What you effectively are doing is a warmup. Warmup is a stimulus for your body to open up your blood vessels, move your blood to right places, move some water from your cells to your blood, etc. If you just start running your heart is fighting against thick blood and constricted blood vessels. If you warm up a bit and then give it a rest it can complete the transition easier and be ready for a run. Fun fact, when I started running I thought my Garmin is broken because it would always show very high heart rate after start of the run and would calm afterwards. Later I noticed that this does not happen when I do "stupid" warmup like before the races -- on the race I would actually have nice heart rate progression from start to end. I would also have much better performance on the race day (ie it was much easier to keep the pace) which I attributed it to being well rested and being excited. But that was mostly just me being properly warmed up. Because I am constricted in time, I no longer take rests -- I just start running. But I make sure first to have at least 10-15 minutes before any hard intervals or tempo and if I do easy/long runs, I do them progressively starting with relatively easy pace and slowly upping the pace till the end.
Hi Jason, would like to thank you a lot for all the content! Also thanks to your tips I managed to run my first marathon in Lisbon in 3.15 and super happy! Now aiming to 3 hours ;)
Jason!! This was such a good video by you! I have been following you and your podcast for years and you deserve so much more subs on your youtube channel. your training philosophy and coaching is the one who made my running get better without injury and I can assure anyone who sees this comment that Jason really knows his stuff. I really hope you do more videos like this where you film easyruns, tempos, longruns and different workouts and also show us good warmups etc. This video was so helpful and made things very easy to understand. Cheers!
Hey Coach Jason! I love to see the sandwich method in action. I hear you mention it on the podcast often and it's great to get a visual example. Thank you for what you do.
1st To say Thank you for This. It's nice to go back to Fundamentals. There's so much info flooding Running on TH-cam. Again, Thank You ( BTW What model Hokas are you using in the video?) It's time to retire my Cliftons for I have ran out of sole on the heel. lol
Great videos. Im still trying to build my base fitness in terms of building core, hip and glute flexibility, in particular after many years of office jobs, sitting and bad posture. At the moment because of these imbalances, all my runs can only be ‘easy.’ I agree, you should have more subscribers, your videos are very informative and easy to watch and i learn a lot
Another great video Jason!! How long should base training last before you start into a training block again? I ran Boston this April and have taken more or less a month off. Two weeks recovery and then I got sick 🤪. Thanks for any tips Jason!
Can someone explain to me, why barefoot running at home, keeps my HR a lot lower, than running with shoes on outside? Its just so crazy to me, because it feels like im running faster at home than outside. HR at home around 130-140. Outside the minimum i can get is 150+, usually 160 in average. There is just one problem with barefoot running, my calves hurt the next day, longer run = more pain, longer recovery.
If your calves hurt after running barefoot you might land too much on your forefoot because there's constant tension on your calves when your heel is always up. Changing to midfoot running has been the solution for a lot of natural runners with the same problem.
I started running 3 months ago, but it feels like a year... And your 8+ m/mile pace for me is crazy impossible. Although i can run 5k and even 10k without any stops, my pace is only ~11'20m/mile, and that with pretty high hr ~160bpm. I really dont understand that "easy run" thing. I would have to run slower than my fast walking, to be able to maintain normal hr around ~130bpm
yeah I started running 3 months ago and it's insane to me that ppl use the first mile as the warm up. I run ~11:40 and have to slow down to walking speed for a few minutes after the first mile lol
I started running in August. My Zone 3 HR runs are around 14:00 miles even though I can run a 5k in under 30 minutes. Maybe I just have a higher HR right now because my endurance needs more work. However, my recovery "runs" with a Zone 1-2 HR are so slow that I have to walk the entire time or my HR gets too high. My approach was to build a massive base a really long time before going into a rest, base, competition, peak cycle. I just finished 3 months of base and I'm taking two weeks of rest, then another 8 weeks of base followed by 8 weeks of long day building. THEN, I'm going into strides and workout runs for 8 weeks to improve my V02Max with that nice big base (like 30 miles per week). I'm hoping that after I run a 10k at the end of this during the summer, I can rest and go back to my base with a faster pace that allows me to actually run during my recoveries. I honestly think it's just a lack of endurance. That's just my observation of myself.
Cool cool cool, your easy run pace range is the same as my 5k - threshold range, nice nice...
Ha. That was basically my thought too!
It's all relative! :)
I take a 30 second walk break after first 2 3 minute segments. Helps to steady my heart rate and maintain an easy pace throughout the run.
What you effectively are doing is a warmup. Warmup is a stimulus for your body to open up your blood vessels, move your blood to right places, move some water from your cells to your blood, etc. If you just start running your heart is fighting against thick blood and constricted blood vessels. If you warm up a bit and then give it a rest it can complete the transition easier and be ready for a run.
