8 Second Hill Sprints | The Missing Link in Your Training

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2024
  • Ahh the hill sprint, such a powerful training tool. But what is a hill sprint? Are we talking busting your lungs for 30-60 seconds up a steep hill, or are we talking the VERY DIFFERENT Brad Hudson style hill sprints? Today we’re talking the later - an 8 second hill sprint that does for you what nothing else in your training does, and maxes out your fast twitch muscle fibers in a way you can do again and again, avoiding injury and getting faster QUICKLY.
    Run Faster From the 5K to the Marathon by Brad Hudson a.co/d/3nIzWPg
    How to Video on Strides: • Do This Easy Speedwork...
    Why Strides are SO Effective: • Just How Effective are...
    NAVIGATE VIDEO:
    00:00 You’re doing hill sprints wrong
    00:40 Why just 8 seconds?
    03:20 Why Uphill?
    05:35 How to Recover?
    07:23 How Steep?
    07:59 How Fast?
    09:03 How to Prepare?
    09:59 How Many? / Frequency
    _________________________________________________
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Комментарии • 220

  • @runelitecoach
    @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +5

    You can read about hill sprints and MANY other hacks like this in the Run Elite Book! www.amazon.com/dp/B0CFCZF65L

    • @apelsinas14
      @apelsinas14 5 месяцев назад +1

      RUclips coach, can you answer why Ritzenhein as a coach now giving his athletes 200m hill sprints?

  • @thru_and_thru
    @thru_and_thru 5 месяцев назад +56

    I can’t believe people do hill sprinters sideways…I legit thought you were joking there 😂

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +16

      It was intended as a joke, and then we found that footage of people actually doing it.

    • @emilyjensenius4289
      @emilyjensenius4289 5 месяцев назад +1

      I thought he was joking too, until he rolled the clip and I was like...oh, geez!

    • @morrisg5060
      @morrisg5060 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@emilyjensenius4289I thought it looked good. I remember doing those drills for karate. I look at it as cross training and lots of runners need cross training anyway.

    • @loganlancaster4809
      @loganlancaster4809 5 месяцев назад

      As a former soccer player running sideways has its place but why anyone would regularly do it as fast as possible is beyond me.

    • @harrymaurer7984
      @harrymaurer7984 5 месяцев назад

      @@runelitecoachhilarious 😂

  • @russellduguesclin2001
    @russellduguesclin2001 Месяц назад +8

    Best advice is the long breaks between sprints. So many 'trainers' advise people walk back and go again, or 1 minute, you will kill yourself or collapse after just a few sprints. Rest, recovery, take your time, enjoy the break, then go nuts! Great video

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  Месяц назад +1

      For raw speed development yes spot on! Thank you

  • @annahunt6578
    @annahunt6578 5 месяцев назад +8

    Great video! I LOVE hill sprints - it's so enjoyable to tap into full-on power.

  • @johnnypar70
    @johnnypar70 5 месяцев назад +8

    Another great informative video Andrew. I’ve been doing one session of 8-10 hill sprints per week for the past 3 weeks.
    I have already seen the benefit.
    Thank you..

  • @livelifefullytomax
    @livelifefullytomax 5 месяцев назад +4

    That was really helpful, thank you. Already built in your strides' suggestion. I'll get some of these in as well.

  • @somkitthompson9559
    @somkitthompson9559 3 месяца назад +1

    Excellent advice. I love this and will definitely utilize your recommendations. Your haircut still looks amazing ⭐️

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  3 месяца назад +1

      Thank you! I’m keeping my hair more clean, cut these days. Found a new stylist, and makes for less maintenance too. But I’m doing so much running, and dancing, that shorter just makes it easier to manage. Thanks for the compliment.

  • @robws007
    @robws007 5 месяцев назад +5

    Great explanation of the 3 energy systems!

  • @runningwithjane
    @runningwithjane 3 месяца назад +3

    Excellent video and well explained, thanks!

  • @jessicareynolds718
    @jessicareynolds718 5 месяцев назад +2

    Love hills! This is a great opportunity to test. I really like the lower injury concept

  • @justinnevins107
    @justinnevins107 5 месяцев назад +19

    Yup, I do hill sprints and strides. I used to do 10 sec hills, but yeah, I knew about the 8 second thing (how most humans can only go all out maximim for 8 sec., thats why 100m sprinters get to peak at 40-60 and start to fade around 80m). That TOTALLY makes sense why 8 sec is better than 10. Those last two, I'm fading, and it's just a push through. Thanks for the tip, I will adjust.

  • @benbeecher5339
    @benbeecher5339 2 месяца назад

    I appreciate your videos. The only running I’ve done was in school and the military, I can honestly say I don’t have any fond memories of that. I live in central Maine and started running last June. I was able to at least get a couple of hours a week in through the winter. The snow is almost gone and I’m able to get more time in now. I get up early and do it and actually look forward to it. I’m not that fast and I’m sure I’m making lots of mistakes but I enjoy it. Never thought I would say that lol.

  • @dcsmith37
    @dcsmith37 5 месяцев назад +5

    Coach, I love the effort and love that you put into your training program and RUclips videos!

  • @Stevo79er
    @Stevo79er 2 месяца назад

    Going to add this to my weekly routine

  • @maximilianu.n.o.2733
    @maximilianu.n.o.2733 5 месяцев назад +4

    thanks i just did 12 today on a 10% ascent...youtube prob gonna hide your channel in the algorithm...you have too much quality, too genuine and seem not to be bought(not a freem@son)...thankyou my guy

    • @williampatrick8814
      @williampatrick8814 3 месяца назад +2

      Yeah slight shadow ban I believe. He recommends raw vegan

    • @maximilianu.n.o.2733
      @maximilianu.n.o.2733 3 месяца назад

      right?? and nice ive been vegan since 2015...(morals and health reasons...not climate ho@x) @@williampatrick8814

  • @potblack7951
    @potblack7951 5 месяцев назад +4

    You’re very well informed for a young runner..

