My opinion is that you’d be far more successful looking at what the best highschool and good college teams are doing.
Pro athletes get all day everyday to focus on stretching,recovery,nutrition etc. While scholarly athletes better simulate what it’s like training as a normal person. You have class/work and other non running related things you need to attend to. This alters your workout schedule and recovery time a good deal.
Pro athletes are also 0.1% talents, who have coaches that understand their exact biomechanics/vo2max/etc. I think the 800m is the event that highlights how this can cause issues the most. Clayton Murphy runs 70-75 mpw, lots of 3-5 mile tempos, 1k repeats, mile repeats, 400m repeats with short rest etc.. Will Sumner runs 10-15 mpw, lots of 100-150m repeats, 300m repeats with long rest, and plyometrics like sled sprints, doing the majority of his aerobic work on a bike or elliptical. These two athletes will both be in a 1:43-1:45 range this year, but they train completely differently and neither would be fast enough to be relevant if they picked up the other guys training.
You can also look at longer distance guys like Galen Rupp, who ran LOTS of miles and almost all of them were under 6:00, many under 5:00. When one goes to copy this kind of training they assume they should push their easy pace as far as possible and also push their mileage as far as possible, it works for galen so it’ll work for me right? Your achilles’ tendon will be donezo in 2 weeks.