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THE RUNNING RESEARCH NEWS WEEKLY TRAINING UPDATE
ISSUE # 44 MAY 15, 2005 ______________ Hill work is a key component of the RRN training progression, and it is a potent producer of fitness in its own right.
The RRN set-up differs from traditional training plans (which usually
"build a base", expand aerobic capacity, and then shoe-horn in a bit of
speed training prior to a major competition) and also from Jack-Daniels'
blocks. RRN's scheme usually involves beginning with general strength
training, proceeding on to running-specific strength training, moving into
hill work, and finishing with explosive training (although the progression
does not have to be in that exact order). Throughout these four phases,
runners work steadily on their speed and gradually expand their ability to
carry out vVO2max and lactate-threshold-type training.
A beauty of the overall progression is that completion of the four
phases has a synergistic effect which can produce mammoth gains in fitness.
In addition, each section of the plan has its own, unique, often-quite-large
impact on running capacity.
Take hill work: We know from the scientific research that hill training
is a wonderful enhancer of running economy. We know from logic and
experience that hill training expands a runner's resistance to fatigue, and
that hill sessions are boosters of VO2max and lactate threshold (since hill
climbs are associated with high rates of oxygen uptake and lofty lactate
levels). As a result, a four- to six-week diet of hills can lead to
remarkable gains in running performance.
Dan Collison, a runner who is using the RRN system, is enjoying the
benefits of hill training right now. Dan, a 45-year-old who has been
running for about five years, began employing the RRN program on August 14,
2004 (with a vVO2max test to assess his initial fitness), and he has chalked
up four shiny PRs since then (not bad for a nine-month period which featured
five months of hibernal weather), his most recent personal-best coming
yesterday in a 10K.
Dan happens to live in New Hampshire, a circumstance which gives him
certain disadvantages as an endurance athlete (as Yogi Berra once said, "It
is a wrong mistake for a distance runner to live where it is cold"). From
November through the end of March, his local tracks are covered with five
feet of snow (six when the weather gets bad). True, Dan can compensate a
bit by running on a treadmill and at the Dartmouth College Field House, but
the track at the latter venue can be unpredictably covered by the booths of
a Home Improvement or RV Show (Yankee ingenuity and practicality, you
know). Frequently, Dan has had to carry out his speed work on marked
sections of roadway. On these days, we call his workouts "doubles", since
he is working on both velocity and agility (while avoiding Yankee drivers
and New England potholes, of course).
However, for the endurance runner there is also a key advantage
associated with living free or dying: The presence of wonderful mountains.
And mountains, as opposed to mere hills, allow runners to carry out the
best-possible sort of "hill" workout - a non-stop, uphill run
of at least three miles in duration. At his personal beck and call, Dan has
Mt. Washington, Mt. Ascutney, and Mt. Kearsarge, just to name a few close-by
crags, and just a 100-meter jaunt from his back door he also has Power Sap
(possibly named after two Dartmouth runners, or perhaps after the puissant
maple trees growing on its slopes - and actually a collection of challenging
inclinations). All permit at least three miles of continuous uphill effort
(Mt. Washington actually offers more than seven).
True, such climbing is not exactly speed training; the tough inclines
and the steady nature of the running tend to tone down average velocity a
bit. However, ascending Washington or Ascutney on a runnable roadway or
trail is the kind of exertion which optimizes running-specific-leg-strength
and sends aerobic capacity and lactate threshold through their respective
roofs.
Elite Kenyan runners have known about the special benefits of
continuous climbs for a long time. When my friend Sammy Lelei was preparing
for a key marathon (he ran 2:07:03 at Berlin, which was at the time the
second-fastest clocking in the world), he liked to ascend a mountain,
running very hard the whole way, in the western part of Kenya on a
13-mile (21-K) roadway which featured nearly steady climbing. Before
starting this workout, he used to call out "How many reps should I do today,
Owen?"
Dan was actually scheduled to move into his explosive phase of training
in early April (he has managed all four of his PRs without ever moving into
that profitable piece of the progression), but then a funny thing happened:
Spring came to New Hampshire. The sudden availability of mountain roads and
trails was simply too good to pass up, and as Ascutney's brooks tumultuously
brought down the water stored over the winter, Dan was working the first
three miles of Ascut's roadway, dodging catamounts and losing his cell
phone, jumping over the occasional heat-resistance ice piles and snow
drifts, but never letting up on his intensity. He blended this escalading
with other strengthening work, vVO2max training, and interval sessions at
race pace.
This past week was a tough one for Dan, with extra hours spent at work
and less sleep than usual. Wednesday's vVO2max session was disappointing -
he wasn't able to hold pace on his 800s. I had a rough week, too, and as a
result I didn't let him know until Friday evening at around midnight that I
wanted him to run a 10K Saturday morning.