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks. I’ve been running for 27 years.

  • @alwaysbj182
    @alwaysbj182 6 дней назад +1

    Thank you

  • @ericgreene3490
    @ericgreene3490 5 месяцев назад +4

    Very informative! Been doing 5 hill repeats on a weekly basis at 30 seconds each. Only make it halfway until I notice that I slow down. Recovery has been about a minute jog back down. I am going to reduce the time and see what happens.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +2

      That’s a great workout, too. That’s a somewhat modified version of a Tabata sprint. It’s very useful for your anaerobic power. And you should keep these as a great tool, but occasionally do the shorter sprints so that you can maximize that fast twitch development.

    • @ericgreene3490
      @ericgreene3490 5 месяцев назад +1

      Finished my weekly hill repeats. Changed it from 30 sec to 15. Had more rest in between. I really did notice my max speed was shot at 8-10 seconds. Such great knowledge and information. Thanks!

    • @amblincork
      @amblincork 2 месяца назад

      You can do both kinds of sprints and get benefits from both.I routinely do 400 metre uphill runs as well as 400 metre flat runs and ideally would do both flat and hill repeats in a week

  • @thecaptainchas2820
    @thecaptainchas2820 5 месяцев назад +2

    I’m incorporating 8 second ATP hill sprints into my own training and that of athletes I am coaching. Strides too, which I already do, but will do more of them and more often. Works for Kenenisa Bekele, #amirite?! I’m also referring people to your book and channel. Thanks Andrew!

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      Very well done! I often reference Bekele when talking about strides

  • @tktobreak222
    @tktobreak222 5 месяцев назад +3

    I just finished reading your book recently and really enjoyed it! I've actually been doing hill-repeats like 20x200m uphill, taking the training ideas of recent great runners like Ingebrigtsens and Jake Wightman whose hill sessions are 200-600m. I understand the critical point of 8 seconds and will definitely add it into my training, but I'm curious about how you would think or characterise those top runner's methods.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +5

      They do that to start peaking. Those are intervals just run on a hill. They have their place. It’s just a totally different kind of workout that’s done at a different time.
      Thanks for reading the book! Please leave a review on Amazon. It helps a lot

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 5 месяцев назад

      Sounds like Jacob they often do 10 times 200m all out with in less them 9mmol lactate

    • @13t1
      @13t1 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@runelitecoach Jakob is doing this in his base phase.

  • @mary-anneelkington20
    @mary-anneelkington20 4 месяца назад +1

    Hi. I am new ro your channel. Great content !! I am an older triathlete and my hill repeat seaaion is normally 4 to 6x 400 or 600metres . So.im confused as to what I ahould be doing or are these 2 separate sessions ?

  • @joakimlandhage5611
    @joakimlandhage5611 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for a great channel and very interesting videos! Are these sprints more specific for sprinters compared to distance runners? And would distance runners benefit more from hill strides and hill sprints of around 100-300m each? I understand that distance runners ofcourse would benefit of these 8sec bursts also but would you suggest putting them during an easy run instead of strides like once a week for a distance runner?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +3

      The answer to this, is basically the video itself. Just watch it and both are answered in detail :). You CAN do longer hill runs if you want, but then you’re doing intervals. Intervals have a place. But they’re totally different and work on different aspects of your running. And they don’t expand your ability to peak. They just move you towards what your potential is currently to peak

  • @liamroche1473
    @liamroche1473 26 дней назад

    I live in a very flat region, so one of the main reasons I bought a treadmill was to do hill intervals. My experiences with this are quite interesting. Firstly, my treadmill is not a top-end one so it is limited to about 3:57/km - not really a sprint! - and 10% slope. This combo already provides a high power interval, but it is certainly not maximal. I realised that a simple modification could fix this, so obtained a 4 x 4 fence post which adds another 10% to the slope of my treadmill with no problem (having ensured the platform is stable). With this setup, what I have tried is using the maximum speed of the treadmill and cranking up the slope. The interesting thing is that even which quite high power sprints, I seem to recover plenty to turn up the slope and go again (without heart rate rising much at all - in zone 3), until I reach my max. Can certainly feel the demand on the muscles - especially the medial glute, I think - as I get near max. For me, when I last did this, I got to 18% slope, a big increase on the previous time. I feel the training response is very strong to this sort of protocol. While the way I did it, the last few hill sprints were near maximal and getting shorter ( down to just 5 strides on the last, if I recall) but I don't feel any more than a minute recovery was needed. Of course 8 seconds is really quite a long set in weight training terms - more than 12 strides per leg, I would say - and general principles would suggest even shorter is optimal for strength. This is easier on the treadmill because there is no acceleration phase - every stride is identical and at full speed (and the very large slope helps as well).

  • @louissatt8497
    @louissatt8497 21 день назад +1

    Took up sprinting competitively when I was 72 years old got quite reasonable performance grades in the Masters Leagues UK I used 12 second hill sprints on grass mostly with full recovery ran on every 3rd minute. Ran my fastest 200m at 75 years old

  • @DanielL143
    @DanielL143 20 дней назад +1

    Not just great advice, but so thoroughly explained - Thanks! (what about running stairs, very intense but hurt my knees?)

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  20 дней назад

      An accepted substitute if you don’t have a hill. But hill will help your running more as it is more specific to a race course and activates your calves more and allows for self selected stride length

    • @DanielL143
      @DanielL143 20 дней назад

      @@runelitecoach This makes sense. I don't really like running up and down the long sets of steps we have locally along the escarpment in Sothern Ontario (which is very popular) but I do enjoy a good hill. Its running back down that hurts my knees too. Thanks again.. I think your approach of explaining the science behind the strategy is very effective at helping to apply the information and also deliver the message. Well done sir.

