The Distance Dr: In Practice

Kate Baldwin

The Distance Dr: In Practice brings endurance research down to earth and into your actual training week. I’m Dr Kate Baldwin (physio + researcher + strength coach), and each episode I take a real performance or injury question and work through what the evidence says, what it doesn’t say, and how to apply it without turning your life into a spreadsheet. Expect science you can trust, practical sessions you can use, and honest conversations about the grey areas: strength training for runners and triathletes, tendon/overuse issues, load management, endurance performance, and what matters most when you’re trying to get fitter and stay on the road.

  1. 5H AGO

    Tired, Sick or Injured: How to Adjust Your Running Plan: Distance Dr Daily

    Training plans look neat on paper. Real life does not always behave that politely. In this episode of Distance Dr Daily, I talk through what to do when you are following a marathon, half marathon, triathlon or running plan and suddenly things change: you feel run down, you get sick, or an injury starts to niggle. The big question is usually: do you catch up on missed sessions, swap things around, take a break, or just jump back into the plan? I break this down into three common scenarios: fatigue or feeling run down, illness, and injury. We talk about when it may make sense to swap a session, when to reduce intensity, when to rest, and when symptoms mean you should stop and seek medical advice. I also cover why suspected bone stress injury is different, why altered gait matters, and why jumping straight back into hard sessions after a flare-up can backfire. The goal is not to follow the plan perfectly. The goal is to make smart decisions so your body can actually adapt to the training. In this episode: What to do if you wake up exhausted on interval dayWhen to swap, reduce or skip a sessionWhy you usually should not “catch up” missed runsHow to modify training when you are sickHow to return after time off or altered trainingHow to think about pain during runningWhen injury symptoms need medical adviceWhy your plan needs to bend before your body breaksThis is a practical episode for runners and triathletes who want to keep training moving without forcing the plan at all costs.

    5 min
  2. 2D AGO

    How To Do Your Marathon Long Run Properly: Distance Dr Daily

    On today's episode of The Distance Dr Daily with Dr Kate, she discusses how long runs are the cornerstone of marathon training, but most of the questions runners actually have, how far, how often, how hard, when to peak, and what to practise, don't always get answered clearly in a generic training plan. I walk through five evidence-based considerations for getting your long run right, drawing on recent research and applying it practically for runners building toward a half marathon, marathon, or longer. I cover: How often to do your long run, and why every 7 to 10 days can work better for some athletes, particularly those who are injury-prone, postpartum, or new to marathon training. How long your long run should actually be, based on what research shows works across different weekly training volumes, and why staying under 25 km may cost you on race day. Where to place your peak long run in the training block, and how far out from race day it should sit. How to progress your long run distance safely using the 10% rule, which applies specifically to your long run rather than your overall weekly volume. How hard your long run should be, where marathon pace work fits in, and why it shouldn't be every week. What to practise during the long run, including fuelling, hydration, cadence, and biomechanics under fatigue. This is for runners who want to train smarter, not just harder, and who want to understand the why behind the long run rather than just ticking off the kilometres. Study references: Fokkema T, van Damme AADN, Fornerod MWJ, de Vos RJ, Bierma-Zeinstra SMA, van Middelkoop M. Training for a (half-)marathon: Training volume and longest endurance run related to performance and running injuries. Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2020 Sep;30(9):1692-1704. doi: 10.1111/sms.13725. Epub 2020 Jun 3. PMID: 32421886; PMCID: PMC7496388. Knopp, M., Appelhans, D., Schönfelder, M., Seiler, S., & Wackerhage, H. (2024). Quantitative Analysis of 92 12-Week Sub-elite Marathon Training Plans. Sports medicine - open, 10(1), 50. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40798-024-00717-5

    6 min
  3. 3D AGO ·  BONUS

    How to Make a Generic Training Plan Work for You: Distance Dr Daily

    Generic running plans are not automatically bad. In fact, for many runners, they are affordable, accessible, and much better than making things up week by week. But the problem is that a generic plan does not know your injury history, your sleep, your training load tolerance, your work schedule, or how your body is responding. In this episode of Distance Dr Daily, I explain how to make a generic running plan work better for you. We talk about why individualised coaching is usually the gold standard, but also why generic programs can still be useful when you adjust them properly. I cover the two biggest things runners need to modify: their expectations and the program itself. I also explain how I would think about adjusting a plan if you have a history of bone stress injury, Achilles tendinopathy, recent injury, poor sleep, or limited training time. The goal is not to throw away your generic plan. It is to stop following it blindly and start making it fit the runner in front of it. In this episode, you’ll learn: Why individualised programs often outperform generic onesWhy generic running plans can still be usefulHow to adjust your expectations when using a pre-set planWhat to change if you have a history of bone stress injuryHow to modify speed, hills, and sprint sessions with Achilles tendinopathyWhy strength and rehab work need to be prioritisedHow to choose the most important sessions when time is limited

    5 min
  4. 4D AGO ·  BONUS

    Stop Guessing Your Training Paces and Zones: Distance Dr Daily

    You have downloaded a marathon, half marathon, or triathlon training plan. It tells you to run in Zone 1, Zone 2, Zone 3, or maybe gives you interval intensities… but how do you actually know what those paces are for you? In this episode, I explain how to take a generic training plan and make it more specific by applying your own training paces. We go through two practical methods you can use without a lab: the talk test and a simple 1-mile / 2-mile critical speed test. DOWNLOAD THE FREE CRITICAL SPEED CALCULATOR HERE: https://www.thedistancedr.com/criticalspeedcalculator I explain how the talk test can help you identify easy running, moderate or threshold-type work, and harder efforts, and why critical speed can be a useful anchor for setting more objective training intensities. I also cover why generic heart-rate formulas and old race PBs can sometimes lead you astray. This is a practical episode for runners and triathletes who want to stop guessing, train with more confidence, and make their plan actually fit the athlete in front of it. In this episode, you’ll learn: How to apply your own paces to a generic training planHow to use the talk test to guide training intensityWhat critical speed is and why it can be usefulHow to test using a 1-mile and 2-mile effortWhy “220 minus age” is not a great way to set heart-rate zonesWhy your current fitness matters more than your old PBs

    5 min

About

The Distance Dr: In Practice brings endurance research down to earth and into your actual training week. I’m Dr Kate Baldwin (physio + researcher + strength coach), and each episode I take a real performance or injury question and work through what the evidence says, what it doesn’t say, and how to apply it without turning your life into a spreadsheet. Expect science you can trust, practical sessions you can use, and honest conversations about the grey areas: strength training for runners and triathletes, tendon/overuse issues, load management, endurance performance, and what matters most when you’re trying to get fitter and stay on the road.

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