Pressed for Time?
What to run when your training time is slashed
By Mackenzie Lobby
As featured in the Web Only issue of Running Times Magazine
For the competitive runner, daily runs are not simply a means to an end; without them, normal sleeping, eating, socializing, and working patterns can suffer. You depend on the daily run, not only to log PRs, but also to help maintain a precious balance in life.
Unfortunately, balance cannot always be achieved. The scales tip, life steps in, and you are faced with the dreaded circumstance: a hiatus from your usual mileage, perhaps for many weeks, because of an unavoidable work commitment, a family health situation, lack of child care, etc. Fortunately, even several weeks away from regular training does not necessarily equate into loads of lost fitness, if you properly structure your more-limited training time.
Pete Rea, head coach at ZAP Fitness, is well versed in the training of runners on both ends of the spectrum and everywhere in between. He says, “If you’re able to continue running three or four days a week and you do the right things during those three or four days, you can maintain fitness even for a couple months if you have a busy time at work or aren’t able to get out the door every day.” Smart training, with an emphasis on quality over quantity, could actually spit you out on the other side of those down weeks rejuvenated, ready to jump back in with full force.
Paul Giannoble, a Minneapolis-based master who wins races outright in his late 40s, knows this predicament well. The father of two and full-time investment adviser says he had many 5:30 a.m. runs during his children’s younger years, “trying to get back before everyone was up.” He looks at balancing competitive running with all of life’s other responsibilities as a welcome challenge that can sometimes even improve your running performance by forcing you to make the most of the limited training time. He explains, “For the typical runner, let’s face it, quality is more important than quantity. To get faster, you have to get in the higher-quality workouts. That’s what it could force you to do if you can’t run every day.”
Rea suggests if you can only run a few days a week, “Do not get away from the workouts designed to improve your different energy systems.” In practical terms, that means devoting one run a week to a key type of workout, designed to boost your endurance, VO2 max or lactate threshold.
Run #1: Go Long
The long run is a staple in most runners’ weeks, and, as much as possible, shouldn’t be scrapped even when the number of days per week you can run diminish. The benefits of long runs—increased capillary density, improved ability to use fat as a fuel at a solid pace, biomechanical endurance, and more—will go a long way toward keeping you able to resume your regular training when things return to normal. (And don’t discount the value of time alone to think or to run with friends when under a lot of stress.) If you must cut your normal long run short, follow the lead of Giannoble, who says, “Typically I try to do a two-hour long run, but when you’re pressed for time you squeeze that down and make it a little more high-quality.”
Run #2: Go Fast
To maintain your high-end fitness, do short intervals at between 3K and 5K race pace. In addition to working on your VO2 max and running economy, these workouts will help you to maintain fast-running form for when you can return to normal training. Rea suggests repeats of 300m or 400m, but don’t worry about precise distances if getting to a track is going to cut into suddenly short training time. Instead, head out on one of your regular loops and, after a brief warm-up, do 8-12 surges at 3K to 5K effort level, leaving enough time at the end for a short cooldown. If anything, the run will take a little less time than just covering the course at a moderate pace.