How to Run Fast with a Low Heart Rate

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James Dunne
If you really want to run faster with a low heart rate, there are some secrets about low heart rate ...
Video Transcript:
running fast with a low heart rate sounds way too good to be true right especially if right now simply looking at your running shoes spikes your heart rate but by the end of this video you're going to see how it's not only possible but really holds the key to you running faster for longer painfree imagine this you've been running regular 5Ks and 10ks maybe your first half marathon and you found it harder than expected particularly the second half of the race where your pace slowed your legs felt really heavy and you realize that your base
endurance isn't quite where it needs to be to maintain your Target Pace following that experience after a bit of research you discover low heart rate training and running slow to run faster but it feels really unnatural just running at a snail's pace has your heart rate way up above your target Zone it feels slow ploty and wooden a whole load of effort spent going nowhere fast in fact a lot of the time the only way you can get your heart rate back under control is to stop and walk for a while it's super frustrating I
know cuz what I just described that was me but with some patience and a lot of perseverance low heart rate training really works in fact it's how I took half an hour off my Marathon finish time in 6 months the thing is there are 10 fairly counterintuitive things I learned in that process and once you know what they are you'll be able to start training more effici eff L and effectively to run faster at a low heart rate so the first thing that made a massive difference for me was understanding that my heart and your
heart they don't know the difference between running walking cycling any other form of exercise it's all about intensity from a point of view of your physiology okay so whatever it is Pace wise that gets your heart rate up into zone two but no higher it's where you need to be okay so that could be a steady state easy paced run or if you're just if you're just starting out with this that could be a power walk you you're just getting out there and you're getting moving and even just walking briskly gets you up into the
right Zone and there's nothing wrong with that whatsoever you'll find with a bit of consistency though you're actually able especially if you start with a run walk process a run walk program you're able to quite quickly transition from needing to walk to stay in zone 2 to be able to run slowly in zone 2 I mean this is this is the goal of the whole thing to be able to run faster whilst maintaining the same low heart rate that's what happens as we get trained in this as we get better and we improve our aerobic
capacity we improve our endurance now it's not just about when you're starting out it's also about as you're running as you're getting into the program and you start running different terrains you start finding that you're addressing more Hills you might need to walk the hills to keep your heart rate where it needs to be again we're going to talk later on about Pace but just when we looking at staying in zone two and not spiking your heart rate that's where we need to be really really disciplined and that's what a lot of people it's where
a lot of people really struggle okay the discipline and the patience and the ego quite frankly you know if you're used to pushing yourself hard with every run overtaking people running people down feeling like you're really you're doing a really great job all of a sudden being the person who is holding back who's letting all the runners come past you on a Sunday morning that takes some pride to be swallowed and there's that that's a challenge for a lot of us but there's there's nothing wrong with doing that you're doing this with purpose so if
normally you run up that long hill but you'd be a bit gassed at the top just walk it walk it knowing that your heart rate and you can watch your heart rate is still staying in the zone you want it to work at and as I said right at the top of this point your heart does not know the difference you're still working at that appropriate effort level to be getting those true aerobic training benefits what if your heart rate does Spike what if you do suddenly look at your watch and find that you've been
running too hard and you you you've jumped well out of that zone two bracket and again in terms of zone two obviously you need to actually have set your heart rate zones and there's a video which I'll link down in the description which will walk you through the process of figuring out what your max heart rate is and bit of a spoiler it's got nothing to do with your age again A lot of people are using these age-based heart rate um heart rate calculations and they're just anyway zone two if you jump out of that
and you spike your heart rate because you've suddenly been running too fast or like I said you ran up that hill you probably should have walked up at this point all is not lost your run is not ruined and the misconception is that I've blown it I've all of a sudden I've gone too hard my heart rate's up here it's going to take forever to come back down again it's an exercise in discipline in fact as Runners as we're working on our endurance we're working on building that aerobic capacity one of the big skills is
learning to manage your heart rate and allow it to drop back down whilst still moving I'll say still moving rather than still running because chances are you're going to want to actually back off to a walk let everything calm down and then gently build back into the run but ultimately as you then progress and become fitter become more capable in this kind of aerobic realm you'll find that you're able just just to ease back on the pace of the Run ease back on the effort of the run and see your heart rate drop back down
to where it needs to be if you started there and you spiked up here you might find yourself here you see not necessarily exactly where you previously were but you're not just simply seeing that very well initial quick Spike just turn into a a much higher plateau of harder work and higher heart rate for the rest of the run it's easy to do in terms of allowing yourself just to keep pushing once you're up there but that's not the goal allowing yourself to drop back down and get used to trying to work on managing your
