That 8 Minute Mile

Hey friends!

For those runners out there, I've set a long term goal of training for a sustainable 8 minute mile. I am really interested to hear from others who are on a similar path or who have already achieved that kind of sustainable 8 minute mile pace - how long did you train to reach that goal?

Everyone's fitness level is going to be different, as is their time frame of what it took/takes to get there; I'm simply curious as to the path each of you went down and your experiences.

That's all! :smile: Hope everyone is doing well!
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Replies

  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    Looking forward to seeing the discussion here, this is something I would also love to accomplish.
  • DX2JX2
    DX2JX2 Posts: 1,921 Member
    Run much longer much slower. What do you mean by sustainable? One continuous mile only or for multiple miles? If the former, then once you can run a sub-10 minute 10K you should be able to handle one 8 minute mile.

  • pondee629
    pondee629 Posts: 2,469 Member
    " run a sub-10 minute 10K you should be able to handle one 8 minute mile." A sub 10 minute 10K is quite an achievement, no? ;-)
  • TavistockToad
    TavistockToad Posts: 35,719 Member
    pondee629 wrote: »
    " run a sub-10 minute 10K you should be able to handle one 8 minute mile." A sub 10 minute 10K is quite an achievement, no? ;-)

    :laugh:
  • RunnerGrl1982
    RunnerGrl1982 Posts: 412 Member
    DX2JX2 wrote: »
    Run much longer much slower. What do you mean by sustainable? One continuous mile only or for multiple miles? If the former, then once you can run a sub-10 minute 10K you should be able to handle one 8 minute mile.

    I probably worded that oddly, apologies. For sustainable, I was implying continuous miles (ie: marathon pacing)
  • Nativestar56
    Nativestar56 Posts: 112 Member
    Sustainable over what distance? My parkrun PB is a 7.57 pace but my long distance pace (10k and over) is around 9.20.

    I found the best way to get my parkrun time down was to slowly increase overall weekly mileage and have one long slow run at the weekend.
  • Tacklewasher
    Tacklewasher Posts: 7,122 Member
    I "think" this is my target for this year. If I do the math right, this would be ~25 mins for a 5K, or 5min/km for 5K. PB for me so far is 27:33 for 5K and my latest runs are ~28:15, but that is on snow and ice.

    Plan is to run a lot more. ~50KM per week, with a couple of the runs being speed work, and the bulk to be longer slow runs. Following the 80/20 rules of running.
  • RunnerGrl1982
    RunnerGrl1982 Posts: 412 Member
    edited February 2019
    Sustainable over what distance? My parkrun PB is a 7.57 pace but my long distance pace (10k and over) is around 9.20.

    I found the best way to get my parkrun time down was to slowly increase overall weekly mileage and have one long slow run at the weekend.

    7:57, that's awesome. :smile:

    Sustainable over a 10K length running up to marathon pace, eventually. I was just interested in hearing people's experiences on their own time frame of getting down to that pace. I totally get needing to increase mileage slowly. I'm up to 40mpw right now and working on slowly building that up over the rest of this year +.
    I "think" this is my target for this year. If I do the math right, this would be ~25 mins for a 5K, or 5min/km for 5K. PB for me so far is 27:33 for 5K and my latest runs are ~28:15, but that is on snow and ice.

    Plan is to run a lot more. ~50KM per week, with a couple of the runs being speed work, and the bulk to be longer slow runs. Following the 80/20 rules of running.

    Nice! That's great! I also follow the 80/20 rule. :smile:
  • Nativestar56
    Nativestar56 Posts: 112 Member
    7:57, that's awesome. :smile:

    Sustainable over a 10K length running up to marathon pace, eventually. I was just interested in hearing people's experiences on their own time frame of getting down to that pace. I totally get needing to increase mileage slowly. I'm up to 40mpw right now and working on slowly building that up over the rest of this year +.

