Summary:
Boost your weekly mileage with intense cross-training.
A coaching colleague of mine has a basic formula for cross training:
60 minutes at or above 70 percent of your maximum heart rate equals a
five-mile run. He uses this formula with his athletes in the summer to
allow them to augment their base miles.
He also uses it during the cross-country and track season when a runner
becomes injured, and during the winter when inclement conditions make
it difficult to keep actual running mileage high.
Is a cross training
mile exactly the same physiologically as a running mile? Nope. But
intense cross-training for an hour can elicit the same aerobic benefits
as a five-mile training run. And because of the low-impact nature of
most cross-training activities, injury-prone runners can beef up their
"mileage" using this formula without increasing their risk of injury.
In the following two case studies, both Lisa and Dave used
cross-training miles to become better runners.
Cross-training through injury. Lisa, a good college
cross-country runner, had been injured in a car accident. When her
injury had mostly healed, she was able to run but could maintain only
about half of her pre accident mileage. Working out on either an
elliptical trainer or a stationary bike for an hour a day, Lisa
increased her cross-training mileage quickly. More importantly, the
supplemental workouts enhanced her aerobic fitness, which allowed her
to increase her actual running mileage. And even though her total
mileage skyrocketed to 115 per week (50 cross-training miles plus 65
running miles), Lisa's morning resting heart rate remained the same,
which indicated she was not overtraining. By the end of the summer,
Lisa had the strength and energy to lead her college to a top 10 NCAA
performance in cross-country and garnered all-American honors.
Cross-training to lose weight and boost fitness. After four
years of competing for his college cross-country team, Dave took a
two-year break from running to live and work in Spain. When he returned
from Europe 30 pounds heavier, he tried to run again and found that the
extra weight made his knees and hips
hurt. That joint pain, coupled with his lack of aerobic fitness, made
it difficult for Dave to run long enough to lose the weight. Over a
three-week period, Dave gradually added up to an hour of cross-training
per day (elliptical, stationary bike, and pool running) to his 30- to
45-minute daily runs. As his weight dropped and his fitness increased,
Dave could run farther and faster with no pain. After several 50-mile
weeks (25 cross-training miles plus 25 running miles), Dave dropped the
extra weight, then continued to cross-train twice a week for enjoyment
and additional weight maintenance.
By Ed Eyestone for www.runnersworld.com
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