heart rate is such an important skill and you'll notice that I've been talking about watching your heart rate on your watch not watching your pace on your watch now there's a number of reasons I say it like that none less none less none more I suppose than because pace is dictated by all sorts of different things of course terrain but also heat okay so the the just the ambient temperature and the ambient kind of humidity and those sorts of things they all will impact the ability for you to run out of certain pace for a
certain heart rate so for me what I do is I hide Pace on my watch I take it off the activity screen on my watch I can go and review it when I download my data later on that's fine it's in the the chus app but when I'm looking on my watch mid-run I just see my heart rate data and my time that's all I'm really interested in because that allows me just to Simply focus on the one thing that matters which is the intensity I am running at if all of a sudden I'm looking
at PACE I know what I'm like I know that the ego will creep in and with the ego creeping in yes I know that the goal is is heart rate but I also want to run you know mentally I'm thinking I want to run at sub this pace and blah blah blah it's hard to manage those two things take one off your plate just focus on what matters now a common frustration I often hear about low heart rate training is that it's dull it's boring it's doing lots of long slow running and to be fair
it is a lot of long slow running but that's not to say needs to be boring okay I mentioned earlier about not wanting to to spike your heart rate and that's that's really true but of course you can still work on going through the gears in fact I think there's a massive massive massively important role in going through the gears and by going through the gears I mean just starting to work on some neuromuscular training you may have heard me talk about this before on the channel but we are so hard up on thinking about
the heart and lungs okay so the the Aerobic System but actually that's just one piece of the puzzle what about the link between your brain and the muscles what about working those muscles through the kinds of range of motion that you need to be working through to allow your legs to kind of remember how to run faster when you put the put the pedal down when you actually ask them to run faster you've got to practice that if you expect it to be there when you want to push I've met lots of runners in the
past who have done lots of low heart rate training they've focused on lots of long slow easy running and don't get me wrong they got quicker over those those sorts of distances those longer distances simply because their aerobic systems that much better but they've lost top end Pace CU it's been goodness Only Knows since they really opened up and started turning their legs over quicker so what you can do is a couple of things you can be a bit playful with this within a long slow run and this isn't something you do lots of so
let's say you're doing a 12m run within that four or five times spread out you can just do a few kind of 15 20 second little surges just go up take yourself up to 5K race pace and Beyond it's only short okay if we're suddenly turning that into 30 seconds 60 seconds 90 seconds you're just going to blow a gasket and find yourself constantly working what I said said earlier in terms of trying to bring your heart rate down but if it's just a very short burst then you're just going to be working on turning
the legs over that a little bit quicker reminding your body how that feels and it should feel good it should feel really good it should feel light it should feel springy it should feel athletic but not in such a way that's going to really start to mess with the the aerobic side of the run that you're doing the other side as well is at the end of the run and I I love this at the end of long St runs finishing off not at my door but finishing off mile half a mile from home and
just doing a few sets of strides short acceleration runs you know 50 80 yards something like that where you're just again going through the gears up to kind mile rep type Pace again whatever you want to think of it as about F fast let's at least say faster than 5K race paace again it doesn't need to be super prescriptive but basically we're saying go through the gears a little bit of faster running really focusing on form almost exaggerated form there's a couple of things that go on there firstly it's allowing you to remember how to
run well or to teach your body how to run well technically well run with good form under fatigue and secondly it's just reinforcing those neuromuscular links between your brain and the muscles again under fatigue okay so don't do lots of these because you are fatigued so volume won't do you any favors at all we're looking at maybe doing four to six reps with a long walking break in between should be fully recovered this think of this as weirdly a kind of a part of your cool down you should be fully recovered in between these reps
it's not a it's not an interval you know a short super short interval session it's not that at all recover go again it should feel light it should feel sprightly and it should finish a long run feeling a lot more of a buzz than you would do normally a lot of the time you finish a long run you get home it's like okay that was that was hard that feels that feels good that feels kind of virtuous to have done that but I feel like I've done a long run whereas these you kind of come
home of course you've done the long run but you come home and it just feels like there's a more zip in the leg feels a little more I like think of it as kind a bit more Buzz I don't know I hope that that comes across right now here's a big misconception when it comes to running slow to run faster low heart rate training because it comes with the kind of secondary benefit or the the the associated benefit people talk about in terms of becoming better at burning fat for fuel fat oxidization it's true you
are at those easier Paces far better set up to be burning fat as a fuel source to be able to maintain that easy pace for longer in fact even the most lean of us have ample amounts of body fat to be able to power that long slow easy running for a very very long time in terms of um or in comparison rather to the muscle glycogen that is relied upon when you're simply burning burning carbohydrate the fuel which that will deplete in I think it's about 90 minutes it's all good burning fat for fuel but
