| Literature DB >> 34021488 |
Thomas Haugen1, Øyvind Sandbakk2, Eystein Enoksen3, Stephen Seiler4, Espen Tønnessen5.
Abstract
Despite an increasing amount of research devoted to middle-distance training (herein the 800 and 1500 m events), information regarding the training methodologies of world-class runners is limited. Therefore, the objective of this review was to integrate scientific and best practice literature and outline a novel framework for understanding the training and development of elite middle-distance performance. Herein, we describe how well-known training principles and fundamental training characteristics are applied by world-leading middle-distance coaches and athletes to meet the physiological and neuromuscular demands of 800 and 1500 m. Large diversities in physiological profiles and training emerge among middle-distance runners, justifying a categorization into types across a continuum (400-800 m types, 800 m specialists, 800-1500 m types, 1500 m specialists and 1500-5000 m types). Larger running volumes (120-170 vs. 50-120 km·week-1 during the preparation period) and higher aerobic/anaerobic training distribution (90/10 vs. 60/40% of the annual running sessions below vs. at or above anaerobic threshold) distinguish 1500- and 800-m runners. Lactate tolerance and lactate production training are regularly included interval sessions by middle-distance runners, particularly among 800-m athletes. In addition, 800-m runners perform more strength, power and plyometric training than 1500-m runners. Although the literature is biased towards men and "long-distance thinking," this review provides a point of departure for scientists and practitioners to further explore and quantify the training and development of elite 800- and 1500-m running performance and serves as a position statement for outlining current state-of-the-art middle-distance training recommendations.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34021488 PMCID: PMC8363530 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-021-01481-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med ISSN: 0112-1642 Impact factor: 11.136
Sources of best practice training information
| Athletes [reference] | Personal bests (min) | International merits | Type of source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alberto Juantorena [ | 800 m 1:43.44 (WR) | Olympic gold 1976 | Keynote speech/training log |
| Clayton Murphy [ | 800 m 1:42.93 | Olympic bronze 2016 | Interview/presentation |
| David Rudisha [ | 800 m 1:40.91 (WR) | Olympic gold 2012 and 2016 | Web post and training log |
| Hicham El Guerrouj [ | 1500 m 3:26.00 (WR) | Olympic gold 2004 | Lectures |
| Jim Ryun [ | 800 m 1:44.3—1500 m 3:33.1 | Olympic silver 1968 | Chronicle and training log |
| Joaquim Cruz [ | 800 m 1:41.77—1500 m 3:34.63 | Olympic gold 1984 | Chronicle and training log |
| John Walker [ | 1500 m 3:32.4—mile 3:49.08 (WR) | Olympic gold 1500 m 1976 | Magazine article/interview |
| Marty Liquori [ | Mile 3:52.2 | Pan American champion 1971 | Chronicle and training log |
| Michael Rimmer [ | 800 m 1:43.89 | EC silver 2010 | Chronicle and training log |
| Natalia Rodriguez [ | 1500 m 3:59.51 | WC and EC gold 2010–2011 | Chronicle |
| Nick Symmonds [ | 800 m 1:42.95—1500 m 3:34.55 | WC silver 2013 | Training log |
| Nick Willis [ | 1500 m 3:29.66—mile 3:49.83 | Olympic medals 2008 and 2016 | Training log |
| Peter Elliott [ | 800 m 1:42.97—1500 m 3:32.69 | Olympic silver 1988 | Chronicle and training log |
| Said Aouita [ | 1500 m 3:29.46 (WR)—mile 3:46.76 | Olympic gold 1984, WC gold 1987 | Training log |
| Silas Kiplagat [ | 1500 m 3:27.64 | WC silver 2011 | Training log |
| Taoufik Makloufi [ | 800 m 1:42.61—1500 m 3:28.75 | Olympic gold 2012 | Interview |
In addition, we have had personal communications with Vebjørn Rodal (Olympic 800-m champion in 1996) and Arturo Casado (European 1500-m champion in 2010). Novel training data from these athletes are presented in Table 6