  • @threatened2024
    @threatened2024 2 месяца назад

    So glad you posted this. Insta butt influencers constantly claiming to have done "5 minute sprints" ...Usain Bolt would have held every track record up to middle distance if it was possible to sprint for that long.

  • @chrism589
    @chrism589 5 месяцев назад +3

    Been doing 8 secs hill sprints for the last few weeks. Yeah can feel the'fading'after about 8secs.

  • @emilyjensenius4289
    @emilyjensenius4289 5 месяцев назад +1

    Whoopsie I've been doing 20 second hill sprints...guess I'll try the 8 sec ones!

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +1

      Still useful. But for anaerobic conditioning. Not as good for fast twitch development

  • @gudboyngdisyerto
    @gudboyngdisyerto 5 месяцев назад +1

    ordered your book last week december 12 together with brad hunson's book. amazon says it's arriving january 10.
    i've been doing 10x10secs hill sprints with 3:50 recovery jog once a week. easier when i already know that the hill segment is 40mins

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      That’s a crazy long time… if you have prime it should be 3-4 days at most. Where are you located? Send me a DM on IG and I can get it to you faster

    • @gudboyngdisyerto
      @gudboyngdisyerto 5 месяцев назад

      @@runelitecoach that's ok. i'm not from US and picked combined shipping with another book and a pair of running gloves to save on shipping fee. thanks

  • @fontajo
    @fontajo Месяц назад

    I do this exact workout except downhill. makes you feel alive. all heels too

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  Месяц назад

      Downhill Running) has a huge place in training. I normally have my runners do strides downhill, not sprints. And then, towards the end of training, we do specific downhill runs to maximize the sarcomeres of your muscles. Yes good stuff. Heels are ok on a downhill

  • @johnaskew3705
    @johnaskew3705 5 месяцев назад +2

    How would this transfer to treadmills? I feel this would work well in a controlled environment especially in winter. The only thing is the delay in belt speed and not having instant acceleration

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +1

      I used to work at a performance training center where we did this on treadmills. It’s tricky, and you gotta be sure to be safe. But what you do is you step off to the side of the treadmill put the speed up and then hop on. But don’t do that unless you experienced doing it and know how to safely do it. We also had spotters when we did that. If you can’t do that, then just do strides on the treadmill and not hill sprints

  • @Kelly_Ben
    @Kelly_Ben 5 месяцев назад +1

    Wow, you really bring out the "experts" in the crowd! 😂 I get super bored while running, hence my hatred of the track, and severe dislike of pavement in general. Repeats of any kind over the same terrain are also dreaded. I've been doing hill sprints (30 seconds, I'll shorten those), by running a hilly route, charging the hills and jogging/ walking the rest. Is this a reasonable replacement for the same hill over and over? Any suggestions on how to further maximize it for this purpose, without actual repetition?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  4 месяца назад

      Of course. You don’t need to run the same hill again and again. There’s no reason why you can’t do different hills.

    • @Kelly_Ben
      @Kelly_Ben 4 месяца назад

      @@runelitecoach Thank you sweet baby Jesus! Lol You sound surprised by my question, but every hill workout video I’ve ever watched has been all about running up and down the same hill. Over. And over. I’m loving your real world advice, in this and all running topics.

  • @EricCartmanFTW
    @EricCartmanFTW 3 месяца назад

    another thought about adding this to a weekly routine, how about during those 30s, 60s or 90s hill repeats go easy or steady on the way up and then hammer the last 8 seconds of the hill rep. with 3-5 mins rest walking downhill? I used to do all my hills at the same pace and only started trying this concept last week. What do you think Andrew?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  3 месяца назад

      I guess you can do that, but I’d prefer to see that extra time be spent and just recovering so that you can do another eight second health sprint sooner and get a little bit more volume there. If you’re gonna do 92nd health sprints, I would just call those uphill intervals, there’s a place for those for sure, just a different workout. And combining the two I guess you can do, but it seems inefficient at both, focusing on just one for a day will likely produce a better result. But there’s nothing wrong with it. I think you can try it if you want, it’s not going to hurt you, but it’s equivalent to just doing a very hard interval with a fast finish. So just view it as that.

  • @mckonal
    @mckonal 5 месяцев назад +1

    thanks for the info & input. at the end of the video, do you really not run with a chest strap, no?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +1

      I don’t use one

    • @mckonal
      @mckonal 5 месяцев назад

      wowzers.@@runelitecoach

  • @thall0
    @thall0 5 месяцев назад +2

    In what kind of runs should one add these? Easy runs, or hard days/workouts (before 1k repeats for example, since I guess it's optimal to do the hill sprints with fresh legs)

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +2

      Do these when fresh only. So an easy day or potentially before a workout but not after

  • @jriddle599
    @jriddle599 5 месяцев назад +3

    Ha…I’m 65 years old with 115,000 miles in my legs..I do 15 second uphill sprints because I need the first eight seconds to get up to max speed to avoid injury!! Long rests for sure! So in effect I’m doing 8 seconds max power

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      That’s fine. Just hitting the max speed for about 8 sec. Good job

  • @leocossham
    @leocossham 5 месяцев назад +3

    Yes 8-9s is the longest you can sprint at max effort before running out of ATP makes you slow down (experimenting with hill sprints myself backs this up) but that doesn't mean you should never do hill reps longer than 8s. Sub max hills have value too. I've ran 1:55 in the 800m and 31:16 in the 10k for context.

    • @leocossham
      @leocossham 5 месяцев назад +1

      If you want to focus purely on speed, then yes 8s max power output hills are great, but they would be most useful in the base phase of training

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +1

      Yup. True statement

    • @nikitaw1982
      @nikitaw1982 4 месяца назад

      how do you know when ATP replenished doing the 8 second top speed hill sprints?

