Showing posts with label PLAN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PLAN. Show all posts

Saturday, November 3, 2012

10 WEEKS TO A HALF MARATHON PLAN




CT: Cross-Train
Do 30 minutes. Pick an activity that elevates your heart rate, such as biking, swimming, power walking, or using the elliptical.

TT: Time Trial
Warm up for one mile, running at a very easy pace. Then time yourself at a comfortably fast pace (not all-out) for two miles. Note your time and try to beat it at your next time trial.

R&R Run: Rest & Recovery Run
Run three to four miles at an easy pace. Every fourth week will be for recovery--a rejuvenating time to scale back intensity.

INT: Intervals, 3.5 Miles
Run one mile easy, then for the next two miles, alternate either one minute of harder effort with one minute of easy recovery jogging or two minutes of harder effort with one minute of jogging. Cool down with half a mile at an easy pace.

T: Tempo Runs, 3–4 Miles
Get ready to pick up the pace (you can talk, but no more than a few words at a time) for a portion of your workout. Do one mile at your normal pace, then add the tempo somewhere in the middle. Finish at your normal pace.


http://www.womenshealthmag.com/fitness/half-marathon-training

Sunday, April 1, 2012

3 Week Exercise Plan


http://blog.shareitfitness.com/2012/02/22/do-this-look-like-that-total-body-blitz-workout/
For each week, each bullet point corresponds to one day.  It is best to do these in order (first bullet point = Monday, second bullet point = Tuesday, etc.) as the routine has been carefully designed to allow your muscles to rest effectively.
Week 1
  • Monday – 60 minutes HIIT cycling (30 seconds 100% intensity, 1:30 60% intensity, repeat for an hour)
  • Tuesday – 5 sets of 8: squats, barbell deadlifts, sumo squats, walking lunges, reverse lunges. 100 box jumps.
  • Wednesday – 30 minutes HIIT jump rope (45 seconds jump, 30 seconds rest. repeat for half-hour)/15 minutes row machine
  • Thursday – 5 sets of 8: bench press, military press, barbell curls, skull crushers, snatch, lat pulldowns. 250 ab reps ( you pick the type of exercises)
  • Friday – 60 minute jog
Tips: Try to complete this Mon-Fri, allowing yourself a full two days off on the weekend.  On weight days, make sure the weight is heavy enough that the 7th and 8th rep are VERY tough to complete.  Training heavy at the beginning of this program is key for establishing  your base.
Week 2:
  • Monday – 5 sets of 8: deadlifts, bulgarian squats, lunges. 5 sets of 50: squat jumps, 50 calve raises.  Plank for 3 minutes, 60 reverse crunches, 60 hanging knee raises.
  • Tuesday – 60 minutes HIIT cycling (:30/1:30 format)
  • Wednesday – 5 sets of 8: incline bench press, clean and press, overhead tricep extension, bent over barbell row, concentration curls, upright row.
  • Thursday – 60 minutes HIIT running (sprint for 30 seconds/jog for 1:30 minutes)
  • Friday – 5 sets of 8: deadlifts, bulgarian squats, lunges, 50 squat jumps, 50 calve raises, plank for 3 minutes, 60 reverse crunches, 60 hanging knee raises
Tips: For squat jumps, calve raises, planks, and any ab exercises, complete the number of reps/time in as few sets as possible.  Continue to go heavy on the weight during resistance training.
Week 3:
  • Monday – Super Sets: jump rope 45 seconds/12 box jumps/rest 1 minute.  Repeat 20 times.
  • Tuesday – 5 sets of 8: close grip lat pulldowns, single arm dumbbell rows, dumbbell bench press, dumbbell flys, incline dumbbell curls, standing barbell curls, lat pulldown burnout (100 reps on light weight).
  • Wednesday – Super Sets: jump rope 45 seconds/12 box jumps/rest 1 minute.  Repeat 20 times.
  • Thursday – 100 body weight squats, 60 crunches, 100 alternating lunges, 60 bicycle crunches, 100 knee tucks, 100 flutter kicks, 3 minutes plank.
  • Friday – 30 minutes HIIT cycling (:20/1:00 format), 30 minutes HIIT running (sprint every other .2 miles, i.e. 0-.2 jog, .2-.4 sprint, .4-.6 jog, .6-.8 sprint, .8-1 mile sprint)
Tips: Super sets involve no rest between exercises; only rest when indicated.  Last week of heavy resistance, go hard and heavy.  Make sure you’ve increased the weight on each exercise from Week 1, if only slightly.
Week 4
  • Monday – 3 sets of 20: leg press machine, squats, deadlifts, calve raises, hamstring curl machine, box jumps
  • Tuesday – 20 minutes HIIT cycling (:20/1 min), 20 minutes HIIT rowing (:20/1 min), 20 minutes HIIT jump rope (:30 jump/:30 rest)
  • Wednesday – 3 sets of 20: lat pulldowns, bench press, incline bench press, tricep pushdown, concentration curls, upright rows, bicycle crunches, decline sit ups, hanging leg raises
  • Thursday – 60 minutes casual jog
  • Friday – 3 sets of 20: leg press machine, squats, deadlifts, calve raises, hamstring curl machine, box jumps
Tips: Use light weight on resistance training days.  Do these exercises slow.  Count to a full 4 seconds on the lift, and a full 2 seconds on the lower.
The above routine is part one, of a 12-week total body makeover.  You should already be seeing results after only 4 weeks of training.  As we previewed in week 4, part 2 focuses on increasing total time under tension (TUT) resistance training, which is a departure from the high sets/low rep heavy training that made up weeks 1-3.  Cardio training begins to include more cross-training principles and explosive movements to really develop your lower body while maximizing fat loss at the same time.  Part 3 will introduce complex lift formats such as step sets, drop sets, etc. while combining short, intense bouts of cardio to give you a couple more extreme workouts each week.