WC world championships, EC European championships, WR former or current world-record holder
aHonore Hoedt coached Sifan Hassan during her early career, not when she broke several world records
Case study examples of training weeks for an Olympic 800-m champion and European 1500-m champion across the annual cycle
| Day | 800-m champion (Vebjørn Rodal) | 1500-m champion (Arturo Casado) |
|---|---|---|
| Mon | M: 8 km long run (z1–2) + 20 min drills E: 3–4 km warm-up (z1–2) + stretching + 10 min drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 8 × 1000 m | M: 14 km long run (z1) E: 10 km long run (z1) |
| Tue | M: Rest E: Warm-up with basketball + stretching + 10 min drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 3 × (3 × 4) vertical & (3 × 5) horizontal jumps + 20 × 20–75 steps of running and jumping in stairs with walk down rec. and 6 min set-break + core exercises 20 min | M: 14 km long run (z1) + Drills + Hurdles technique + 10 × 400 m lactate tolerance training (z6), rec. 1 min + 1 km cool down (z1) E: 10 km long run (z1) |
| Wed | M: 8 km long run (z1–2) + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + stretching E: 4 km warm-up (z1–2) + 10 min drills + 5 × 80 m strides (z8) + 2 × 10 × 200m lactate tolerance training (z6), rec. 1 min and set-break 6 min + 1–2 km cool down (z1) + stretching | M: 3 km warm-up (z1) + Strength training + 14 km long run (z1) + 18 × 100 m hill repeats (z7/8), rec. easy jog back + 3 km cool down (z1) + plyometrics E: Rest |
| Thu | M: 3 km warm-up (z1–2) + plyometrics and strength training without weights 2 × 10 exercises (20/20 s work/recovery) E: 4 km warm-up (z1–2) + stretching + 10 min drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 10 × 1 min | M: 4 km warm-up (z1) + 10 × 1000 m E: 10 km long run (z1) |
| Fri | M: Rest E: 6 km warm-up (z1–2) + stretching + 10 min drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 3 × 200 m lactate production training (z7) and 3 × 100 m sprint (z8), rec. 4 min and set-break 8 min + 1 km (z1) | M: 3 km warm-up (z1) + Strength training + 16 km long run (z1/2) + drills + 6 × 100 m strides (z8) E: Rest |
| Sat | M: 3 km warm-up (z1–2) + stretching + 10 min drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 90 min. explosive weight training E: 12 km progressive run (z1–3) | M: 4 km warm-up (z1) + 2 × 6000 m anaerobic threshold intervals (z3), rec. 2 min + 3 km cool down (z1) E: Rest |
| Sun | M: 2 h long run (z1) E: Rest | M: 12 km long run (z1) E: Rest |
| Mon | M: 6 km warm-up (z1–2) + 20 min. drills E: 4 km warm-up (z1–2) + 10 min. drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 2 × 10 × 200m lactate tolerance training (z6), rec. 1 min and set-break 6 min + 1–2 km cool down (z1) | M: 14 km long run (z1) + Drills + Hurdles technique + 15 × 200 m lactate tolerance training (z6) with 100 m easy jog in between (each 200 m in 29 s on average + 1 km cool down (z1) E: 10 km long run (z1) |
| Tue | M: 12 km long run (z1) E: Warm-up with basketball + stretching + 10 min drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 3 × (3 × 4) vertical and (3 × 5) horizontal jumps + 15 × 20–75 steps of running and jumping in stairs with walk down rec. and 6 min. set-break + 20 min. core exercises | M: 3 km warm-up (z1) + Strength training + 5 km (z1) + Fartlek (5, 4, 3, 2, 3 and 2 min. running in z3 with easy jog z1–2 in between corresponding to half the repetition time) + 1 km cool down (z1) E: 10 km long run (z1) |
| Wed | M: 6 km warm-up (z1–2) + 4 × 100 m strides (z8) + stretching E: 4 km warm-up (z1–2) + 10 min drills + 6 × 100 m strides (z8) + 4 × 300 m and 4 × 100 m lactate production training (z7), rec. 4 min and set-break 8 min + 1 km cool down (z1) + stretching | M: 14 km long run (z1) + 12 × 100 m hill repeats (z7/8), rec. easy jog back + 3 km cool down (z1) + plyometrics E: Rest |