  • @gerson7366
    @gerson7366 Месяц назад +1

    I did this yesterday and I am freaking sooooore and aching all over. 🤣

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  Месяц назад +1

      Yup:) good adaptations coming your way. This stuff is so neglected with distance runners

    • @gerson7366
      @gerson7366 Месяц назад

      @@runelitecoach i think i'm gonna need a 3 days off. The only thing I worry about is, if i'm gonna be this sore all the time after it, my weekly mileage will be shortened for sure cause i think i'm gonna be needing a recovery run or 2.

  • @mikes5764
    @mikes5764 5 месяцев назад +1

    Hey Andrew, just a question. Do you count till 8 while running, or use a watch to do the counting?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +3

      I count my strides to get approximate time. I count 20 strides (40 steps). Whatever. Don’t over analyze. Just keep them about 8s. If you repeat the same hill , time it once, then just use that distance covered as a benchmark

    • @mikes5764
      @mikes5764 5 месяцев назад

      @@runelitecoach Thank you, that makes sense!

  • @HighCaliberGarbage
    @HighCaliberGarbage 4 месяца назад +1

    So if I want to incorporate these into my training, should I do them in place of strides? Or, if I should do both, when should I do each one?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  4 месяца назад

      You can do both. You can watch the videos that I have on strides as well to get more clarity. But really watch the video I have on structuring your training through the triphasic model. And if you like you can pick up the Run Elite book that breaks it down in minute detail for you

  • @qigong1001
    @qigong1001 4 месяца назад

    Not sure what to make of this. I do anaerobic hill-interval type work maybe once a week where it lasts 50 seconds, the rests in between our pretty long, however. I have seen massive improvement. But it does require more recovery. I absolutely think what he’s saying is worth giving a shot for a period and see what happens.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  4 месяца назад

      If your goal is to train the anaerobic system, then your recovery doesn’t necessarily need to be a full recovery. In fact, many times it shouldn’t be a full recovery so that you can get back up to a high heart rate quickly. But what I’m talking about here is absolute full power, which, yes, is anaerobic, but it goes beyond that, and it uses the shortest energy system that you have, shorter than the anaerobic system. So what you’re referring to here is just a different type of training. And you can totally do both. But there’s nothing wrong with what you’re doing, it’s just different.

    • @qigong1001
      @qigong1001 4 месяца назад

      @@runelitecoach i’m 100% going to incorporate what you suggested!

  • @perfidy1103
    @perfidy1103 3 месяца назад +1

    I did these for the first time today. I ended up doing 6 of them with about 6 minutes of very easy running between each sprint, 8s up an approximately 6% hill.
    A question: should these be SPRINTS? In your strides video it sounded like strides should be run at just below the transition between a fast run and a true sprint, but you don't mention that here. I ask because the way I did them today involved (a) running on the balls of my feet (during the sprint itself my heels never touched the ground) and (b) a lot of contribution from my upper body. They felt great, but I was wondering whether I should be doing them with more of a fast running form rather than true sprint to maximise carryover to non-sprint running?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  3 месяца назад +1

      Hey. Nice job starting to do these. Yes they are 100% speed

  • @D_Crichton95
    @D_Crichton95 4 месяца назад

    What’s the max amount of sets and reps you’d recommend for someone completely new to running vs someone who’s been running for a while? Thank u for this information! 😄

    • @cpm4317
      @cpm4317 4 месяца назад

      For someone who is new. Don't do it all...

    • @Dirtydreamer2023
      @Dirtydreamer2023 2 месяца назад

      @@cpm4317why not?

  • @nikitaw1982
    @nikitaw1982 4 месяца назад +1

    how do you know when ATP replenished doing the 8 second top speed hill sprints? does slow jogging interfere with this?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  4 месяца назад +1

      Good question, active recovery will help. The way that you know your ATP is replenished is simply that you waited 5 to 10 minutes. Your ATP will replenish extremely rapidly, but to be back at 100% will take this waiting. The best way to know is that you feel Ready to go, and the absolute best indicator is that you in fact, maintain 100% speed

  • @timharmoni1846
    @timharmoni1846 4 месяца назад

    I do resistance training with kettlebells 3 times a week. Can I still slip some sprint sessions in or will it likely be too much? I'm 53.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  4 месяца назад

      Totally depends on how many sprints you’re doing and how much weight you’re lifting.

  • @pragmaticduck1772
    @pragmaticduck1772 5 месяцев назад +4

    Its not so much that longer hill sprints are wrong or bad, its just they serve a different purpose.
    Its no different to training 50m sprints vs 400m sprints. The 50m will be better for pure speed, the 400 will build better lactate tolerance. But both are still technically sprints.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed. And that’s what I said in the video. Just different. Like a long run vs an interval run. Just different things. But longer hill reps aren’t “sprints”, they’re intervals. You can’t sprint all out speed longer than 9 seconds

    • @pragmaticduck1772
      @pragmaticduck1772 5 месяцев назад

      @runelitecoach yeah that's fair, i mean i think it eventually comes down to a semantic game, i was replying more to the thumbnail/ title (which i ought to know better) which wasn't what the video said. 200m in my mind is very much still a sprint race as is 400 but again, I'm being bit picky. Love the content, mate.

    • @Messup7654
      @Messup7654 5 месяцев назад

      Technically not even the 100m is a sprint a 60m would be tho

  • @stevepace-first8617
    @stevepace-first8617 5 месяцев назад

    A question. For those of us who are relative beginners, is it best to just concentrate on building up mileage with easy running, I was thinking something like 60 kms per week before doing any speed stuff. Or is it better to sprinkle in the speed regardless of being pretty underdeveloped all around. I am always a bit wary of the fast stuff, hamstrings and calves seem a bit temperamental when I push hard. Does the book map out progress from noob to elite?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      You should add in strides, unless your hamstring is really bad. You can omit the hill sprints until you have consistent strides going, and then add Hill sprints later. But only slow easy running is unlikely to yield faster race times. It should be coupled with at least some strides, unless you’re an ultra marathon, in which case they’re important, but arguably less so

    • @stevepace-first8617
      @stevepace-first8617 5 месяцев назад

      @@runelitecoachmany thanks. For a potential 5k pr of 20 mins, what is approximately a good weekly mileage? How long should the long run be? Obviously there are many sources on the net, but I value your opinion.

