Dear Coach: My goal is to run a marathon. I am not much
of a runner (run three times, three miles this week). I mountain
bike at least once a week. What kind of training will I need to
do to be able to run a marathon successfully? Thanks. R.M.Dear Coach: I am a 26-year-old male runner who has
recently become fanatical about the sport. My plan is to run
Marine Corps Marathon, qualify for Boston in 1999 and progress
from there to triathlons. I have been running consistently for
the past 3-4 years. Currently I am running 35 miles per week (3
easy Monday, 6 miles hard Tuesday, 3 fast Wednesday, 6 easy
Thursday, 3 hard Friday and 14 Sunday). My goal is to run 5K in
18:00 and to keep my 10-mile pace below 7:30. What can I do to
train safely to reach these goals by marathon time? G.G.
Dear Coach: I am a 32-year-old female with forty-seven
minute 10K PR. I want to run a 3:40 to qualify for Boston. What
kind of training do I need to do? D.L.
Dear Runners: The marathon is the toughest running event
that a long-distance runner can do and thus you must be properly
trained for it. First, I do not think anyone should be doing a
marathon until they have built up a proper running base. This
means at least a year of running 10-15 miles per week before you
begin training for the event. If you do not build such a base,
you greatly increase the likelihood that you will get injured
and have to stop running for weeks, if not months. Building a
running base slowly gives your body a chance to get used to the
kind of pounding it will take during marathon training.
Most marathon training should be done very easy, at 60-70% of
Maximum Heart Rate (MHR) or about two minutes per mile slower
than your current 10K race pace. You should slowly build up your
long run to 12 miles. Then continue running 12 miles once a week
for at least three months before your goal marathon. I recommend
that you spend at least three months (June-August) building your
mileage up to 40-70 miles per week, with the mileage goals based
on how long you have been running, your past mileage history,
and your work and family schedules.
You should follow the 10% rule. This means that you should not
increase your weekly mileage or long run by more than 10% in any
consecutive week. I also recommend that every fourth or fifth
week you reduce your mileage by 30% to allow your body the
chance to recover and assimilate all the mileage you have been
running. I want to stress that this build up should be done very
slowly with lots of easy miles. If you run too hard and too fast
during this phase of training, you will overtrain and probably
go into the marathon already beaten up.
After building up your mileage, veteran marathoners can
introduce a dose of anaerobic threshold running (AT). AT runs
are done at 80-85% of MHR; that translates roughly to your 10-
mile or 15K race pace. I suggest doing three times one mile with
a 400-meter recovery as your main AT workout and supplementing
it with a 20-minute continuous AT run. You can substitute an AT
workout with a race between 5K and 10K in length. The only
restrictions I would place on AT workouts are that they should
not be done back to back nor should they be done the day after a
long run. You can also substitute a hard hilly run for the AT.
Runners averaging 50+ miles per week can incorporate a third AT
workout.
Those marathoners trying for a specific time goal should be
doing Predicted Marathon Pace (PMP) runs. Start with 3 miles,
and every other week, increase it by two until you get to 13
miles of nonstop PMP. Running at marathon pace will help you
learn the pace of the race so that you do not go out too hard
and crash at mile twenty. It helps your leg muscles get used to
the very specific range of motion associated with your marathon
pace. This will also help delay the onset of fatigue toward the
end of the marathon. The only caveat about PMP runs is that you
need to set a realistic pace. A general rule of thumb is that
you can probably run your marathon 45-90 seconds per mile slower
than your 10K race pace. The faster you are, the shorter the
gap. A thirty-eight minute 10K runner (6:06/mile) can probably
run around three hours (6:52/mile), whereas a fifty minute 10K
runner (8:00/mile) should be able to run 4:15 (9:30/mile).
Coach West offers private coaching for motivated adult
runners. If you have a question for him, contact him at kirtwest@erols.com