How to Run Doubles
Running doubles isn’t as easy as just heading out twice in one day. Your primary goal should be promoting recovery so it’s important to give yourself enough time between runs.
Start by adding a second run to a day with a key running session that pushes you, such as intervals or threshold training. Your second run should then be easy, and can be at any time of the day whether it’s before, or after your scheduled training session. Don’t worry about pace just stick to an easy, conversational speed for maximum benefit.
Aim for around 6-8 hours between runs, or at a minimum 5 hours. Leaving a shorter period of time such as 2-4 hours isn’t as effective as your body has little time to recover.
When to Run Doubles
If you’re training for a marathon or a longer distance event and you’re struggling to fit the weekly mileage in running twice a day may help, but make sure you don’t break up your long run. When it comes to building endurance and muscle strength, running doubles are not a substitute for the weekly long run.
If your only goal is to increase your weekly mileage, then you may find it more beneficial to make up the miles in single runs rather than running twice a day. For examples, if you’re already running 5 days a week, try to add an extra running day rather than doubling up.
The Benefits of Running Doubles
- Body benefits – Doubling up on your runs puts your body in a glycogen-depleted state. As your body adapts to this new state it burns more fat and functions more economically by making use of your glycogen stores more efficiently, delaying fatigue and speeding up your recovery so you get fitter faster.
- Cumulative mileage – Doubling up once a week can give your total mileage a boost and help your body run further, for longer.
- Efficient recovery – Mixing your hard training sessions with short less strenuous runs will help increase blood flow to the active muscles, challenging and teaching your body to recover faster. If you can’t bear running again the same day as intervals or threshold, try a 30-minute cross-training session instead.
The Downsides to Running Doubles
- Recovery – Doubling up on run days can be tiring so make sure you rest completely on your down days to prevent overtraining and fatigue.
- Aerobic endurance – If you’re a beginner or intermediate runner – if you haven’t been running 50+ miles a week consistently for 3- 5 years – then the majority of your running improvement is going to come from increasing your aerobic endurance by increasing your runs of around 60-90 minutes. Running doubles is often two shorter runs of around 30-45 minutes, which while beneficial, is less effective for enhancing your fitness.
- Time consuming – Doubles require time and dedication. Although it sometimes seems easier to split a run into one in the morning and one in the evening, you still need to factor in proper fuelling, post-run recovery, ensuring you get enough sleep, as well as showering and changing time.