    • @user-ur5vw1gi4v
      @user-ur5vw1gi4v 4 месяца назад

      @@stevepace-first8617 Quite easy : -Increase to 30km/week gradually (+5km each week) : at 30km : 1) 10k at high z2 (5:30-5:00) 2) 15k at z2 (5:30) 3) 5km : quality Intervals : 10x500 at 3:30
      -Always combine with bike workouts (can be zwift, fitness bike, or outside if the weather is good enough) : 4-5h/week : 1)2h z2 to build aerobic capacity 2)1h threshold intervals like 4x8min at 90-100% FTP 3)1h 12x8s sprints & easz recovery in between 4) 1h tempo(z3) if you feel understimulated
      Don't necessarily do running sprints, do it on the bike it's even better : no impact, injury risk free.
      You're about 7-8h/week.
      With some dedication you'll get there in 3 months.
      I run 1h28 half marathons. I still have a lot of room to get better since I improved a lot on the bike recently. Targeting 1h24 next time.

  • @Dirtydreamer2023
    @Dirtydreamer2023 2 месяца назад

    Nice video. However I didn’t understand why is it important to develop fast-twitch muscle fibers for running long distance or improve the phosphocreatine energy system. Wouldn’t anaerobic make more sense, at least for the last meters in a 5km for example?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  2 месяца назад

      You’re not trying to improve your phosphocreatine system. You’re simply using it in order to develop your fast which muscle fibers. Your fast, which muscle fibers become a limiting factor as you fatigue. That’s why you can continue to run if you slow the pace, but you can’t pick up the pace for very long, when extremely fatigued. You’re using all muscle fiber types when running, just in different proportions. So, of course, you’re slow twitched development is really important for a marathon, but it doesn’t mean that fast twitch muscle development is not. It’s very important, and most runners don’t develop it at all, so there are massive gains to be made there.

    • @Dirtydreamer2023
      @Dirtydreamer2023 2 месяца назад

      @@runelitecoach thanks for answering. That makes sense!! 🔥🥰

  • @benjamin.kelley
    @benjamin.kelley Месяц назад +1

    Just squat in the gym. No, you don't have to go as heavy as possible because that'll probably interfere with recovery for you running. But lifting in the gym helps you become a more durable runner that ultimately helps you train longer and harder.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  Месяц назад

      Didn’t say to go as heavy as possible?

  • @chrisbrenner4598
    @chrisbrenner4598 5 месяцев назад

    What if it is shorter than 8 seconds? Unless I have time to run somewhere else, the hill I have access to is 5 seconds max. Is there any benefit?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      Yes! Just going over 8 isn’t possible to keep top speed. 5 is ok. Just do more

  • @don2144
    @don2144 3 месяца назад

    What about a 8 second hill sprint then immediately backpedal down for rest period, Then immediately sprint back up once you backpedal to bottom?? . I always time myself to make sure sprinting up is within 8-9 seconds and not slowing down because of limited rest. This way my total hill sprint workout comes in at around 4 minutes complete, and I get knee strengthening with the backpedal part of workout . If my 10th hill sprint comes within 1 second or so of my 1st wouldn't that be OK??

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  3 месяца назад

      I mean, backpedaling down the hill is just a different thing. As far as I’m concerned, you can do whatever you want between Hill sprints, including backpedaling, back down, but I would take a little bit more time. It takes several minutes to be ready to go all out again. And if you’re doing up to eight reps, you’re gonna want to be taking 5 to 10 minutes ideally between reps.

    • @don2144
      @don2144 3 месяца назад

      @@runelitecoach Yes I agree and understand your point. I have always read that my rest was not sufficient but felt if my time on the last sprint was close to the same as the 1st I would be ok. Hill sprints are never easy as you know , so .I think its a mental thing knowing I can be finished in less than 5 minutes and I time myself every time to make sure my speed is the same or better.

  • @fatmansprinter
    @fatmansprinter 5 месяцев назад +1

    and work in a recovery week, do less or none 1 week because sprinting is very taxing on your CNS. 8 reps x 8 seconds x 3 x a week seems a lot to me and my son is a sprinter - Up hill maybe 50 m for average person in 8 seconds so 1200m a week - my son does 350-400m (over 3 days) and is sub 7 for 60m that`s how little you need to make it work.
    He doesn`t have the fatigue of running distance either. Anyone that`s going to start doing these reps better know what they are getting into.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      Yup. That’s why 8x8 three times a week is the maximum. Not the recommended. But the maximum.

  • @Pindropphotog
    @Pindropphotog 4 месяца назад

    For a sports athlete i can only fit in one speed session a week should i rotate doing flat sprints with hill sprints every week? Or periodise both

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  4 месяца назад

      It depends what you’re training for. What are your goals? But a basic answer is that you want to train nonspecific furthernout from your competition and more specific as it approaches. So depends on you, your history, when your event is, etc

    • @Pindropphotog
      @Pindropphotog 4 месяца назад

      @@runelitecoach thanks sport is soccer my speed is probably great but power could develop more. That makes sense maybe hills first than top speed mechanics closer to season. And in season hills might work for a period at some point to be less taxing

  • @paxundpeace9970
    @paxundpeace9970 5 месяцев назад

    24 sprints a week is already quite a lot for a distance runner
    I would day you still have to do longer hill sprints like 6*20 or 8*15 seconds once a week.