that does not equate to weight loss that does not equate to Fat Loss specifically I think that's where a lot of people get a bit confused they're thinking I'm running in the fat burning Zone yeah fat burning Zone low intensity low effort it's it's exactly what it is fat burning does not equate to this being reduced the only way we lose fat the only way we we burn body fat in a way that's actually going to lower your body fat percentage is to be in a calorie deficit I mentioned this in in a video a
couple of weeks ago being in a calorie deficit you consuming less than you burn so you actually get that thermogenic effect of exercise you you end up burning the stores that you have and reducing the stores that you have because it's fued the exercise okay if not your body's just using available fat to fuel itself but you're also taking in the calories that replace the available stored fat so you're you're not seeing that that sum reduction of body fat so that all that to say that if you're looking to do this to burn fat as
in lose weight you're probably going to end up disappointed what I'd rather see you do is take a look at what you're eating take a look at what your putting in your body okay eating drinking as well from a calorific perspective day in day out and understand that once you get into a calorie deficit your running will actually help support that calorie deficit and make it easier for you to stay in that calorie deficit as you have a little bit more wiggle room with the food okay so again it's all about mindset it's all about
your expectations and what you're what you're trying to do with this and on a very similar note not fasted running this is something I've played with in the past something I've seen a little bit of benefit to in the past as well fasted running I for me was getting up in the morning and going out and doing a long slow easy paced run before I've had any food that for me was really beneficial I found that the times when I was also in the calorie deficit and I was doing that it really did help to
accelerate the the process for me of weight loss cuz I was I was doing it in a deficit as well as running decent mileage um I was combining those two things now you got to be careful with it really really careful with it because for those who are in a for those who are running fasted it's also not unlikely that you're probably going to be a little bit dehydrated if you are getting up first in the morning and going um and there are so many different there are so many different ways in which running faster
can help from uh improving fat met fat metabolism um improving mitochondrial efficiency all those sorts of things but is the juice necessarily worth the squeeze if you're putting yourself in a position where potentially that could be a little bit unhealthy you you can find yourself you perhaps struggling a little bit later in the day I don't know you you got to play with that and just just be sensible with it it can also have a bit of a catabolic effect so you can actually end up starting to lose a bit more muscle mass than you
would do if you were simply running in a deficit on a regular basis okay running in a deficit on a regular basis especially if you're not doing a lot of strength work and your protein intake which for a lot of us our protein is quite we probably don't eat enough protein um there will be a degree of lean muscle loss anyway if you're doing fasted long runs you're going to probably see more lean muscle loss which for us Runners a lot of us don't have a lot to lose so we need to be careful of
that a big mistake that a lot of Runners seem to make when it comes to running slow to run faster and running at a an easy low heart rate is that they completely ignore their running form running form is so so so important when it comes to this kind of thing because you're doing high volume of running and you're doing it in such a way which could allow you just to a little bit lazy and it's that lazy form that kind of plotting gate that comes with running at a slow pace again a lot of
the time Cadence can take a little bit of a nose dive we can find that we start to overstride a little bit posture starts to suffer that's when we start finding that whether it's shins splints whether it's runner's knee whether it's even things like high hamstring tendonopathy we start to get those overuse injuries starting to creep in ITB syndrome another great example so we need to make sure that although your running at an easy patient should feel Rel relaxed you still try and stay on top of keeping your Cadence nice and high you might not
find yourself up at that 180 range if you're running down at 10 11 minute miles it's very different to whether you're to to if you're running at you know more of a Tempo Pace but not allowing your Cadence to take such a nose D that it feels heavy and bloody underfoot you should be looking just to feel that it feels light and responsive underfoot you feel that you're tall in your posture those two things alone will make a massive difference because it's when you get tired and you start to slump and the Cadence drops and
the contact time gets longer it feels heavy puts more stress and strain up through the system and most of the time that's where we find that if Runners have a tendency not to use their glutes that's going to be worse at that point and you start reinforcing a lot of bad patterns a lot of muscular imbalances that can start leading to those overuse injuries so keep an eye on your form it really really really matters it's not just about the numbers on your watch now let's say you're training for a marathon or a half marathon
and you're looking to do so using this low heart rate Training Method and basically doing lots of long easy slow running it makes sense you're you're training for an endurance event your endurance needs to be worked on particularly in those long marathon training runs as we're getting longer 12 14 16 18 20 22 M long runs you're going to be doing lots of easy running your endurance is going to improve come what may but if you turn up to race day expecting your Target Pace to be there on demand assuming your Target Pace is significantly
faster than your long run Pace it should be it might not be there you might find that if you've only done long run Pace at low you know zone two type Pace work in training and all of a sudden on race day you're hoping to run at whatever your goal pace is you might be setting yourself up for a lot of frustration what I tend to get people to do to counter that in the last 6 to8 weeks of a marathon training plan and this works for half marathon as well is for those those key
