Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
Again, as a triathlete you have to make what you do count. So for running, you should have
at least one day a week where you emphasis some technique work. Where you run through
some forms and after those forms what you can do are some strides. A lot of triathletes
think, I race 5 K or 10 K or half a marathon so they do all their goal paced work at that
pace and slower. And really, you should do some work much faster then you race. For the
neuromuscular benefit, for the efficiency benefit, for the benefits to your form, all
those things. To activate fast switch muscle fibers. So one thing we can do are strides.
And I use strides, I start out at the beginning of the year with just a set of three by one
hundred. And a stride is a brisk one hundred meter run, it can be done on a track, it can
be done on a road, it can be on a trail, and it's done real brisk as fast as you can go
while maintaining form. So you want to think about the elbows being close in, the knees
coming up, the heels kicking up and smooth, fast, efficient running. As soon as your form
starts to break down you want to slow down. Start out with three by one hundred, each
one just a little bit faster with full recovery in between. You can walk back, or you can
jog back really slowly. And progress over the course of the year to where on your bigger
weeks you do six by one hundred strides. Strides can also be used after a warm up and a form
set, as in final get your heart rate up effort before a local running event, 5 K or 10 K
fun run, or before a big session of intervals or something on the track.