  • @tonykung1755
    @tonykung1755 4 месяца назад

    I tore my popliteus while I was doing hill sprints. I had been doing them all the time so really frustrated.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  4 месяца назад +1

      Sorry to hear you got injured. Heal up stronger and get back at it. I’ve had that injury before. Massage really helps with that one

  • @alexandersokwala2509
    @alexandersokwala2509 5 месяцев назад

    You should look down while accelerating and learn proper sprint mechanics. Other than that, a good video with tons of helpful information.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      Look down? You should be straight from neck through ankle

  • @gerson7366
    @gerson7366 Месяц назад +1

    I have a question. So by doing 8sec hill sprints. Does that mean that the other runners here on youtube that has a video of hill sprints saying 30-60sec rep is their "recommended" time per hill sprint. Who's telling the truth though? Or is there different benefits for this?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  Месяц назад

      It’s not about truth. It’s two different workouts. This is for maximizing power and raw speed and neuromuscular intervention. Longer hill sprints aren’t sprints. You can’t sprint for 60 seconds. It’s a run. It’s an anaerobic interval. Just different.

    • @gerson7366
      @gerson7366 Месяц назад

      @@runelitecoach yeah i figured after reading the comments here. Thank you for explaining it. So personally how do you do this workout? Cause 5-10mins rest after burning 8secs is just way too much time to recover for me. Cause i'm always in time constraints. I only got an hour and 2H on weekends.
      In 1H time you would only get to do 6-8reps and i'm guessing that should be enough?

  • @Nonewon
    @Nonewon 5 месяцев назад

    In the plains. Can we use the stairs instead?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      Sure. Use what you’ve got. Treadmills work too. Parking garage ramps too. Get creative and the sky is the limit

  • @gabrielgabriel5177
    @gabrielgabriel5177 2 месяца назад

    I have been doing 5 sets of 2 mins hill sprints. They feel quite hell but i am training for muay thay and not for running. Is that any good?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  2 месяца назад +1

      You’re doing anaerobic system training. For martial arts that’s very good. Even better to do anaerobic rounds on the bag

    • @gabrielgabriel5177
      @gabrielgabriel5177 2 месяца назад

      @@runelitecoach thank you sir for your answer

  • @Fvrishmzi
    @Fvrishmzi 3 месяца назад

    I want to ask how many reps and set should I do?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  3 месяца назад +1

      Max out at three days per week. Max out each day at 8 hillnsprints. Max out each sprint at 8 seconds
      Don’t start there. Just self govern on the way to there

  • @angiedavidconfiado3328
    @angiedavidconfiado3328 3 месяца назад

    How many times can I practice this 8 seconds sprints

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  3 месяца назад

      The prescription for this is detailed in the video. But in short, a maximum of eight sets of eight second hill sprints done three times per week. More than that and the extra time is better put into strides and easy miles.

  • @DJ-pt7wg
    @DJ-pt7wg 5 месяцев назад

    Does this only help I for the first 8 seconds in your race??

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      No. It helps your base of fitness so you can stack on a higher level of fitness on top of it. I have a few videos breaking down the whole way it works. You can get the most details in the training section (section 2) of the Run Elite Book. www.amazon.com/dp/B0CFCZF65L

  • @MisterGames
    @MisterGames Месяц назад

    I get that there might be a warm up requirement from a sport performance POV, but if we are in the wild and need to go go go to get away from that bear or whatever you said, we are not saying "oh hey Mr Bear, don't attack me yet I need to warm up, and make sure I have my special sprint shoes on too, cause I don't wanna do a hamee".

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  Месяц назад

      And we’re not being chased by a bear so it’s moot. We’re competing in a race where pacing and tactics come in to play. When running from a bear just GO. But the bear will catch you.

  • @itsoracle
    @itsoracle 3 месяца назад

    i have a super steep hill right outside my school and on my lunch break me and the boys go out all and sprint up for around 8 seconds and then walk back down and repeat

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  3 месяца назад

      Hot dang! That’s awesome. It’s a good idea to get in at least a short warm-up before hitting that hill, but this is a great idea.

  • @rda0013
    @rda0013 5 месяцев назад

    When doing hill sprints on a treadmill, what incline would you suggest? Thanks.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +1

      As steep as you can safely. At least 5%, and not necessary to go above 10%

  • @fleetze
    @fleetze Месяц назад +1

    Oh man I've been doing my hill sprints on all fours and growling so the other runners know I'm serious

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  Месяц назад

      Think I saw you the other day. “Down boy!” Seemed to work well

  • @Nuxvomicaaa
    @Nuxvomicaaa 5 месяцев назад +2

    210Minutes for hillsprints in a week seems quite hard😮

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +2

      Agree…that’s why it’s 64 seconds…

  • @reggiepoonyane5260
    @reggiepoonyane5260 3 месяца назад +1

    ❤🎉

  • @trofee8
    @trofee8 5 месяцев назад +1

    You do these on a seperate day?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      Up to 3 days per week

    • @trofee8
      @trofee8 5 месяцев назад

      @@runelitecoach I mean like in another workout

  • @rodconstable2095
    @rodconstable2095 5 месяцев назад

    You are wrong on this 8 seconds uphill is not the same as 8 seconds on the flat. 8 seconds uphill requires more energy(work) and is dependent on the slop of the hill. Therefore the phosphogen system may exhaust in 6-7 seconds uphill.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      Dude of course it’s not the same. I clearly say that they’re not the same…

  • @powasjington4262
    @powasjington4262 3 месяца назад

    I been doing this for 15+ years

  • @DMGC529
    @DMGC529 5 месяцев назад +2

    While I agree with most of this video, 98% of ATP is restored within 2-3 minutes. Waiting 10 minutes is crazy.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад +1

      Now do 8 of them and see if 2 mins is enough. Even if that’s true then by the 8th you have not restored 16% of ATP. And why be in such a hurry? Just jog around and get your miles in. No need to underperform on sprints unless you’re impatient

    • @DMGC529
      @DMGC529 5 месяцев назад

      @runelitecoach
      You don't need 10 mins. Sure take 3,4 minutes if you need. Any physiology text book from the last century will tell you this is what is needed. You are the only person I have ever heard say you need to take 10 minutes recovery after an 8 second bout to restore ATP-PC.
      If you are jogging around in between then you aren't fully recovering for a sprint and if you jog for 10 mins between 8 sprints you will be running for an hour and 20 mins....makes zero sense.
      Why be in a hurry? I dunno - kids, family, work, school, having a life.

