Running Hills - The Secret To Running Faster And Longer
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When I first started running hills, I used the training to get fit quickly to be able to run races fast.
Hill running training helps you improve your speed, strength, endurance and overall fitness. They can be overlooked by runners, but in this video I explain why they are so important and how I trained by running hills and how you can too.
These hill running tips are simple to follow, but very effective.
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What I truly appreciate about your videos is their simplicity. On KZread, there are numerous self-proclaimed running experts who can barely run a sub-3 hour marathon, yet they go on about their complicated training routines, nutrition, and so on, which appear more intricate than those of professional runners. The real secret lies in consistent training with occasional fartlek sessions or hill climbs whenever you feel like it. Sometimes, I believe people are reluctant to adopt such an approach because it seems too straightforward, and everyone is always searching for that magic training session or perfect nutrition plan.
@conradburdekin722
10 ай бұрын
I like this comment. What you say really rings true
@AMostlyFunctionalJess
10 ай бұрын
I've definitely seen this coaching strength work to runners and cyclists. It's fairly straight forward really but you see people advertising strength programs with 15 exercises per workout, half of them are completely superfluous and every time they're advertised as the 'ultimate bulletproof workout for runners' or whatever. Run consistently, lift heavy things a couple of times a week, do a little bit of jumping, eat a balanced diet and voila, you have a training routine that'll keep you going well into your old age.
@patrickmartinrunning
10 ай бұрын
Yes there is no special workout that will make you faster. When I first started running I was overwhelmed with all the advice online so I just kept it simple and it worked quite well. The reason I started this channel was so that other people could understand that too and not waste their time.
@user-je8po9rk3o
Ай бұрын
You don’t need to be a WR holder to be a good coach and to know what you’re talking about. Stop being bitchy, go for a run so that you can get into a better mood and so that you can get more BDNF because your brain cells are clearly lazy (if present).
Hills pay the bills!
What a breath of fresh air! Everybody these days is going in and in about zone 2 running and running long to run faster which in my opinion is not right. What you say absolutely makes sense. First we need to increase vo2max, strengthen legs and increase mitochondria and then once we can run faster we slowly extend the distance T the lower speed. That makes much more sense then 10 years of zone 2 training that brings your time down from 28min 5k to 25m 5k
Great video, no BS, no sales, just straight information. Very appreciated 👍
My slow zone 2 long runs start 4 km of uphill, UPHILL, U P H I L L, uphill and when it flattens I feel I can fly. Had to walk the uphills to stay below 141 BPM zone 2 but now I can slowjog all of it at 141 BPM. PROGRESS! 😊
Love your approach. I'm training for 75 minute half marathon and you are spot on for incorporating hills on every single run !
Recover as you go back down the hill? But it's going down that's tough on the legs. My favourite circuit is triangular: uneven steps up a steep wooded hillside (one of the steps is a tree root), then down a rocky uneven shallow gradient, then back to the beginning along flat soft ground. It's the soft flat bit that provides the recovery, not the downhill. The unevenness improves proprioception; something you don't get by setting a treadmill to a gradient.
30-40sec very hard will be near 200m for many runners. By jogging back down it helps the workout become a mix of Aerobic and Anaerobic as heartrate levels will naturally keep rising each rep. This combined with the 1km Steady hill session makes sense how it wouldve boosted your 10km race ability so early on + sporty background 😊. Also your lean lower bmi / bfat% is very handy for endurance running. Tall with a bmi below 22 and thin calf muscles can be very beneficial. Cheers 🎉
Great explanation. Thank you
If you want to find 10km hill there is one in Poland - the road that is closed to the car traffic (only pedestrians allowed and horse carriages) and leads to “Morskie Oko” in the mountains 10km in total, going only up. Fantastic venue for training. As extra bonus once you get to the top you can continue running by the lake and up the mountain until you get to “Rysy” - the scenery is breathtaking
Patrick, i'm not sure if you know who Sinéad Diver is, but she startied running at age 33 and is now 46. She recently had her best marathon performence at age 45 breaking the Australian womens record with a time of 2:21:34 in Valencia. I say that because I know you still have so much more improving to do, and i'm excited to see it.
@patrickmartinrunning
10 ай бұрын
Yes I listened to a podcast with her before I had even run a marathon. She's very inspiring with those unbelievable times, quite incredible.
great video, I havebeen doing these once a week and def feel stronger
I love your videos! Keep it simple and consistent. Thanks a lot, Patrick!
@patrickmartinrunning
10 ай бұрын
Thanks, glad you're finding them useful.
Great videos, thanks
Thanks for sharing all these info 😅😊
I hope you get a larger following man. Your training and subsequent progress are VERY impressive.
@patrickmartinrunning
10 ай бұрын
Thanks, I appreciate that.
It really makes a difference and improves stamina 😎👌
Insightful
Every morning I wake up for my daily training session and ask myself, “what would Patrick Martin expect me to do?” More Hills. I guess that’s the answer! 😂 But seriously, I agree with finding a way to sprinkle them into otherwise ordinary runs. Going to help make race day seem awfully flat, quick!
@toasterboy708
10 ай бұрын
WWPD????
