Spring Base - Week 1 - Gazelles
Week 1 – February 3rd thru 9th
House Keeping Notes
1. Weekly Base Schedules are NOT Password protected
2. WINTER/SPRING Saturday Meeting time @ 7:30 am
3. Boston Long Run Schedule:
Feb 16th – 15 miles
23rd – 20 miles
Mar 1st – 16 miles
8th – 22 miles
15th – 15 miles
22nd – 17 miles
29th – 21 miles
Apr 5th – 15 miles
12th – 10 miles
20th – Boston Marathon
Monday 3rd Cross Train Day
Lift Weights/Pilates (Mat or Reformer)/Yoga – 45 to 60 minutes
Tuesday 4th Easy/Light Run 40 minutes
Include 5 x 30 sec light strides/60 sec easy within run
do light strides after 20 minutes of running
Sports Conditioning Class @ CAC-Flatirons – 10:45 am
Wednesday 5th Fartlek Workout
East Boulder Rec @ 6:30 am OR Potts Field @ 5:30 pm
Warm Up 15 min/Stretch/4 x 30 sec strides (45 sec easy)
4 x 45 sec short hill with easy down recovery
take 2 min active rest after fourth hill
4 x 2:30 min @ 10 km effort with 90 sec easy
take 2 min active rest after fourth 2:30 min
4 x 2:30 min @ 5 km effort with 90 sec easy
take 2 min active rest after fourth 2:30 min
4 x 45 sec short hill with easy down recovery
active rest = walk/slow run recovery
Cool Down 5-10 minutes
Thursday 6th Cross Train Day
Lift Weights/Pilates (Mat or Reformer)/Yoga – 45 to 60 minutes
Sports Conditioning Class @ CAC-Flatirons – 6:00 pm
Friday 7th Easy Shake-Out Run 40 minutes
Saturday 8th Tempo Workout from East Boulder Rec @ 7:30 am
Warm Up 15 min/Stretch/4 x 30 sec strides (45 sec easy)
Boston Crew
2 x 3 km @ marathon pace with 4 min active rest
1 x 2 km @ half marathon pace
Others
2 x 2 km @ half marathon pace with 3 min active rest
2 x 1 km @ 10 km pace with 2 min active rest
active rest = walk/slow run recovery
Cool Down 5-10 minutes
Sunday 9th Boston Crew – 18 miles
Easy Long Run – 70 minutes
Relaxed Pace/Hydrate on the Run
Easy 5 min Walk Cool Down
Easy/Light/Recovery Run - Conversational Pace/Relaxed Effort
Long Run – 60-90 sec Slower than your Marathon Goal Pace
Tempo/Sustained - Run between 70-80% Effort of Max
Fartlek – Playing with Fast/Slow Speed
Hills - Work on Good Form (drive with arms/relax the shoulders/get up on toes/quick
turnover/mid-foot strike on the downs/look 5-10 feet in front of yourself)
Meeting Places
East Boulder Rec - follow Baseline east to 55th St. Take a right on 55th and follow the road until the sharp left turn and go past the first parking lot and tennis courts towards the Rec Center. Park on the West Side of the Rec Center Parking Lot close to the tennis courts.
Potts Field – CU Outdoor Track between Foothills Parkway and 30th off of Colorado Avenue
Coach's Notes
Welcome to Winter/Spring Training!!! We are flowing straight into training…however…for those joining that were not in the Winter Groups…please make sure to take these next three weeks a tad easier….always do the lower end of the daily runs and run the harder days more controlled. Although it is still theoretically Winter…we will Prep those racing Spring marathons and of course ALL those racing Bolder Boulder on Memorial Day…May 25th!!!
Cadence Boost is something all runners should look to improve on. Research has shown that 180 strides per minute is the optimum stride rate. Foot strike, posture, arm swing and stride rate are all factors when it comes to one's running economy. As you improve each of these technique variables, you'll be able to run faster while using less energy.
Stride Rate is of particular importance because it's indicative of one's overall running form. Runners with loping styles tend to have a lower foot strike frequency, taking longer strides and tending to get more air (bounding) between each foot strike, which means more energy is expended vertically as opposed to horizontally. On the other hand, athletes with higher foot-strike frequency (in the 180 strides per minute range), tend to be more mid- to forefoot strike oriented with greater horizontal velocity, shorter strides and better posture. Their more efficient form yields faster overall running on fatigued legs.
There are several ways to improve your running cadence:
- incorporate strides into your easy runs where after 20 min easy you do 5-7 x 30 sec
pick-ups where you work on quick turnover and executing perfect form (Tue runs)
2. run on a treadmill once in a while at your aerobic pace with the incline at 2-3 percent and
focus on taking shorter, quicker steps as you run the incline
3. doing drills and plyometric training where you are working on quick cadence and power
(Darren’s Sports Conditioning Class on Tue @ 10:45 am or Thu @ 6:00 pm at CAC-
Flatirons…non-members of the Club are welcome…$15 drop-in fee paid to the gym)
Next time we doing a fartlek...in the middle of the interval…count how many strikes you have in 60 seconds and see how efficient you are...that is taking into account the fatigued legs and elevated heart rate. Also, during your long runs as the legs fatigue and you start getting into a rut…count your foot plants in a minute and see if your cadence is dropping off from been efficient…if you have dropped off…inject some pace back into your stride and notice the difference in how you feel when your legs are flowing at a good cadence.
Let's work on those SPM’S (strides per minute) and become a more efficient runner.
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