Fun fact, when I started running I thought my Garmin is broken because it would always show very high heart rate after start of the run and would calm afterwards. Later I noticed that this does not happen when I do "stupid" warmup like before the races -- on the race I would actually have nice heart rate progression from start to end. I would also have much better performance on the race day (ie it was much easier to keep the pace) which I attributed it to being well rested and being excited. But that was mostly just me being properly warmed up.
Because I am constricted in time, I no longer take rests -- I just start running. But I make sure first to have at least 10-15 minutes before any hard intervals or tempo and if I do easy/long runs, I do them progressively starting with relatively easy pace and slowly upping the pace till the end.
Hi Jason, would like to thank you a lot for all the content! Also thanks to your tips I managed to run my first marathon in Lisbon in 3.15 and super happy! Now aiming to 3 hours ;)
I often walk the first mile (quickly) as part of the warm up.
I walk like 400m, then walk fast another 400m, then mix running with walking in the next 400m and then finally run slowly between 400m and 800m.
Jason!! This was such a good video by you! I have been following you and your podcast for years and you deserve so much more subs on your youtube channel. your training philosophy and coaching is the one who made my running get better without injury and I can assure anyone who sees this comment that Jason really knows his stuff.
I really hope you do more videos like this where you film easyruns, tempos, longruns and different workouts and also show us good warmups etc. This video was so helpful and made things very easy to understand. Cheers!
Hey Coach Jason! I love to see the sandwich method in action. I hear you mention it on the podcast often and it's great to get a visual example. Thank you for what you do.
Will someone share the name of the podcast? TIA
I like using a car buffer before I run and it removes all tightness in my hips and calves
1st To say Thank you for This. It's nice to go back to Fundamentals. There's so much info flooding Running on TH-cam. Again, Thank You ( BTW What model Hokas are you using in the video?) It's time to retire my Cliftons for I have ran out of sole on the heel. lol
Thanks JT! I'm wearing the Hoka Zinal. Really like these shoes!
@@JasonFitzgerald : Thanks Jace!!
That's awesome. I liked this 👍🏿 it does help and best way to have a base training.
Great videos. Im still trying to build my base fitness in terms of building core, hip and glute flexibility, in particular after many years of office jobs, sitting and bad posture. At the moment because of these imbalances, all my runs can only be ‘easy.’ I agree, you should have more subscribers, your videos are very informative and easy to watch and i learn a lot
Excellent Video.....
Good job...❤
Another great video Jason!! How long should base training last before you start into a training block again? I ran Boston this April and have taken more or less a month off. Two weeks recovery and then I got sick 🤪. Thanks for any tips Jason!
A conversational pace for me is Zone 3. Should I run my easy runs there? Everything I research says 80% in zone 1-2 and 20% in zone 4-5
That breakdown is legit. Just leave some room for Z3!
What exactly are strides
Can someone explain to me, why barefoot running at home, keeps my HR a lot lower, than running with shoes on outside? Its just so crazy to me, because it feels like im running faster at home than outside. HR at home around 130-140. Outside the minimum i can get is 150+, usually 160 in average.
There is just one problem with barefoot running, my calves hurt the next day, longer run = more pain, longer recovery.
If your calves hurt after running barefoot you might land too much on your forefoot because there's constant tension on your calves when your heel is always up. Changing to midfoot running has been the solution for a lot of natural runners with the same problem.
What is your pace difference between easy and max part of strides
I started running 3 months ago, but it feels like a year... And your 8+ m/mile pace for me is crazy impossible. Although i can run 5k and even 10k without any stops, my pace is only ~11'20m/mile, and that with pretty high hr ~160bpm. I really dont understand that "easy run" thing. I would have to run slower than my fast walking, to be able to maintain normal hr around ~130bpm
yeah I started running 3 months ago and it's insane to me that ppl use the first mile as the warm up. I run ~11:40 and have to slow down to walking speed for a few minutes after the first mile lol
I started running in August. My Zone 3 HR runs are around 14:00 miles even though I can run a 5k in under 30 minutes. Maybe I just have a higher HR right now because my endurance needs more work. However, my recovery "runs" with a Zone 1-2 HR are so slow that I have to walk the entire time or my HR gets too high. My approach was to build a massive base a really long time before going into a rest, base, competition, peak cycle. I just finished 3 months of base and I'm taking two weeks of rest, then another 8 weeks of base followed by 8 weeks of long day building. THEN, I'm going into strides and workout runs for 8 weeks to improve my V02Max with that nice big base (like 30 miles per week). I'm hoping that after I run a 10k at the end of this during the summer, I can rest and go back to my base with a faster pace that allows me to actually run during my recoveries. I honestly think it's just a lack of endurance. That's just my observation of myself.