
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
This is the big epic workout of our Marathon Maker Series. It’s not one to be taken lightly. You’ll want to treat it as both your long run and your key session of the week—so much so that you’ll even taper for a few days before the workout and have a good week of recovery style running afterwards.
Marathon Maker #4
6k – 5k – 4k – 3k – 2k – 1k (6k, 5k & 4k @ your marathon pace, 3k & 2k @ your half marathon pace, 1k @ 10k pace)
1k recovery run between each interval
Terrain: Flat, measurable pathway.
Simply because humans are crazy! We hunt after the more artificial challenges in life like running marathons or ultras or personal best times because they give us the courage and life strategies for tackling the real world challenges we face.
This sort of workout is that perfect challenge of your endurance and pacing and mental fortitude that prepares you brilliantly for a marathon, half or ultra—and for tackling the marathon of life!
With 30k or more worth of running in this session, this will be your long run for the week. So avoid the temptation to just do this on your normal workout schedule, but instead swap out the LSD run for this key endurance session.
The fatigue on your legs will be similar to what you’d experience from a 10 or 15k road race, so treat the recovery similar. For every mile you race, allow a day of recovery/easy running. So, at minimum, you’ll want six days after this session before doing another challenging run.
Thought for the Week:
A week or so ago I had the privilege of commentating the New Zealand Track & Field Champs. This was two days of epic racing and truly incredible performances. So, here are my top three takeaways that we can all apply to our fitness journeys from the weekend’s action:
This is the big epic workout of our Marathon Maker Series. It’s not one to be taken lightly. You’ll want to treat it as both your long run and your key session of the week—so much so that you’ll even taper for a few days before the workout and have a good week of recovery style running afterwards.
Marathon Maker #4
6k – 5k – 4k – 3k – 2k – 1k (6k, 5k & 4k @ your marathon pace, 3k & 2k @ your half marathon pace, 1k @ 10k pace)
1k recovery run between each interval
Terrain: Flat, measurable pathway.
Simply because humans are crazy! We hunt after the more artificial challenges in life like running marathons or ultras or personal best times because they give us the courage and life strategies for tackling the real world challenges we face.
This sort of workout is that perfect challenge of your endurance and pacing and mental fortitude that prepares you brilliantly for a marathon, half or ultra—and for tackling the marathon of life!
With 30k or more worth of running in this session, this will be your long run for the week. So avoid the temptation to just do this on your normal workout schedule, but instead swap out the LSD run for this key endurance session.
The fatigue on your legs will be similar to what you’d experience from a 10 or 15k road race, so treat the recovery similar. For every mile you race, allow a day of recovery/easy running. So, at minimum, you’ll want six days after this session before doing another challenging run.
Thought for the Week:
A week or so ago I had the privilege of commentating the New Zealand Track & Field Champs. This was two days of epic racing and truly incredible performances. So, here are my top three takeaways that we can all apply to our fitness journeys from the weekend’s action: