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Podcast Running with Dr Will

Running with Dr Will

Dr Will O'Connor

Sport

Fréquence : 1 épisode/35j. Total Éps: 36

Hosting podcast Spotify for Podcasters

How do I predict my marathon time? How long will my ultramarathon take? What are my heart rate training zones? How do I get started with running power? What workouts should I do to run a faster 5km? Should I run with heart rate or pace? Garmin, Coros, Polar, Sunnto, Wahoo, what's the best running watch?

Welcome to Running with Dr Will. A show for runners who want to get faster using the latest in running science and technology. I break down the science and tech so you can run faster for less effort.

In each episode, you’ll get actionable, scientifically-backed tactics and strategies to teach you how to add structure, accountability, and specificity to your running using the latest in running science and running technology so that you can enjoy running and smash your next PB. Running faster doesn't have to be hard!

Hit subscribe now to be notified when new episodes go live.

To steal my secret formula to running mind-blowing PBs, head to https://link.drwillo.com/stealmyformula

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Why Your Legs Get Sore Running

Saison 2 · Épisode 1

dimanche 1 décembre 2024Durée 05:32

Look who's back! I'm playing around with Spotify's video features. Let's see how it works out.


Join my Run Club here https://link.drwillo.com/Run-Club-Podcast

Carb loading, heart rate data, running power, Garmin insights and more - Your Questions Answered

vendredi 21 juillet 2023Durée 23:04

Answering a bunch of questions sent through by a client of mine.


Follow my training blog - https://substack.com/@drwilloconnor

Use my training zones calculator https://link.drwillo.com/calculators

Follow me on Instagram (DMs welcome) - https://www.instagram.com/drwilloconnor

Stalk my training on Strava - https://link.drwillo.com/strava-profile


Links and resources to help your running.

1. Steal my formula for smashing mind-blowing running PBs FOR FREE! https://link.drwillo.com/stealmyformula

2. Buy one of my $59 DONE-FOR-YOU Training Plans. https://link.drwillo.com/leadtrainingplans

3. Head to https://link.drwillo.com/courses to check out my “Run Faster with Data” course.

#fasterwithdata #runningcoach #marathontraining #runner #runningscience #trailrunning #ultrarunning #runchat #marathon #ultramarathon #trainingpeaks

The Run Down: Separating Grey Zone, Zone 3, and Junk Miles in Running

mardi 14 février 2023Durée 15:38

Join me at my LIVE Masterclass - March 13th https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunning

🏃‍♂️ Runners, have you heard of the difference between Grey Zone, Zone 3, and Junk Miles? If not, you could be doing more harm than good to your training and performance!


💪 Grey zone training is pushing too hard without the right intensity and can lead to fatigue, injury, and plateau. On the other hand, Zone 3 is the ideal low-dose strength and stamina-building zone.


😲 But beware, zone 3 can quickly turn into grey zone if you push the pace too hard. That's why it's important to find your thresholds (pace, power, heart rate) and set your training zones.


💻 My simple three-step process for setting your running thresholds:


1️⃣ Get a baseline measurement of your running performance with a 30min TT.

2️⃣ Determine your threshold levels based on your average pace/power/HR of the last 20min of your 30min baseline measurement.

3️⃣ Create training zones based on your thresholds. https://link.drwillo.com/calculators

📝 Don't let grey zone training ruin your running journey. Sign up for my free Running Masterclass March 13th https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunning


Read the full blog - https://www.drwilloconnor.com/blog


Follow me on Instagram (DMs welcome) - https://www.instagram.com/drwilloconnor


Stalk my training on Strava - https://link.drwillo.com/strava-profile


Links and resources to help your running.


1. Steal my formula for smashing mind-blowing running PBs FOR FREE! https://link.drwillo.com/stealmyformula


2. Buy one of my $59 DONE-FOR-YOU Training Plans. https://link.drwillo.com/leadtrainingplans


3. Head to https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunning to apply for my group coaching program that hands intermediate runners the advanced level, personalised and scientifically-backed ‘here’s how you do it’ repeatable runner’s road map, so they can master the workout ‘why,’ consistently increase speed and leap towards their next PB in record time.


Overheating Again: How Prior Heat Strokes Impact Runner Performance in the Heat

mardi 14 février 2023Durée 13:28

Join me at my LIVE Masterclass - March 13th https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunning

Another running event, another heat stroke 💔 As a runner, we all know the feeling of pushing ourselves to our limits, but what happens when our body can't keep up? It's time to talk about the real consequences of overheating and why it's crucial to listen to our bodies.

Have you ever noticed that no matter how hard you try, the same thing keeps happening during races? Your body temperature rises, you feel dizzy and disoriented, and you can't seem to shake it off. That's because repeated overheating can have a lasting impact on your body, specifically on the hypothalamus.

