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167. Peaking For a Race: How to Avoid Peaking Too Soon - Publication Date |
- Aug 12, 2022
- Episode Duration |
- 00:52:47
Have you ever "peaked too early" for a race?
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How to avoid this👇
PERIODIZE YOUR TRAINING aka don't do the same training all year long and have different seasons for different aspects of training
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1️⃣ BASE BUILDING: This is the foundation of any endurance training plan. The focus here is aerobic development with an emphasis on easy miles. This phase could include shorter speed workouts, like fartleks and strides, more strength training, building on your long runs, etc. You want to be pushed a little bit but not TOO much during this phase so the bigger workouts in the next phase aren't as big of a shock to the body. 4-10 weeks in length depending on what and when your race is (longer for a marathon)
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2️⃣ RACE PREP: This is when longer runs, longer tempo runs, and longer repeats are implemented after getting the aerobic development from the base building phase. This is where you'll have the more "traditional" marathon workouts if you're training for a marathon. 8-14 weeks in length depending on athlete level and race distance
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3️⃣ TAPERING/PEAKING: Overall volume (number of miles/kms) decreases, but intensity stays up! Many people make the mistake of not keeping intensity in during their taper/peaking phase. Keeping intensity in allows for fine-tuning your speed and running econony. 2-3 weeks in length for a marathon
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4️⃣ RECOVERY/OFF-SEASON: You should plan to take at least a full week off of training after a marathon. Take the recovery before you think you need it! It’s important mentally to draw the line in the sand and “end” the training cycle. The next few weeks of recovery can include easy runs, running every other day, etc. 👍
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