| Thu | M: 5 km warm-up (z1) + 20 min drills E: 4 km warm-up (z1–2) + 10 min drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 10 × 1 min | M: 6 km warm-up (z1) + drills + 5 × 1200 m E: 10 km long run (z1) |
| Fri | M: Rest E: 3 km warm-up (z1–2) + stretching + 10 min drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 3 × (150–120–100 m) lactate production training (z7), rec. 3 min and set-break 6 min + 1–2 km cool down (z1) | M: 3 km warm-up (z1) + Strength training + 16 km long run (z1) + drills + 3 × 3 × 60 m sprints (z8), rec. walk back and set-break 3 min E: Rest |
| Sat | M: 3 km warm-up (z1–2) + plyometrics and strength training without weights 2 × 10 exercises (20/20 s work/recovery) E: 4 km warm-up (z1–2) + 3 × 600 m, 3 × 400 m and 3 × 200 m lactate tolerance training (z6), rec. 4 min and set-break 10 min + 1 km cool down (z1) + stretching | M: 4 km warm-up (z1) + 8 km AT run (z3) + 4 km cool down (z1) E: Rest |
| Sun | M: 15–20 km long run (z1) on road or treadmill E: Rest | M: 14 km long run (z1) E: Rest |
| Mon | M: 5 km warm-up (z1–2) + 4 × 100 m strides (z8) + stretching E: 3 km warm-up (z1–2) + 10 min drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 200–400–600–600–400–200 m lactate tolerance training (z6) rec. 1–3 min + 1 km cool down (z1) + stretching | M: 6 km warm-up (z1) + drills + 3 × 4 × 200 m lactate tolerance training (at 25 s on average; z6), rec 1 min and set-break 3 min + 1 km cool down (z1) E: 6 km recovery run (z1) |
| Tue | M: Rest E: 6 km warm-up (z1–2) + 10 min drills + 4 × 4 × 4 vertical and 6 × 30 m horizonal jumps, rec. 1 min + 10 × 20–30 jumps in stairs with walk down rec | M: 6 km AT run at 3:10 min. per km (z3) + 6 km fartlek [4 × (1 km in 3 min and 500 m in 1:40 min), 18:40 in total (z3)] + 2 km (z1) E: Rest |
| Wed | M: 8 km long run (z1–2) + 4 × 100 m strides (z8) E: 3 km warm-up (z1–2) + 10 min drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 2 × 5 × 200 m lactate tolerance/production training (z6–7), rec. 2 min and set-break 10 min + 1 km cool down (z1) | M: 6 km warm-up (z1) + drills + 4 × 1000 m E: 6 km recovery run (z1) |
| Thu | M: Rest E: 3 km warm-up (z1) + 10 min drills + 5 × 100 m strides (z8) + 5 × 100 m near-maximal sprints (z8), 1–2 min rec. + plyometrics and strength training without weights 20 min | M: 12 km long run (z1) + Strength training + drills + 6 × 100 m strides (z8) E: Rest |
| Fri | M: Rest E: 3 km warm-up (z1–2) + 10 min drills + 4 × 100 m strides + 2 × 400 m lactate production training (z7), rec. 10 min + 1–2 km cool down (z1) | M: 6 km warm-up (z1) + drills + 3 × 4 × 300 m lactate tolerance training, each run at 40 s on average (z6), rec. 1 and set-break 3 min + 1 km cool down (z1) E: 6 km recovery run (z1) |
| Sat | M: 5 km warm-up + 10 min drills + 4 × 100 m strides (z8) E: 4 km warm-up (z1–3) + drills, strides and speed work + 800 m competition + 1–2 km cool down (z1) | M: 15 km long run (z1) + drills + 6 × 100 m strides (z8) E: Rest |
| Sun | M: 8 km recovery run (z1) E: Rest | M: 6 km warm up (z1) + drills + 8 × 150 m lactate production training with 4 kg ballast (at 16–17 s on average; z7), rec. 3 min. + 1 km cool down (z1) E: 6 km recovery run (z1) |
Zone 1 running was performed at ~ 3:40 min·km−1 for Casado and ~ 3:55 min·km−1 for Rodal. Drills for Rodal consisted of 2–3 × 30 m ankle triplings, high knees, butt kicks, straight-leg bounce and other running-specific exercises. Drills for Casado consisted of 2 × 40 m high knees, butt kicks, straight-leg bounce, forward skip, double leg bounce, forward lung and brief sprinting. Hurdle technique for Casado consisted of four exercises over 6–8 hurdles with 1–2 steps in between. Strength training for Rodal consisted of explosive full and half squats, step-ups for each leg, bench flies, arm-movement simulations and toe lift at 30–70% of one repetition maximum, in addition to running-specific core exercises without weights. Strength training for Casado consisted of 3 × (6 × full squat, dead lift, step-ups for each leg, bench press at 50–70% of one repetition maximum, plus other exercises such as hamstring curls, calf raises and core strength. Stairwork for Rodal consisted of high-frequency running, one-leg and two-leg jumps. Plyometrics for Casado consisted of 2 × 50 m one-leg bounding for each leg and 2 × 50 m two-leg bounding on grass. Vertical plymetrics for Rodal consisted of hurdle jumps, while horizontal plyometrics consisted of one-leg jumps and various steps/”sprunglauf” exercises. The training program for Casado was designed by Arturo Martín-Tagarro
