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Power Surge: Target Your Peak Performance
By Ed Eyestone on 30/06/2011 17:51:02
Want to win your next race? A tactical burst of speed can zap the competition

pace, then drop the pace by two to three seconds for each successive 400mRecovery: Jog for four minutes between repeats.Ed Eyestone is an exercise physiologist and two-time Olympic marathon runner.

Fast Lane: Extend Your Peak
By Ed Eyestone on 27/02/2008 08:10:29
Reload and reduce to keep racing successfully for months

for the Olympics, for example, must peak for an arduous trials process, then ramp up their performance again to place well at the Games themselves. When you keep returning to the well like this, how can you make sure the bucket doesn't come up empty? A

Get Faster: Double Up
By Ed Eyestone on 02/08/2011 10:00:00
Run twice a day to up your cardiovascular fitness – and gain a competitive edge

SundayAM: 4 miles (easy)   PM: RestEd Eyestone is an exercise physiologist and two-time Olympic marathon runner

Burn, Baby, Burn
By Ed Eyestone on 01/06/2002 15:49:50
Learn to train at your lactate threshold, and you'll be on your way to faster racing

of Medical Science for Sport and Exercise showed that speed at lactate threshold is the best physiological predictor of distance-running performance. Indeed, Frank Shorter, the 1972 Olympic marathon champion was said to have had a modestly high VO2max

Fast Lane: PB-Ready In One Week
By Ed Eyestone on 25/02/2008 09:46:14
Your seven-day training plan for toeing the line on short notice

Many elite runners plan their racing calendars a year or more in advance. There are some right now who know that in order to be on the starting line of an Olympic final in Beijing in August 2008, they need to hit an A-standard qualifying time in a

Fast Lane: Beat The Mileage Trap
By Ed Eyestone on 28/02/2008 09:41:28
Follow these rules to beat the mileage trap and achieve your running goals

What is the proper mileage to succeed in distances from 5K to a marathon?" I once asked a colleague who has coached many runners to collegiate and Olympic glory. "That's easy," he said. "You want to run as few miles as you can and still win

Take it to the Limit
By Ed Eyestone on 01/06/2002 15:44:48
How to use short-burst fartlek training to boost your VO2max

. A little more than a year later, they became famous for something else: their Olympic gold medals – Vasala in the 1500m and Viren in the 5000m and 10,000m. Pure coincidence? I don’t think so.By now I’m sure you can use the word fartlek in polite

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Racing (2)

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Ed Eyestone (7)

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