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Training - Level Two

Extract from Bruce Tulloh's Half Marathon Training Schedule
(originally published Runner's World 1996 and reprinted with their permission)

LEVEL TWO - WEEK ONE - 3 1/2 HOURS OR 26 MILES
DAY 1 2 X 5 mins threshhold pace inc 5 min recovery jogs
DAY 2 35 mins easy
DAY 3 8 x 1min fast, 2 mins slow
DAY 4 40 mins steady off road
DAY 5 40 mins steady off road
LEVEL TWO - WEEK TWO - 4 HOURS OR 30 MILES
DAY 1 2 X 1M approx,timed inc 5 min recoveries
DAY 2 35 mins only
DAY 3 6 x 2 mins fast, 2 mins slow
DAY 4 40 mins easy off road
DAY 5 DAY 5 8-9M endurance run
LEVEL TWO - WEEK THREE - 4 1/2 HOURS OR 33 MILES
DAY 1 2 X 10 mins threshold pace inc. 6 min recovery jogs
DAY 2 40 mins easy
DAY 3 Run to hills, then 8 x 40 secs uphill jog; jog back (total approx 5M)
DAY 4 35 mins easy off-road
DAY 5 10M endurance run - approx 75 mins
LEVEL TWO - WEEK FOUR - 3 1/2 HOURS OR 27 MILES
DAY 1 3 X 1m timed as Week 2
DAY 2 40 mins easy
DAY 3 12 x 200m (or 40 secs) fast strides, inc 60 sec recoveries
DAY 4 20 mins easy off-road
DAY 5 Warm up then 10K race
 

This level covers a wide spectrum of runners, because it is based on effort rather than speed.

If you're unsure about the distance you're supposed to cover, do the amount of training that the time will allow you. If you're a nine-minute miler, run for 75 minutes on the Sunday of Week Five - eight and a bit miles - rather than trying to do 10 miles. The general rule is ' if in doubt, ease off'. If you find that you an do more training, there's always another day but if you push too hard when you're tired, injury and illness are likely to follow. If you find that two quality sessions a week are too much, just give yourself a steady run instead. 

LEVEL TWO - WEEK FIVE - 4 1/2 HOURS OR 34 MILES
DAY 1 6 X 800Mm (or 3 mins) inc 3 min recovery jogs
DAY 2 40 mins easy
DAY 3 15+10+5 mins threshold pace in 5 min recovery jog
DAY 4 10 mins easy then 25 mins brisk, then 5 min jog
DAY 5 10M endurance run - approx 75 mins
LEVEL TWO - WEEK SIX - 5 HOURS OR 38 MILES
DAY 1 10 X 40 sec uphill as Week 3 (total session approx 6M)
DAY 2 40-45mins e
DAY 3 4 x 1M timed inc. 5 min recovery jogs as Week 4
DAY 4 60 mins easy off-road
DAY 5 11-12M endurance run - 80-90 mins
LEVEL TWO - WEEK SEVEN - 4 HOURS OR 30 MILES
DAY 1 2 X 10 mins threshold pace, inc 6 min recovery jogs
DAY 2 40-45 mins easy
DAY 3 12 x 200m fast stride inc 200m recovery jogs
DAY 4 30 mins easy inc strides
DAY 5 Race 6 - 10M
LEVEL TWO - WEEK EIGHT - 5 HOURS OR 38-40 MILES
DAY 1 40 mins easy off-road
DAY 2 45 mins steady, inc 10 x 1 min fast
DAY 3 45 mins easy
DAY 4 20-30 mins brisk
DAY 5 6 x 800m (or 3 mins) as Week 5
DAY 6 12-13M endurance run - approx 90 mins
LEVEL TWO - WEEK NINE - 4 HOURS OR 30 MILES
DAY 1 5m easy off- road
DAY 2 10 x 40 secs uphill as Week 6 (total session: approx 8 M)
DAY 3 40 mins easy
DAY 4 40 mins off- road inc. 10 x 1 min fast
DAY 4 8M brisk
 

At this stage in your schedule the hardest part of your training is over.

Putting in hard training at this stage is counterproductive, because there's not time for the body to respond to the stresses you're imposing, and if you're not fully recovered you'll be tired when you start. On the other hand if you do no training at all in the last two weeks you'll start to lose fitness. You need to do enough to maintain your aerobic fitness and endurance and keepyour weight down. Short brisk sessions at or above threshold pace are best for the former: sessions like 10 x 30 seconds, or two miles at race speed (just below threshold pace) are perfect. You should maintain your general endurance by having a weekly run of at least an hour, plus regular outings during the week.

LEVEL TWO - WEEK TEN - 2 HOURS OR 15-18 MILES, PLUS THE RACE
DAY 1 20 mins easy, off-road
DAY 2 Warm up then 2 x 1M at race pace inc.5 min recovery jogs then warm down
DAY 3 Rest or 20 mins easy
DAY 4 10 mins jog then 8 x 30 secs fast 1 min slow, then 10 mins jog
DAY 5 Rest
DAY 6 20 mins jog in racing kit with easy strides
 

Targets and Tactics

Settling into the right pace from the start makes a huge difference in a long race, and if you're in doubt about what the right pace is, err on the side of caution.

For most of us the best tactics are just to run at a level pace, in the appropriate section of the field, and to try to use our fellow competitors as pacemakers. If you go off at a steady pace, its very encouraging to find that you're pulling back those who started faster - whereas if you go off too fast and slow down, its very discouraging to be caught and passed in the second half of the race. If you're up at the sharp end however it's a different matter. As there are many half-marathons run nowadays it's quite common for races to be won in over 70 minutes, and of course age-group times may be correspondingly slow. A good club runner, and certainly a good Vet, may find him - or herself in with a good chance of a win. In this case it's worth deviating from a level pace in order to get an advantage. If you're a woman hoping to run 1:18 - six minute mile pace, and you've a rival whose best time is, say, 1:19 minutes, it's far better to go off with men who are running 1:16 or 1:17 pace. They can set the pace for you and maybe protect you from the wind, whereas if you were running at 1:18:30 pace from the start your rival could run with you and take advantage of your pacemaking. On the morning of the race eat your last meal - something simple and digestible - three hours beforehand. In the 24 hours before that, lay off high-fibre foods. If it's hot keep taking drinks up to 30 minutes beforehand, and if necessary, drink more just before the start, so that the fluid doesn't have time to be taken up by your kidneys.