To find your specific training program, simply:
1. Identify your level of running experience based on the guidelines below
2. Choose what day you typically do your long runs on
3. Find your race distance on the chart
RUNNING LEVELS
Level I: Beginning Runners and Walkers. Build to 2-4 runs or walks per week and supplement with non-impact cross training (cycling, swimming, yoga, etc.).
Level II: Intermediate Runners. Currently running 3-5 times per week with occasional speed workouts and supplementing with non-impact cross training (cycling, swimming, yoga, etc.)
Level III: Advanced Runners. Currently running 5+ times per week totaling 30-40+ miles per week with speed work in a recent training cycle. Marathoners are running up to 10-12 miles for long runs and half marathoners are running 8 miles for long runs. Advanced full marathoners should have previous marathon experience. Both full and half marathoners are racing the distance.
Click here for Level I Saturday training schedules
Click here for Level I Sunday training schedules
Click here for Level II Saturday training schedules
Click here for Level II Sunday training schedules
Click here for Level III Saturday training schedules
Click here for Level III Sunday training schedules
Visit nikemarathon.com/training for weekly updates on the Nike Women’s Marathon Run Club.
]]>On June 17th, we were at NIKETOWN, San Francisco and had our biggest turn out yet! Coach Cordes–our official Nike Women’s Marathon Run Club training coach–was there to give everyone training tips, along with key facts on how to choose the best running apparel to enhance your running experience.
The awesome NIKETOWN staff was on hand to fit everyone into a shoe that was right for them. We raffled off prizes to three lucky individuals including a Nike+ system with a Nike travel coffee mug, the Nike+ system with a Nike tote bag, and an opportunity to purchase one race entry to the SOLD OUT Nike Women’s Marathon!
Join us this week at our remaining events:
Wed 6/24, 6-7:30 pm Lombardi Sports, 1600 Jackson St, SF CA
Thurs 6/25, 6-7:30 pm NikeStore Bay Street, 5664 Bay St, Emeryville, CA
See you there!
]]>Tues 6/23, 6-7:30 pm Fleet Feet, 2076 Chestnut St, SF, CA
Wed 6/24, 6-7:30 pm Lombardi Sports, 1600 Jackson St, SF, CA
Thurs 6/25, 6-7:30 pm Nike Store Bay Street, 5664 Bay St, Emeryville, CA
WEEK 17: THE COUNTDOWN BEGINS!
Are you ready for the Nike Women’s Marathon Run Club to kick off another season? We have all the information you‘re going to need to start your training right! Every Tuesday the blog will be updated with the course map for the weekend and a training tip from our coach.
This weekend marks the first training run for the Nike Women’s Marathon Run Club 2009 and we are kicking it off with a two mile run! The first two miles will be a great way for our returners and advanced runners to get back into the swing of things, while giving our new and first time runners a chance to establish their pace group.
This, and every weekend, our post run refreshments and snacks will be provided by Safeway. For kick off weekend, we also have Pop Chips who will be providing a variety of flavors, and Yes To Carrots which is an organic skin care product.
COURSE MAPS
2 Mile Course Map for Saturday June 27th
2 Mile Course Map for Sunday June 28th
COACHING TIP
Find your pace and meet your leaders!
Start your training on the right foot. Join our 2 mile kick off run and give it your best effort. Based on your finish time we will assist you in proper pace group selection. Our coach will be available to explain the details and answer all of your questions. We want to help you train at proper paces and intensities for your current fitness level and also have a rewarding experience. Be sure to wear your Nike+ system or other timing tool.
FREQUENT RUNNER PROGRAM
EVERYONE attending will fill out a waiver and receive a Frequent Runners Card. With the Frequent Runner Card you will collect the following swooshes:
* 10: Attend a training run
* 7: Trial Nike footwear
* 4: Trial the Nike+ system, either the Sport Kit or the new Sport Band (launching in July!) You can Fast Track through if you are an active NikePlus.com user. Be sure to ask our friendly staff how!
* 2 - Mystery Swooshes
* 1 - Create and share a Nike+ Mini
* 1 - Create or Join a Nike+ Challenge
Collect 20 Swooshes and earn the opportunity to purchase a race registration to the SOLD OUT 2009 Nike Women’s Marathon. Complete your card (all 25 Swooshes) and gain access to the Start Line Frequent Runners Lounge featuring private bag check, private stretching, pre-race snacks and race day amenities.
GET THE INSIDE SCOOP
On facebook? Become friends with Jane Runner!
Due to my location, I am really limited on where I can run, so with that said, I have been running on a treadmill over the last few weeks, usually ranging from three to four miles.