long let's call them long Sunday runs cuz they so often are for those key long runs in that period before that that real last kind of big block before your taper begins is to start adding in blocks of Target Pace within Those runs now there are two versions here either you can do something like we're doing a 16m long run you could have 2 * 3 miles within that so you do the first few miles you then do three miles at Target Pace couple of miles at long run P Pace three miles on Target Pace
again then finish off through to the end at long run Pace that's one example or and this is my my favorite what what I tend to do in fact I start out with those let's say eight weeks to go before taper start out for the first four of those eight weeks doing those blocks in the middle progressively changing those sessions to make them slightly more challenging as we go but then for the last four weeks before taper we started doing what I refer to as fast finish long runs so let's say you're doing again um
well no let's say you're doing 18 Miler you 18 miler in the last couple of weeks before your taper starts I'd get you to perhaps do 10 miles at long run Pace then the last eight miles you run it in at Target Pace Target marathon pace you're starting to get your body used to feeling what it is to actually turn your legs over at that pace again under fatigue not just fatigue on the session but the cumulative fatigue of all the training that you've done in that block that's why we have the table because you
need to shake that cumulative fatigue so you can actually Peak at the right time but getting used to Target Pace is so so important you can't just run slow to run faster okay and I mentioned obviously those long Sunday runs but in fact it's not just about a given long run in the week when it comes to running slow to run faster low hard rate training what's really important is the cumulative time you're spending in zone two across a given training week and again the weeks that you're backing up week after week after week after
week as you do that the cumulative effect that volume you can think of it as mileage but to be honest I'd rather think of it more in terms of just time spent in the right Zone that is what really starts to move the needle that's what starts to get you in a position where your heart your cardiovascular system will start to actually see that that adaptation again it's not just the heart I don't know why I keep saying the heart um it's it's the the whole cardiovascular system really starts to make such adaptations and there's
something else there's a certain point around about 2 hours of a long run that really seems to again move the needle in terms of really seeing progress in your ability to run faster at that easy pace for me it's when I've got to a point and again the same with a lot of the runners that I've coached you get to a point where you're able to do a couple of 2hour plus runs in the week in some cases maybe even three 2hour plus runs in the week again that's not for everybody but again something that
I've I've played with in the past with my own training cuz my body responds a little better to doing fewer runs in the week but making them longer CU I'm a slightly heavier guy um fewer runs in the week making them longer which means I can get the volume in whilst also ring fencing the recovery between those runs allowing myself to do runs Beyond 2 hours more frequently seem to really progress the rate at which I was improving when it comes to running given Paces for a certain heart rate yeah staying in my zone too
so if you have the capacity to do so get up to that point where you're running longer than longer than 2 hours yes in your long Sunday run or whenever your long run is in the we long run is in the week but if you can find another time to do kind of a medium long run in the week that's when you'll start really pouring gas on the effect of this and the very last point I wanted to make with this is to really really listen to your body get game some people get so hooked
up on the numbers that they just push through regardless okay they they feel these kind of aches and pains and they think well you know what trably won't get any worse spoiler it usually does um and they just say right I must hit these certain benchmarks in terms of my weekly again time spent in zone or weekly mileage or whatever however they're measuring it you can't just get so obsessed on the numbers got to listen to your body and allow yourself the time away from running if your body needs it to get the recovery right
because as I said in the video the other day it's better to take a week off proactively to allow yourself to recover from a small acal pain than it is to be forced to miss a month six weeks that's where your Fitness is really going to take a nose dive now taking that right back to the start of this your body does not know the difference between running and another form of exercise so you can get away with getting on the bike if if your shins are hurting so you ramped on the volume too quickly
get on the bike there's a certain Fitness aerobic fitness endurance which transfers really well from cycling to running it doesn't really go the other way so in the world of triathlon you see an Iron Man Triathlon in particular you see people who are really quite injury-prone when it comes to running they do a lot of their training on the bike they don't do a great deal of running training they do but they don't do the same as you would do if you're an out andout runner and they absolutely smash it when it comes to running
a marathan off the bike and an Iron Man because they built the Fitness on the bike now I know for a fact that you could be a great Runner stick that great runner on the bike and they will be garbage the strength isn't there the it just it just isn't the same but going that way it works so have some confidence in the fact that if needs be you can just jump on the bike be static bike or getting out and cycling and you can keep working on this whole system without actually putting your body
through the pounding that is running earlier I mentioned that time I took 30 minutes off my marathon time in just 6 months using low heart rate training I'll link to that video on screen now knowing that you made it to the end of this video I'm certain that you'll enjoy that one I'll see you over there
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