@patrickmartinrunning
10 ай бұрын
Haha 😄 yes that's exactly it, sprinkle them into every day runs and you'll feel the difference.
It’s something I know I should do but don’t very often. I always do a speed session and a long run and should always do this too! I normally do around 2000meters a month in my normal runs
Just subscribed 👍✌
Thanks
Hi Patrick, thank you for sharing the secret. I'm trying to implement both of your hill workouts into my training. I understand the short hill sprint, but i find it difficult to choose the right intensity for the long hill runs. In terms of HR, would you say the long hill steady run is closer to about 85-90% of MAX HR or lower?
Because of my age I run slow, but putting hills in my run feels like I am doing something too strengthen my hole Boady.
Chalie spedding won bronze 1984 Olympics in the marathon after adding in more hill training
@patrickmartinrunning
9 ай бұрын
Interesting, it makes sense I think. You're training with a lot of resistance.
I am a bg believer of short hill sprints in the base phase but mine are 8 seconds. Real sprints.
That is really good advice but like with strides (long) hill sprints are demanding and you should start with only a few reps like 3*20 seconds or 4*15 seconds if you do it once a week. You can increase either length or the number of repetitions from week to week.
I ran a half marathon last week in 1:43:18. This was my first race ever. The last 4km were uphill (about 2.4%) and I got outkicked by at least 100 runners because I had to slow down a lot on the hills. I have a hill next to me, but unlike what you said in the video, I tried to always avoid it, but now I have to muster the courage to incorporate it into my runs or even do repeats as you suggested. You mentioned in the video that you had been running only 1 to 2 years before you ran the marathon in approx. 2h 20min. This is a ridiculous time. Did you start running from scratch (like couch to 5k) or did you have a good running base from other sports or maybe you were a runner in your younger days? I'm really curious to know.
Hey Patrick! Thanks for this video. I have a question: I am following Garmin coach plan and it has some hard days (interval, sprints etc) and then some easy days (easy run, long easy run). I don’t have any hill-runs so want to add them. What would you recommend: should I do hill runs after the hard days so that the easy days remain easy? Or, should I do hill-runs on the easy days after my easy runs (which would sort of mean that I don’t have any solely easy day in the schedule)? Thanks! :)
@patrickmartinrunning
10 ай бұрын
If it was me I would probably try to either substitute something I was going to do on a hard day for a hill run or if I could, mix hills in on a harder day. If I was doing 2 or 3 hard sessions a week I would want my easy days to be easy only so I could recover to be able to run hard again when I needed to.
@Kureshiman
10 ай бұрын
@@patrickmartinrunning thanks sir! :)
I would suggest easing into this. Remember, your feet are going to be angled upwards, thereby stretching your achilles and calves more. Great workout though, "Hills are speed work in disguise" - Frank Shorter😀.
@andysinclair7162
6 ай бұрын
Good post. Hills can also put extra strain on plantar tendos. As ever, best to ease into them over a few weeks of short and not too hard reps before dropping the hammer. Aso, the pressure on feet and ables goes up a fair bt once we get over 10 degrees.
Patrick - how did you schedule your hill running - did you alternate short and long repeats into long runs; double sessions; alternating long and short every other week ?
At the age of 51 I started doing some longish hills sessions, and despite being out of the game for 15 months due to plantar fas., I've been able to do some new PB's this year, less than a year back in the runningshoes. This I partly blame the hillworkouts! But I find it interesting how you point out the value with 30-40 sec steep hill sessions. This is just in line with what the Ingebrigtsen-brothers practice, and they are Fast😅. What incline do you consider "steep"?
@patrickmartinrunning
10 ай бұрын
That's brilliant. I think a 15% gradient would be steep. But I don't want to make it complicated, most people don't have a choice of steep hills near them so anything that feels steep is good.
@MusicChristo
10 ай бұрын
Thanks, tried this today, finishing just before a severe lightning and thunder event took place. 10*30ish sec. To say the last 5 sec felt sluggish is just an understatement😅.
BLINK!!
Would you recommend a 5k every day or a 10k every other day?
I enjoy the fact that you have demonstrable empirical evidence to back yourself up . That you are almost heretic in what you are saying and almost exasperated in the way you perseverate on the importance of consistancy, hills and simplicity. Like teaching a child to tie shoe laces .
I love hills live In a super hilly area but the side effect for me is I never sleep well when I push hills hard is this normal
@patrickmartinrunning
8 ай бұрын
That's interesting, I think I've had something similar. When I used to do a lot of hill sprints I always found it hard to sleep afterwards, especially if I did them in the evening. No idea why!
@sandodo7768
Ай бұрын
Do it in the morning.
You definitely shouldnt be trying to do hilly runs every day, hills are very hard on your achilles tendons and they spike your HR.
@user-kl3lg7tf3n-anx1ous
10 ай бұрын
My father used to run a hilly dirt road 6 days a week for about 18 years. The result: about 100 podium finishes on local races from 5K up to the half marathon.
@dianadesilva4877
10 ай бұрын
I'm new to your channel and I just subscribed. I'm going to incorporate more hills, in my running, because I remember when I used to do that, I was a stronger runner. Thank you!