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Introducing Speed Endurance at the Right Time

Story By Coach Bjorn Jansen

Training for the outdoor season demands careful timing when introducing speed endurance. Move too early, and fatigue builds before the body is ready. Wait too long, and race preparation feels rushed. The key lies in progression.

At SpeedPro, we layer speed endurance once athletes have rebuilt rhythm, aerobic strength, and movement quality. When that foundation is in place, intensity becomes productive rather than disruptive.

Training for the Outdoor Season Requires a Foundation First

Before speed endurance enters the programme, the outdoor season must rest on rhythm and aerobic stability. Athletes need to control pace, recover well, and maintain posture under moderate fatigue.

Without that base, higher intensity sessions often create tension and inconsistency. Athletes may hit splits in training but struggle to repeat them or recover properly. By prioritising consistency early, training for the outdoor season prepares the body to absorb faster work safely.

What Speed Endurance Really Develops Outdoors

Outdoor speed endurance builds the ability to sustain high velocity while maintaining technical control. It connects acceleration and rhythm endurance to race-specific performance.

Sessions might include longer repetitions close to race pace, broken runs, or progressive efforts that challenge posture and relaxation. The aim is not to chase exhaustion but to reinforce composure at higher speeds.

When introduced correctly, speed endurance strengthens confidence. Athletes learn how race pace feels and how to manage it without panic.

Training for the Outdoor Season: Layers Intensity Gradually

Training for the outdoor season works best when intensity rises in stages. Early exposures remain controlled, often with longer recoveries and fewer repetitions.

As adaptation improves, volume or pace increases slightly. This layered approach allows the nervous system to adjust while protecting overall freshness. It also ensures that competition performances improve steadily rather than peaking too soon.

Gradual progression keeps the season moving forward. Athletes feel sharper each month instead of chasing form in April.

Balancing Speed, Endurance, and Recovery Outdoors

As competitions approach, speed endurance sessions become more specific. However, recovery becomes equally important. The outdoor season rewards athletes who stay fresh enough to express their work.

Managing total load across the week prevents intensity from overwhelming rhythm and strength gains built earlier. Training remains connected rather than fragmented.

When balance is right, athletes arrive at races prepared, confident, and composed under pressure.

The Finish Line

Training for the outdoor season is not about adding speed endurance as quickly as possible. It is about introducing it at the right time and building it progressively. When rhythm, aerobic strength, and technical control are already in place, speed endurance enhances performance rather than draining it.

At SpeedPro in Wimbledon, this progression sits at the heart of our coaching philosophy. By respecting timing and structure, athletes move through the outdoor season with purpose and arrive at championships ready to perform. Athletes who want to experience this structured approach can begin with our free trial sessions.

Next in the Outdoor Training Series

  • Managing Load as Competition Approaches

    Managing Load as Competition Approaches

    Training for the outdoor season becomes more demanding as competitions begin to appear in the calendar. This article explains how managing training load helps athletes stay fresh, consistent, and ready for competition.

    Read the next article in the series

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