| name | periodization-coach |
| description | Periodization framework for trail/mountain running based on Training for the Uphill Athlete methodology (House, Jornet, Johnston). Covers training phases, zone distribution, progression rules, strength integration, and vertical gain planning. |
Periodization Coach
When to use this skill
Use this skill when the request involves:
- Creating multi-week training plans (Transition/Base/Specific/Taper phases)
- Determining zone distribution and intensity progression
- Planning strength training cycles and integration with running
- Vertical gain progression and race-specific preparation
- Evaluating readiness to add intensity (Z3/Z4)
- Establishing training volume progression rules
Core methodology: Training for the Uphill Athlete
Based on Steve House, Kilian Jornet, and Scott Johnston's approach to mountain/trail endurance training.
Key Planning Principles
Aerobic Base Development
- 80-90% of annual volume in Zone 1-2 (below AeT — aerobic threshold)
- Repeatability rule: if the athlete can repeat yesterday's workout today, tomorrow, and the day after — the load is correct
- Metric priority (in order of importance): time on feet → vertical gain → distance
AeT-LT Gap Assessment for Focus Selection
Calculation: AeT-LT gap (%) = (LT - AeT) / AeT × 100
-
Gap >20%: pronounced aerobic deficit
- → 100% focus on Z1-Z2, no Z3-Z4 for at least 12 weeks
-
Gap 10-20%: moderate deficit
- → 95% Z1-Z2, can add strides/hill sprints (neuromuscular work without lactate load)
-
Gap <10%: good aerobic base
- → Z3 can be introduced after 6-8 weeks of consistent base
High-Intensity Training
Criteria for Readiness to Add Z3
Add Zone 3 (Tempo/SteadyState) ONLY after meeting ALL criteria:
- Minimum 6-8 weeks of consistent aerobic base (no gaps >3 consecutive days)
- AeT-LT gap <10% (otherwise continue base work)
- Stable CTL (non-declining trend) and positive or neutral TSB
- No signs of overtraining: resting HR normal, sleep >7h, no chronic fatigue
Intensity Progression
- Zone 3: start at 5% of weekly volume, increase by 2-3% every 2-3 weeks (max ~15% in Specific Period)
- Zone 4 (Intervals): add only when Z3 is ~10% of weekly volume AND the athlete has adapted to Z3 (2-4 weeks)
- When adding intensity: reduce Zone 2, maintain or increase Zone 1 (total Z1+Z2+Z3 volume may decrease slightly for adaptation)
Intensity Zones (Detailed Description)
Recovery: very easy, effortless conversation
Zone 1: easy, nasal breathing possible
Zone 2: moderate, BELOW AeT (upper Z2 boundary = AeT HR), full sentences, nasal breathing at the limit
- Typical Z2 HR cap: AeT HR (e.g., 155 bpm if AeT=155)
- Z2 pace should feel "comfortably moderate", not "easy" (that's Z1)
Zone 3: tempo, between AeT and LT (lactate threshold), 5-7 words
- Lower boundary: AeT HR + 1 bpm
- Upper boundary: LT HR
- Pace feels "comfortably hard", sustainable but requires focus
Zone 4: intervals, above LT, 2-3 words
Zone 5: maximal, sprints, one word
Energy Systems and Adaptations
Aerobic System (Zone 1-2):
- Mitochondrial development
- Capillarization: long runs
- Fat metabolism
- Mitochondrial density: base endurance
Lactate Threshold (Zone 3):
- Increased sustainable power
- Lactate threshold: sustainable speed
VO2max (Zone 4):
- Maximum aerobic power
- Stroke volume: increases through Zone 4
Anaerobic Power (Zone 5):
- Hill sprints
- Neuromuscular power
Vertical Gain
Progression for beginners:
- Start at 1/3 - 1/2 of the target race vertical gain
- Peak: at least the full race vertical gain in two weeks of the late base period