  • @gsschneck
    @gsschneck 5 месяцев назад +1

    Well wait a second. I wouldn't run hill sprints to develop fast twitch muscles because I can't run my fastest on a hill. There's too much resistance. If anything hill sprints do the opposite. Developing fast twitch muscles happens by practicing running fast on a flat surface or downhill hill for short durations (30-60 meters maybe). Hill sprints are more for power and VO2 max. I do both. If you want to be fast, you have to practice being fast.... not slow. And, when done with a hill rep, you should feel exhausted with the heart beating as hard as it can to really get the benefits.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      To engage your fast twitch muscle fibers, you eat, either need to go fast, or heavy. It’s about the amount of resistance provided. Power is force over time. Running uphill, requires more force, so it engages power production more than on a flat.

    • @gsschneck
      @gsschneck 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@runelitecoach Power is energy expenditure per unit time which has a Force component which may help with block starts. Respectfully disagree on the hill sprints. They are not going to make anyone faster or recruit fast twitch muscles better then flat sprint work. Now if a person is out of shape and have never run previously then sure. But for someone who runs regularly all they are going to get out of it is stronger legs with the ability to run slow uphill. Their VO2 max will get better. It's not going to make a person run faster on a flat. If that were true, then sprinters would only run hills which they don't. Got to work the flats to recruit fast twitch muscles by running fast. In other words, to be quick a person has to practice being quick not slow.

    • @gsschneck
      @gsschneck 5 месяцев назад

      I guess if a person is a long distance runner who practices running slow all the time and then sprints up a hill for practice, then sure, you'll be recruiting your fast twitch muscles simply because you are running faster than normal and you'll get stronger legs.

    • @charliefong6980
      @charliefong6980 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@gsschneckI agree, but uphill sprints has its own place for developing stronger muscles which is one of key elements for sprinters.

  • @danieldepalol6101
    @danieldepalol6101 Месяц назад

    Hudson says to start with 8s but in the long term aim for 10s

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  Месяц назад

      Cool. Do it! Most runners never do anything at 100% speed. So 8s, 10s. Just do it!

  • @johnconcerto8721
    @johnconcerto8721 5 месяцев назад

    The ten minute break in between is going to take a lot of time to get the workout in...

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      I explain how to do it without taking exorbitant time in the video…

  • @paxundpeace9970
    @paxundpeace9970 5 месяцев назад

    While your and coaches approach might be correct it is not just one way to do hill sprints.
    7 or less seconds does serve a specific speed Development for running faster over a short duration. Considering that many middle distance and XC, long distance runners do lack that speed. Still the important choice is running faster for longer.
    A short hill workout at the end or in the middle of a run can be 6*20-25 seconds or 10*15 seconds which hardly covers aerobic capacity and is mostly anerobic but to a huge degree ATP and sprint too.
    Doing 4*2*6-8second hill sprints w full rest like 90 seconds between reps and 4 min between sets does traget speed for pure Sprint performance.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      A hill “sprint” can’t be longer than 9 seconds. Not to say you can’t do “intervals” longer. But I’ve already responded to half a dozen of the same statements in these comments, so feel free to read some of those.

  • @YannickLB
    @YannickLB 5 месяцев назад

    Well, yes... And no... On paper you're correct. But in real life almost nobody can move their legs fast enough for the needed push on the ground to stimulate fast twitch muscle in the way that it can't go past 8 seconds.
    A weightlifter or powerlifter that does one rep in about 8 seconds is using both sides of their body at the same time, and putting out waaaay more force.
    With running, both legs aren't pushing at the same time in the same direction with the same muscle for the same duration if you're doing only 8 seconds. You could make the case that it could be up to 16 sec for that reason.
    And to be honest: if you want to build strength, do strenght training, and do it heavy. It's way better than trying to mimmick it with running.
    Hill sprints are only great because it's uphill, wich put's less stress on your joints for the same effort (wich I don't have to tell you). So basically, it's up to goal of that trainingday how long you want to run up a hill, and what speed you pick for that effort.
    Also: the ATP system is trainable. Meaning there's no such thing as a fixed number like 8 seconds. For some it could be 4. For others it could be a whole minute.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      You can totally go to the max with your fast twitch fiber in a short sprint. That’s why 800 m sprinters are slowing down in the last 30 m. Because they are getting fatigued.

  • @dominikschrott7412
    @dominikschrott7412 4 месяца назад

    In 8secs i haven't even accelerated close to max speed 😕

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  4 месяца назад

      That’s interesting. If that’s really true then there’s an issue going on. Are you injured? Have you not touched on speed at all in many months or years? 8 seconds is a long time. If needed just jog IN to the hill sprint so you’re starting at 50% speed. It doesn’t need to be from a standing start

    • @dominikschrott7412
      @dominikschrott7412 4 месяца назад

      @@runelitecoach i'm just not one of a lot of fast twitch muscle fibres. Kinda Diesel motor.

  • @tovarestwhite7866
    @tovarestwhite7866 Месяц назад +1

    You can walk that hill for 2 hours and get more out of it...