Should I be mixing this up? Four miles has been my max as of now. I’m sure I could go longer, but have yet to try it. Should I run four miles one day, then maybe two the next just at a faster pace, then four miles again the next day?
I am completely lost on how to build a schedule or what I should do? Thank you for any advice.
Regards,
Chris
Chris -
Thanks for the email and I hope you don’t mind that I make an assumption here; I’m going to assume that you want to get better and that you want to race at some point, anything from a 5k to a full marathon. But the reason I want to preface my comments is that running is an important contemplative time, and often times, for someone grieving or someone who has an unreasonable amount of life stress or someone who simply is trying to loss weight, a daily run that never varies is still a wonderful thing. So, if I’m made a horrible assumption and you simply want to use running as exercise that it is also contemplative then don’t change anything.
If you want to gain fitness and if you hope to run races then you MUST alternate both volume (i.e. distance, duration) and intensity. The changes can be subtle; you could theoretically run 4 miles every day for 5 days, three days being easy, one day a two mile fartlek and one day a 2 mile threshold effort (1 mile warm-up and 1 mile cool-down each day). If you add a long run of 6-7 miles then you’ve got a 26-27 mile week that is sound. But for most people, they eventually get to the level where they run 5-6 days a week, they have a long run that is 20-25% of their weekly volume for that week (if you’re running 50 miles a week or more than don’t go above 20%, but if you’re running 28 miles a week a 7 mile run is sound) and they have a day off and/or a day of cross training. There are numerous progressions out there, but I wrote one on this blog for a 5k race a couple months back.
Key point: the body will adapt to what ever you give it and if you want to race then you better not give it the same run at the same pace every day or you’ll be doomed to run a a level below your potential.
Thanks Chris and good luck.
Hi, Coach Jay.
This is an email from a guy who will do WHATEVER IT TAKES. That is, I have the *willpower, discipline, and time* to do
whatever training is necessary. (I teach college in the fall and spring, so in the summers my training time is only limited to what my body will do.)
Background: I’ve been running for 20+ years and have completed many, many marathons and half marathons. I have no health issues.
I have experimented with this, but for the past two weeks have really begun in earnest…two-a-days. Most days I run 6 miles in the morning and 6 in the afternoons. Some days 7 & 6, 7 & 7, 8 & 6. I think I’d like to bump up to 8 & 8, and, I don’t know, maybe get to 10 & 10. (Again, my knees, etc., are fine.)
Anyway, I’m totally at sea about two-a-day programs and haven’t really found many resources out there that help.
My diet is very good (I really do view food as fuel and eat very healthy). I’m 5′ 11″ and 175 lbs–and I know I’m carrying too much weight. My goal is to get my body-fat percentage down to 8% or lower.
I’m one of those guys who will do whatever you say (even trying to adopt Ryan Hall’s or Deena Kastor’s training program), so the harder the better!
Warmly,
Shannon
Shannon -
What ever it takes, huh? I was grinning reading your question, as my first thought was, “None of the elite athletes I work with would say that because practice is already 2-3 hours and even if they could physically work out longer, mentally they are at their limit.” So be careful what you wish for big guy (I can say that as I too am a big guy….currently 15-20 lbs. over my collegiate race weight - yikes!)
Seriously though, I love your enthusiasm and I wanted to respond not only to help you but also because your question is actually very similar to Chris’ question…or at least the answer is going to be similar. What the answer? You need variation in your training.
Specifically, you need the three workouts that every serious runner has in their week or 10 day cycle: a long run, a threshold run and a seasonal, race appropriate workout. The first two have been covered in previous posts, but since the last one is always changing based on the time of year and your upcoming race goals, let’s look at that third workout.
Bill Bowerman is, by far, by a factor of a million, the most important person to have their image smashed repeatedly by the human calcaneus bone. Bowerman is the guy pictured in the heal of your Bowerman Series shoe.* Bill Bowerman was an amazing coach at the University of Oregon, mostly because he understood people and he took the time to “learn each athlete.” He was also an innovative coach in training methodology and it’s my understanding that he came up with the terms Date Pace and Goal Pace.** Example. My current date pace fitness for 5k is 18 minutes, which I know because I simply ran a 5k race. I think I can run 16:30 by September 1st, which is my goal pace. That gives me about 10 weeks to gain the fitness to run 16:30, yet next week I need to run Date Pace (17:50? 17:40? Who knows?***) during my fartlek workout, not Goal Pace. So, pick a half marathon in September or decide to run Chicago in October and set a reasonable goal time for those race, but then be honest with yourself about current fitness and when in doubt, assume your less fit than you are. Or as my college coach loved to say, “Never underestimate the humane capacity for self deception.”
