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80/20 Working: Run Stronger and Race Quicker By Coaching Slower

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TRAIN EASIER TO RUN FASTER

This revolutionary coaching methodology has been embraced by elite runners—with extraordinary outcomes—and now you are able to do it, too.

Revered working and health skilled Matt Fitzgerald explains how the 80/20 working program—wherein you do 80 p.c of runs at a decrease depth and simply 20 p.c at a better depth—is one of the best change runners of all skills could make to enhance their efficiency. With an intensive examination of the science and analysis behind this coaching methodology, 80/20 Working is a hands-on information for runners of all ranges with coaching applications for 5K, 10K, half-marathon, and marathon distances.

In 80/20 Working, you’ll uncover easy methods to remodel your exercises to keep away from burnout.

• Runs will turn out to be extra nice and fewer draining
• You’ll carry much less fatigue from one run to the subsequent
• Your efficiency will enhance within the few high-intensity runs
• Your health ranges will attain new heights

80/20 Working promotes a message that each one runners—in addition to cyclists, triathletes, and even weight-loss seekers—can embrace: Get higher outcomes by making the vast majority of your exercises simpler.

From the Writer

Get better results by making the majority of your workouts easier

Get better results by making the majority of your workouts easier

80/20 Running makes the the number one training secret of the world's best runners available to all

80/20 Running makes the the number one training secret of the world's best runners available to all

Writer ‏ : ‎ Berkley; Illustrated version (September 2, 2014)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 272 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0451470885
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0451470881
Merchandise Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 kilos
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 0.58 x 8.98 inches

Clients say

Clients discover the e book very informative and sensible with enough explanations. They are saying it is nicely value their time and thought-provoking. Readers describe the exercise plans as easy and straightforward to make use of. They reward the writing high quality as clear, concise, and straightforward to learn. Nonetheless, some discover the content material boring and irritating. Opinions are blended on the coaching plans, with some discovering them nice and straightforward to observe, whereas others say they’re lacking exercises and missing good definition.

AI-generated from the textual content of buyer critiques

9 reviews for 80/20 Working: Run Stronger and Race Quicker By Coaching Slower

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  1. Tom K.

    Very Informative.
    Easy read and very interesting.

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  2. Kalchas

    Has changed the way I view running. I’m much happier with my running.
    TL;DR: Buy this book.
    I’m very happy with the book. I only recently bought it, but I had previously borrowed it from my library and liked it. I might have read some blogs by the author, but wasn’t really familiar with him before getting the book. There are lots of parts of the book where the author is discussing the 80/20 philosophy, its history, research, other training approaches, and things like that. Those sections seem well written and are not boring. I am even re-reading it, as I feel like I want to really get a good grasp of this knowledge. A lot of the author’s basic discussion applies to all areas of exercise fitness, not just running. The sections that discuss specific workouts and later training plans seem pretty well set up in tables with good discussions before them. I liked it so much I felt I needed to own the book and continue to return to it rather than just copying some of the information from the library book.
    I feel like the running philosophy the author is advocating is sound and works well for me. The author backs up his main premises with really solid research. I previously would run way too hard on what should have been easier runs, and it made it difficult to keep up a long-term fitness routine. Now I feel pretty refreshed after easier runs, and am able to improve on my long runs, short interval workouts, and tempo runs while not be drained at the end of a week.
    By the way, I’m basically an amateur runner. I’m 36, and I ran track and cross country all through high school, but was never at an elite level even when compared with my local conferences, let alone at larger region or state level. I’ve been running off and on since, sometimes with some pretty good stretches. I only ran my first Marathon when I was 35 (roughly 7 months prior to this review, roughly 2 months before I initially obtained this book), and prior to that had never completed a race of longer than 5 miles. I had a lot of trouble with training for the marathon, and after reading numerous blogs I feel like I have a better understanding of some proper ways to train. Even still, I don’t think I had grasped the idea that more of my running needed to be at a lower effort. This book offers a consistent guide and seems to have all the information I need in one place.
    At the time of this review, I’m in the middle of the half-marathon level 2 training plan, and am pleased with the fact that I’ve made it this far and still feel good.
    I took off one star due to some issues with the physical book, not with the content. The paper seems super thin and cheap, and it tears easily. It is probably recycled paper and that makes me feel okay about it, but it still makes it a little annoying. Also, I think the book pages could be better labeled with chapter numbers at the tops and such for an easier time quickly finding something you’re looking for. The titles of some chapters are not necessarily as helpful to me for quickly finding content. However, these are very minor issues not related to actual content. If I could only take off a half-star I would probably do that. The book itself is inexpensive, so some issues with the physical book are probably expected, anyway.

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  3. Kenn

    Interesting Read for Recreational Runners
    I’ve been running off and on for most of my life. Mostly because I had to be in shape for my occupation. I mostly trained for runs of 3 miles or less and my training was running a few miles a week as fast as I could. “No pain, no gain” was the only way I knew. I retired and no longer had any external motivation to continue running. It was such a drag that I didn’t miss it at all. Then I got soft and flabby and started running again. I did it the same way I always have, short and fast. I made some progress and won my age group in a couple of 5k races. I tried to train for 10k and I couldn’t. My legs were always wore out and joints were constantly sore. I started researching different training methods and came across Maffetone, polarized, and 80/20. All of them emphasizing mostly low intensity training. I’m currently a month into Maffetone training and just finished this book. I’m getting much more mileage without wearing myself out and my pace is slowly coming down while my heart rate stays the same. It is also rather enjoyable and almost relaxing to run without panting and having my heart pounding. I believe the method works. It’s a slow process and it will require patience and discipline to keep plugging along at a very low intensity and slow pace. This book has some great information that I will incorporate for my next phase of training. I think any runner could benefit from this training concept but it would be especially beneficial to aging recreational runners who want to train in a way that is sustainable and less prone to cause injury.

