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Articles
Hill
Training When and How
Most any
training program includes hill training of some kind. For
flatlanders it might be stadium stairs. For others it might
be trail runs and others yet will find the slopes on various
roads in the area.
Historically,
we believed that running hilly courses or trails and throwing
in a few hill repeat runs prepared us for hills. We also thought
that if we did hill repeats they made us faster. Though a
good start, research has given us more insights into improving
our approaches to integrating hill work into training programs.
So let’s
start at the beginning. Some hill work is better than no hill
work, even if it is an “artificial” hill like
stadium stairs or flights of stairs in buildings. The best
hill work is quality hill work as opposed to passive hill
running. (Passive hill training is running any hilly terrain
at a steady pace.) Quality hill work gives us far more return
on our investment of energy (e.g. it’s efficient training).
We also know that hill training, by the very nature of offering
resistance, actually teaches our legs to move slower. (Think
of the neuro-muscular contractions.) So, hill training itself
doesn’t make you fast. It makes you strong. It is a
precursor to doing speed work because it makes you stronger
so you can handle more quality mileage. That ability to handle
more repeats within a workout and/or more frequent quality
workouts is what directly leads to running faster. (Fast movements
make you fast. Not long steady or resisted slow movements...
regardless of how many.)
Here are
some key hill training points:
Ease into hill work or you will definitely encourage injuries.
The most effective way to train on hills is to use a progressive
tiered approach which moves from general to specific strength
building, to short hill repeats to longer hill repeats. Each
phase should last 4-8 weeks.
First
we introduce general strengthening with circuit training;
and some easy trail runs and passive hilly course runs. Passive
hill training is acceptable for general strength development.
You need to introduce trail running to your routine incrementally.
This is a nice pre-season or off-season workout. At this time
of the season, vary your pace and have fun. You can turn a
passive hill workout into an active and more effective hill
workout by running hard specifically up the hills during that
run.
We then
move into running-specific strength training (i.e. 200-800
meter repeats at 5k pace with specific core and body strength
exercises between each repeat; add more complex drills and
exercises). This is followed by integrating once-a-week workouts
with repeats on a gradual inclined (3%) hill (i.e. repeats
will move from 400-1000 meters and the goal is to maintain
about 5k pace). After some adaptation, we follow that with
a second hill workout on a steeper (8%) incline (i.e. use
bounding drills for short durations – 30-100 yards).
During the return rest interval in these hill repeats, walk
down the steep hill repeats and jog easy down on the longer
ones.
One
interesting tidbit from research indicates that the best
results for hill training are a combination of hill work
types (steep and modest sloped repeats). The combination
provides more powerful physiological and performance results
than either one used alone.
If you
are going to run a hilly race you have to train for hills
but hill training is also race-specific. If that course has
significant downhills (i.e. St. George, Boston); then you
must train specifically for them. The myth is that these courses
are “fast” because they have large portions of
downhills. If you don’t prepare for it, you won’t
run fast. If you haven’t conditioned yourself (quadriceps
especially) for the downhill pounding, you may start out like
gang-busters but you’ll not be running fast for very
long.
Running
form on hills is important. You will become more comfortable,
more efficient and better with practice. Going up, do not
over-lean into the hill. Run fairly erect still. This takes
core body strength. Don’t try to take big strides, use
shorter, efficient strides and increase leg turnover instead.
Relax and if you maintain a somewhat erect posture and only
a slight lean you will be better off. Downhill running also
takes practice and adaptation. Relax but don’t let loose
and go wild. Do not lean backward and “brake”
when you run downhill. Allow gravity to do some work. It is
more likely that downhill running will cause injuries than
uphill due to pounding. The exception is for someone prone
to tendonitis (usually Achilles) which is exacerbated with
uphill efforts.
Is your
running going downhill? Contact one of the RxRunning coaches!
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