M morning session, E evening session, z training zone (see Table 4), AT anaerobic threshold
Specific training methods for middle-distance running
| Training method | Description | |
|---|---|---|
| Continuous running | Warm up/recovery run/cool down | Low-intensive running (typically 3–5 km·h−1 slower than marathon pace, i.e., 4:00–4:45 and 4:30–5:15 min·km−1 for men and women, however, the last part of the warm-up may approach marathon pace or slightly above), predominantly performed on soft surface (grass, woodland, forest paths, etc.). Typical duration is 10–30 min |
| Long run | Low-intensive steady-state running (marathon pace or 1–2 km·h−1 slower, i.e., 3:30–4:00 and 4:00–4:30 min·km−1 for men and women) performed on forgiving surfaces such as forest trails where possible. Typical duration is 60–90 min, but 2-h runs are also performed during the preparation period | |
| Anaerobic threshold run | A sustained run at moderate intensity/half-marathon pace (i.e., 2:55–3:15 and 3:10–3:30 min·km−1 for world-class male and female middle-distance runners). Typical duration 15–40 min. The session should not be extremely fatiguing | |
| Fartlek | An unstructured long-distance run in various terrains over 30–60 min. where periods of fast running are intermixed with periods of slower running. The pacing variations are determined by the athlete’s feelings and rhythms and terrain | |
| Progressive long runs | A commonly used training form used by African runners. The first part of the session is identical to an easy long run. After about half the distance, the pace gradually quickens. In the final portion, the pace increases to the anaerobic threshold (half-marathon pace) or slightly past it. Athletes are advised to slow down when the pace becomes too strenuous | |
| Interval training | Anaerobic threshold intervals | Intervals of 3–10 min. duration at an intensity around anaerobic threshold (half-marathon pace) or slightly faster. Typical sessions: 8–12 × 800–1000-m with 1 min. recovery between intervals, 4–8 × 1500–2000 m with 1–2 min. recovery between intervals, or 2–4 × 10-min. with 2–3 min. recovery between intervals. As a rule of thumb, the recovery periods are ~ 1 min. of easy jogging per 5 min of running. Recommended total time for elite runners is 25–40 min. Such intervals are advantageous because they allow the athlete to accumulate more total time than during a continuous anaerobic threshold run |
| Intervals of 2–4 min. duration at 3–10 K pace, with 2–3 min. recovery periods between intervals. Typical sessions: 4–7 × 800–1000 m or 2 × (6 × 400 m) with 30–60 s and 2–3 min. recovery between intervals and sets, respectively. Recommended total time for elite runners is ~ 15–20 min | ||
| Lactate tolerance training | Intervals typically ranging from 200 to 600 m with 800–1500 m race pace and 1–3 min. recoveries. Typical sessions: 10–16 × 200 m with 1 min. recovery between intervals, or 3 x (4 × 400 m) with 60–90 s and 3–5 min. recoveries between intervals and sets, respectively. Total accumulated distance ranges from 1500 to 5000 m in elite athletes | |
| Lactate production training | Intervals typically ranging from 150 to 600 m at 200–600 m race pace and full recoveries. Typical sessions: 5–7 × 300 m with 3–5 min. recoveries, 3–5 × 400 m with 7–15 min. recoveries, or 600–500–400–300–200 m with 6–15 min. recoveries. Total accumulated distance ranges from 800 to 2500 m in elite athletes | |
