国产吃瓜黑料

Side View Of An African American Woman Running On The Street.
If interval training is about feeling the burn, tempo runs are meant to increase the time you can spend close to the fire without getting too hot. (Photo: BONNINSTUDIO/Stocksy)
Up Your Game

Why You Need to Master the Tempo Run

Building aerobic fitness is the key to making fast running feel "easy"

Published: 
Side View Of An African American Woman Running On The Street.
(Photo: BONNINSTUDIO/Stocksy)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

At some point during the past decade, fitness publications began gushing over workouts that emphasized short, hard effort reps, aka high-intensity interval training听(HIIT). As the broader public appeared to be discovering the benefits of HIIT, dedicated endurance athletes had an excuse to feel even smugger than usual. After all, high-intensity intervals have been a training staple for runners since at least the mid-20th century, when Emil Z谩topek was banging out quarter-mile repeats to become the preeminent distance runner of his day.

Far less prominent is the humble tempo run, which hasn鈥檛 received nearly as much mainstream coverage as its HIIT counterpart听but is also essential for runners looking to improve their fitness. Unlike short intervals, tempos are moderately hard efforts that you can sustain for extended periods (up to an hour) without exceeding your 鈥渓actate threshold鈥濃攖hat is, the pace at which blood lactate waste starts accumulating faster than it can be flushed out and you begin to slow down. If interval training is about feeling the burn, tempo runs are meant to increase the time you can spend close to the fire without getting too hot.

Since good advice is always better than a bad metaphor, we reached out to head coach to demystify the tempo run and give us a few workout suggestions.

The Basics

According to Finley, tempo runs serve a dual purpose:听training the body to clear the lactate that鈥檚 produced at higher speeds while making it more efficient at pumping blood and circulating oxygen. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about increasing the time you can spend with your heart rate right at the 80 to 90 percent range,鈥 Finley says.听鈥淕etting your heart rate up and keeping it at that level.鈥

The Main Challenge: Finding Your Tempo Pace

鈥淭he reason a lot people don鈥檛 do tempos, or don鈥檛 do them correctly, is because they don鈥檛 know what their max heart rate is听or what their hour-run pace is,鈥 Finley says. He recommends that runners don鈥檛 rely too much on heart rate data鈥攆or one thing, it can be difficult to measure accurately鈥攁nd instead use their half marathon race听paceas a ballpark figure for their tempo pace.听There are obviously some caveats here as well: if you鈥檝e never raced a half marathon, you鈥檒l have to estimate an achievable goal based on your current fitness. Ditto if your half marathon PR came 20 years ago.

The Solution: Tempo Repeats

While professional runners will often have their ideal tempo paces dialed to the second, the rest of us are unlikely to have the resources or self-knowledge to nail it every time. For that reason, Finley recommends doing progressive tempo repeats听with short rests between sets. The idea is to start at a pace that is significantly faster than what you would do on an easy day but still a few seconds per mile slower than your half marathon pace听and gradually bring it down with each rep.听Ideally, you finish the workout running slightly faster than you might for a continuous tempo.

鈥淔or anyone who is not in the top 1 percent of athletes, progression runs are absolutely necessary鈥攂oth from a warming-up perspective, but also because they protect the workout,鈥 says Finley, referring to the widespread tendency among runners of all levels听to start off way too fast.

The Workouts

The Ladder

After a few miles of easy running to warm up, start out with ten minutes at half marathon pace. Give yourself one minute of standing or walking to recover and lower your heart rate. Then run eight minutes slightly faster. Repeat the process for six minutes, four minutes, and two minutes. (If you鈥檙e feeling good, do two sets.)

2-Mile Repeats

After warming up, run two miles at your current听half marathon听pace. Give yourself 90 seconds of standing or walking rest. Run two more reps of two miles with a 90-second break in between, each one slightly faster so that your final rep is approaching 10K pace.

A Final Note of Caution

The same principle that holds true for longer races applies here as well: you want to start out conservatively. You can always add another rep if you feel like you took it too easy on yourself, but if you鈥檙e fried after rep one, your workout is over.

As Finley puts it: 鈥淵ou want to let the workout come to you鈥攊nstead of trying to force some idea of a workout onto your body.鈥

Lead Photo: BONNINSTUDIO/Stocksy

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online