    Thanks! I'm working on increasing my mileage, I'm up to 18mpw so 40mpw is really impressive to me! I've learnt my lesson the painful way about increasing slowly so I'm pretty careful to not go too quickly and I'm only adding on an extra 1-1.5 miles a week.
  • RunnerGirl238
    RunnerGirl238 Posts: 448 Member
    I'm interested too. I can do a 9 minute...but 8 is definitely a long term goal.
  • Djproulx
    Djproulx Posts: 3,084 Member
    I'm an "ok" runner at best,(at 61 years old and 180lbs) but I ran a sub 8 minute pace consistently for the 5k distance in training and races during the 2017 season. I had restarted running in 2012 after a 15 year layoff.

    My goal during training was to improve my half marathon run split during triathlons, so the 5k speed improvement was just a bonus. To train for it, my coach set up track workouts on Tuesdays as one of my 3 runs/week. We did various speed sessions on the track each Tuesday, plus 2 other runs weekly, one of them being a long run.

    Here's a couple track workouts that really helped me increase my speed at both the 5k and 13.1 distance:

    The first is called the "popsicle stick" workout. It is fun when done on a track with a group. After a warm up mile, each runner takes a popsicle stick and carries it with them for the prescribed run time(say 2, 3 or 4 minutes) and then drops it where they stand and walks back to the starting line. This is typically a 30-45 second rest, then run again. The idea is to start at a modest pace for the first block, then increase speed with each subsequent block so you move the popsicle stick farther and farther each time. The last one is meant to be run "all out". Typically we'd do 5 sets of this, then a cool down mile. With a competitive group, this got to be nearly vomit inducing. :)

    The second is by far my favorite track workout for increasing a runners ability to push hard over an extended time period, like a HM. Its a simple workout, but very effective. Again, its easiest to run this on a track or somewhere with easily measured intervals. Start with a 1 mile warm up. Then runners do laps alternating between 5k pace and Half Marathon pace. So, as an example, Lap 1 would be run at a 7:50pace, Lap 2 at a 9:00 pace, Lap 3 at a 7:50pace, Lap 4 at a 9:00 pace, etcetera. Finish with a 1 mile cool down.

    We'd start early in the season with 12 laps of work(3 miles) then build up over the weeks to 16 or 20 laps of work. With a warm up mile and a cool down mile, the 20 lap sessions yielded a 7 mile workout. After a few months of speed work, my open half marathon time improved from a 9:10 to an 8:43 pace during 2017, with my 5k time getting down to 7:50/mile.

    Speed work can increase the risk of injury for newer runners, but for those runners who have enough mileage under their belts, it is very helpful. Since focusing on longer course racing last year, I stopped speed work in favor of more distance focused training.


  • taneillehopkins98
    taneillehopkins98 Posts: 6 Member
    I'll join in...I can get a 10 minute mile but a 9:30 1500m. Long term goal is 8 minutes and I have been wanting to get this for a while. I am mostly a long distance runner from 2 to 3 miles, but I need help getting the mile down to 8 minutes. I will force myself to train extra hard in March. :)
  • Chieflrg
    Chieflrg Posts: 9,097 Member
    I never trained running per sae, but I'm a athlete and it took me about a month to achieve sub 8 min mile average for 5k and just over 9min miles on 10k-25k when I ran every day for about a year or so when I was 45ish of age.

    Just add mileage load increases about 10% a week or follow a program. Once you get miles kicking, you don't really need to try to kick faster...it just happens because you increase your fitness for running.
  • pierinifitness
    pierinifitness Posts: 2,226 Member
    edited March 2019
    As a former fun runner who described himself as a retired runner, I've jumped back into the action and am a work in progress. I never ran a marathon but did do fun runs of the 10k variety and ran longer distances at a sub 8:00 mile pace. Now, I'm working on a sustained 10:00 mile pace and do have as a goal to run a 10k sometime in 2019 at a 9:00 mile pace.

    What I've learned is to run fast you must train fast and while longer runs are part of building a base, you got to put time in running faster. What I"m currently doing is taking a run walk run approach getting in one hour of running this way. I've had best results doing 3 minutes running and one minute walking rounds because the 3 minute runs can be at that faster pace. Compare this to runs I've done using 5 minutes running and one minute walking. One hour later, the distance covered is less than when doing it 3 minutes running and one minute walking because of run speed.

    Don't know if this helps but just wanted to share my two cents. Good luck.

    p.s. I'm age 64 and it's definitely harder jumping back on the running saddle and reclaiming some pace speed from the good olden and younger days.
  • pridesabtch
    pridesabtch Posts: 2,464 Member
    The longest distance I've run is 13.1(PR 1:42:10), but I did quite a few time trials on my bike. Faster came from the same things training and diet. There is a lot of great training advice above, but the other thing that kicked my time down was getting lean, strong and mentally ready.

    I made my diet about fuel. Coach had me on a very specific high protein, lower carb diet that he'd adjust based on events or training. I did strength training in the gym only 1/week. Most of my strength workouts came from hills. Fast hills, slow hills, steep hills, dreaded windy steep hills that you think will never end (mental game there).

    I also had to become comfortable with discomfort. Finding that point just beyond comfortable that you can sustain takes mental fortitude and knowledge of what your body can do. These are also things you need to practice.

    Once every 2 weeks, I'd do a "trial race" each time with a different focus, lower HR, faster climbs, negative splits, go out fast and then ease into it, different fuels, whatever. For running this was a set 8 mile loop. Sometimes I blew up, sometimes I couldn't find my rhythm, sometimes the "goal" just didn't fit my running style, but I always learned something. Once a month I went and tried to kill it. I learned what my strong suits were, that I knew how to push and how to attack a race course. I'd put this knowledge to work at local races. I'm super competitive, and I mostly knew who I should beat and who I wanted to beat.

    I start out fast and it takes about a mile for my breathing and stride to stabilize. That mile is uncomfortable, but I knew it would pass and that I didn't need worry about it. I found out that I am not a great climber but I am a moderate consistent climber and usually have a tiny kick as I approach the top. Always a great place to pass people. Again my breathing gets wonkie, but I know it will settle. The big one that I learned is I had a lot of self doubt. I seem to to think I'm going to die (fail) and I stop like 100m before the finish. If I let myself stop, it was never for more than a few seconds. Not enough to recover, just enough to let a few people pass me (damn!). If I'd needed to stop longer it might have been because I had kicked too soon, but that wasn't it. I was just afraid of failing or disappointing people. Silly but true. I've stopped in 5k's all the way up to half marathons in view of the finish, for no apparent reason. I learned through practice at these mostly local races to push through that doubt/discomfort and finish strong.

    Always remember that discomfort is ok, pain is not.

    It all takes time on the road, track or path. I'm currently trying to rediscover the drive I had then. Typing this out reminds me how much I enjoyed the challenge and thrill of racing. Hope you can take something from my experience that helps.
  • RunnerGrl1982
    RunnerGrl1982 Posts: 412 Member
    lporter229 wrote: »

    Sustainable over a 10K length running up to marathon pace, eventually. I was just interested in hearing people's experiences on their own time frame of getting down to that pace. I totally get needing to increase mileage slowly. I'm up to 40mpw right now and working on slowly building that up over the rest of this year +.

    The jump from running a sub 8 min/mile 10K to sub 8 min/mile marathon is pretty huge. I would venture to say that many, many people that can routinely run a sub 8 min/mile 10k will never be able to hit that pace for a marathon *points to self*. The big difference is that you can run 5Ks and 10Ks at paces above your lactate threshold. That is not the case for a a marathon. For example, my PR paces at the popular distances set within about a year of each other are: 5k-7:04, 10K-7:15, HM-7:38, marathon-8:20. As you can see, the drop off in pace increases greatly as the distance increases.

    But since you asked for personal accounts of what it took to get under 8 min/mile, here is mine in a nut shell. I ran for many years through my 20s and 30s, just as a recreational runner. Most of my running was done in the 9-10 min/mile range, regardless of distance. I didn't do too many races, but when I did most of my times fell into this range for 5ks up to half marathons. My first 3 half marathons were all 2:05. At least I was consistent.

    In 2013, at 41 years old, my friend convinced me to run a marathon with her. I agreed, but she was a relatively new runner and her pace was a bit slower than mine. However, we trained together for most of our long runs at that slower pace and we ran the entire race together. We finished in just under 5 hours (around 11:30 pace). Not long after that, I had signed up for a half marathon on my own. I went out and ran as a normally did and was shocked to see that my pace was 8:30. Without really trying, by training for a marathon, even at very slow pace, my pace had improved by nearly a minute per mile over my previous times. So then I got the bug and wondered what I could do in a marathon if I ran it on my own.

    I picked up a copy of "80/20 Running" and that book was really what changed everything for me. In January of 2015 I ran my first solo marathon and finished in 1:52:26. Since I knew I was pretty close to my Boston qualifying time, I spent the rest of the year training for an October marathon to try and BQ. I used the intermediate plan that is in the book which included one day of intervals, one day of tempo runs along with long runs that had some speed work embedded in them, which I think were the most effective runs. I ran my marathon in October of 2015 at a PR time of 3:38:26 and qualified for Boston.

    Since then, I have used this general format of training and have achieved all of the PRs I listed above as a result. I think time, patience and consistency are the key. Of course, I should also mention that, at 47 years old now, I am starting to slow down. All of those cumulative miles eventually begin to take their toll. In 2015 I was running 6 days a week and maxing out around 60 mpw. I am currently running 4-5 days and will max out in this training cycle around 45 mpw. I think early on in your training, those extra mile really pay off, but there eventually comes a point where they offer diminishing returns as your body starts to notice the wear and tear.

    Thank you for sharing your experience and perspective on things. This was incredibly insightful. I picked up running roughly 5 years ago, but have only been consistently running for a year now. Most of my times currently are in the 9's, and I run my first marathon in late March. My relative pace will be somewhere between 10:30 and 11:00.

    It's a great point you brought up about maxing out around 60mpw, I was under the assumption it would most likely take 60 - 70mpw consistently to start seeing results over time. I'm dedicated to working my pace down over time, I'm not in a hurry, but it is a goal. Whether I reach that goal or not, will remain to be seen - but at least it's out there!

    I haven't read the book you've mentioned, but I do train under those metrics currently. I should look into that and pick up a copy to continue educating myself.

    Congratulations on qualifying for Boston! That is also one of my primary reasons I've set a goal to hit an 8 minute pace. Thank you again, your personal account and information has been incredibly helpful and thought provoking!
  • RunnerGrl1982
    RunnerGrl1982 Posts: 412 Member
    edited March 2019
    Djproulx wrote: »
    I'm an "ok" runner at best,(at 61 years old and 180lbs) but I ran a sub 8 minute pace consistently for the 5k distance in training and races during the 2017 season. I had restarted running in 2012 after a 15 year layoff.

    My goal during training was to improve my half marathon run split during triathlons, so the 5k speed improvement was just a bonus. To train for it, my coach set up track workouts on Tuesdays as one of my 3 runs/week. We did various speed sessions on the track each Tuesday, plus 2 other runs weekly, one of them being a long run.

    Here's a couple track workouts that really helped me increase my speed at both the 5k and 13.1 distance:

    The first is called the "popsicle stick" workout. It is fun when done on a track with a group. After a warm up mile, each runner takes a popsicle stick and carries it with them for the prescribed run time(say 2, 3 or 4 minutes) and then drops it where they stand and walks back to the starting line. This is typically a 30-45 second rest, then run again. The idea is to start at a modest pace for the first block, then increase speed with each subsequent block so you move the popsicle stick farther and farther each time. The last one is meant to be run "all out". Typically we'd do 5 sets of this, then a cool down mile. With a competitive group, this got to be nearly vomit inducing. :)

    The second is by far my favorite track workout for increasing a runners ability to push hard over an extended time period, like a HM. Its a simple workout, but very effective. Again, its easiest to run this on a track or somewhere with easily measured intervals. Start with a 1 mile warm up. Then runners do laps alternating between 5k pace and Half Marathon pace. So, as an example, Lap 1 would be run at a 7:50pace, Lap 2 at a 9:00 pace, Lap 3 at a 7:50pace, Lap 4 at a 9:00 pace, etcetera. Finish with a 1 mile cool down.

    We'd start early in the season with 12 laps of work(3 miles) then build up over the weeks to 16 or 20 laps of work. With a warm up mile and a cool down mile, the 20 lap sessions yielded a 7 mile workout. After a few months of speed work, my open half marathon time improved from a 9:10 to an 8:43 pace during 2017, with my 5k time getting down to 7:50/mile.

    Speed work can increase the risk of injury for newer runners, but for those runners who have enough mileage under their belts, it is very helpful. Since focusing on longer course racing last year, I stopped speed work in favor of more distance focused training.

    Oh wow! Thank you for sharing these workouts. I hadn't run across those variations before. Very intriguing. I bet the Popsicle stick workout can be very challenging and competitive. I'm internally competitive with myself, so I could see how this could easily ramp up quickly.

    I appreciate you sharing your experience and workout ethics. This was quite good! :smile:

    nlmackey98 wrote: »
    The longest distance I've run is 13.1(PR 1:42:10), but I did quite a few time trials on my bike. Faster came from the same things training and diet. There is a lot of great training advice above, but the other thing that kicked my time down was getting lean, strong and mentally ready.

    I made my diet about fuel. Coach had me on a very specific high protein, lower carb diet that he'd adjust based on events or training. I did strength training in the gym only 1/week. Most of my strength workouts came from hills. Fast hills, slow hills, steep hills, dreaded windy steep hills that you think will never end (mental game there).

    I also had to become comfortable with discomfort. Finding that point just beyond comfortable that you can sustain takes mental fortitude and knowledge of what your body can do. These are also things you need to practice.

    Once every 2 weeks, I'd do a "trial race" each time with a different focus, lower HR, faster climbs, negative splits, go out fast and then ease into it, different fuels, whatever. For running this was a set 8 mile loop. Sometimes I blew up, sometimes I couldn't find my rhythm, sometimes the "goal" just didn't fit my running style, but I always learned something. Once a month I went and tried to kill it. I learned what my strong suits were, that I knew how to push and how to attack a race course. I'd put this knowledge to work at local races. I'm super competitive, and I mostly knew who I should beat and who I wanted to beat.

    I start out fast and it takes about a mile for my breathing and stride to stabilize. That mile is uncomfortable, but I knew it would pass and that I didn't need worry about it. I found out that I am not a great climber but I am a moderate consistent climber and usually have a tiny kick as I approach the top. Always a great place to pass people. Again my breathing gets wonkie, but I know it will settle. The big one that I learned is I had a lot of self doubt. I seem to to think I'm going to die (fail) and I stop like 100m before the finish. If I let myself stop, it was never for more than a few seconds. Not enough to recover, just enough to let a few people pass me (damn!). If I'd needed to stop longer it might have been because I had kicked too soon, but that wasn't it. I was just afraid of failing or disappointing people. Silly but true. I've stopped in 5k's all the way up to half marathons in view of the finish, for no apparent reason. I learned through practice at these mostly local races to push through that doubt/discomfort and finish strong.

    Always remember that discomfort is ok, pain is not.

    It all takes time on the road, track or path. I'm currently trying to rediscover the drive I had then. Typing this out reminds me how much I enjoyed the challenge and thrill of racing. Hope you can take something from my experience that helps.

    Thanks for your account on training! I'm pretty strict about my diet as well, though mostly due to being in the tail in bulk of my marathon training. It does make a difference. I didn't think about running different types of hills. This is poor logistics on my part. I do hill sessions about once every month, but I hadn't changed up the venue. That is an excellent point you make, because I have become somewhat adapted to the current hill I'm running on, even at various effort based sessions.

    Appreciate the time you spent sharing this! Very intriguing and helpful information!



  • DX2JX2
    DX2JX2 Posts: 1,921 Member
    pondee629 wrote: »
    " run a sub-10 minute 10K you should be able to handle one 8 minute mile." A sub 10 minute 10K is quite an achievement, no? ;-)

    :) I definitely didn't mean to imply it was easy. But neither is an 8 minute mile.
  • mburgess458
    mburgess458 Posts: 480 Member
    DX2JX2 wrote: »
    pondee629 wrote: »
    " run a sub-10 minute 10K you should be able to handle one 8 minute mile." A sub 10 minute 10K is quite an achievement, no? ;-)

    :) I definitely didn't mean to imply it was easy. But neither is an 8 minute mile.

    I think you missed their joke. You said "a sub 10 minute 10K", not "a 10K at a sub 10 minute per mile pace". Running 10K in under 10 minutes total (not per mile) would be quite an achievement, like running 37.2 mph for 10 minutes if my math is correct.
  • gradchica27
    gradchica27 Posts: 777 Member
    For shorter distances, I noticed my pace dropped significantly (from ~9:45 to ~7:50 for a 5k) after adding in strength training 3x/week and adding in some short sprints once a week. I’m not running now, but I was shocked at what a difference that extra lower body muscle made, even with me running less often. Granted I would average about 9 min/mile over a 5k, so I can’t speak to endurance + speed.
  • RunnerGrl1982
    RunnerGrl1982 Posts: 412 Member
    I ran a 5k today, it made me think of this thread as I PBed it with a time of 27:14 which is 8:37 minute miles...

    My mind is actually blown by the fact that I can run a 5k at a pace that starts with an 8... :bigsmile:

    The last time I did a chip timed 5k was in 2016 and my time was 30:33.

    All I wanted to do when I started running was run a 10 minute mile, and now here I am with the 8s! I've been running for 4 years, the first 2 of them very inconsistently, the last 2 consistently training for 3 or 4 races a year, 10ks and half marathons.

    I only started doing speed work once a week in February, so pretty much all my miles are slow and easy.

    :drinker: :drinker: :drinker:

    Congratulations! That's a fantastic result. What a way to PB over your last race!
  • TavistockToad
    TavistockToad Posts: 35,719 Member
    I ran a 5k today, it made me think of this thread as I PBed it with a time of 27:14 which is 8:37 minute miles...

    My mind is actually blown by the fact that I can run a 5k at a pace that starts with an 8... :bigsmile:

    The last time I did a chip timed 5k was in 2016 and my time was 30:33.

    All I wanted to do when I started running was run a 10 minute mile, and now here I am with the 8s! I've been running for 4 years, the first 2 of them very inconsistently, the last 2 consistently training for 3 or 4 races a year, 10ks and half marathons.

    I only started doing speed work once a week in February, so pretty much all my miles are slow and easy.

    :drinker: :drinker: :drinker:

    Congratulations! That's a fantastic result. What a way to PB over your last race!

    Thanks! I did a park run in January, and got a time of 28:48 So I was hoping for around 28:30 as the park run was short, but am absolutely delighted with my time!
  • WilmaValley
    WilmaValley Posts: 1,092 Member
    Great info!
  • lporter229
    lporter229 Posts: 4,907 Member
    I ran a 5k today, it made me think of this thread as I PBed it with a time of 27:14 which is 8:37 minute miles...

    My mind is actually blown by the fact that I can run a 5k at a pace that starts with an 8... :bigsmile:

    The last time I did a chip timed 5k was in 2016 and my time was 30:33.

    All I wanted to do when I started running was run a 10 minute mile, and now here I am with the 8s! I've been running for 4 years, the first 2 of them very inconsistently, the last 2 consistently training for 3 or 4 races a year, 10ks and half marathons.

    I only started doing speed work once a week in February, so pretty much all my miles are slow and easy.

    :drinker: :drinker: :drinker:

    Congrats! That feeling of "I can't believe I just did that..." is so motivating! All of your hard work has paid off!
  • robertw486
    robertw486 Posts: 2,399 Member
    Djproulx wrote: »
    Speed work can increase the risk of injury for newer runners, but for those runners who have enough mileage under their belts, it is very helpful. Since focusing on longer course racing last year, I stopped speed work in favor of more distance focused training.

    What I've learned is to run fast you must train fast and while longer runs are part of building a base, you got to put time in running faster. What I"m currently doing is taking a run walk run approach getting in one hour of running this way. I've had best results doing 3 minutes running and one minute walking rounds because the 3 minute runs can be at that faster pace. Compare this to runs I've done using 5 minutes running and one minute walking. One hour later, the distance covered is less than when doing it 3 minutes running and one minute walking because of run speed.

    Don't know if this helps but just wanted to share my two cents. Good luck.

    p.s. I'm age 64 and it's definitely harder jumping back on the running saddle and reclaiming some pace speed from the good olden and younger days.

    nlmackey98 wrote: »
    I also had to become comfortable with discomfort. Finding that point just beyond comfortable that you can sustain takes mental fortitude and knowledge of what your body can do. These are also things you need to practice.

    Once every 2 weeks, I'd do a "trial race" each time with a different focus, lower HR, faster climbs, negative splits, go out fast and then ease into it, different fuels, whatever. For running this was a set 8 mile loop. Sometimes I blew up, sometimes I couldn't find my rhythm, sometimes the "goal" just didn't fit my running style, but I always learned something. Once a month I went and tried to kill it. I learned what my strong suits were, that I knew how to push and how to attack a race course. I'd put this knowledge to work at local races. I'm super competitive, and I mostly knew who I should beat and who I wanted to beat.


    All of these stood out to me, and applied to me gaining back speed I had lost over years of not running much if at all. Note that I am not running marathon distances (never have) but have trained up to about 15 mile distances.

    And not to go against the grain, as I know a lot of input here comes from accomplished runners. But both in my younger years and now I got quicker with very little running, but mostly doing other things to work on my cardio base and for strength/speed work. I like exercise in general, but never really loved running the way some do. I could do it, but a swim or bike ride, hike or.... well just about anything was usually more fun to me except for rare occasions when I enjoy a run.

    When I was younger in my military days, running was easy. I ran what I had to for training and little more. My only half marathon was completed just quicker than 8 mile pace, and the last 10k I ran with friends as a group supporting the slowest guy for most of it, and still ran in the 7 minute pace. Twenty some years after I got out of the military, speed was harder to come by. I could run up to about 10k at a 10 mile pace within months of exercising more again, but improving on that was slow at first.

    I still rarely run. I have some lower back issues and elliptical, biking, uphill jogs, etc are easier on the back than any distance runs. But after some time with intense intervals on the elliptical, pushing higher paces longer on the bike, etc the speed started coming. In actual running I still suck at proper pacing, and always did. And I haven't quite matched my last 10k time. But I got close enough to call it there. And I probably ran less than 100 miles last year.


    Something that is very vital for me is an aspect that @nlmackey98 brought up. Finding a way to be comfortable being uncomfortable is a must for me. That and the part of knowing my strengths and weaknesses is a big part of the game. And for me fortunately one of the strengths is that mental game. When I find myself gassed, dropping pace, wanting to shorten a workout, etc, I can just usually revert back to the younger days of military training, put my head back in the game, and suck it up.


    And another point that was made by @lporter229 is very important IMO. You have to be quick at shorter distances and build with time and volume to support the longer distances. I actually started down in th 2-3 mile equivalent distances on my elliptical to up pace, and then over time added miles.
  • pierinifitness
    pierinifitness Posts: 2,226 Member
    Saw my son's high school and cross country coach at a high school meet last that my son and I went to, 20 years after his high school running "career". My son was a 1,600 meter and 3,200 meter runner in high school and a decent one at it. He's always said how he could have been better had he done more upper body exercise work. The typical training approach his coach put him through back then was run, run and run more, then perhaps a set of pushups at the end of it all.

    In talking to the coach, he acknowledged how he's now having his runners do more upper body work and even spending days on the exercise bicycle rather than another run. He acknowledged he's having good results with this different approach, less athlete injuries and better race performance. He had two sisters who made it to the state meet. The event we attended is what's called sections, leading to the state meet. I saw his "girls" run and they were spectacular.

    So, running is a whole body movement and that upper body needs to be strong. My two cent share this morning.