| This program is
designed to prepare you for a 5K and/or a 10K. I divide the workouts
into three different categories -1. walkers, 2. first time runners
or those getting back into running, and 3. those wanting to get
faster.
Before getting started, it is very
important to understand how your body responds to workouts and what
causes improvements in fitness and endurance. It is not during the
work session that your body improves, it is during the rest. No
rest, No improvement. The body responds to physical stress by
adapting in three main areas; the heart and lungs become more
efficient, the muscles become stronger and the bones and tendons
increase density. If you increase your activity too much, your body
will breakdown. If you are starting properly, you will avoid
soreness and injury.
There are three main factors in a
training program; Duration, Intensity and Frequency
(DIF). It is very important that as you try to make improvements,
you don’t increase these factors by more than ten percent per week.
Most people go from sedentary or low levels to high levels of all
three and end up injured within three weeks and then take 6-8 weeks
to recover.
It is important when starting out
to keep your intensity and duration low and get your frequency up to
5 days a week. After you get your frequency up, you can then
increase your duration to get you ready for a 10K. There is a rule
that in a one time effort, you can do three times the distance of
your average run/walk. We will prepare you better than this, but it
is nice to know you don’t have to rush your training to be prepared.
We will keep the Intensity low until you are used to the frequency
and duration of this program.
Your training program should have a
full range of workouts to maximize your potential, avoid injury and
boredom. The different types of workouts are long intervals, short
intervals, resistance work (hills), steady states, over-distance and
the un-workout, rest. Planning the rotation and intensity of these
workouts is the secret to becoming a runner or walker.
This program will focus on the
goals of each of the groups. It is very important to understand how
the body responds to exercise and how much is too much. We will have
a very conservative approach for the first 4-6 weeks. The workouts I
propose are not written in stone, listen to your body first, the
workout program second.
For more info,
call Paul Carrozza at 536-6969 or email at
paul@runtex.com.
|
Week 1 |
Walkers |
First Time
runner or Getting back in shape |
Runners wanting
improvement |
| Tuesday |
rest |
rest |
rest |
| Wednesday |
20 min walk |
20 min walk/jog |
30 min easy run |
| Thursday |
rest |
rest |
rest |
| Friday |
30 min walk |
rest |
30 min easy run
|
| Saturday |
walk
*45 min |
30 min walk/jog
|
45 min easy run |
| Sunday* |
rest |
rest |
rest |
| Monday |
30 min walk |
rest |
20 min easy run |
*You can
interchange Saturday or Sundays Workout. Try to avoid hills this
week.
|