Weekly Schedules

Week 10 - San Jose R 'n R Half Marathon Training Schedule
Color GroupStart
Time
Sat
Jul 24
Sun
Jul 25
Mon
Jul 26
Tue
Jul 27
Wed
Jul 28
Thu
Jul 29
Fri
Jul 30
Start
Time
Sat
Jul 31
Note: Monday through Friday run is expressed in minutes.
Blue 8 am 6 miles  OFF  50/e  10x60/60  OFF  45/tempo  OFF  8 am 8 miles 
Green 8 am 6 miles  OFF  45/e  8x60/60  OFF  45/tempo  OFF  8 am 8 miles 
Yellow 8 am 6 miles  OFF  40/e  6x60/60  OFF  40/tempo  OFF  8 am 8 miles 
Red 8 am 6 miles  OFF  30/e  6x60/60  OFF  25/tempo  OFF  8 am 8 miles 

Color Group Training Pace:

Blue
 Under 8 min/mile
Green
 Less than 9 min/mile
Yellow
 9 to 10 min/mile
Red
 10-13 min/mile
Purple
 13 + min/mile and Walkers
Blue
 Under 8 min/mile
Green
 Less then 9 min/mile
Yellow
 9 to 10 min/mile
Red
 10 - 13 min/mile

Important: 5k trial run will determine your pace group.

How to determine What's hard or easy?
Hard workouts: long slow runs and fast short runs
Easy workouts: slow short runs and rest days

A slow run is typically 80% or less of a persons current race pace for a given distance.

Glossary

Speed Work

"8x30-30" means "30 seconds fast, 30 seconds slow, eight times in a row."

After a thorough warm-up, run for 30 seconds at about 90-95% intensity, then do a 30-second recovery jog. Make sure that you don't slow down during the workout, so you are running your last 30 seconds about as fast or even a little faster than your first 30 seconds. Run on a soft surface if you can, rather than on concrete or asphalt. When you are done, jog or walk slowly for a while to cool-down. Both the number of repeats, and the duration of the fast and slow intervals, will change from week to week.

Tempo

After a warm up for about 5 - 10 minutes, maintain a pace about 10 to 15 seconds per mile slower than 10-K race pace. The last 5 to 10 minutes should be a cool down period. Another way to gauge the pace of tempo runs: a pace about midway between short-interval training speed and your easy running pace.

Easy (e)

A slow run done at a conversational pace.

Hillwork

Hills prepare the muscles for faster running without going anaerobic. Hill training will enable you to run better on all types of terrain. Find a hill with a moderate grade, about 10-15%. Run at about 85% effort and jog slowly down to recover. Start with about 4 hills and increase by 1 a week until you can run 8-12 hills.

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