Whippet Wisdom – Spring/ Summer workouts

Two weeks ago, we touched upon summer races throughout the city and how they are typically shorter than other key races in the training schedule: 5k, 4-miles, 5-miles, 10k. If you’ve never trained for shorter races you may be wondering how does one go about training for these shorter distances?

In my experience, the biggest hurdle a runner has is themselves. Much of an athlete’s view on running has to do with when they started running. People who ran in high school or college are typically much more comfortable running fast while breathing heavy and pushing through when wanting to stop. For the many runners who started later in life, they gravitated toward the half and full marathon. In that instance, battling through the fatigue – not the breathlessness – is the training goal.

In coaching people “down” from the half or full marathon, convincing an athlete to take chances and run workouts at speeds they think are unfeasible is the first step. The second step is determining those workout goals. For example, let’s say you’re a 3:30 marathoner (8:00/ mile) so common race calculators would predict a 5K time of ~21:35 (6:55/ mile). And let’s say this week’s track workout is 6 x 800m – just short of 5k in distance – with 2:00 rest. My suggestion would be to run the 800s at 3:20-25 (6:40-6:50 pace) and see how it goes. And this means not running the first one in 3:30 to ‘ease into the workout.’ The times have to be achieved right from the very first interval. I am confident a 3:30 marathoner could do this workout; it’s the marathoner who needs to believe it.

With the summer coming, the interval length in our track workouts will be shorter in distance because of the heat. They provide the perfect opportunity to take chances to see if you can handle the pace. So what if you don’t finish the workout? If you’re trying to get faster, I’d rather see that then be able to finish semi-comfortably.

If you don’t make it through a workout, cooldown and live for another day. Don’t attempt another workout until the next scheduled one. Keep to your normal training schedule in the days in between; maybe add on a mile or two to any easy days to make up for the missed distance from workout day.

With planned vacations, warm temps, dining/ drinking outside with family/ friends, summer is the perfect time to leave your comfort zone because it is likely to be the least stressful time of the training year: no weekend long run requirement, short/ fast interval workouts, fun summertime races. Take advantage and try something new.

Lastly, if you have questions planning around these summer races or a vacation, reach out to the coaches: . Cassie, Megan, Scott and myself all monitor the email address and we’d be happy to offer suggestions for a specific instance.

Happy Summer!
Chris 40

More about Chris Forti

Chris grew up just outside of Boston where he competed at the high school and collegiate level. In Boston, he coached athletes with varying objectives - from youth to high school to adults - and went so far as to marry his favorite athlete. He joined the Whippets in 2013 and is excited to be coaching for this highly motivated group. He works at siggi's yogurt in New York City as a demand planner and can be found playing "catch the red laser dot" with his favorite kitty, post-run. He calls himself "40" because "Forti" is evidently too many typeface characters to handle and can be found on Facebook, Twitter (@chris40runs), and Instagram (@chris40runs)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *