Sounds like marathon pace. LT1 kind of workout. <2.0 mmol blood lactate.
Tulsa will have their 28:XX 10k guys do 8-10miles at like 5:40 which is similar effort wise to 6:30 for a 17:30 boy
Sounds like marathon pace. LT1 kind of workout. <2.0 mmol blood lactate.
Tulsa will have their 28:XX 10k guys do 8-10miles at like 5:40 which is similar effort wise to 6:30 for a 17:30 boy
I started running in my 30s and after a few years I got down to 16:2x 5k and 34:3x 10k while running 50-60 mpw. On my own I would not be capable of running a workout of 10k/40 minutes which is about 6:30 pace. If I tapered a bit, sure I would be able to run it because at the time I also paced my GF for a 1:25 HM which is also 6:30 and it did not feel very hard but it was because of the racing mood and big race atmosphere.
Some of my running buddies would run regular "easy" workouts of 10k at 39 minutes only to run 37-38 minutes in an all-out race when it mattered.
So it is about the context, subjective exertion, mindset, etc.
I think most 17:30 5k runners probably don't need to get too scientific about their workouts (assuming you are male and not an older masters athlete). Are you tired after it? Probably good enough. Just run often.
That's just a little slower than the equivalent marathon time for a 17:30 5k runners & probably in line with most runners who slow a little with more distance. Seems fine to me.
OP here. Did a 1 mile warm up then 8 miles around 6:30 on a loop. I didn't look at the watch much and miles ranged from 6:29 to 6:38. Felt like I could have done more at the end. Usually I jog my regular runs at 8 pace so this was a change. Curious if there will be any fitness benefit.
I don’t think it’s too slow at all. I coached a sub 16 / sub 9:30 guy and early season we would do 3-5 mile progression runs that started around 6:15 pace and dropped down to 5:50 or a bit faster. So for a 17:30 guy, 6:30 pace would be roughly equivalent.
I’d treat this as a quality workout day.. Your true easy / recovery days should be much slower, around 8:00-8:20 per mile.