Oct 2014
4:47pm, 22 Oct 2014
54,706 posts
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Gobi
Thats shit !!!!!!!!!!
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Oct 2014
4:53pm, 22 Oct 2014
19,688 posts
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SPR
Indeed. My club have lost the 5 open meetings we host annually (although I was injured this year) and no one else put anything on locally, so training and racing will be compromised.
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Oct 2014
4:53pm, 22 Oct 2014
11,046 posts
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Ultracat
SPR not thought about the type of hillwork yet. I live in a fairly hilly area anyway but can do plenty of flatish routes if needed.
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Oct 2014
4:56pm, 22 Oct 2014
54,708 posts
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Gobi
Sorry to hear that SPR
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Oct 2014
5:06pm, 22 Oct 2014
19,690 posts
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SPR
UC - As long as it doesn't turn into a threshold workout you'll be fine, but the hills will add more of a strength element into the workout rather than speed.
Gobi - Thanks.
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Oct 2014
8:21am, 23 Oct 2014
11,047 posts
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Ultracat
SPR to fully understand this training method, the reason you wouldn't want a threshold session is?
I am okay with hills, I just slow down if it gets too hard.
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Oct 2014
10:42am, 23 Oct 2014
19,691 posts
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SPR
The basic premise of polarized (aerobic) training is that most of your training should be away from middling intensity (threshold). This means a high percentage of easy training (let's say at least 70%, but commonly 80% or more), then and a small proportion of high intensity (say 10%) . Threshold can be done (If you're split is 80/10 you have 10% left for anything else), but is neither low intensity or high intensity.
So if you are planning a high intensity session and you end up doing threshold, you have not achieved your goal.
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Oct 2014
10:44am, 23 Oct 2014
19,692 posts
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SPR
You're should be your!
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Oct 2014
11:02am, 23 Oct 2014
11,048 posts
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Ultracat
thanks, I will have to be careful if I am Parkrunning not to do threshold unless its part of the training week.
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Oct 2014
11:11am, 23 Oct 2014
19,693 posts
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SPR
How about factoring it into your training week if it's something you do regularly?
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