Three track workouts to propel you into indoor season
The season of running in tiny circles is back; soon, we’ll be watching world class athletes racing around a 200m loop at their indoor season opener. Track is a fun, exciting sport–even in the winter–and there’s no reason why you need to be left out. If you’re looking to tune up your turnover and spice up your speedwork on the indoor track this year, here are three workouts to kickstart your track sessions.
Calculate your 800, 1,500m and 3,000m paces using this pace chart.
Reverse ladder
Set 1: 5 x 600m (at 3,000m pace) with 80 seconds rest. Set rest: 5 minutes
Set 2: 4 x 300m (at 1,500m pace) with 90 seconds rest. Set rest: 5 minutes
Set 3: 3 x 200m (at 800m pace) with 90 seconds rest.
Drop distance
Set 1: 3 x 800m (beginning at 3,000m pace) with 2 minutes rest. Set rest: 5 minutes.
Set 2: 400m, 300m, 200m with 90 seconds rest. Begin at a faster pace than the 800s, and speed up as the reps shorten. Set rest: 4 minutes.
Set 3: Same as set 2, slightly sped up, if possible.
400 repeats
Set 1: 10 x 400m with 60 seconds rest. Start at 3,000m pace and aim to speed up by a second every other rep. Set rest: 5 minutes.
Set 2: 2 x 200m with 60 seconds rest at 800m pace.
Warmup/cooldown
Follow your 10 to 15 minutes of warmup with some drills and strides on the track–to avoid injury, it’s important to make sure you warm up completely before hopping into your session, especially if you just returned from the winter weather. If your legs feel especially sore or lactic after your final set, conclude your workout with some light, form-focused strides to shake out them out. Cap off the session with a 10- to 15-minute cooldown.
Outdoor/treadmill alternatives
If you don’t have access to an indoor track or don’t feel like running in circles, you can use time and effort-based cues to modify the workout to suit outdoor or treadmill running. Use the pace chart to find out your goal running time for each interval, and aim for time during each rep, instead of distance. If running outside, make sure you find a clear path or road with lots of traction for the fast reps.
3,000m pace: steady, comfortable effort. You should feel relaxed enough to maintain brief conversations with your training partners.
1,500m pace: comfortably hard effort. Speaking is limited to one or two words at a time with training partners.
800m pace: hard, intense effort. Your breathing will be too labored to carry a conversation. (These reps are very short anyway–the chat with your running buddies can wait!)
posted Wednesday January 8th
by Cameron Ormond