The hypothalamus plays a critical role in regulating our body temperature, but overheating can cause inflammation and damage, leading to a decreased ability to regulate temperature effectively. This makes us more vulnerable to heat stroke, even in low ambient temperatures during a race.


Read the full blog - https://www.drwilloconnor.com/blog


Follow me on Instagram (DMs welcome) - https://www.instagram.com/drwilloconnor


Stalk my training on Strava - https://link.drwillo.com/strava-profile


Links and resources to help your running.


1. Steal my formula for smashing mind-blowing running PBs FOR FREE! https://link.drwillo.com/stealmyformula


2. Buy one of my $59 DONE-FOR-YOU Training Plans. https://link.drwillo.com/leadtrainingplans


3. Head to https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunning to apply for my group coaching program that hands intermediate runners the advanced level, personalised and scientifically-backed ‘here’s how you do it’ repeatable runner’s road map, so they can master the workout ‘why,’ consistently increase speed and leap towards their next PB in record time.



Optimize Your Ultramarathon | What I've Learned from Winning and Failing

vendredi 3 février 2023Durée 20:24

Join me at my LIVE Masterclass - March 13th https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunningTarawera Ultra 102km 2023 - Top 10?

Can I do it? Last year, Tarawera was cancelled due to covid, which was lucky for me because I trained so hard that I got a sacral stress fracture a couple of weeks before the scheduled race date 😥. 

In 2021, I raced totally underprepared and pushed myself so far beyond my physical capabilities that I collapsed at 95km (yes, 95!). I was carried out of the forest on a stretcher. I legitimately thought I was going to die 😬.

In 2020, I smashed my race eight weeks after becoming a Dad and finished 14th overall in one of the most competitive fields ever seen. 

This year, I have taken all I’ve learnt from the previous three years and applied it to what has been an absolutely quality build-up (touch wood 👉🪵). 

What I’ve learnt and what I’ve changed.
  1. Last long run earlier
  2. Chill on the speedwork
  3. Only two LONG runs within two weeks
  4. Heart rate over pace and power
  5. Visualisation
  6. Easy runs SLOW

Read the full blog - https://www.drwilloconnor.com/blog


Follow me on Instagram (DMs welcome) - https://www.instagram.com/drwilloconnor


Stalk my training on Strava - https://link.drwillo.com/strava-profile


Links and resources to help your running.


1. Steal my formula for smashing mind-blowing running PBs FOR FREE! https://link.drwillo.com/stealmyformula


2. Buy one of my $59 DONE-FOR-YOU Training Plans. https://link.drwillo.com/leadtrainingplans


3. Head to https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunning to apply for my group coaching program that hands intermediate runners the advanced level, personalised and scientifically-backed ‘here’s how you do it’ repeatable runner’s road map, so they can master the workout ‘why,’ consistently increase speed and leap towards their next PB in record time.

Am I Running Too Slow?

dimanche 27 novembre 2022Durée 15:47

I doubt it.

I can almost guarantee you are running too fast rather than too slow.


Everyone thinks that performance comes from hard workouts.

In reality, your best performances are predominantly dictated by your aerobic base. Not your ability to run 10x 1min fast.


Running longer than 60min requires the ability to utilise fats maximally, spare carbohydrates, and buffer the acidity of lactate production to maintain maximal running economy for the duration of the event. At no point are you required to run ‘fast’. 

Your aerobic system contributes 98% of the energy required for events lasting 60min or more. Therefore, your most significant potential to get faster lies in building your aerobic base.


The biggest mistake I see runners make is thinking they need to run fast to get fast. 

Read the full blog - https://www.drwilloconnor.com/blog


Follow me on Instagram (DMs welcome) - https://www.instagram.com/drwilloconnor


Stalk my training on Strava - https://link.drwillo.com/strava-profile


Links and resources to help your running.


1. Steal my formula for smashing mind-blowing running PBs FOR FREE! https://link.drwillo.com/stealmyformula


2. Buy one of my $59 DONE-FOR-YOU Training Plans. https://link.drwillo.com/leadtrainingplans

 

3. Head to https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunning to apply for my group coaching program that hands intermediate runners the advanced level, personalised and scientifically-backed ‘here’s how you do it’ repeatable runner’s road map, so they can master the workout ‘why,’ consistently increase speed and leap towards their next PB in record time.


Tapering for Running Races | The Smart Method

lundi 14 novembre 2022Durée 20:39

Tapering is always hard. You need to freshen up, but you still have to do some hard workouts so you don't get stale. Otherwise, the race will be too much of a shock to the system. At the same time, you can't thrash yourself, or you'll start the race cooked.


