If you have already done a 10km race and would like to improve on your time and performance, this is the training programme to use. It incorporates intervaltraining and speed work to build up your speed and endurance, and calls on a commitment of running on 4 days a week over 2 months.
The aim of this programme is to make 10km (6 miles) an easily achievable distance for you to run, and to enable you to improve your technique and speed over this distance whilst maintaining the ability to run further at a slower pace.
The Programme
Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday | |
Week 1 | Rest | 2 miles easy run | 30 mins interval run | Rest | 30 mins easy run | Rest | 3 miles steady run |
Week 2 | Rest | 2 miles easy run | 30 mins interval run | Rest | 30 mins easy run | Rest | 5 miles steady run |
Week 3 | Rest | 3 miles easy run | 30 mins interval run | Rest | 30 mins easy run | Rest | 6 miles steady run |
Week 4 | Rest | 3 miles easy run | 40 mins interval run | Rest | 30 mins speed run | Rest | 7 miles steady run |
Week 5 | Rest | 2 miles easy run | 40 min interval run | Rest | 30 mins speed run | Rest | 8 miles steady run |
Week 6 | Rest | 2 miles easy run | 50 mins interval run | Rest | 30 mins speed run | Rest | 8 miles steady run |
Week 7 | Rest | 3 miles easy run | 50 mins interval run | Rest | 30 mins speed run | Rest | 6 miles steady run |
Week 8 | Rest | 3 miles easy run | 5kms at race pace | Rest | 3 miles easy run | Rest | RACE DAY! |
Hints
Timing your runs and your mile speeds is an excellent way of monitoring your improvement, and a good motivation to improve. Don’t be afraid to set yourself challenges.
Use the speed sessions on a Friday to improve your aerobic fitness and strength, and to test your own effort and endurance levels.For the longer runs and steady runs you should train at about 75% effort (a run not a sprint!), but can put a little more effort in on the shorter, faster runs and interval training. Once you are comfortable with 6-mile runs you can try increasing your speed a little, but do so gradually and only after your body has warmed up.
From week 4 your interval training can be adapted to shorten the recovery periods if possible, but try different lengths of interval runs to find the level that suits your ability. You want to avoid having to walk at any point, so make sure you have enough energy between interval runs to maintain a gentle recovery jog. You may want to shorten the interval run but also reduce the recovery run before the next bout of faster running. Alternatively you may wish to increase the duration of the interval runs but have slightly longer recovery runs in between as a result. Ultimately the aim is to increase the duration of the interval runs and get your body used to faster running.
In the final 3 weeks see if you can slightly increase your effort and speed gradually on the longer runs as your body warms up after each mile. On the final Wednesday in week 8 set off at a gently pace to warm up and then see if you can do 5kms at your predicted race speed. Finish with a gently jog to warm down. Take it easy on the final Friday run.
On race-day, don’t start too quickly. Allow the body to warm up for the first half mile or so before you aim for your race pace, and try not to get caught into a faster runner’s pace. Try to run with other people aiming for a similar finishing time to avoid burn-out.
A few things to remember from the start:
To maintain this new level of fitness, try to do at least three 30-40 minute runs every week and keep experimenting with interval and speed running.
This website uses cookies.