- In recovery weeks, reduce by 40-60%
Safety rule:
- Do not increase vertical gain and volume simultaneously by more than 5% each
- After significant vertical gain (>1500m) — next day Z1 or rest
Strength Training
Progression Principles (source: Training for the Uphill Athlete, ch.6-8)
General Strength (Stage 1→2→3):
- Master Stage 1 completely before moving to Stage 2
- Transition criterion: performing all Stage exercises with correct technique without compensation
- 2 times per week in Transition Period
- Separate from key running workouts: minimum 6 hours, ideally on different days
Max Strength (early Base Period):
- 2x/week, 3-5 sets × 3-6 reps at 85-95% of 1RM
- Reduce to 1x/week in late Base as running volume increases
Muscular Endurance (ME) in the pre-race specific phase:
- ME workouts: hill sprints, long climbs at race effort, strength circuits
- Frequency: 1-2x/week, integrate into running workouts when possible
Injury Prevention Connection
- Foot/ankle strength (see Science of Running) mandatory when volume >8h/week
- Hip/glute stability important for descents and technical terrain
- Core stability supports running economy on long distances
Periodization (Training Cycle Phases)
Transition Period (2-8 weeks)
Recovery, general strength, aerobic base
- Volume: 50-70% of peak
- Intensity: Z1-Z2 only
- Strength: General Strength 2x/week (Stage 1→2→3)
Base Period (8-16+ weeks)
Building Zone 1-2 volume, adding Zone 3
Early Base (4-8 wks):
- Focus on Z1-Z2 volume
- Strength: Max Strength 2x/week
Late Base (4-8 wks):
- Peak volume
- Introduce Z3 (5→10%)
- Reduce strength to 1x/week
Specific Period (4-8 weeks)
Zone 4 intervals, race-specific workouts
- Volume: 85-95% of peak
- Z3: ~10-15%, Z4: 5-10% (starting at 2-3%)
- Strength: Muscular Endurance (ME) 1-2x/week or maintenance
Taper (7-21 days depending on race distance)
Volume reduction while maintaining neuromuscular tone
- 50K and under: 7-10 days
- 100K: 10-14 days
- 100+ miles: 14-21 days
- Reduce volume by 40-60%, maintain 1-2 short intense sessions to preserve neuromuscular tone
Detailed protocols: see "Taper Protocols" section below
Load Progression Rules
Weekly Volume Increase
NEVER increase volume >7-10% per week without explicit request
- The 7-10% rule applies to TIME (hours), not distance or TSS
- After a recovery week, returning to pre-recovery level is allowed (not considered an increase)
- After illness/injury: start at 50% of the last healthy volume, progress by 10-15%/week
Recovery Weeks
- Every 3-4 weeks reduce volume by 40-60%
- Maintain training frequency (number of days)
- Goal: adaptation, supercompensation, reducing overtraining risk
Additions from Ultrarunning Training Essentials (Jason Koop)
Long-range planning (Chapter 10)
- Plan the macrocycle as: Base → Build/Specific → Peak/Taper
- Set key B/A races well in advance
- Break into mesocycles (4-8 weeks): each phase has target metrics (hours/vertical/key workouts)
- Verify progression sustainability (not >7-10% time/week) and correlate with CTL/TSB before introducing a new intensity block
Short-range planning (Chapter 12)
Weekly template (example for 5-day schedule):
- Mon: REST or easy activity
- Tue: Quality (intervals / tempo / hill repeats)
- Wed: Recovery run + strength
- Thu: Endurance run (Z2) or steady effort
- Fri: REST or easy + mobility
- Sat: Long endurance run (Time on feet + vertical)
- Sun: Recovery run or easy cross-training
Place key sessions so that there is at least 48-72h between them for recovery.
Strength training specifics (Chapter 11)
- Maintain general strength 1-2x/week in Transition
- Max strength 2x/week (early Base) — 3-5 sets x 3-6 reps @85-95% 1RM
- Before the race-specific phase, transition strength to ME/endurance: hill-specific circuits, single-leg strength, core and ankle work
- Include mobility and prehab (foot/ankle, hips) as a regular part of the program
Methodological Sources
Training for the Uphill Athlete (House, Jornet, Johnston)
- Primary source: periodization, aerobic base, strength training (Stage 1-3), vertical gain
- Link:
knowledge/Training for the Uphill Athlete.txt
- Key sections: «Aerobic Base Development», «Periodization», «Strength and the Uphill Athlete»
Ultrarunning Training Essentials (Jason Koop)
- Additional: practical planning (long-range/short-range), weekly schedule templates, strength training details
- Link:
knowledge/Ultrarunning Training Essentials.txt
- Key chapters: CH.6 (Tracking), CH.10 (Long-range planning), CH.11 (Strength), CH.12 (Short-range planning)
Key Messages (Training Philosophy)
- "Volume is the key" — aerobic base volume matters more than intensity
- "If in doubt, go long and easy" — when in doubt, choose long easy runs
- "Listen to your body" — fatigue is a signal, don't ignore it (Kilian Jornet: "Sometimes you realize you need to stop before the prescribed time is over")
- "Training is not competition" — don't turn every workout into a race
Taper Protocols (Evidence-Based)
Source: Meta-analysis by Wang et al. (2023) - Effects of tapering on performance in endurance athletes (PLOS ONE)
Optimal taper strategy
Volume reduction:
- 41-60% reduction from peak volume = optimal performance gains (SMD = 1.28)
- Example: Peak week 10 hours → Taper week 1: 4-5 hours → Taper week 2: 5-6 hours
Intensity & Frequency:
- Maintain 100% training intensity (same HR zones, same pace targets)
- Maintain 100% training frequency (same number of sessions per week)
- Rationale: Preserves neuromuscular adaptations while reducing fatigue
Duration:
- 8-14 days optimal for most endurance athletes
- 7 days: acceptable for shorter events (<50K)
- 15-21 days: acceptable for 100-mile+ events or masters athletes (>45 years)
- <7 days: insufficient recovery
-
21 days: risk of detraining
Taper type:
- Progressive taper > Step taper
- Progressive: Gradual linear reduction (e.g., 100%→80%→60%→50% over 2 weeks)
- Step: Abrupt reduction (e.g., 100%→50% immediately)
Pre-taper overload
Critical insight: Tapering combined with pre-taper overload training had MORE significant effect on performance than conventional tapering (P < 0.05)
Implementation:
- Final hard block (2-3 weeks before taper): Push volume to 105-110% of average
- Include 1-2 key race-specific sessions (e.g., long run with race pace segments, big vertical)
- Then: Begin taper as planned
Rationale: Greater accumulated fatigue → greater supercompensation during taper
Week-by-week taper structure (example for 2-week taper)
Peak week (Week -3 before race):
- Volume: 100% (e.g., 10 hours)
- Include key sessions: long run, tempo, intervals
- This is pre-taper overload week
Taper Week 1 (Week -2):
- Volume: 50-60% (5-6 hours)
- Maintain intensity: Keep 1 tempo session (shortened to 20-30 min)
- Long run: Cut by 40-50% (e.g., 20K → 10-12K)
- Frequency: Same number of days (e.g., 5 days if peak was 5 days)
Taper Week 2 (Week -1):
- Volume: 60-70% (6-7 hours) — slightly UP from Week 1 (progressive taper)
- Maintain 1 short tempo/intervals (15-20 min)
- Long run: Easy 60-90 min max
- Last hard session: 3-4 days before race
Final 2-3 days:
- Only easy runs (20-30 min Z1)
- Day before race: 20 min easy or complete rest (athlete preference)
Source: Wang et al. (2023), PLOS ONE, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282838
Back-to-Back Long Runs
Source: Runners Connect (2025), recent ultra-endurance research synthesis
Scientific rationale
73% of successful first-time 50K finishers used back-to-back long runs in preparation.
Unique adaptations not replicated by single long runs:
- Enhanced fat oxidation: Starting run with low glycogen promotes PDK4 upregulation → ↑ reliance on fat as fuel
- Glycogen-sparing capacity: Body learns to maintain performance with depleted CHO stores
- Neuromuscular fatigue resistance: Maintaining running economy and coordination despite accumulated fatigue
Key insight: These adaptations are specific to ultra-distance events (>4 hours) and cannot be replicated by single long runs.
Protocol (for recreational ultramarathoners)
Frequency:
- 1x per 2-3 weeks (NOT every weekend!)
- Rationale: High cumulative stress requires adequate recovery between cycles
Structure:
- Saturday: 15-25 km (or 75% of current single long run distance)
- Sunday: 12-20 km (or 50% of Saturday distance)
- Combined distance: Start at 30 km, progress to 40-50 km max
Intensity (CRITICAL):
- Both days: 65-75% max HR (conversational pace, Z1-Z2)
- Common mistake: Running too hard defeats the purpose
- Rationale: Need to preserve metabolic stress while minimizing injury risk
Progression:
- +10% combined distance every 2-3 weeks (not weekly!)
- Example:
- Week 1: 15+15=30 km
- Week 2: (pause - no B2B)
- Week 3: 18+18=36 km
- Week 4: (pause)
- Week 5: 20+20=40 km
- Week 6: Recovery week (no B2B)
Recovery between days (CRITICAL)
Immediate post-Saturday (first 30 min):
- 1.2 g/kg CHO (e.g., 84g for 70kg athlete)
- Examples: 2 gels + sports drink, or porridge + banana + honey
Evening Saturday:
- Normal meal (high-CHO)
- Good sleep (7-8 hours minimum)
- Optional: ice bath (controversial but may help some athletes)
Sunday morning:
- High-CHO breakfast (oatmeal + fruit, or pasta)
- Hydration
Following week:
- Monday-Wednesday: Reduce volume, easy runs only (Z1)
- Rationale: Absorb accumulated load before next quality week
When to use back-to-backs
Appropriate for:
- Athletes preparing for 50K+ events
- Current weekly volume >40 km
- Solid aerobic base (6-8 weeks consistent training)
- Build phase (8-12 weeks before race)
Not appropriate for:
- Marathon training (single long runs sufficient)
- Athletes with current weekly volume <40 km (risk of overload)
- During recovery weeks
- Within 3-4 weeks of race (taper phase)
Source: Runners Connect (2025), https://runnersconnect.net/long-runs-training/
Downhill/Eccentric Training Protocols
Source: Millet et al. (2020) - Downhill Running: What Are The Effects and How Can We Prevent/Manage Them? (Frontiers in Physiology)
Scientific basis: Repeated Bout Effect (RBE)
Key finding: Muscles adapt to eccentric loading very rapidly (1-2 exposures)
- 1st downhill bout → 2-5 days soreness (DOMS), strength loss, elevated CK
- 2nd bout (10-14 days later) → 50-80% reduction in DOMS and faster recovery
Practical implication: Pre-conditioning with downhill sessions 3-4 weeks before race is ESSENTIAL for trail athletes
Protocol: Pre-race downhill preparation
Timing:
- Session 1: 3-4 weeks before race
- Session 2: 10-14 days after Session 1 (i.e., 2-3 weeks before race)
- Optional Session 3: 7-10 days later (i.e., 10-14 days before race)
CRITICAL: Last hard downhill must be 10-14 days before race (NOT 3-7 days!)
Session structure:
- Duration: 25-30 min (Session 1), 30-35 min (Session 2)
- Grade: -6 to -8% (typical trail downhill), up to -10% for specific race prep
- Intensity: Moderate (RPE 4-5/10), NOT hard
- Recovery: Expect 48-72h soreness after Session 1 (this is NORMAL)
Example calendar for April 1 race:
- March 8-11: Session 1 (25-30 min, -6-8% grade)
- March 18-21: Session 2 (30-35 min, same or steeper grade) → minimal soreness expected
- March 25: Optional Session 3 (20-25 min, race-specific grade) → light soreness
- April 1: Race (muscles adapted, DOMS minimized)
Alternative: Eccentric strength training (if no downhill access)
Protocol:
- Frequency: 2x/week × 4-6 weeks leading to race
- Exercises:
- Bulgarian split squats (4-5 sec eccentric phase, 1 sec concentric)
- Step-downs with dumbbell (4-5 sec down)
- Nordic curls (eccentric hamstring)
- Volume: 3 sets × 8-10 reps per exercise
- Rest: 60-90 sec between sets
Effectiveness: ~70% as effective as actual downhill running for RBE adaptation
Integration: Can combine with downhill sessions if geography allows (1 downhill + 1 strength per week)
Monitoring & adjustment
Expected responses:
- Session 1: Moderate-severe quad soreness 24-48h later (scale 5-7/10)
- Session 2: Mild soreness (scale 2-4/10)
- Session 3: Minimal soreness (scale 1-2/10)
Red flags:
- Soreness >7/10 or lasting >5 days → reduce grade or duration next session
- Sharp pain during session (not muscle burn) → stop immediately
- Persistent weakness after 7 days → consult physio
Source: Millet et al. (2020), Frontiers in Physiology, https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2020.01140
When to Refer to Other Skills
- Recovery monitoring, red flags, VO2max work: see
athlete-monitoring skill
- Nutrition/fueling protocols (gut training, race-day, carb-loading): see
race-nutrition skill
- Intervals.icu output format, MCP tools: see
intervals-icu-integration skill
- Injury prevention, evidence-based practice: see
kinesiology-foundations skill