One of my pet peeves as a coach is the oft-heard advice: 鈥淎ttack the hill, don鈥檛 be weak, don鈥檛 let up.” It’s one of those things runners get taught when they are young that are just plain wrong. The idea, it seems, is to show your strength and grit, to prove to yourself and your competitors that you are, literally, king of the hill. Or it is an attempt to keep the pace consistent, to not let the hill rob any seconds through sheer willpower. I can鈥檛 count the number of runners I鈥檝e known who鈥檝e been taught just that.
The only problem is that it doesn鈥檛 work that way.
When I was first starting to race, on rolling courses in Michigan, I quickly realized that most of the runners around me struggled up the hills, then were forced to recover on the downgrades. Then some older, wise soul in my running club told me that the best way to run hills effectively begins by learning how to run fast on the downgrades.
鈥淟ean forward,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd let your torso fall down the hill. Then move your legs fast enough to keep up.鈥 Run downhill effectively and you don’t need to kill yourself going up.
Disproportionate Effort
Years later, I came under the tutelage of Alberto Salazar, long before his fall from grace. And whatever you may think of him today, he was an extremely good tactician, with a scientist鈥檚 bent toward figuring out the best way to do everything as perfectly as possible.
One of the things he told me was that, curious about the best way to run hills, he鈥檇 once gone out and run a 400m hill at 鈥渉ard,鈥 鈥渕edium,鈥 and 鈥渆asy鈥 efforts 鈥 as determined by a heart rate monitor. Then, he went to a nearby track and replicated those efforts on the flat, comparing his times.
What he found validated the wisdom of my long-ago teammate. Uphill, the time difference in running hard, medium, or easy, was vastly less than it is on the flat. He compared running hard uphill to trying to run fast in sand. You can blow an enormous amount of energy and accomplish very little.
Flash forward more years, and I found myself coaching marathoners for the Portland Marathon, which at the time included a notorious 175-foot climb to the top of Portland鈥檚 highest bridge over the Willamette River. The climb came at about mile 17, and pretty much everyone was terrified of it.
My answer: run the same effort you would on the flat (not pace). The bridge will suck about a minute of time out of your life, but there鈥檚 nothing you can do about that, and if you try to get up it faster, you will pay for it, later.
Calculating Heartbreak
Support for this comes not just from Salazar, but exercise physiologist and coach Jack Daniels, who once estimated the effect of hills on runners doing the Boston marathon. His conclusion, which I use with my runners, was that each 50 feet of climbing slows you down by about 15 seconds. I.e., that 175-foot bridge means about 52 seconds鈥lose enough to 鈥渁 minute鈥 to justify what I was saying.

Yes, you can run up a hill like that faster. But if you do, you need to view it as the equivalent of a hard surge. Can you sustain it? And if you can鈥檛, how much more will you give back on the recovery? Better is to run the upgrade at about the same energy level you鈥檝e been running on the flats and let the time be what it is. When you reach the top, you want to feel 鈥渞eleased鈥 and eager to go fast, rather than spaghetti-legged, gasping for breath, and desperate for a chance to recover.
Discipline and Practice
Finding the discipline to approach hills this way takes deliberate effort. 鈥淚f I don鈥檛 think about it, I鈥檒l just push,鈥 says Janne Heinonen, one of Portland, Oregon鈥檚 best masters runners. 鈥淚 have to make a conscious effort to hold back. It鈥檚 hard, because the steeper it is, the more my instinct is to surge up it.鈥
Luckily, there are ways to practice this. One of my favorites is what I call 鈥渄ip-bounces.鈥 Find a route with a small dip leading to an equally small hill. On the descent, lean forward and practice the sense of 鈥渇alling鈥 down the hill, being careful not to overstride. Then practice carrying your momentum up the other side using the same effort. By reversing the order of down and up, you practice the faster descent fresh and have already reaped the benefits so you can relax and float up.聽
When I did these with training partners, I鈥檇 always find myself two to three strides ahead of them, even with a dip of only 5-6 feet, waiting for them to catch up. Do these whenever you can, making them so habitual that you can鈥檛 imagine running such terrain any other way, regardless of the order of ups and downs.
Another, more advanced, is hill up-and-overs. For these, find a longish paved hill that climbs to a smooth crest then drops down the backside (if the climbs are asymmetrical in grade and/or length, you can alternate the 鈥渇ast鈥 and 鈥渟low鈥 directions. Start 400m before the top and run up, over the top and down the backside.
The target is to hit the top feeling not like you need to back off and recover, but instead, feeling released. This objective is twofold: (a) to practice fast, controlled running on the descent, and (b) to figure out your own most efficient way to cover the entire distance, up and over the hill. After all, the ultimate goal isn鈥檛 to be as fast as possible to the top of the hill; it鈥檚 to be as fast as you can be to the finish line for the overall race.
There are, of course, races in which you need a different approach. If the descent is too steep, you may need to adjust. If the descent is both excessively steep and technical (as can sometimes occur in trail races or cross-country events) there may be situations in which the primary goal is to remain upright. For these, the strategy is to attack when the footing is good, and recover when it isn鈥檛.
Another exception could be when a hill falls close to the finish and you don’t have distance or terrain to make up for falling behind. Even in this situation, however, you won’t benefit by pushing so hard you have to back off at the top 鈥 the uphill push should be proportional to your overall increase in effort and pace.
In general, the best results come not from attacking hills as hard as you can but from learning how to match your energy expenditure to the course 鈥 so you don鈥檛 just 鈥渂eat鈥 the hills but run your best race.