Thursday, June 26 — 🏃 Hal Higdon Novice 5K · Week 6, Day 2
24/6/2026 · 6:13

Thursday, June 26 — 🏃 Hal Higdon Novice 5K · Week 6, Day 2

Complete guide for Week 6 Day 2 — 2.0-mile easy run. Covers Talk Test pacing, Ohio State dynamic warm-up, StrengthRunning easy-pace video, GTN + Runna TV form cues, Tom Peto cool-down, 3-tier scaling, and Friday StrongLifts preview.

Tuesday's 2.75-mile run was the week's heavy lift. Today's 2.0-mile easy run is the intentional step back — shorter distance, same conversational effort, same goal: keep the aerobic base building without piling on fatigue. 1 Thursday's run in Week 6 sits between two 2.75-mile efforts, which makes it a recovery bridge as much as a training session.

Today's session at a glance

ElementDetail
Distance2.0 miles (3.2 km)
EffortEasy — conversational pace
Warm-up~4 min dynamic movement
Run2.0 mi at Talk Test effort
Cool-down~5 min lower-body stretching
Total time~25–30 min (pace-dependent)

Warm-up (4 min)

Even on a shorter day, skipping the warm-up leaves your joints cold going into the first mile — and that first mile is the one where form problems tend to show up. The Ohio State Wexner Medical Center 15-movement dynamic sequence works through head rolls, arm circles, trunk rotations, walking lunges, Spider-Man lunges, side shuffles, leg swings, and ankle rolls. 2 Two days of accumulated stiffness from Tuesday's run makes this especially worth doing today.
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Move through all 15 drills continuously. By the last drill, your hips should feel open and your breathing should have picked up slightly — that's the signal you're ready to run.

Pace and effort

Hal Higdon's guidance for every easy run in the Novice 5K plan comes down to one test: can you hold a conversation? His instructions are consistent throughout the program: "Ideally, you should be able to run at a pace that allows you to converse comfortably while you do so." 1
The Talk Test is the only meter you need. Speak a full sentence out loud mid-run. If you're gasping through it, slow down. Walk breaks remain on the table: Higdon notes there's nothing in the plan that requires continuous running — "Run until fatigued; walk until recovered." 1 On a recovery day especially, the pace should feel almost too slow.
Coach Jason Fitzgerald of StrengthRunning (USATF-certified, 2:39 marathoner) covers how to dial in easy pace from both technical and feel-based angles: 3
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A rough pace guide by level, assuming the Talk Test stays green throughout:
LevelApproximate easy-run pace
Beginner (run/walk intervals welcome)13:00 – 16:00 min/mile
Intermediate (continuous running)11:00 – 13:00 min/mile
Advanced (comfortable continuous)9:30 – 11:00 min/mile
If Tuesday's run left your legs heavier than usual, stay at the slow end. The whole point of Thursday's distance being 2.0 miles instead of 2.75 is to let you arrive at Saturday's run ready — not depleted.

Running form

Two miles gives you fewer total strides than Tuesday, which makes it a good session to focus on one specific cue rather than trying to fix everything at once. Pick one thing from each video and check in on it at the halfway point.
Global Triathlon Network runs through the full technical checklist — posture, foot placement, hip engagement, shoulder relaxation, arm swing, and head position. With over 4.4 million views, it's the most-watched free running form guide available: 4
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Runna TV head coach Ben Parker focuses on the cues beginners most often get wrong — body position, foot strike, cadence, and arm swing when fatigue sets in. Thursday's shorter distance is a low-stakes window to experiment: 5
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One cue from GTN (posture — tall spine, slight forward lean), one from Runna TV (cadence — small quick steps over long bounding strides), check in once per mile. That's enough.

Cool-down (5 min)

Hip flexors, hamstrings, adductors, and glutes carry most of the load across 2.0 miles, and Saturday's 2.75-mile run is only two days out. Tom Peto's 5-minute follow-along lower-body routine covers all four groups: 6
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Hold each position a full beat longer than feels necessary. The short distance today means your muscles won't be as worked as they were Tuesday, but 48-hour recovery windows are tight — the more you invest in the cool-down now, the less Saturday's run will feel like a grind from the first step.

3-level scaling

LevelTarget distanceApproachWalk breaks
Beginner1.5 – 2.0 miRun/walk intervals (e.g. 3 min run / 1 min walk)Yes — as needed
Intermediate2.0 miContinuous easy run at Talk Test paceOnly on hills or if effort climbs
Advanced2.0 – 2.5 miContinuous run; add one form focus drillNo
Beginner note: if 2.0 miles still requires significant effort, 1.5 miles at genuinely easy effort does more training good than 2.0 miles at a pace that's too hard. 1 Covering the distance is the target; easy effort is the non-negotiable.

Week 6 in context

Thursday is Day 2 of 4 in Week 6. The 2.0-mile distance here is deliberate — it's lighter than either of the week's two 2.75-mile runs, placed specifically to keep your legs moving without adding more load mid-week. 1
DaySessionStatus
Tue, Jun 242.75 mi easy run✅ done
Thu, Jun 262.0 mi easy run← today
Sat, Jun 282.75 mi easy run(upcoming)
Sun, Jun 2955 min walk(upcoming)
Saturday's 2.75 miles will be the week's final run — a mirror of Tuesday's distance. The 5K race target (3.1 miles) is less than half a mile beyond what you'll cover on Saturday.

Next session: Friday, June 27 — StrongLifts 5×5 Workout A, Session 10

Tomorrow returns to the barbell: Squat 5×5 at 95 lb, Bench Press 5×5 at 75 lb, Barbell Row 5×5 at 95 lb. Session 10 is the double-digits milestone for the lifting program — eat well tonight and hydrate after today's run.
Cover photo by Alex Kinkate via Pexels

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