Roadrunner distance training is built around consistent aerobic development, gradual progression, strength, and smart recovery. The goal is not to run the most miles as quickly as possible. The goal is to help athletes adapt safely, stay healthy, and arrive at the season prepared to train and race well.
The weekly rhythm is simple:
Monday — Quality Workout 1
A focused threshold or VO₂Max/speed session, followed by strength training and/or cross-training.
Thursday — Quality Workout 2
A second focused workout such as hills, grass intervals, threshold repeats, broken 600s, or short VO₂Max reps, followed by strength and cross-training.
Saturday — Long Run
A moderate aerobic long run, often with a controlled 2-mile pickup, plus optional cross-training.
The other days support the key sessions with easy mileage, recovery running, strides, mobility, strength, or cross-training. Athletes should leave most workouts feeling like they could have done a little more.
Mileage Progression
Athletes should begin with the plan that matches their current preparation, not the plan they hope to reach later. A runner who is currently comfortable around 25–30 miles per week should start with the 30-mile plan, then gradually progress toward 40, 50, or 60 miles only after adapting well.
A good rule is to increase mileage by about 10% per week, using periodized cycles of 2–3 build weeks followed by a recovery week. This allows the body to absorb training before adding more load. Soreness that improves with easy running is common; pain that changes stride, worsens during the run, or lingers should be treated seriously.
Use these plans as structured examples. Coaches, parents, and athletes can adjust based on age, training history, injury background, schedule, weather, and goals.
30 Miles Per Week
Best for newer high school runners, athletes returning from a break, younger athletes, or runners who are using cross-training to build durability. The 30-mile plan uses Monday and Thursday quality sessions, 60-minute cross-training days, and a 10-mile long run with a 2-mile pickup.
40 Miles Per Week
Best for athletes who have already adapted to regular running and can handle consistent weekly mileage. This plan includes Monday and Thursday quality sessions of about 7 miles, easy recovery runs, moderate aerobic days with strides or pickups, and a 10-mile long run.
50 Miles Per Week
Best for experienced high school distance runners who have built durability over time. This plan raises the quality-session volume to about 9 miles, includes 6-mile recovery days, 8-mile moderate aerobic days, and a 12-mile long run with a controlled pickup.
60 Miles Per Week
Best for advanced, well-prepared high school runners with a strong aerobic background and good recovery habits. This plan includes 10-mile quality days, 9-mile recovery days, 10-mile moderate aerobic days, and a 12-mile long run.
Weight training is a key part of the Roadrunner training system because stronger athletes are usually more durable, efficient, and resilient late in races. Distance athletes typically lift 2 times per week, usually after the Monday and Thursday quality sessions, so hard neuromuscular stress is grouped on the same days and recovery days stay truly easier. Middle distance athletes often lift 3 times per week because their events require more speed, power, and force production. The emphasis should be on quality movement, posture, core strength, hip stability, lower-leg durability, and controlled power—not maxing out or creating soreness that interferes with running.
Cross-training helps athletes build aerobic volume without adding the same impact load to the legs. Easy cycling, swimming, pool running, elliptical, rowing, or other low-impact aerobic work can support cardiovascular development while reducing stress on bones, tendons, and joints. This is especially useful during mileage build phases, recovery weeks, return-to-running periods, or for athletes who are not ready to add more running volume. Cross-training should usually feel controlled and aerobic, not like an extra hard workout, unless a coach specifically assigns it as a quality session.
Threshold training teaches athletes to run strong and controlled without overreaching. Examples include 3–5 repeats of 5 minutes at threshold pace with short recovery, or a 30-minute threshold test.
VO₂Max and speed development improves rhythm, mechanics, and race-specific efficiency. Examples include 150-meter repeats, 200-meter grass intervals at mile pace with float recovery, broken 600s, and 1-minute reps at 3K pace.
Hill repeats build strength, power, posture, and efficient mechanics without needing to sprint all-out on the track.
Strides and pickups keep athletes fast and coordinated while still maintaining an aerobic emphasis.
Strength training and cross-training help support durability. Strength should reinforce posture, hips, core, lower-leg resilience, and general athleticism. Cross-training can add aerobic volume while reducing impact.
A full training cycle is organized around a 12 to 16-week progression that gives athletes enough time to adapt, sharpen, and peak without rushing fitness. For the 16-week progression, the first 10 weeks focus on gradual adaptation: building aerobic capacity, improving durability, developing strength, and safely increasing training volume through controlled workouts and recovery weeks. The next 5 weeks shift toward tuning, where workouts become more race-specific, pacing becomes more precise, and athletes practice the rhythm, confidence, and efficiency needed for their target event. The final 10 days are a taper designed to reduce fatigue while preserving sharpness, allowing the athlete to feel fresh, fast, and prepared to hit a target race or goal time.
Athletes should choose the plan that feels repeatable. A runner is ready to move up when they can complete the current plan for several weeks while sleeping well, recovering well, keeping normal easy-day effort, and avoiding injury warning signs.
A simple progression might look like this:
30 miles → 33 miles → 36 miles → recovery week → 40 miles
40 miles → 43 miles → 47 miles → recovery week → 50 miles
50 miles → 55 miles → recovery week → 60 miles
Not every athlete needs to reach 60 miles per week. Many high school runners improve very well at 30–50 miles per week when the training is consistent, balanced, and individualized.
For help interpreting workouts, adjusting paces, managing recovery, or building a plan around your goals, use the AI Track Coach Chat. The chat page is designed to answer questions about training, nutrition, recovery, pacing, sports psychology, and event-specific preparation.
Athletes can also use the Athlete Profile Builder. It allows runners to upload activity files, Final Surge exports, or ZIP archives to review training trends, activity details, predictions, and AI-ready exports. The tool supports FIT, GPX, TCX, Final Surge XLSX, and ZIP uploads, and it can help create a detailed training profile that can be used with the AI Track Coach to customize training around current fitness and goals.
Training plans are guides, not guarantees. Athletes should work with coaches, parents, athletic trainers, and medical professionals when making major training changes or dealing with injury symptoms. The best plan is the one an athlete can complete consistently, recover from, and build on over time.