Run4PRs
Run4PRs
Run4PRs
We build stronger runners at Run4PRs Coaching. This podcast is filled with training tips & personal stories from the @run4prs coaches like 13x Boston Qualifier Victoria Phillippi. Our goal is to empower you with training tips & help you become the best athlete you can be. Want to get a more customized approach or consult with us directly on YOUR running questions? —-> www.Run4prs.com for a free 7 day trial
322. How Fast Should Your Easy Runs Really Be?
www.run4prs.comEasy runs are the most misunderstood part of training — and the #1 reason runners get stuck, burned out, or constantly fatigued. In today’s episode, Victoria breaks down exactly how slow your easy runs should be, why they matter, and how to make sure you’re actually training in the right zone.Whether you’ve been guilty of “gray zone” running or you’re scared to slow down, this episode will completely change how you approach easy days.Easy running isn’t about proving your fitness — it’s about building it. We dive into how easy miles strengthen your aerobic base, protect you from injury, improve recovery, and set the foundation for every PR.Most runners run too fast on easy days, landing in the “gray zone.” It feels fine at first… until you’re tired all the time, your workouts fall apart, and progress stalls. We explain exactly why this happens.We break down three ways to know your true easy pace:Heart rate (65–75% max HR / Zone 2)Pace relative to marathon or 5K paceThe talk test (real conversations, not gasping)Spoiler: It’s slower than most people think.When you finally run easy runs easy, your body responds: fresher legs, stronger workouts, more mileage, faster recovery, and long-term progression.“People will judge me.”“My easy pace used to be faster.”“I feel like I’m losing fitness.”We address all of it — and why none of these fears are actually true.Signs your easy days are on point: workouts feel strong, long runs feel manageable, recovery is quick, and your aerobic fitness improves without forcing anything.A rapid-fire list of common traps runners fall into (and how to avoid them).Easy runs should feel almost too easy.That’s the secret.Slow down now → race faster later.This is how you level up.If you want help determining your specific easy paces, send us a message — we love breaking down the numbers.Thanks for listening to the Run4PRs Podcast, and happy running! 🏃‍♀️✨In This Episode We Cover:🏃‍♂️ Why Easy Running Matters⚠️ The #1 Mistake Runners Make📏 How Slow Should Easy Runs Actually Be?🔥 Why Slowing Down Makes You Faster🧠 The Mindset Barriers Everyone Struggles With💡 How to Know You’re Doing Easy Running Right🚫 What NOT To Do On Easy Days🎧 Final Takeaway
May 15
36 min
321. How to Break Through a Running Plateau
www.run4prs.com The running plateau.That moment where your fitness is like,“I’m good. I’m gonna sit right here. Forever.”And you’re like,“Cool, cool, cool… except I have goals.”If you feel like you’ve been training well, doing the work, showing up consistently—and somehow your paces or fitness are just… stuck—this episode is for you.I’m going to walk you through a clear, step-by-step way out of that quicksand—based on both the science and years of coaching runners through this exact problem.Let’s get into it.A plateau isn’t a verdict.It’s a signal.You’re not regressing.You’re not failing.You’re not “losing your edge.”You’re just bumping up against the limits of your current stimulus.Running is biology.Your body adapts to whatever stress you consistently give it.If the stimulus stays the same, the adaptation stays the same.If recovery quality drops, adaptation stalls.A plateau is your system saying:“Hey… we need a different plan.”So instead of spiraling, we zoom out.SECTION 1 — First Things First: You’re Not Broken. Plateaus Are Data.
May 1
35 min
320. How to Actually Run a Boston Qualifying Time
www.run4prs.comRunning a BQ isn’t about luck, talent, or one magical workout — it’s the result of months of smart training, disciplined pacing, and a calm, confident race plan. In this episode, Coach Victoria breaks down exactly what it really takes to run a Boston Qualifier, from training structure to execution to the small details that make the biggest difference.Whether you’re chasing your first BQ or trying to finally break through after a close call, this episode gives you the full blueprint.🏃‍♂️ What a BQ actually representsIt’s not a heroic long run — it’s hundreds of small decisions stacked with intention.⏱️ Step 1: Knowing and respecting your target paceWhy most runners train too fast and sabotage their own BQ attempts.📈 Step 2: Building the right marathon training structureBase → strength → specific → taperLong runs, medium-long runs, tempo work, marathon-pace intervals, and cutback weeks.🍌 Step 3: Dialing in the detailsFueling (60–90g carbs/hr), strength training, mobility, recovery, and race-day simulation.🏅 Step 4: Executing the race planThe first 10K is everything.Fuel early. Stay calm. Trust the training. Handle the late-race pain logically.🧠 Step 5: Mindset and patienceA BQ often takes more than one cycle — it’s not failure, it’s data.Confidence and composure > panic and perfection.A Boston Qualifying time isn’t about grinding harder — it’s about training smarter, recovering better, and executing with discipline. You don’t need elite talent. You need a plan that builds durability, aerobic strength, and mental resilience.Comment "BQ" on our latest Instagram post or visit run4prs.co and we’ll send you a week of marathon-specific workouts tailored to a BQ goal.Thanks for listening — and as always, happy running and keep chasing those PRs! 🏃‍♀️✨In This Episode, We Cover:Takeaway:Want a Free BQ Training Week?
