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Running Training Article
Running Hills Can
be a Key to Improving Your Performance
from
AmericanRunning.org Let's face it, hills
hurt. They tire you out. They slow you down. Fortunately, running hills is an
acquired skill. Anyone can improve. Look at it this way, the better you get on
them the more runners you can pass (or avoid getting passed by) on hills in
races, and the less time you'll lose on the finishing clock. Even if you race
on the flats, hills will help improve performance.
Why take the
hill-pill: A big advantage of hill training is that it allows you to
simultaneously work on aerobic, anaerobic, and muscular fitness. Different hill
workouts can hit a variety of training goals. Running hills, like lifting weights, is
resistance training. Hills strengthen the leg muscles to meet the specific
demands of running. By working hard on hills, you force the muscles to overcome
the incline and resistance of gravity. This strengthens the driving muscles the
hamstrings, calves, buttocks, and particularly the quadriceps, which don't get
much work on the flats. Fatigued quads are particularly a problem late in
races, especially marathons. It's hard to pick your feet up and move them
forward if the quads are growing tired of this important repetitive task.
Ankles strengthen as the feet push off to bound up
hills. Since you have to really pump the arms to get up hills, your upper body
is strengthened, too. With hill training, you'll increase resistance to
fatigue during races. That will help you maintain good running form and a
steady pace. Since you have to concentrate on driving the arms, lifting the
knees and pushing off the feet to get up hills in training, running form will
be exaggerated and improved. As
with fast intervals, you'll also be able to tolerate greater levels of lactic
acid, and extend your lactate threshold.
Hill training bolsters your confidence, too. You
don't have to do repeats up the same hill in a race, so a few scattered hills
on race day won't seem so bad. As you develop courage by hill training you
won't be intimidated by one of those killer hills during a race. You'll better
tolerate the discomfort of overcoming hills and be psychologically prepared to
"hang on" to the top.
In fact, you may even look forward to tough hills
since you'll gain on your competition. You'll be able to attack the hill
before it attacks you. Hill training is valuable when preparing for all
distances, but particularly marathons. Add it at the beginning of the
strengthening phase of your training cycle as a transition to fast track
intervals. By strengthening muscles before you start training fast, you'll
minimize injury and increase the quality of track workouts. But hills can also
be used to sharpen for races, especially hilly events. Hill-repeat
guidelines
Although running hills often at
training pace improves overall strength, it won't make you faster. To get that
benefit, you have to repetitively work the hills hard. You exaggerate form and
effort to be able to run up hills in races more efficiently and to run
faster on the flats, too. Before starting any type of hill training, ease
into it by running over hilly courses two or three times a week, increasing the
intensity slightly on the uphills. When you're ready for hill repeats, start
conservatively with moderate hills.
Ease into hill repeats by running
10K race pace or tempo pace. To increase distance-running strength,
progressively increase the grade, speed, and number of hill repeats but
not all at once a little at a time as you get more fit.
Hill repeats are basically like track intervals, but
you go up instead of around. Run easy for 15 to 30 minutes, then run slightly
faster than training pace up the hill to further prepare the body for the
intensity of these workouts. Run the first repeat slightly slower than your
goal intensity. Try to run the rest of the workout at goal intensity.
Run fast, but under control. Think of it as about
85% effort, or about as hard or slightly faster than you would work the hills
in a typical race. If your pace slows dramatically or form and breathing become
ragged, reassess the intensity or abort the workout.
Begin your effort 20 yards from the base of the hill
so you can gather speed before starting up the grade. This eliminates the
strain of a standing start on a steep slope. Continue running hard for another
20 yards on the flats, if possible, at the top of the hill. This tactic helps
you pull away from competitors on race day.
At the top, don't stop. This is a continuous run at
intermittent paces. Recover by running back down nice and easy. The recovery
run should take about three times as long as it took you to run up a short,
steep hill. Return somewhat faster on a longer, gentler hill: about twice the
time it took you to go up. If you have to walk down all or part of the way,
you've run up too fast. The steeper the hill, the less shock you'll get going
up, but the more shock you'll get going down. Relax and run down gently.
Long hill repeats These are analogous to
running long intervals on the track. Find a moderate-grade (5% to 8% or three
to four degrees) hill just steep enough to try the legs and just long enough to
try the mind. Long hills are particularly good for building strength and
endurance for races of half-marathon to the marathon. Find a hill that is
about one-quarter to one half-mile in length. It should take about two to five
minutes to run up at your 5K to 10K race pace effort or slightly faster. If the
hill is too long, the recovery coming back down will be too long.
If you can't find a long-enough hill, run hard on
the flats going into the hill so your total hard effort is at least three
minutes. Do about three to five repeats, five to 10 for more experienced
competitors.
Short hill repeats
These are particularly good for sharpening speed for races of 5K to 10K since
they are run at faster than race-pace effort. They are of similar benefit as
short, hard- and fast-paced intervals on the track.
Pick a hill that's 50 to 200
yards in length and steep enough (10% to 15% or seven to nine degree grade) to
really challenge you, but not so steep that it makes good form impossible. It
should take about 30 to 90 seconds to get to the top.
If the hill is too steep or too
long, you won't be able to maintain a strong effort to the top. You don't have
to run these too hard since gravity will take care of the intensity. Do not
sprint all-out. Envision you're running to a 5K-race finish line at the crest
of the hill. Do about four to six repeats, six to 12 for more experienced
competitors.
(This column is adapted from the
completely rewritten third edition of The Competitive Runner's Handbook
released in April 1999. This book as well as The Runner's Handbook and The
Runner's Training Diary are available at The American Running Store, or call
1-800-776-2732 to order. For more information concerning Bob Glover's running
classes offered through the New York Road Runners Club call 914-366-4175.)
Volume 17, Number 7, Running & FitNews
© The American Running
Association, a non-profit, educational association of runners and medical
professionals dedicated to promoting running nationwide. For over 30 years, the
American Running Association and its professional division, the American
Medical Athletic Association, have provided information and support to runners
nationwide.
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