Trevelyan Harper wrote:
I was thinking today as I ramped up the pace in the last 200m of my tempo run, that it has always felt like the perfect weekly workout to end quickly. It’s a long sustained effort followed by a shift into a higher gear. Is this good over the long term and would it help in races? (Yes I know I don’t really need a kick because I’m minutes off the elites in a 5k but whatever, I still want to beat people racing at a similar pace)
I’m not talked about a flat out 100 at the end of every tempo or “tying up” going to the well etc but is it good to mentally call on those fibres to fire when fatigued from a long sustained effort.
I just imagined racing having done 20 or so tempo runs in the last few months where I was so in the habit of running fast when tired that it was practiced and I could do it or is this just hurting my training because I’m going to need more recovery?
Also, it seems the tempo run is better than the easy runs, moderate runs or even long runs to practice this in training.
What does the community on here think?
I don't see the problem with "kicking" at the end of a 20 minute tempo. If you are training for 5,000m it is almost a perfect simulation of the type of progression you would see in a 5km race (of course you will be going faster). It's not going to add a significant amount of lactic acid to your system, and will likely train your body to better recruit muscle fibers after a harder, sustained effort. It literally trains your body to do what it needs to do on race day. However, I wouldn't use the last 100m to sprint like Lagat. You should just wind up the last mile a bit and finish strong, fast, and relaxed. What you can do to better stimulate fast-twitch fibers and train your body to kick hard at the end of a race, might be to immediately follow a tempo effort with some fast strides.