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Your Ultimate 10-K Plan
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YOUR ULTIMATE 10-K PLAN

You'll be glad to hear that 10-K training forms the foundation of all-around fitness, because it includes ample amounts of the three core components of distance running--strength, stamina, speed.

By Doug Rennie

PUBLISHED 05/03/2004

Intermediate

You've been running a year or more, done some 5-Ks, maybe even a 10-K. But you've always finished feeling like you could have, or should have, gone faster. You consider yourself mainly a recreational runner, but you still want to make a commitment to see how fast you can go.

Here's the two-pronged approach that will move you from recreational runner to the cusp of competitive athlete. First, you'll be adding miles to your endurance-building long run until it makes up 30 percent of your weekly mileage. Second, you'll now be doing a substantial amount of tempo running aimed at elevating your anaerobic threshold, the speed above which blood lactate levels skyrocket--a gulping-and-gasping prelude to your engine shutting down for the day. How to avoid this unpleasantness? With regular sessions at a little slower than10-K pace--that is, tempo-run pace. This will significantly improve your endurance and running efficiency in just six weeks.
So your tempo work will include weekly "10-10s," along with a mixed grill of intervals and uphill running, all of which strengthen your running muscles, heart, and related aerobic systems (see "Stuff You Need To Know,").
Oh, one more thing: Running fast requires effort--and some discomfort. Still, be conservative. If you can't maintain the same pace throughout a given workout, or if your body shrieks "No mas!" then call it a day. And maybe adjust your pace next time.

WeekMonTueWedThuFriSatSunTotal
1Rest2 miles,
1 or 2x10-10,
2 miles
4 miles1x400m PI,
1x800m PI,
1x1200m PI,
1x800m PI,
1x400m PI
Rest4 miles,
4x100m S
6-7 miles 24 miles
2Rest6 miles, incl. 6:00 TUT4 miles1x1200m PI,
2x800m PI,
4x200m PI,
4x200m SI,
4x100m S
Rest

4.5 miles,
5x100m S

7-8 miles 26 miles
3Rest2 miles,
2 or 3 x 10-10,
2 miles
4 miles1x800m PI,
1x1200m PI,
1x800m PI,
2x400m SI,
4x200m SI
Rest5 miles,
6x100m S
7-8 miles27.5 miles
4Rest6-7 miles, incl. 8:00 TUT4 miles1x1200m SI,
1x800m SI,
2x400m SI,
2x200m SI,
4x100m S
Rest5 miles,
6x100m S
8-9 miles29 miles
5Rest2 miles,
3 or 4 x10-10,
2 miles
4 miles1x800m SI,
4x400m SI,
4x200m SI,
1x800m SI,
4x100m S
Rest6 miles,
6x100m S
8-9 miles31 miles
TaperRest800m SI,
2x200m SI,
400m SI,
2x200m SI,
6x100m S
4 miles,
4x200 m SI,
4x100m S
Rest

3 miles easy,
3x100m S

10-K race

Race Day Rules "Many intermediate runners run too fast in the first 5-K," says Coach Sinclair. "That's the surest way to run a mediocre time. Even pace is best, which means the first half of the race should feel really easy." Sinclair's wife and co-coach, Kim Jones, a former U.S. Olympian, adds this: "Divide the race into three 2-mile sections: doable pace for the first 2, push a bit the middle 2, then go hard the last 2."

Stuff You Need To Know
Pace Intervals (PI): Run at 10-K goal pace to improve efficiency and stamina, and to give you the feel of your race pace. For 10-minute pace (a 1:02:06 10-K), run 2:30 (for 400 meters), 5:00 (800m), 7:30 (1200m). For
9-minute pace (55:53), run 2:15 (400m), 4:30 (800m), 6:45 (1200m).
For 8-minute pace (49:40), 2:00 (400m), 4:00 (800m), 6:00 (1200m). With pace and speed intervals (below), jog half the interval distance to recover.

Speed Intervals (SI): Run these at 30 seconds-per-mile faster than goal pace. For 10-minute pace, run 2:22 (for 400m), 4:44 (800m), 7:06 (1200m). For 9-minute pace, 2:08 (400m), 4:16 (800m), 6:24 (1200m).
For 8-minute pace, 1:53 (400m), 3:45 (800m), 5:38 (1200m).

10-10s: 10-minute tempo repeats at 30 seconds per mile slower than 10-K goal pace; 3- to 5-minute slow jog after each.

Total Uphill Time (TUT): Run repetitions up the same hill, or work the uphill sections of a road or trail course.

Strides (S): Over 100 meters, gradually accelerate to about 90 percent of all-out, hold it there for 5 seconds, then smoothly decelerate. Walk to full recovery after each.

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