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  4. J. Bonbright

    A slow running skeptic no more!
    IMHO, this is THE book you need if you want to make huge jumps in your running performance.
    A little background: I just started running three years ago, at age 50. Until I got this book about six months ago, I just went out and ran with no plan. My runs were pretty much the same effort (heart rate zone), equating to what most folks would call tempo runs or a little bit faster. I did vary the mileage quite a bit, however. And sure, that method gradually got me a little faster over the years (more so at first) sometimes cutting off a few seconds from one 5K race to the next, though not always. I was kind of plateaued.
    I decided in May (2015) that I needed a REAL plan to prepare for my first marathon, later in the year (October). So, I started following the Marathon Level 1 plan in this book. Really, my goal for the training was to merely finish the marathon, with little expectation that it would allow me to perform better at an upcoming 5K (August) and a half marathon (Oct 10th). But, during the training I noticed I was running faster and faster at the same heart rate.
    So let’s cut to the chase: following this marathon raining plan, I PR’d in the August 5K race by 35 seconds, finishing in 22:21. Then, two months later I shaved 10 MINUTES off the half marathon, finishing an extremely hilly course (Freedom’s Run in the rolling hills of West Virginia) in 1:46:56 (compared to same race in 2014). There is NO WAY I could have run an 8:09 pace for the half – for almost two straight hours of running – without the unbelievable aerobic improvements this book has allowed me to attain. Further proof: my Strava suffer score for the 2014 Half was 333 (“epic suffer” rating) compared to a 243 for the same Half this past weekend. I ran about 50 seconds PER MILE faster BUT at a LOWER heart rate! That, to me, is unbelievable.
    So yeah, buy this book. It’s concise, packed with scientific proof, and has training plans for 5K, 10K, Half’s, and full Marathons. Even if you don’t race, following his 80/20 rule will make your runs MUCH more enjoyable and productive, insofar as improving your aerobic fitness level.
    One more note: while I usually buy Kindle versions of books, I bought the paperback edition and was glad I did. I wound up going back and forth repeatedly between sections, particularly the tables with the myriad different runs (long, tempo, intervals, fast finish, etc.) and the tables with the prescribed runs for a particular training day. I even affixed colored tabs to make it easier.

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  5. Lauriane

    I read this book so fast. I’m currently doing the training provided inside of it and I saw great improvements!! Love it

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  6. Juliana Santos

    Otimo

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  7. Alessandro Voltolina

    Una marea di informazioni su come gestire allenamenti lenti e allenamenti moderati.
    Consigliato

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  8. theenemywithin

    Having been a runner for 30 years I decided to put some structure in my running. Also got a few marathons this year so as I’m turning 48 soon I thought it would also be a good idea to better understand how to train Correctly. I’ve always been that guy busting a gut every run then complaining my legs are dead when I want them to work. With the advice and examples given in this book it tells you it’s OK to slow down and try to enjoy running instead of trying to kill your self every run.
    Yes I’m a Strava Idiot who is forever chasing PB’s but I’m trying to get over it. With what I’ve learnt in this book I think I will get over it and hopefully speed up some.
    I would suggest the only downside is trying to work out how this training works for you.
    I haven’t written a regime yet but I’m going to using the basis of this book.
    I’ve started using it and got my Fastest ParkRun for a while last week!
    Fingers Crossed!!!

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  9. Jakob W.

    “80/20 Running: Run Stronger and Race Faster By Training Slower” hat meine Herangehensweise ans Laufen völlig verändert – und zwar zum Besseren! Als leidenschaftlicher Läufer war ich auf der Suche nach einem Buch, das mir neue Einblicke in das Training geben könnte, um meine Leistung zu steigern.
    Die Idee, dass 80% meiner Trainingszeit im langsamen Tempo verbracht werden sollte, war für mich anfangs etwas ungewohnt. Doch die Autoren erklären diesen Ansatz auf eine so überzeugende Weise, dass ich es unbedingt ausprobieren wollte. Und die Ergebnisse sprechen für sich! Durch die Umstellung meiner Trainingsroutine habe ich nicht nur Verletzungen reduziert, sondern auch meine Ausdauer und Geschwindigkeit erheblich verbessert.
    Die Autoren präsentieren ihre Konzepte auf eine klare und verständliche Weise. Die wissenschaftliche Grundlage wird gut erklärt, ohne zu technisch zu werden. Die Trainingspläne und Tipps sind äußerst praktisch und lassen sich problemlos in meinen Alltag integrieren. Ich habe das Gefühl, dass ich meine Laufziele jetzt viel effizienter erreiche.
    Besonders beeindruckt hat mich, wie das Buch auf individuelle Bedürfnisse eingeht. Egal, ob man ein Anfänger oder erfahrener Läufer ist, die vorgestellten Prinzipien lassen sich anpassen und sind für alle Leistungsniveaus relevant.
    “80/20 Running” hat meine Begeisterung für das Laufen neu entfacht und mir geholfen, meine Ziele auf eine gesündere und nachhaltigere Weise zu erreichen. Wenn Sie nach einem Buch suchen, das Ihr Lauftraining auf die nächste Stufe heben wird, dann ist dieses definitiv die richtige Wahl. Ich kann es nicht genug empfehlen!

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    80/20 Working: Run Stronger and Race Quicker By Coaching Slower
    80/20 Working: Run Stronger and Race Quicker By Coaching Slower

    Original price was: $20.00.Current price is: $12.51.

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