Tuesday Run — Hal Higdon Novice 5K, Week 4 Day 1 (2.25 mi)

Tuesday Run — Hal Higdon Novice 5K, Week 4 Day 1 (2.25 mi)

Today's run is Week 4 Day 1 of the Hal Higdon Novice 5K program — a 2.25-mile easy run at conversational pace. The article covers the Ohio State 15-movement dynamic warm-up, Talk Test and Zone 2 pacing explained, GTN and Runna TV running form checkpoints, Tom Peto's lower-body cool-down, a beginner motivation guide, a 3-level scaling table, the full Week 4 schedule, and a preview of Wednesday's Tabata Session 3.

Workout Plan Pick
2026. 6. 9. · 22:17
구독 1개 · 콘텐츠 25개
Week 4 starts today. At 2.25 miles, this is the longest single run you've done in the program so far — 12.5% further than any Tuesday or Saturday run in Weeks 1–3. Hal Higdon's instruction stays the same as it has been every week: cover the distance at a pace that lets you hold a conversation, and the training is doing exactly what it's supposed to. 1
"Don't worry about how fast you run; just cover the distance — or approximately the distance suggested. Ideally, you should be able to run at a pace that allows you to converse comfortably while you do so." 1
The extra quarter-mile is not a test of fitness. It's a deliberate load increase designed to build aerobic capacity gradually — and the only way it works is if you resist running it faster than easy.

Session at a glance

FieldDetail
ProgramHal Higdon Novice 5K — Week 4, Day 1 1
Distance2.25 miles (≈ 3.6 km)
EffortConversational pace (Talk Test)
Warm-up~5 min dynamic drills (video below)
Cool-down~6 min lower-body stretch (video below)
Total time on feet~32–45 min depending on pace
Week 4 total mileage6.0 mi running + 45-min walk
TomorrowRest day (Wednesday is HIIT — Tabata Session 3)

Warm-up (~5 min)

Don't skip this. Cold muscles handle the impact of running less efficiently, and a brisk start without preparation is one of the most reliable ways to collect a minor calf or hip flexor strain early in a training block.
The Ohio State Wexner Medical Center's 15-movement dynamic warm-up (3:46, 1.37M views) was built by the OSU Sports Medicine team specifically for pre-running activation — it increases blood flow and, as the team describes it, "turns on" the muscles that need to be ready once you start moving. 2
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Ohio State Wexner Medical Center — 15 movements to warm up before workout, 3:46 (1.37M views). 2
The sequence hits 15 movements: head rolls, shoulder rolls, arm circles, swimmer's stretch, trunk rotations, windmill squats, walking lunges, Spider-Man lunges (a deep forward lunge with an elbow-to-ground rotation that opens the hip flexor and thoracic spine simultaneously), lateral shuffles, walking hamstring toe touches, dynamic calf stretch, ankle rolls, and leg swings. Run through all 15 at a relaxed pace — by the last movement, your hips should feel loose and your heart rate gently elevated.

Pacing: the Talk Test and Zone 2

Today's run has no time target and no pace target. The only number that matters is whether you can speak in full, complete sentences while running.
The Talk Test works like this: if a running partner asked you a question mid-run and you could answer in three to four words without gasping, you need to slow down. If you can speak a full sentence — something like "Yeah, it's a bit humid out today" — without a pause for breath, you're in the right zone.
From a physiology standpoint, that conversational effort corresponds to roughly Zone 2 heart rate (about 60–70% of maximum heart rate), the aerobic base-building range where your body trains its cardiovascular system to deliver oxygen more efficiently and burns a higher proportion of fat as fuel. Easy runs in Zone 2 also let your legs absorb the structural stress of running without generating enough fatigue to compromise your next session.
Jason Fitzgerald, a USATF-certified running coach and 2:39 marathoner at StrengthRunning, covers both the technical tools (heart rate monitors, pace calculators) and the subjective cues (Talk Test, rated perceived exertion) for finding and holding easy pace in his 11-minute breakdown: 3
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StrengthRunning — Master Easy Running: How to Find "Easy Pace", 11:18 (21K views). 3
His most useful point for beginners: most people run their easy days too hard. If your pace on a Tuesday "easy" run isn't noticeably slower than your hardest effort, it isn't easy. Deliberately running slower than you think you need to is not a failure of fitness — it's the correct execution.
Run/walk intervals are explicitly permitted. Hal Higdon's position: "There's nothing in the rules that suggests you have to run continuously, either in training or in the 5K race itself. Run until fatigued; walk until recovered." 1 If your Talk Test fails, take a 60-second walk break and resume when you can speak again.