Fortunately, Dan is an adaptable fellow, and he had been mindful of the
extra stress in his life and thus made the "effort" to rest well Thursday
night; he also took a scheduled recovery day on Friday. Fortunately,
too, hill training has a wonderful way of working its magic, especially
when it has been undertaken by a runner like Dan who doesn't mind letting it
all hang out in races. When he toed the starting line on Saturday morning,
he felt strong, and even though the course was not flat, was open to
traffic, and had a million turns, Dan surged to a 36:20 PR (previous best
was 37:10). Not bad for a Masters runner half-way to earning his Veteran
status!
Dan and Sammy have more in common than their love for hill (mountain)
training. Both always contribute far more than they take. Each has an
incredible sense of humor; Sammy's cackle can ignite any room, and Dan has a
fondness for Yogiisms (aka "bulls"). Dan believes that Yogi may
secretly be an Irishman, since his bulls are always so pregnant. And when
it comes to competition, both Dan and Sammy have Mickey-Mantle-like hearts
(as Yogi once said of the Mick, "He gives you everything he has, and then he
gives you another 20 percent!").
They also recover after their hill workouts in exactly the same way. At
the top, Sammy would change his shirt and then walk 50 meters to the nearest
Kenyan tea shop, at which he would guzzle copious quantities of highly
sugared Kenyan tea. Dan hides a trove of New England tea, sweetened
with generous dollops of maple syrup, at the pinnacle (usually, it's still
there when he reaches the precipice). Sugar or syrup, the effect is the
same: Recovery commences as soon as the challenging climb is completed.
By the way, when you run continuously upward for three miles or more, it
is not necessary to recover by jogging down the slope: In fact, I strongly
recommend that you do not jog back to the bottom. If you want a
bit of extra eccentric strain on your quads (to help fight future soreness),
simply amble down the slope for 400 meters or so, but that's it. There is
no need to ruin a perfect workout by tearing your quads to shreds with a
long bout of downhill running.
That was never a problem for Sammy; the top of the monticle was on his
way home, so he would be picked up by car at the tea house, and off he would
go. Dan stashes a bike at the top, enjoys an easy walk down, or else
is collected by family/friends, and that is exactly the way to do it.
***************************************************
Because of Michigan's recent bout of brumal weather, RRN's business
office is in a generous mood, and the folks there have informed me that they
are extending the recent Malibu-Running-Camp promotion. It really is an
incredible offer: Anyone who signs up for one of the sessions of our running
camp (the dates are June 21-26 and July 19-24) during the three-day
period from Wednesday, May 18 through Friday, May 20 can attend the camp
for just $895, a sizable saving from the usual price of
$995. And - here's the best deal of all: Two people signing up
together can come for just $1600 ($800 per person), a 20-percent discount.
Sign-ups can be accomplished by phone (517-371-4897; if you reach voice
mail, I'll call you right back) or by e-mail (owen@rrnews.com).
You can also go to
http://rrnews.microform.com/running-camps.php , download the camp
brochure using the link at the bottom of the page, and then fax your
completed application to 517-371-4447.
Our Malibu camp really is incredible - a wonderful mix of education and
fun. It doesn't hurt that it takes place at a terrific location (Pepperdine
University), and that many of our runs take place on beautiful trails in the
Santa Monica Mountains (yes, we'll do some Collison-Lelei-type climbing
there, although not for 13 miles at a crack). To find out more about
Pepperdine, please go to
http://www.pepperdine.edu/main/ To learn more about the Santa Monica
Mountains, please visit
http://www.nps.gov.samo/
Many thanks for your interest in RRN! I hope that I have the chance to
meet you this summer.
With very kindest regards,
Owen Anderson
E-mail: owen@rrnews.com
Web: http://www.rrnews.com
Phone: (517) 371-4897
To find out how to improve at any
race distance, to learn how to use the latest information from the field
of sports nutrition to upgrade your performances, and to discover how to
train in ways which reduce the risk of injury, subscribe to Running
Research News ($35 for a one-year subscription); please go to
http://www.rrnews.com and click on the
yellow "Subscribe" button.
To purchase Owen's new e-book, which contains great workouts for
competitive distances ranging from 800 meters to 100K, please go to
http://rrnews.microform.com/great_workouts_popular_races.php
To obtain Lactate Lift-Off, Owen's hard-copy book
about lactate-threshold-velocity-enhancing training, please go to
http://www.rrnews.com/products.htm
To download free samples of Running Research News, Cycling Research
News, Swimming Research News, and Weight-Loss Research,
please visit http://www.rrnews.com/sample-issues.htm
To find out how to lose the pounds which are slowing you down, please consider a subscription to Weight-Loss Research (http://rrnews.microform.com/weight-loss-research.php)
To obtain back issues of Running Research News on topics ranging
from 5-K and marathon training to carbohydrate intake to plantar fasciitis,
hamstring troubles, shin splints, ITB syndrome, and running-injury
prevention, please go to
http://www.rrnews.com/archive.htm Please use the search engine
provided to look for articles on specific subjects.
To learn about the contents of the latest issue of Running Research
News and about upcoming events at RRN, please go to
http://www.rrnews.com/next.htm
Thank you Dr. Anderson for giving permission to republish this article.
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