One more thing. 5ks are fun. 10ks, run well, are beautiful. If you want to run PRs at the half marathon and marathon distances don’t look down your nose at the 5k and 10k distances. A client of mine who is training for Chicago has really enjoyed the 5k and 10k races we’ve chosen, which give us a good, hard workout, but also a benchmark for his fitness. So, once every 3-4 weeks this summer consider running a 5k or 10k race as your workout.
Thanks Shannon and when I want to blow off the gardening work this weekend, I’m just going to remind myself that “I have the willpower, disciple and time.” Love it.
Thanks!
Coach Jay
NOTES:
*May I recommend the Pegasus +25? It’s sort of a “faker” shoe, but I love it for my slow days, though the LunarTrainer is just amazing. I never thought I could run in that type of shoe, but I’ve had no foot problems, though I lack the requisite “style” to make a white shoe with red and day-glow yellow look cool…I just look like the dorkyest wannabe runner Dad running behind the baby jogger. Oh well
**My understanding of running is limited and narrow…I read what I want to read and I read outside of running. That said, I think Bowerman came up with Date Pace and Goal Pace, but I could be wrong, yet there is no doubt that when you read through his training two things keep coming up (at least for me). The influence of Lydiard and the underlying theme/thesis that you can’t and should run Goal Pace throughout the year but should start with Date Pace and work to Goal Pace.
***And no, Bo Jackson does not know, but if you know the reference then you should Just Do It and smile.
*Coach Jay’s advice is provided as general training information. Use at your own risk. Always consult with your own heath care provider for questions relating to your specific training and nutrition.
]]>TIP: PLAN AHEAD
The morning of a recent 5k race I made all of the classic mistakes. I got up a touch later than I had planned. I hadn’t packed so it took a while to find my shoes, make a bottle of water and a bottle of electrolyte drink. I got in the car and started to drive the 20 minutes I thought I would take to get to the race course. The drive took 30 instead, and as I arrived I realized that the 5k race was to go off in 23 minutes. That would be plenty of time for my warm-up routine, but I had not registered for the race. Plus, the reason I was running was to support a local track program and I needed to say hello to the coach, Oscar Ponce, a great friend and a former CU teammate. And this is when I started to stress…and stressing on race day, especially when it results in increased cortisol production, is not ideal. Cortisol, like most hormones, has a variety of effects on the human body, but it’s safe to say that you don’t want more of it prior to a race as it adversely effects performance. Now, did running late prevent me from racing well? Not completely, but there was no reason to start the stressed.
And just think…all I had to do was get up a little earlier, pack my gear the night before and plan ahead.
Coach Jay coaches athletes at RunnersCoach.com and blogs at CoachJayJohnson.com. And don’t forget, if you have training question for Coach Jay, ask it here!
]]>While recycling containers were the most visible and tangible to participants, there was much more to it! Check out just a few fast facts about the 2008 Nike Women’s Marathon that you probably didn’t know:
• Biodegradable postcards containing seeds were handed out at the Expotique
• Temporary restrooms contained environmentally friendly soap and toilet paper made from recycled content
• Event staff and volunteers were bused to the event to reduce vehicle usage
• A bike valet was provided for runners
• A no idling policy for race transportation was enforced to help reduce emissions
• Three tons of cardboard from on-course aid stations was recycled
• Four cubic yards of heatsheets (those silvery blankets provided at the finish) were recycled
• Wherever possible, compostable cups and spoons were used
• Unused food and discarded clothing were donated to charity
• Age group awards included bags made from banners and collateral from the 2007 NWM
• The Reuse-A-Shoe program was promoted, which takes used shoes and recycles them into material used in sport
In 2009, Nike will continue to grow these efforts. And we invite you to grow with us. Check back for updates on what we have planned for this year’s event!
]]>The one type of workout that 99% of runners wouldn’t think of doing any place other than the track is VO2 max work. Many of you have heard the terms VO2 and/or VO2 max, but don’t know what it means. VO2 is simply the amount of oxygen your body can utilize during exercise for a given length of time. The reason you need to know the term is that certain workouts improve your VO2 max to a great degree than others. Long runs and threshold don’t improve your VO2 max the same way 4-6×800m at 3,000m pace will even though those two workouts are the cornerstones of any intelligent training plan.
So what is your VO2 max? While you could go to a testing facility to get an accurate measurement, the easiest way is to run a 3,000m (7.5 laps) time trial and that pace is your velocity at VO2max. Now, I’ll be honest…running a 3k time trial at your local track is REALLY hard…not sort of hard, not challenging, but REALLY hard. I suggest you find a runner faster than you to pace you through 5 laps (2k) at 10-15 seconds mile faster than your 5k PR pace and hopefully you can kick a bit in the last minute or two of the time trial.