Monday, March 19, 2012

5K run: 7-week training schedule for beginners




Week 1On run/walk days, walkers walk only. Runners run for 15 seconds/walk for 45 seconds.
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
Run/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRun/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRestRun/walk 3 miles (4.8 km)Rest or walk
Week 2On run/walk days, walkers walk only. Runners run for 15 seconds/walk for 45 seconds.
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
Run/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRun/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRestRun/walk 3.5 miles (5.6 km)Rest or walk
Week 3On run/walk days, walkers walk only. Runners run for 20 seconds/walk for 40 seconds.
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
Run/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRun/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRestRun/walk 2 miles (3.2 km) with Magic Mile*Rest or walk
Week 4On run/walk days, walkers walk only. Runners run for 20 seconds/walk for 40 seconds.
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
Run/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRun/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRestRun/walk 4 miles (6.4 km)Rest or walk
Week 5On run/walk days, walkers walk only. Runners run for 25 seconds/walk for 35 seconds.
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
Run/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRun/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRestRun/walk 2 miles (3.2 km) with Magic Mile*Rest or walk
Week 6On run/walk days, walkers walk only. Runners run for 25 seconds/walk for 35 seconds.
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
Run/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRun/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRestRun/walk 4.5 miles (7.2 km)Rest or walk
Week 7On run/walk days, walkers walk only. Runners run for 30 seconds/walk for 30 seconds.
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
Run/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRun/walk 30 minutesWalk 30 minutesRest5K race dayRest or walk
Source: Galloway, J. Galloway’s 5K/10K Running. 2nd. ed. Aachen, Germany: Meyer & Meyer Sport; 2008:38. Used with permission.
*The Magic Mile is a training tool designed to help you find a realistic race pace. On the first Magic Mile, warm up as usual and then run or walk one mile (1,600 meters) slightly faster than your normal pace. Time your one-mile run/walk with a stopwatch. Run or walk easily the rest of the distance assigned for the day. On each successive Magic Mile, warm up as usual and then try to beat your previous one-mile run/walk time. Your 5K race pace should be one to two minutes slower than your fastest Magic Mile time