(Photo: Runner: Alvaro Medina Jurado/Getty; Design: Ayana Underwood/Canva)
Improving your running game might actually include running games. Sure—the standard, tried-and-true programming and drills are your best bet for advancing as a runner. But if you feel like you’re in a rut with your training or need a break from the usual running workouts, why not try something different? Whether it’s a game learned in high school track or a creative drill introduced by a fellow athlete, there are plenty of fun ways to shake up the routine and introduce a change of pace.
We asked three accomplished run coaches to share some of their favorite out-of-the-box (and effective) exercises that benefit athletes’ running form, endurance, and mental fortitude. Their suggestions include games and circuits that incorporate speed work and pacing, as well as other essential skills that runners need to practice.
Here are five fun and untraditional workouts to get your heart pumping and improve your running.
Ben Rosario is the CEO of The Marathon Project as well as the former head coach of the HOKA NAZ Elite professional distance running team in Flagstaff, Arizona. Having coached athletes for over 20 years, he’s a big advocate for injecting creative running workouts in training (alongside standard programming). “The mind needs to be stimulated as well, not just the body,” he says. “We can’t expect athletes to do the same thing week in and week out and not get bored.” Rosario likes to play a pacing game in group runs.
“None of your running buddies know when the surge is coming, but they have to keep up,” Rosario says. “It’s this fun way to accomplish some pace change without it being so monotonous.”
An alternative take on the game is to have a designated person call out a number. The person who drew that number would then choose the pace for the same number of minutes (so if you draw an eight, you’ll lead for eight minutes). The pace could be fast or slow—basically a follow-the-leader Fartlek.
As Olympic distance runner Frank Shorter once said, hills are speed work in disguise. Rosario finds that doing hill circuits, or building a training run around varied terrain, is a great way to mix things up.
“The beauty of hill circuits is that they can be done anywhere, and because you’ve run up and down varying grades at different zones, you’ve gotten a really complete workout,” Rosario says.
Scott Browning, a running coach, likes to insert some fun into running workouts with a game called Pursuit. To play, runners start on opposite ends of the track and try to catch a designated runner. There’s no set distance in this game, just the objective to not get caught. “This is deceivingly hard and requires a lot of strategy,” Browning says.
Browning allows runners to rest about two to three minutes between rounds and repeats the game three to five times, rotating the pairs if there are more than two runners present.
Another workout that Browning uses with his athletes is essentially a reverse game of tag, where the whole group of runners tries to tag just one person. “One runner is the fox, the others are the hounds,” Browning explains. “The fox tries to keep from getting caught for a predetermined amount of time; if they’re caught, the interval ends and the game resets.” This chase-based interval workout uses a looped path in a park rather than the track so that runners can spread out.
Runners are permitted to rest for 60 to 90 seconds between rounds while aiming to repeat the game four to six times, rotating roles each time.
It can be a struggle to recover after long runs; Elisabeth Scott, a Virginia-based certified run coach, encourages runners to give tired feet a rest by swapping some miles for cross-training exercises. “In this way, they get the total duration of the workout to achieve their goals without spending so much time on their feet,” Scott says.
An example of this hybrid running workout could look like:
Breaking up the run into a more manageable timeframe while supplementing other types of workouts will allow you to build up your strength and avoid injury at the same time. Plus, it adds some variety to keep your mind and body engaged.
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