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Tapering
for Full and Half Marathons
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by
Coach Brendon
Getting fit and fast is only part of the equation
to having a great day. Not only do you need to ensure that
you peak at the right time, which is on the day of your event,
but you also need to arrive fully recovered, that is fresh
and without any feelings of fatigue. Peaking and Tapering
is about ensuring full recovery while maintaining performance
adaptations and it's a fine balance.
Why
do you need to Taper?
You need to reduce your training volume (taper) to ensure
full recovery. Running training causes muscle damage, fatigue
and also depletes carbohydrate stores in muscle. You need
to ensure that these factors are reduced as much as possible
while at the same time you need to make sure that the adaptations
your body has made from your training are not lost.
Ensuring Full Recovery
You need to ensure full recovery for a number of different
body systems. Lets take a closer look at the key factors you
need to work on for full recovery in the taper:
Muscle Damage
By reducing training, and in particular long or intense speed
training sessions, you will arrive at you event with fresh
legs. Quite often marathoners and ½ marathoners find
that it is their legs that give out in the latter part of
a race. Starting with muscle soreness or muscle fatigue will
increase the risk.
Fatigue
By fatigue I mean general fatigue from lots of hard training
over a prolonged period (10 weeks plus). A proper taper will
give you some mental drive, a very necessary component to
ensure that you can focus for your event and push hard in
the closing stages. Your central nervious system needs several
days of light training as a minimum and the longer your buildup
the longer the taper needs to be to remove this. One way to
do this without getting lethargic is to do wind sprints in
the final few days. These are short efforts at or faster than
your projected race intensity (PRI) see the programme below.
Carbohydrate Stores
Your body can only store a limited amount of carbohydrate
in muscle (600g or so) and so your final week should focus
on maximizing this. You therefore need to ensure that you
do keep eating well, but you can overdo it. If you have been
training hard you will be eating more food than usual, so
when you reduce your training in the taper, most athletes
would be advised to keep their energy stores up by keeping
the same eating patterns. This also follows the age old rule
of not changing anything close to your event. By also timing
your meals immediately (<30min) after your training, you
will also ensure that you store less of your food as body
fat and more as muscle glycogen, which is good general training
advise anyway.
Maintaining Performance Components
As I said earlier you need to make sure that while you are
reducing your training so that you are fully recovered, you
will also need to ensure that you maintain all the adaptations
from your training. These adaptations have been hard earned
so you do want to hold onto them. The key areas are cardiovascular
endurance, muscular endurance, cardiovascular speed, and Muscular
(Leg) speed.
Cardiovascular (aerobic) Endurance
Many of the adaptations to endurance training are rather permanent,
things like red blood cell numbers, the oxygen carry molecule
heamoglobin, blood capillary density in muscles and mucles
cells mitochondria and oxygen carrying myoglobin don't change
rapidly. That's good news if you want to cut back your training
and freshen up. So this explains why you can do your last
long run as much as a month out from a marathon. You body
still maintains the benefit for up to 30 days. Key point here
is that you should never be afraid to back off your long run.
By reducing your training volume to 1/3 of your highest level
you can maintain your cardiovascular fitness for around 8
weeks.
Cardiovascular Speed
Your taper must include speed work, but reduced to limit muscle
damage if you have run a time trial of about 50% of race distance
2 weeks out from your event you will need to do something
hard 8 days out of around 25% of race distance. This would
be your last hard session. So for a good marathon runner this
would be 5x2k at PRI. 6 days out you would look to remind
your body with some shorter intervals say 4x400m. You want
to do just enough to maintain. Listening to your body and
knowing when to quit this session is also important. Ask "is
another rep going to make me faster on race day" if not
warm down and go home.
Muscular Endurance
If you are properly rested and have maximized your energy
stores and energy usage the next most likely area to cause
you to slow down in a marathon is muscle endurance, that is
simply that your legs die, it happens all the time. Your taper
needs to be done carefully to ensure that you maintain these
adaptations. You do need to do something of about 1/3 your
maximal muscle endurance around 10 days out but also another
smaller amount 6 days or so out. For the 10 days out from
a marathon a workout of 60min including 50% Hills and several
hill reps (say 8x400m) at PRI is key. Do this on grass to
reduce muscle damage. This workout should feel mildly taxing
on the legs but relatively easy in terms of available energy
and cardiovascular effort.
Muscular (Leg) Speed
Leg Speed seems to decrease rapidly. Even after a day off
from exercise you feel sluggish and part of this is that your
ability to turn your legs over fast drops, to combat this
you need to include wind sprints, these are often 1-200m reps
at PRI or slightly faster. Because you lose leg speed rapidly
I think that you should do something on the day before your
marathon. Nothing worse than taking ½ the event to
get going. A short session building up to your PRI on that
day before is also good for your nerves, do it on grass and
keep it short (see the suggested taper programme)
Monitor your state of readiness
It is not uncommon for athletes to become sick during the
taper, to avoid this monitor how you feel. If you feel lethargic
but you shouldn't be due to reduced training, this is a sign
that you need to do some speed even 2x200m at your ½
Marathon Pace can be enough to 'wake your body up'. As you
will be able to see the suggested taper includes some faster
training on every day except the day two days out.
Individual Variation in Taper
Some athletes need more training than others when it comes
to the final few days. If you need more training to avoid
going sluggish, be careful that you don't end up with tired
legs and depleted energy stores. Keep on the grass and top
up your energy stores as you go.
Massage, Contrast Water Therapy and Stretching
Many athletes get a massage in the week before their goal
event, my advice. Don't do it if you don't get a regular massage
or keep it very light.
Contrast water therapy is where you take a hot shower or use
a spa or hot bath and follow this with a cold shower, or plunge
pool Eg. 3-4x 7min hot and 2min cold works well and can really
make you feel alive. Works for me.
The rule is before exercise use active stretching and after
exercise use passive stretching.
Example
Tapers for ½ Marathon and Marathon
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Monday
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Tuesday
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Wednesday
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Thursday
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Friday
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Saturday
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Sunday
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Volume
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8-10km
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6km
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3km
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4km
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Day
off
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2-4km
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Race
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Specifics
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3-6x400m
at PRI*
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2-5x400m
Shallow Hill Reps at PRI*
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2-6x100m
PRI*
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Include
4-8x200m at
PRI* 2x1min Up hill PRI
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Include
1-2x45sec at
PRI*
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Notes
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Full Recovery
between efforts.
On Grass if
possible
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Easy Session
Optional
if you are not feeling fully recovered miss out, if
you feel lethargic do this session
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On
grass if Possible
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If
you feel lethargic use contrast water therapy
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