Running form checkpoints

Good form at easy pace reduces impact stress and builds movement habits that carry forward as the distances grow. Pick one or two cues to focus on during today's run — trying to fix everything simultaneously leads to overthinking and tightening up.
GTN coach Heather's 9-minute guide covers all the fundamentals: posture, foot placement, torso angle, hip alignment, shoulder mechanics, arm swing, head position, and breathing. At 4.4 million views with English captions enabled, it covers more technique checkpoints in one sitting than most beginner running guides. 4
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Global Triathlon Network — How To Run Properly | Running Technique Explained, 9:35 (4.4M views). 4
For a more recent take with coaching context, Runna head coach Ben Parker's 2026 guide covers the same checkpoints and adds something the GTN video doesn't: a clear warning against making too many form changes at once during a training block. His advice applies directly at Week 4 — the body is adapting to a rising weekly mileage load, and stacking a full form overhaul on top of that is unnecessary stress. 5
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Runna TV — How to Run with PERFECT FORM | Coach Explains, 8:03 (75K views). 5
Two cues worth carrying into today's run if you're not sure where to start:
  • Posture: stand tall with a slight forward lean from the ankles (not a hunch from the waist). Imagine a string pulling the top of your head upward.
  • Arms: elbows bent at roughly 90 degrees, hands relaxed (as if loosely holding a potato chip you don't want to crush), swinging forward and back — not across your body.

Cool-down (~6 min)

After crossing your 2.25-mile mark, don't stop dead. Walk for 2–3 minutes at a slow pace to let your heart rate drop before you stretch. Then follow Tom Peto's 5-minute lower-body cool-down routine (5:43, 96K views), which targets the four muscle groups that accumulate the most stress from running: hip flexors, hamstrings, adductors (inner thigh), and glutes/piriformis. 6
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Tom Peto Training — 5 Min LOWER BODY COOL DOWN STRETCH ROUTINE | Follow Along, 5:43 (96K views). 6
Each stretch is held for around 40 seconds. Breathe steadily through each hold and let the tension release gradually — don't bounce or force range of motion. The goal at this stage is muscle relaxation, not flexibility gains.
If you've felt any tightness in your calves or IT band during recent runs, add 30 seconds of standing calf stretch (heel off a step or curb, gentle downward press) after the routine.

If you're new to running

Chelsea Trevor's beginner guide — published December 2025 and sponsored by Runna — is worth a watch if Week 4 is starting to feel like a mental hurdle as much as a physical one. 7 It covers motivation strategies, injury-prevention habits (warm-ups, cadence work, strength basics), and how to build a sustainable running routine — the same principles underlying Hal Higdon's Novice plan.
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Chelsea Trevor — From "I Can't Run" to Runner: How to Start Running in 2026, 16:27 (13.7K views). 7

Scaling

LevelDistancePacingWalk breaks
Beginner2.25 mi total (run/walk OK)Talk Test throughout — slow to a walk any time speech becomes difficult60-second walk break after every 4–5 minutes of running; no minimum continuous run requirement
Intermediate2.25 mi continuous runConversational pace; heart rate stays below ~75% of maxWalk only if Talk Test fails; target no more than 1–2 breaks
Advanced2.25 mi continuous runTrue Zone 2 — comfortable enough to hum a few bars; perceived exertion 3–4 out of 10No walk breaks; if the run feels easy, keep it there — resist pushing pace until Week 5+

Week 4 schedule

DaySessionDistance
Tuesday, Jun 9Run: Week 4 Day 12.25 mi ← Today
Wednesday, Jun 10Rest / HIIT (Tabata Session 3)
Thursday, Jun 11Run: Week 4 Day 21.5 mi
Friday, Jun 12Rest
Saturday, Jun 13Run: Week 4 Day 32.25 mi
Sunday, Jun 14Walk45 min
Total running mileage for Week 4: 6.0 miles. 1

Coming up: Wednesday HIIT — Tabata Session 3

Tomorrow is a strength-and-conditioning session: Tabata Session 3. Tabata is a high-intensity interval training format — 20 seconds of work, 10 seconds of rest, repeated 8 rounds per exercise, across 4 exercise blocks. The format keeps total session time short (roughly 20–25 minutes with warm-up) while delivering a cardiovascular and muscular stimulus that complements the aerobic base you're building on running days.
Session 3 introduces a new set of exercises distinct from Sessions 1 and 2. The full session plan will be in tomorrow's article.

참고 출처

  1. 1Hal Higdon — Novice 5K Training Program
  2. 2Ohio State Wexner Medical Center — 15 movements to warm up before workout
  3. 3StrengthRunning — Master Easy Running: How to Find "Easy Pace"
  4. 4Global Triathlon Network — How To Run Properly
  5. 5Runna TV — How to Run with PERFECT FORM
  6. 6Tom Peto Training — 5 Min LOWER BODY COOL DOWN STRETCH ROUTINE
  7. 7Chelsea Trevor — From "I Can't Run" to Runner: How to Start Running in 2026

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