Apr 19
35 min
319. Should You Share Your Workouts?
www.run4prs.com In today’s solo episode, Coach Victoria is diving into a hot topic in the running world:Should you share your workouts online?Between Strava, Instagram, and group chats, it feels like everyone is posting their miles, splits, and Garmin screenshots. For some runners, it’s motivating. For others, it creates pressure, comparison, and performance anxiety.This episode breaks down:Why runners feel drawn to sharingWhen posting your runs is actually helpfulWhen it becomes toxic, stressful, or distractingSigns that social sharing is hurting performanceHow to find your own healthy balanceWhether you love the community aspect of sharing your training — or you’re wondering if it’s affecting your performance — this episode will help you understand your relationship with running, identity, and social media.1️⃣ Why Runners Love Sharing WorkoutsAccountabilityCommunity and connectionInspiration for othersCelebrating progress2️⃣ When Sharing Helps YouKeeps you consistentMakes training feel less isolatingCreates a visual timeline of growthSupports mental resilience3️⃣ When Sharing Hurts PerformanceTraining for the post instead of the planRunning too fast on easy daysComparison spiralTying your confidence to likes/comments4️⃣ A Quick Gut-CheckAsk yourself:Does it feel joyful or stressful?Would you still be proud of the run even if no one saw it?Does posting motivate you — or distract you?5️⃣ How to Find Your BalanceShare feelings, not just pacesTry weekly recaps instead of daily postsConsider making Strava private during goal cyclesProtect your mental space during heavy trainingShare your workouts if it serves you — not if it runs you.Sometimes the best training happens in silence.If this episode resonated, share it with a running friend or tag us with your thoughts.Happy running — whether it’s public or private. 🖤🏃‍♀️
Apr 3
33 min
318. Marathon Training: How to Crush your marathon in 2026
If you’re listening to this in March and targeting a fall 2026 marathon, hear this first:You are not early.You are right on time.www.run4prs.comMarch is where great marathon cycles actually begin—not with mile repeats or 20-mile long runs, but with smart decisions that determine how the fall will feel.In this episode, we break down how to set yourself up for a breakthrough marathon by doing what most runners skip:Building the aerobic engine earlyTraining with restraint instead of egoDeveloping durability before intensityPlaying the long game on purposeThis is about becoming the kind of runner who can handle marathon training—so when the specific work arrives, it feels controlled, not desperate.If you do this phase right, fall training won’t feel like a gamble.It’ll feel inevitable.Let’s get into it.
Mar 23
36 min
317. Transitioning to outside running after winter
www.run4prs.com for a free week of training.Difference in surface: treadmill vs. pavement/track/grassImpact & foot strike mechanicsStabilization and balance: treadmill supports lateral movement less than the roadMental differences: pacing, effort perception, and rhythm changesSIGNS YOU’RE NOT READY Soreness in calves, shins, or knees after short runsAnkle or hip fatigue after outdoor attemptsFeeling slower or more fatigued than expectedFeeling “off balance” or tripping more oftenSECTION 3: STEP-BY-STEP SAFE TRANSITION PLAN Start with hybrid runsMix treadmill and outdoor sessions in the first 1–2 weeksExample: 20 min treadmill + 10 min outdoor or vice versaAdjust pace & effortDon’t try to match treadmill pace exactlyOutdoors usually feels harder; aim for the same effort, not speed
Mar 12
38 min
316: Should You Be Cross-Training?
Should you be cycling, swimming, or lifting to become a faster runner — or are you just adding noise to your training? 🤔In this episode, we break down the truth about cross-training for runners — who actually benefits from it, when it’s worth your time, and when it can backfire.You’ll learn:✅ Why runners add cross-training (and what most get wrong)✅ The best types for endurance, strength, and mobility✅ When to use it for recovery, injury, or burnout✅ How to build a balanced week that still prioritizes running✅ The simple rule of thumb: If it enhances your running, it’s valuable. If it interferes, it’s noise.Whether you’re marathon training, coming back from injury, or trying to stay consistent through busy seasons, this episode will help you understand how to make cross-training work for you — not against you.🎧 Tune in now and learn how to get stronger, recover smarter, and run your best miles yet.👉 Comment “strength” on our latest post to get a free week of customized strength workouts designed for runners!
Feb 27
37 min
315. Are Downhill Races 'Worth it' Anymore?
www.run4prs.comLet’s start with why runners are drawn to downhill courses:PR potential – Gravity can help you run faster, which is why people chase downhill half-marathons and marathons.Psychological boost – It can feel exhilarating to fly down a hill, and mentally that can make miles feel easier.Excuse to try a faster pace – Downhill courses give you a reason to push yourself without guilt.
Feb 15
34 min
314. What to do when running is feeling stale
www.run4prs.com for a free week of trainingFirst, let’s break down why training can feel stale. There are a few big reasons:Repetition without progression – If you’re doing the same long runs, intervals, and tempos week after week without adjusting intensity, your body and your brain get bored.Mental fatigue – Life stress, work, family, and everything else can drain your energy and make even your favorite workouts feel heavy.Lack of variety – Running only one route or one type of workout can make training feel monotonous.Recovery imbalance – Too much volume or not enough rest can zap motivation and make workouts feel sluggish.The first step is recognizing that it’s normal — every runner hits a plateau or mental block at some point.
Feb 3
39 min
313. How to Finally Set a Big 5k PR
www.run4prs.com for a free week of trainingSpeed sessions – Short, intense repeats that teach your legs to move fast and your lungs to tolerate oxygen debt. Think 400s or 800s at 5K pace or slightly faster.Threshold runs – Sustained efforts at your “comfortably hard” pace. These build the aerobic engine you need to sustain 5K pace without collapsing. Usually 15–25 minutes at tempo pace.Race-pace practice – You must spend time at actual 5K pace. Nothing replaces the feel of running the exact effort you’ll need on race day.Here’s a little secret: the fastest runners aren’t the ones with the highest mileage—they’re the ones who hit their quality workouts consistently and recover properly.
Jan 21
39 min
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