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2026-06-28

Aerobic Repeats

Aerobic Repeats

Controlled quality work that builds your aerobic engine

What Are Aerobic Repeats?

Aerobic Repeats are structured running intervals done at a strong but controlled aerobic effort. The goal is not to sprint, race, or empty the tank. The goal is to stack up quality running while keeping the effort smooth, repeatable, and under control.

Simple definition: Aerobic Repeats are quality aerobic efforts separated by easy recovery so you can keep the pace, form, and rhythm consistent.

Aerobic Repeats vs. Fartleks

Aerobic Repeats and Fartleks both build endurance, but they are not exactly the same workout. The biggest difference is how the recovery is handled.

Aerobic Repeats

Aerobic Repeats use a planned easy recovery between faster aerobic efforts. This gives the athlete a short reset so they can stay smooth, controlled, and consistent.

  • More structured
  • Often pace-based
  • Easy recovery between reps
  • Focus is consistency and control

Fartleks

Fartleks are continuous runs with changes in effort. The “recovery” is usually a steady pace, not a true easy jog, so the athlete keeps the aerobic pressure on.

  • More fluid and flexible
  • Often effort-based
  • Steady running between surges
  • Focus is rhythm and changing gears

Key takeaway: In Aerobic Repeats, the recovery is usually easy. In a Fartlek, the recovery is usually steady. That changes the purpose and feel of the workout.

Benefits of Aerobic Repeats

Builds Aerobic Strength

Helps athletes handle longer races and stronger efforts without relying on all-out speed.

Improves Consistency

Teaches athletes to repeat quality efforts without fading or forcing the pace.

Controls Fatigue

The easy recovery allows athletes to get more quality work without turning the day into a race.

Improves Running Form

Because the pace is controlled, athletes can focus on posture, cadence, breathing, and rhythm.

Develops Pace Awareness

Athletes learn what strong-but-controlled feels like instead of guessing or sprinting too early.

Great for Cross Country

Builds the strength needed to handle hills, grass, uneven footing, and changing race demands.

Coaching Points for Athletes

  1. Start controlled. The first repeat should feel smooth, not like a race.
  2. Run the pace you can repeat. The goal is not one great rep. The goal is all reps done well.
  3. Use the easy recovery correctly. Jog easy, breathe, reset, and get ready for the next quality effort.
  4. Do not sprint the last rep. Finish strong, but stay within the purpose of the workout.
  5. Stay relaxed. Shoulders down, hands loose, face calm, breathing controlled.
  6. Focus on rhythm. Find a pace that feels strong, smooth, and sustainable.
  7. Keep your form late. When tired, do not force. Stay tall and efficient.
  8. Leave something in the tank. You should finish feeling like you worked, not like you raced.

How It Should Feel

During the Repeat

Strong, smooth, controlled. You are working, but you are not straining.

During the Recovery

Easy jog. Reset your breathing. Get your body ready to repeat the effort.

After the Workout

You should feel tired but in control, not destroyed. The workout should build you up, not break you down.

Example Aerobic Repeat Workouts

  • 6 x 3 minutes strong aerobic effort with 1 minute easy jog
  • 5 x 800m controlled with 60-90 seconds easy recovery
  • 4 x 1000m smooth and consistent with easy jog recovery
  • 8 x 2 minutes strong but relaxed with 1 minute easy jog

The exact workout may change, but the purpose stays the same: controlled aerobic quality with easy recovery.

The Big Idea

Aerobic Repeats are not about proving how fast you can run one interval. They are about learning how to run strong, recover easy, and repeat quality work with control.

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