In today’s newsletter, Coach Sage Canaday gives you everything you need to know to successfully incorporate hill workouts into your own training plan.

Let’s go!

This is one of my favorite type of workouts to give to my athletes. Why? Flat track runners, road marathoners, half marathoners, and ultra mountain trail runners should all incorporate hill repeats, because they build efficiency at every distance.

What I Look For In a Hill 🏔️

Let’s start from the beginning. When looking for a hill to complete a workout on, what should you be looking for? I try to find a hill that averages a 5 to 10 percent grade, as this tends to work well for a variety of hill workouts. If you can find something even steeper, that’s great depending on what you have available and your target race. For example, I prefer to steeper grades when preparing for a mountain ultra race whereas road runners may aim for 5 to 8 percent.

When I start an athlete on a training block, I typically have them start with shorter hill repeats, such as 30 to 60-second sprints, and then gradually build up over weeks and months to longer repeats—two, three, even four or five minutes in duration. If you’re having trouble finding a hill in your area that would meet these parameters, I usually suggest completing them on a treadmill or a bridge (if possible).

Why Hill Workouts WORK ✅

Hill workouts are unique in the sense you’re able to engage your calves, quads, hamstring, and other key muscles like hip flexors, abdominals, and even arms due to the exaggerated arm swing experienced while running uphill. Not only are there key muscular adaptions, but outstanding cardiovascular benefits as well. Your heart rate gets significantly elevated so you’re breathing hard and gaining substantial aerobic benefits.

How to Get the Most Out of Your Hill Workouts 📈

The idea is to maintain good form and avoid a hunched posture. Instead, focus on driving the legs with an exaggerated knee drive, knee lift, and arm swing, working out any kinks in your form and mechanics as you ascend the hill. Hill repeats are never easy, but that’s why they lead to big gains. Understandably, your body is going to get tired and lead to your form breaking down. It’s up to you to be cognizant of this and self-correct!

If you’re interested in reading more on proper uphill running form, I’ve written on that previously which you can check out here.

What Hill Workouts Should Look Like 🔍

Often, I’ll prescribe my athletes to run hard for 1 to 3 minutes at a certain number of reps while focusing on good form and getting their heart rate up. After each intense effort, take a long rest, slowly jogging back down to recover (and possibly walking around at the bottom).

As a rule of thumb, you want the rest period to be longer than the high intensity run time. For example, if you’re running hard for one minute up the hill, you’ll jog down and rest for three minutes between each rep. Why? This helps prevent excessive lactate buildup, allowing you to maintain good form and complete all repetitions, thereby building neuromuscular coordination, efficiency, and running form.

Workout Example ⚡️

Here’s an example workout I’d give to my athletes and use myself: 10 x 1 minute ‘hard’ uphill with a 3-minute jog rest between each. Note: depending on where your fitness is at, it’s important to. modify the number of reps or minutes you run up a hill to prevent overtraining and/or injury!

That’s it for this week! I hope you found this helpful in covering the basics for your own hill workouts.

Happy running,

  • Coach Sage Canaday