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I was at an oustanding Ultra Running web site and found this great training guide for training for a 100 miler.
Here is a link to Matt Mohoney's web site. Check it out for more great stuff!
Date: Wed, 8 Feb 1995 19:28:45 -0700 (MST)
From: STEVEN GREG SIGUAW 100 Mile Training Schedule Several runners have asked me for a training schedule to run a 100 mile
race this summer (usually Leadville). My typical training for a 100 mile
race begins in October and ends the following August (to peak for the
Leadville Trail 100). Since WS is in June and Vermont is in July, all
you have to do is shift the schedule to meet the these race dates. Here
is the schedule I have used successfully both at Leadville and Vermont.
It is based primarily on the work by the legendary coach, Arthur Lydiard
(Running the Lydiard Way) as well as a lot of personal experience
training for these races: October - April (Build Base Mileage) 1. Run 70-75 miles/week (2 workouts/day during the week)
2. 25% of weekly mileage at 10K or 5K pace
3. Longest run (one day on the weekend) is 22 miles
4. Every 3-4 weeks, run 25-50 miles for your long run instead of 22 miles
5. Weight training 2-3 times/week
May (Transition to very long training runs) 1. Increase mileage to 80-85 miles/week (2 workouts/day during the week)
2. Begin Track workouts of 800 meters and 400 meters with 400 meter
recovery; run at 80-90% effort
3. 33% of base mileage at 10K or 5K pace
4. Longest run (one day on the weekend) is still 22 miles
5. Every 3-4 weeks, run 25-50 miles for your long run instead of 22 miles
6. Weight training 2-3 times/week
7. No races of 50 miles or greater from now until 100 mile race day
June-July (Intense training) 1. Increase mileage to 100-125 miles/week (2-3 workouts/day during the week)
2. Continue Track workouts of 800 meters and 400 meters with 400 meter
recovery; run at 100-110% effort
3. Longest run (one day on the weekend) is between 35-45 miles (6 to 10
hours on trails-ideally on the actual race course)
4. Weight training 2-3 times/week
August (Taper! and SHOW-TIME!!) 1. Decrease mileage to 70-80 miles first week
2. Decrease mileage to 50 miles second week
3. Third week is light jogging for 3 days then rest 2 days then RACE!!
CAUTIONS 1. Practically all of this training occurs above 8,000 feet altitude so
you may have to adjust the mileage upward if you train at sea level. 2. The long runs during June and July prepare you for both the physical
The copyright of the article One Person's Guide to 100 Mile Training. in Distance Running is owned by . Permission to republish One Person's Guide to 100 Mile Training. in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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