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A Typical Training Week for Coach Jay Johnson's Elites

Published by
Coach Matthew Barreau   Aug 31st 2010, 6:38pm
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Below is how Jay Johnson describes a typical week for the athletes he coaches. Johnson’s most notable runners are Brent Vaughn (13:18 5,000m/1:02:04 half marathon), Renee Metivier Baillie (15:15 5,000m) and Sara Vaughn (2:03 800m/4:11 1500m).

Sunday: With the long runs we do, Sunday’s a hard day. [On a 20-miler, Johnson’s runners start very easy, are moving well by 8 or 9 miles, then run from 14 to 19 at about marathon race pace effort, and use the last mile as a cool-down.] We don’t double on Sunday, but Brent goes to the pool after and gets a massage, so if he shows up at 8 a.m., he’s not done until 1 p.m. He’s not running that whole time but he is focused on getting better for five hours.

Monday: One run, easy, but we do strides Monday and Thursday, copying the [University of Colorado coach Mark] Wetmore system. If the runners feel like shit, they always have my permission to omit the strides. Now, [Mammoth Track Club coach] Terrence [Mahon] would say you’ve gotta set up the Tuesday workout to go really well by doing uphill strides or flat strides really hard on Monday. Brent hasn’t missed strides on Monday in forever, even when he’s tired, because he knows he’s going to feel better on Tuesday.

Tuesday: Hit it hard [a track workout or repeats on the road], including all the ancillary stuff. [After the hard running, Johnson’s runners do several non-running exercises, like medicine ball tosses and backward shot puts.]

You can’t use the term “easy” if you wait a day to do the power and strength stuff, and you can’t use the term “easy” [for the afternoon] if you wait to do the power and strength stuff. To me, the shot puts are power, but rather than go to the weight room, we’re doing the shot. And I would not put off the [ancillary] workout the way Mammoth does (waiting a few hours), because why wait? Now the power output’s going to be lower [right after a hard running workout], but a few hours later you’re not going to be recovered anyway. If Tuesday morning is really hard, Tuesday night is slow as hell. That’s the recovery workout before Wednesday.

Wed/Thu/Fri/Sat...
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Read the full article at: runningtimes.com

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