, not distance When you train by time, you don't have to measure a route, and you aren't "penalised" for wind, hills, or trails. (Whether you run six miles on hilly trails or eight miles on flat roads, if they each take you an hour and your effort is the same
Running is simple: just put one foot in front of the other, and keep repeating. It’s a shame, then, that training for peak fitness and performance isn’t as easy. No matter how much or how little experience runners have – elite, beginner or anywhere
age to set a marathon PB? Can I split my long run into two efforts? How can I recover in between marathons? Beginners: Can I run/walk a marathon?Can I run a 3:30 marathon on two runs a week? --My second marathon: overweight and slowI've run a sub-3
by former Olympian Jeff Galloway recommends that not only beginners, but also faster marathon runners, run just three to four days a week. Weekly mileage peaks at 31 to 41 miles, depending on your goal time. Galloway reports that 99 per cent of his plan
% (more like 80-ish) but I can run as long as I follow a few ground rules: three to four runs a week maximum (on alternate days), with light cross-training as an alternative. Physio Phil suggested 75% of max effort for a while, so the speed and hill
wouldn't do a 25-30 mile run every weekend and feel fine the next day. – debboYou can't compare them except in terms of general exercise in a given HR zone for a certain time. You can't say "OK I have done 50 miles of cycling so that gives me 'x' miles