| Hill repeats | The main intention is overloading horizontal propulsive muscle groups while reducing ballistic loading. Typical incline is 5–10%, and duration vary from ~ 15 s to ~ 4 min. depending on intensity, goal (aerobic intervals, lactate production or tolerance training) and time of season. Typical sessions: 10–15 × 100 m with 60–90 s recoveries, or 6–8 × 800–1000 m with easy jog back recoveries. Hill repeats are mainly performed during the preparation period | |
| Sprints or time trials | Time trials | “All-out” efforts or trials aiming at achieving a target time. Distances are normally 50–80% of the athlete’s normal racing distance. Typically performed prior to (e.g., 10 days) an important race at the early part of the season |
| Sprints | 5–15 s runs with near-maximal to maximal effort and full recoveries. These can also be performed as strides, progressive runs or flying sprints, where the rate of acceleration is reduced to allow more total distance at higher velocities. The main aim of the session is to develop or maintain maximal sprinting speed without producing high levels of lactate |
An historical overview of middle-distance training organization
| New paradigms | Key coaches and athletes driving the development |
|---|---|
Use of systematic methodologies targeting middle-distance running | Paavo Nurmi was the pioneer of interval training and introduced the “even pace” strategy to running, using a stopwatch to control his speed [ |
Introduction of interval concepts and use of heart rate for intensity control | German Waldemar Gerschler (coach of e.g. Harbig and Moens) together with the physiologist Herbert Reindell refined the interval training concept [ |
Introduction of “fartlek” as a training method | Swedish Gösta Holmer (coach of e.g. Hägg and Anderson) developed “fartlek” as a training method [ |
Use of high-volume low intensity running as a basis of middle-distance running Gradually reduced volume and more competition-specific speed/intensity towards the competition period | New Zealander Arthur Lydiard (coach of e.g. Snell and Halberg) broke with contemporary practice by prescribing a large volume of low intensity running to his middle-distance athletes, peppered with specific high-intensity training, hill bounding and plyometric training [ The emphasis on high-volume aerobic training shifted towards less volume and more specific anaerobic and race-specific workouts towards the competitive season, which remains the foundation for most modern training programs. This training model bears great resemblance to Matveyev’s traditional training periodization [ |
Systematic micro-periodization of hard and easy workouts | Oregon and USA track and field coach Bill Bowerman popularized the hard/easy principle of running; days of hard workouts (e.g., interval training) were systematically alternated with easy days of low-intensive running [ |
Introduction of the multi-pace training concept Use of 2–3-day clustering of anaerobic sessions | In the 1970s, Frank Horwill, the founder of the British Milers’ Club, formulated and innovated the multi-pace training concept [ Another characteristic feature that emerged in British middle-distance running in the 1970s and 1980s was the 2–3-day clustering of anaerobic sessions (high-intensive intervals, strength, power and plyometric training), followed by 1–2 low-intensive (aerobic) training days [ |
Introduction of the polarized and pyramidical intensity distribution concepts | Several acknowledged scientists systematically quantified the training of successful endurance athletes in a range of sports and reported a “polarized” (i.e., significant proportions of both high- and low-intensity training and a smaller proportion of threshold training) [ |
Intensity scale for elite middle-distance runners