Tapering requires you to be super in tune with how you feel daily to avoid overdoing it.

At the fundamental level, tapering is a progressive reduction in training load. Runners will reduce their intensity, duration, and sometimes frequency to increase their recovery time, leading into key events.

I believe there are four distinct durations for tapering;


Ultramarathon (5hrs+) = last big workout, four weeks

Marathon (2 - 4hrs) = last big workout, three weeks

Half marathon (1 - 2hrs) = last big workout, two weeks

<10km (< 1hr) = last big workout, one week



Read the full blog - https://www.drwilloconnor.com/blog


Follow me on Instagram (DMs welcome) - https://www.instagram.com/drwilloconnor


Stalk my training on Strava - https://link.drwillo.com/strava-profile


Links and resources to help your running.


1. Steal my formula for smashing mind-blowing running PBs FOR FREE! https://link.drwillo.com/stealmyformula


2. Buy one of my $59 DONE-FOR-YOU Training Plans. https://link.drwillo.com/leadtrainingplans


3. Head to https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunning to apply for my group coaching program that hands intermediate runners the advanced level, personalised and scientifically-backed ‘here’s how you do it’ repeatable runner’s road map, so they can master the workout ‘why,’ consistently increase speed and leap towards their next PB in record time.


#fasterwithdata #runningcoach #marathontraining #runner #runningscience #trailrunning #ultrarunning #runchat #marathon #ultramarathon #trainingpeaks

Analysing My 2:39 Marathon | Learning From My Mistakes

mardi 1 novembre 2022Durée 22:22

Auckland Marathon 2022 was set to be my best marathon. My training had gone perfectly. Probably my best ten-week block of training EVER. I don’t think I missed a workout, and that wasn’t through being super addicted to training. I loved every run and only began to feel tired in my last ‘training’ week before my taper (3-weeks from the race). I felt like I had a system that was working.


What did my training look like?

After building back from Covid, I did two major blocks of training. Each block was three weeks, with a one-week recovery in between. Each week was about 650 TSS (training stress), 9hrs, 120km, 1000m elevation. I did a midweek threshold workout and a weekend marathon tempo workout each week. The rest of my runs were easy, mainly off-road and hilly.


I specifically made a point to slow my easy runs, which greatly impacted the quality of my workouts and my day-to-day recovery. For reference, most of my easy-aerobic runs were around 4:30-5min/km, 80% LTHR, 80% FTP. Last year, in building up for the Tarawera Ultramarathon, I realised that when my weekly training load is over 100km/wk or 8hrs/wk I can’t run my easy-aerobic runs at the top of my zone 2 (85-88%). Otherwise, I struggle to recover from the big weekend workouts. 


You can follow me on Strava to track my training.


Marathon Workouts

I did four marathon-specific workouts, the biggest being 30km @ target marathon power three weeks out from the race. I ran the last 10km at the top end of my goal power, averaging 3:35min/km and heart rate staying in zone 4 (sub-threshold). I felt great. It gave me a lot of confidence that I could run in the low 2:30s come race day. 


Race Week

My 2-year-old son gets gastro on Tuesday (race is Sunday), and then my wife gets the bug on Thursday. I felt fairly average from Wednesday but never appeared to have contracted the bug. The day before the race, I felt like a truck had hit me. I told Emma how disappointed I was that I wouldn’t be able to race to my potential. However, that afternoon, I felt 100% times better and thought I had finally experienced that taper-week bounce. Race morning, it was pouring with rain, and I mean torrential rain. I couldn’t find my car key, and then I lost my hotel key. Honestly, it felt like the world didn’t want me to do this race.


Process Goals

I felt so bad the days leading into the race that I made a point to write out non-outcome goals that would make the race a success. Expressing myself, having fun doing what I love, and being proud of my effort were the key goals I put together. Once I had these goals in place, I felt I lot better about running a race in which I may not be able to perform to my physical potential. 


The Race

I had my watch on 5km laps with my screen showing lap power, lap pace, real-time HR, and real-time power, which gave me a good average of what I was doing rather than looking too much into each km or mile. I’ll break down my race in each of these 5km segments.


Read the full blog - https://www.drwilloconnor.com/blog


Follow me on Instagram (DMs welcome) - https://www.instagram.com/drwilloconnor

Stalk my training on Strava - https://link.drwillo.com/strava-profile


Links and resources to help your running.

1. Steal my formula for smashing mind-blowing running PBs FOR FREE! https://link.drwillo.com/stealmyformula

2. Buy one of my $59 DONE-FOR-YOU Training Plans. https://link.drwillo.com/leadtrainingplans

3. Head to https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunning to apply for my group coaching program that hands intermediate runners the advanced level, personalised and scientifically-backed ‘here’s how you do it’ repeatable runner’s road map, so they can master the workout ‘why,’ consistently increase speed and leap towards their next PB in record time.