Once you get your 3k PR time then you’ll simply use that pace when you do VO2 max workouts. A classic VO2 max for collegiate athletes is 3-5×1,000m at 3k pace with 3-4 minutes rest. This workout might be perfect for some of you, but let me suggest you start with this workout: 5×600m at VO2 max pace with 400m slow jogs between. Then, the next time you do the workout you can end with a 1,000m segment at VO2 max pace, giving yourself a full 5,000m worth of work on the track (3,400m of VO2 max work and 1,600m of slow jogging=5,000m). One nice thing about this workout is that as you gain fitness over several weeks you can change the slow 400m jogs to easy 400m jogs, making the workout a high level aerobic workout where you’ll run a surprisingly nice 5,000m time during the workout.
So, take advantage of the early summer weather and head to the track for VO2 max.
Coach Jay coaches athletes at RunnersCoach.com and blogs at CoachJayJohnson.com. And don’t forget, if you have training question for Coach Jay, ask it here!
]]>Saturdays, 8:00am
June 27th-October 10th (No July 4th run)
Little Marina Green
Marina Blvd. and Baker St.
Sundays, 8:00am
June 28th-October 11th (No July 5th run)
Danville Town Green
420 Front St.
Run Club features include:
-A FREE training program
-Begin with a two mile kick-off run and build up to 12-22 mile training runs
-Training schedules for levels I, II and III
-Nike footwear and Nike+ product trials
-Meet new training partners in a fun and motivating environment
-Raffle prize giveaways
-On-course nutrition aid stations and post-run snacks
-On-site coach available for your training questions
-Opportunities to get into the SOLD OUT race through the Frequent Runner Program
Frequent Runner Card Program:
• Attend 10 NWM RC training runs
• Try-on 7 pairs of Nike running shoes
• Trial 4 Nike+ systems (May be fast tracked if runner already owns one)
• 2 mystery punches
• Create and share one Nike+ Mini
• Create and join one Nike+ Challenge
Complete any 20 punches → Earn entry to purchase race registration. Either half or full marathon.
Card Completion w/ all 25 punches → Earn entry to Start Line FRC Lounge. Start line tent is near the race start, has private bag check, private stretching area.
]]>Looking for the nearest retail event? We’ll be at each of the locations below.
Road Runner Sports Concord
Tuesday, 6/16: 6-7:30pm
Willows Shopping Center
1975 Diamond Blvd
Concord, CA 94520
(925) 825-8052
Niketown San Francisco
Wednesday, 6/17: 6-7:30pm
278 Post St
San Francisco, CA 94108
(800) 806-6453
MetroSport San Francisco
Thursday, 6/18: 6-7:30pm
2198 Filbert Street
San Francisco, CA 94123
(415) 923-6453
Nike Store Stanford
Sunday, 6/21: 9-10:30am
6 Stanford Shopping Ctr
Palo Alto, CA 94303
(650) 326-6957
Fleet Feet San Francisco
Tuesday, 6/23: 6-7:30pm
2076 Chestnut Street
San Francisco, CA 94123
(415) 921-7188
Lombardi Sports San Francisco
Wednesday, 6/24: 6-7:30pm
1600 Jackson St
San Francisco, CA 94109
(415) 771-0600
Nike Store Bay Street
Thursday, 6/25: 6-7:30pm
5664 Bay St
Emeryville, CA 94608
(510) 595-6912
So, what features can you expect to find on the new site?
NEW SHOE FINDER
Tell us a little about your running style, and we’ll recommend the shoe that’s best for you. Then just click to buy and make it yours.
NIKE+ IS GETTING PERSONAL
A new customized homepage for members gives you at-a-glance views of your training, progress in goals and challenges, and your Nike+ Mini. Personalize your run results with tags for weather, terrain, and more. Nike+ Levels will color your profile based on your total lifetime distance logged with Nike+. Get help with the site or your devices faster than ever with a completely revised Support Section.
FRIENDS & FOES
With enhanced social features you can search for other runners like you, create and accept new friend requests, and invite them to a challenge. Track your friends’ progress with notifications, and share your own success with automatic updates to Facebook, Twitter, and more.
MORE FROM CHALLENGES
Join runners with similar profiles to yours. Nike+ will now recommend challenges from the gallery to help you find challenges with other runners like you.
IMPROVED GOALS AND COACHING
Choose a pre-set coaching program, or personalize your own routine and goals and have more flexibility in meeting your goals.
There’s even more to come. We’ll let you know you when the new NikeRunning.com is live!
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