| Scale | BLa | HR | RPE | TTF | Race pace | AWD | Int. time | Rec | Training methods | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9-zone | 5-zone | mmol·L−1 | % max | % | 6–20 | min | min·session−1 | min | min | ||
| 9 | SST | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | < 0:08 | ≤ 60 m | < 1 | < 0:08 | 1–3 | Accelerations, flying sprints (alactic) |
| 8 | SST | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | 0:15 | 60–120 m | 1–3 | < 0:15 | 1–3 | Progressive runs or maximal sprints |
| 7 | VHIT | > 12 | n/a | 115–140 | 19–20 | 1 | 120–600 m | 3–6 | 0:15–1:30 | 3–15 | Lact. prod. training, TT, LS competitions, hill rep |
| 6 | VHIT | > 12 | n/a | 100–114 | 19–20 | 4 | 800–1500 m | 6–15 | 0:25–1:30 | 0:30–3 | Lact. tol. training, TT, MD competitions |
| 5 | HIT | 8.0–12.0 | > 93 | 90–99 | 18–20 | 15 | 3000–5000 m | 15–25 | 1–4 | 1–3 | |
| 4 | HIT | 4.0–8.0 | 88–92 | 85–89 | 16–18 | 30 | 10 000 m | 20–35 | 2–7 | 1–3 | |
| 3 | MIT | 2.5–4.0 | 83–87 | 80–84 | 14–16 | 60 | Half-marathon | 20–50 | 3–10 | 1–2 | AT runs, fartlek, AT int., prog. runsb |
| 2 | LIT | 1.5–2.5 | 73–82 | 70–79 | 12–14 | 120 | Marathon | 20–90 | n/a | n/a | Long run |
| 1 | LIT | < 1.5 | 60–72 | 55–69 | 9–12 | n/a | n/a | 20–150a | n/a | n/a | Recovery run, easy long run |
BLa typical blood lactate (normative blood lactate concentration values based on red-cell lysed blood), HR typical heart rate, VO maximal oxygen consumption, RPE rating of perceived exertion, TTF time to fatigue (single effort), AWD typical accumulated work duration, Int. interval, Rec. typical recovery time (active or passive) between repetitions, prog. progressive, lact. prod. lactate production, lact. tol lactate tolerance, hill rep. hill repeats, AT anaerobic threshold, TT time trials, LS long-sprint, MD middle-distance, LD long-distance, LIT low-intensity training, MIT moderate intensity training, HIT high-intensity training, VHIT very high-intensity training, SST short-sprint training
aWarm-up is typically performed in zone 1–3, although with shorter duration, while cool downs are typically performed in zone 1–2
bProgressive runs are typically performed in zone 1–3
Weekly training volume for world-class middle-distance runners across the annual cycle
| Variable | Early preparation | Mid-to-late preparation | Pre-competition | Mid-competition | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 800 m | 1500 m | 800 m | 1500 m | 800 m | 1500 m | 800 m | 1500 m | |
| Weekly training duration (h)a | 8–13 | 9–13 | 9–15 | 10–15 | 9–14 | 9–14 | 8–13 | 8–13 |
| Weekly training sessions ( | 6–11 | 8–12 | 9–12 | 10–13 | 8–11 | 9–12 | 7–10 | 8–11 |
| Weekly running volume (km) | 40–80 | 70–120 | 70–120 | 120–170 | 60–100 | 100–150 | 50–80 | 80–140 |
| Weekly running sessions ( | 4–7 | 8–12 | 6–10 | 10–13 | 6–10 | 10–12 | 6–9 | 10–12 |
| Weekly LIT sessions ( | 3–6 | 6–9 | 3–5 | 8–11 | 3–5 | 7–10 | 2–5 | 4–8 |
| Weekly MIT sessions ( | 1–2 | 1–2 | 1–2 | 1–2 | 0–1 | 1–2 | 0–1 | 1–2 |
| Weekly HIT sessions ( | 1–3 | 0–2 | 1–3 | 1–3 | 0–2 | 1–3 | 0–2 | 1–3 |
| Weekly VHIT sessions ( | 0–1 | n/a | 1–2 | 0–2 | 1–3 | 0–2 | 1–3 | 1–3 |
Short-sprint training (SST) is not included in this analysis, as this is rarely the main goal for an entire session in middle-distance runners. The numbers are based on scientific [74, 93] and best practice [2–42] literature
LIT low-intensity training, MIT moderate intensity training, HIT high-intensity training, VHIT very high-intensity training
aSupplementary training (strength, power, plyometric training and stretching) included
b2–4 weekly sessions in total for MIT, HIT and VHIT
| This review serves as a position statement for outlining state-of-the-art middle-distance training recommendations. |
| There are considerable gaps between science and best practice regarding how training principles and training methods should be applied for elite middle-distance running performance. |
| We identify physiological and training distinctions between world-class 800- and 1500-m runners. |