  • @Runfastgo
    @Runfastgo 2 месяца назад

    Can this brainiac actually sprint?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  2 месяца назад

      Well…I’m a distance runner. And yes I can sprint. You’re literally watching a video here. If you want to judge a distance runner by his sprint speed you may be wasting your time

  • @guciolini123
    @guciolini123 4 месяца назад +1

    ATP and phosphocreatine is not in the blood. It is stored in muscular tissue. In presence of oxygen and myoglobin and enough glucose the time to regenerate all the ATP and phosphocreatine is around 30 s. And the amount of of time you have on them is Around 5-12 s (depends on workouts and genetics). ATP and phosphocreatine are getting rebuild by using glycogen and oxygen and myoglobin. If there is no oxygen, they are getting rebuild by anaerobic tract with lactate production and the time to restore is longer. Those are just facts.
    This is my opinion: I don't understand why hill sprints should impact fast muscular tissue ("white muscle") any more then horizontal sprints. To use fast muscle you just have to move fast for short time. That is all. If you do a very slow (cause of weight) squat, you mostly activate slow muscle. The man with most fast muscle that I know was a pianist (it was his hands, not legs, but you get the idea- fast, not hard). Hill sprints impact strength of the calf when stretched- jumping ability on stairs and rocks . They impact taking knees to low. Thy are done at a lower pace then horizontal sprint, so are easier technically and less traumatic, but can lead to Achilles tendon injury, if done wrong (the steeper hill and the worse terrain- the bigger risk of that particular injury).
    In my opinion the trouble after 3-5 sprints is not lack of ATP- it is lack of myoglobin (oxygen) and lactate building up. Also sprint causes overloads and overstretching of small fibers. That is what cruses fatigue (not lack of ATP). 10 minutes is also the time you need to rebuild myoglobine store (so fits).

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  4 месяца назад +1

      Running uphill, is the same as increasing resistance. In theory, you can recruit the fibers as much on a flat, but it comes with a downside of increased impact, and therefore increased injury. There’s also increased range of motion, which also is increased in injury risk. Hills sprints will minimize injury risk while allowing you tomaintain full muscle fiber recruitment.
      In regards to your friend, who is a pianist, the fingers have less amount of muscle fibers per motor unit than say the calf muscles. We want to train the legs to become more neuromuscular efficient as well, and recruiting a larger number of motor units through the same neural pathway with a given running motion is a great way to do that. You could also call that repetition training if you follow the Jack Daniels method.

  • @AE-ix2iz
    @AE-ix2iz 4 месяца назад

    0:08 These days? Smh football players and actual athletes have been doing them for decades! This is a fad for non athletes but has been the norm for explosive athletes

  • @peterwilkins7013
    @peterwilkins7013 5 месяцев назад

    What do you mean 80% of people do them sideways? I have never in my life seen a single person ever do them sideways. I assume you're joking?

  • @electrodynamicorb6548
    @electrodynamicorb6548 4 месяца назад +1

    You call that a hill?

  • @itsinthetreesitscoming7431
    @itsinthetreesitscoming7431 5 месяцев назад

    even 8 seconds you ain't gonna be able to do more than 4 or so before degrading performance.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      That’s why there’s at least 10 mins between reps. And a max of 8 reps

  • @elgaen555
    @elgaen555 Месяц назад

    This is coming at it from the wrong angle, the focus should be on a max effort.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  29 дней назад

      Not at all true my friend. These are max speed not max effort. You can be super tired and putting in max effort but not nearly max speed

  • @user-ox5ig7jz4q
    @user-ox5ig7jz4q 5 месяцев назад +1

    Sorry do you drink coffee?

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      Not much. And decaf when I do. Caffeine coffee only very rarely. I don’t like caffeine. I have two videos on this topic

    • @user-ox5ig7jz4q
      @user-ox5ig7jz4q 5 месяцев назад

      @@runelitecoach 🫶🙏

  • @vinniep01
    @vinniep01 4 месяца назад

    'What we're really doing here is weight lifting.'
    No what you're really doing is hill sprints. When I'm sprinting my leg turnover might be 200 per minute. Nobody squats 200 times per minute. In fact if you want to improve your fast twitch fibers you might be better off doing dead lifts or squats. That's not to say hill sprints aren't a good form of conditioning, they are. Just not equivalent to lifting weights.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  4 месяца назад

      Not true, if you want to improve your fast twitch fibers for running, it would be far more specific to run fast up a hill, which is against resistance. And resistance training can also be called weight training. If you want to look into the semantics of it I’m not here to argue, but you get the point.

  • @craigsips8677
    @craigsips8677 5 месяцев назад

    Stoping after 8 seconds doesn’t make any sense. I run 45 second sprints and the first 8 seconds is as fast as if I only ran for 8 but instead of stopping I just carry on flat out with full aggression.
    8 seconds is fine for warm ups.
    I think you are missing out of something very special by stoping at only 8.

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  5 месяцев назад

      If you keep going you slow down, and it robs you of being able to reset and do one again at full speed sooner. It makes perfect sense and elite runners use this
      If you do only one, then yeah you’re right. But the goal is to accumulate volume at full speed over the weeks and months.
      By your logic, you may as well keep going. Why stop at :45? Run a 10 minute hill sprint!

    • @craigsips8677
      @craigsips8677 5 месяцев назад

      @@runelitecoach The reason I stop at 45 is because that’s when I fail. I only run flat out 100%, nothing less. 9 years ago when I began I could only hammer out 15 seconds before my body slowed involuntarily.
      Anyway, I came across this channel by accident this morning, in hindsight my comment doesn’t belong here because the fitness I aspire to is different from yours. So, keep on doing your thing, peace and respect to you.

  • @Bitelli81
    @Bitelli81 4 месяца назад

    Not a bad video, but you repeat yourself too much. Work on your script

    • @runelitecoach
      @runelitecoach  4 месяца назад

      Aye aye capt’n

    • @Bitelli81
      @Bitelli81 3 месяца назад

      @@runelitecoach sorry it came out that way