What it Takes to Run a Sub-3hr Marathon | The Numbers & The Workouts

lundi 24 octobre 2022Durée 20:48

I hear the 3hr marathon goal thrown around A LOT. A large pool of runners I work with are 35-45 year old working professionals. They come to me and say, “I want to run sub 3hrs. Is that realistic?” They’re often concerned they might have left it too late. 


Here’s what you need to be able to do for a sub-3hr marathon goal to be realistic.


The first number you need to look at is your threshold pace. You want to have a threshold of around 3:50 - 4min/km (6:10 - 6:26min/mi), which is about a 39min 10km or 1:26min half marathon. If you cannot run a sub 40min 10km, you have next to no chance of running sub 3hrs. 


Your sub-3hr target pace is 4:16min/km (6:52min/mi), which means your 1km/1mi splits will drift between 4:10 - 4:20min/km (6:42 - 6:58min/mi). Unless you’re running on a treadmill, you NEED to be capable of running 4:10min/km (6:42min/mi) without going over your threshold.


Suppose your threshold is slower than 4min/km (6:26min/mi). In that case, you will burn too much muscle carbohydrate, accumulate lactate/acidity, and subsequently build fatigue too quickly, which will have you hitting the wall before the race end.


There’s more than one threshold…


Read the full blog - https://www.drwilloconnor.com/blog


Follow me on Instagram (DMs welcome) - https://www.instagram.com/drwilloconnor


Stalk my training on Strava - https://link.drwillo.com/strava-profile


Links and resources to help your running.


1. Steal my formula for smashing mind-blowing running PBs FOR FREE! https://link.drwillo.com/stealmyformula


2. Buy one of my $59 DONE-FOR-YOU Training Plans. https://link.drwillo.com/leadtrainingplans

 

3. Head to https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunning to apply for my group coaching program that hands intermediate runners the advanced level, personalised and scientifically-backed ‘here’s how you do it’ repeatable runner’s road map, so they can master the workout ‘why,’ consistently increase speed and leap towards their next PB in record time.

A Higher Max HR Won't Make You a Faster Runner (Lionel Sanders Example)

mercredi 12 octobre 2022Durée 16:18

Does maximum heart rate influence performance? 

Short answer, no. Cardiac output matters.

Your maximum heart rate has a higher chance of DECREASING as you get fitter. I’ll explain why. 

The term “heart rate” describes the frequency (in beats per minute, BPM) at which the heart is beating at a given point in time. Combined with the stroke volume (the amount of blood ejected from the heart per beat, SV), we get the total quantity of blood being pumped from the heart to circulate around the body per minute (the cardiac output, CO). Blood carries oxygen and fuel to the muscles and removes carbon dioxide as a waste product. At rest, our need for this process is low, so the heart can beat relatively slowly to fulfill requirements. However, during exercise, the demand for blood increases dramatically, and, as the ability for stroke volume to increase is low, this is primarily met by increasing heart rate, making heart rate a good indicator of how hard the body is working to produce metabolic power. Consequently, heart rate has been used by athletes and coaches for several decades to objectively measure exercise intensity and prescribe training.


Through the development of wrist-based HR sensors, many runners have started utilising heart rate in their training, which has led to some dubious ‘experts’ touting bro-science about HR and fitness. Despite heart rates’ advantages over earlier training metrics, such as perceived exertion, heart rate is not a perfect training tool.


One number I see thrown around is maximum heart rate (HRmax). The higher your heart rate the better runner you are or the better you are at pushing yourself. These statements are simply WRONG.


Read the full blog - https://www.drwilloconnor.com/blog


Follow me on Instagram (DMs welcome) - https://www.instagram.com/drwilloconnor

Stalk my training on Strava - https://link.drwillo.com/strava-profile


Links and resources to help your running.


1. Steal my formula for smashing mind-blowing running PBs FOR FREE! https://link.drwillo.com/stealmyformula

2. Buy one of my $59 DONE-FOR-YOU Training Plans. https://link.drwillo.com/leadtrainingplans

3. Head to https://link.drwillo.com/reigniteyourrunning to apply for my group coaching program that hands intermediate runners the advanced level, personalised and scientifically-backed ‘here’s how you do it’ repeatable runner’s road map, so they can master the workout ‘why,’ consistently increase speed and leap towards their next PB in record time.


#fasterwithdata #runningcoach #marathontraining #runner #runningscience #trailrunning #ultrarunning #runchat #marathon #ultramarathon #trainingpeaks


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