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  2. How Tempo Run Workouts Can Make You Faster - AOL

    www.aol.com/tempo-run-workouts-faster-160200374.html

    Tempo run workouts are used by runners to improve their speed during race training protocols. Here, a coach explains what are tempo runs and how to use them.

  3. 5K run - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5K_run

    The 5K run is a long-distance road running competition over a distance of five kilometres (3.107 mi). Also referred to as the 5K road race, 5 km, or simply 5K, it is the shortest of the most common road running distances.

  4. If You Want To Run Faster, Experts Say *This* Is The ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/want-run-faster-experts-workout...

    Here are the tempo running benefits, best tempo run workouts, and how to do them properly for speed and endurance per running coaches. If You Want To Run Faster, Experts Say *This* Is The Workout ...

  5. Fartlek - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fartlek

    Fartlek is a middle and long-distance runner's training approach developed in the late 1930s by Swedish Olympian Gösta Holmér. [1] It has been described as a relatively unscientific blending of continuous training (e.g., long slow distance training), with its steady pace of moderate-high intensity aerobic intensity, [2] and interval training, with its “spacing of more intense exercise and ...

  6. Pacemaker (running) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacemaker_(running)

    Rabbits Abel Kirui, Elijah Keitany [] and Wilson Kigen [] pacing Haile Gebrselassie and Charles Kamathi at the Berlin Marathon 2008. A pacemaker or pacesetter, sometimes informally called a rabbit, [1] is a runner who leads a middle-or long-distance running event for the first section to ensure a high speed and to avoid excessive tactical racing.

  7. 5K challenge: How to walk or run 3 miles in just 6 weeks - AOL

    www.aol.com/november-5k-walking-challenge-walk...

    Five kilometers — or a 5K — is a popular race distance that is an achievable goal. In case your metric conversion skills are a little rusty, five kilometers is 3.1 miles.

  8. Negative split - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_split

    A negative split is a racing strategy that involves completing the second half of a race faster than the first half. It is defined by the intentional setting of a slower initial pace, followed by a gradual or sudden increase of speed towards the end of the race. [1]

  9. Long slow distance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_slow_distance

    A typical 5k runner might consider 8 to 10 miles (13 to 16 km) of LSD, while a marathoner might run 20 miles (32 km) or more. LSD runs are typically done at an easy pace, 1–3 minutes per mile slower than a runner's 10k pace. The objectives of these runs are to build blood volume and to increase muscle strength, endurance, and aerobic fitness.