
Everything you need to know about interval training: track intervals, fartlek, recovery and how to integrate them into your plan.
If you want to run faster, you need to train faster. But not just any way. Interval training is the most effective tool for improving your speed, VO2max and running efficiency.
Intervals are structured workouts: you run a set distance at a specific pace, rest for a fixed time, and repeat. Classic example: 8x400m at 5K pace with 90 seconds recovery.
Fartlek (Swedish for "speed play") is more free-form: you alternate fast and easy efforts based on feel, terrain or visual landmarks. There's no rigid structure, and that's precisely its advantage.
Both work your cardiovascular system in complementary ways. Intervals develop pace precision; fartlek develops adaptability and mental toughness.
Work on pure speed and running form. Pace: faster than your 5K pace. Long recovery (equal to or greater than effort time).
The sweet spot of interval training. Work VO2max and threshold equally. Pace: between your 5K and 10K pace.
Work anaerobic threshold and specific endurance. Pace: 10K pace or slightly faster.
Fartlek was born in Sweden in the 1930s and remains one of the most effective and fun workouts around. The key: there are no fixed rules.
Alternate fast and easy periods by time. Example: 1 min fast / 1 min easy x 10. Or pyramid: 1-2-3-4-3-2-1 minutes fast with 1 min easy between each.
Use the terrain as your guide: sprint to the next lamppost, recover to the intersection, push hard up the hill, easy down. The purest and most fun version of fartlek.
A hybrid: you have a defined structure but you're not on a track. Example: 6x3 min at 10K pace with 2 min easy through a park. Same quality as track intervals, with the variety of natural terrain.
GPS running watch guide: Garmin Forerunner 265 — Programmable interval workouts and real-time VO2max metrics.
Fast shoes: Nike Vaporfly 3 for racing · Nike Pegasus 41 for training.
Heart rate monitor: Garmin HRM-Pro Plus — Monitor heart rate zones during intervals.
Recovery between reps is as important as the effort itself. Too short and you can't maintain pace; too long and you lose the stimulus:
A good sign: at the end of recovery, your heart rate should have dropped to zone 2-3. If it hasn't, you need more time or the intervals are too intense.
Group intervals are transformative. Someone to set the pace, positive pressure from others, and support when the last rep hurts. On CorrerJuntos there are specific interval and fartlek meetups in over 58 cities.
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