Tuesday Running: Hal Higdon 5K Beginner Week 1, Day 1

Tuesday Running: Hal Higdon 5K Beginner Week 1, Day 1

Your first run of Hal Higdon's Novice 5K program: a 1.5-mile easy run at conversational pace — complete with a 7-drill dynamic warm-up, embedded running form videos, cool-down stretches, and beginner run/walk scaling guidance.

Workout Plan Pick
2026. 5. 19. · 22:33
구독 1개 · 콘텐츠 10개
Today's discipline: Running | Program: Hal Higdon Novice 5K | Session: Week 1 Day 1 Total time: ~30–40 min | Equipment: Running shoes, flat outdoor surface or treadmill
Week 1 starts here. Hal Higdon's Novice 5K is an 8-week plan built for people with no prior running experience, and today's workout is the gentlest possible entry point: a 1.5-mile (2.4 km) run at a conversational pace. 1 The goal isn't to push — it's to move continuously and finish feeling like you could have gone further.

Today's session at a glance

PhaseActivityDuration
Warm-upDynamic mobility drills5–7 min
Main run1.5 miles (2.4 km) at conversational pace~18–25 min
Cool-downPost-run static + mobility stretches5–6 min

Warm-up (5–7 min)

Do not skip this. Dynamic movement before running prepares joints to go through their full range of motion before the first stride, which reduces the risk of injury from cold muscles. 2 Static stretching — the kind where you hold a position for 30+ seconds — belongs after the run, not before.
Work through these drills in order. No equipment needed.
DrillExecutionSets / Reps
Ankle circlesStanding on one foot, trace slow circles with the raised foot; reverse direction10 each direction, each foot
Ankle rocksStanding feet hip-width apart, rock forward onto toes, then back onto heels10 reps
Knee-to-chest pullsStanding, draw one knee up toward your chest and hold briefly before stepping forward8 each leg
Leg swings (forward/back)Holding a wall for balance, swing one leg forward and back in a controlled arc10 each leg
Leg swings (side to side)Same wall support, swing leg across the body and out to the side10 each leg
Calf raisesHands on a wall, rise onto toes and lower slowly2 × 10
Arm circlesExtend arms wide, make slow full circles forward then backward10 each direction
📹 Video guides:

Main run: 1.5 miles at conversational pace

Distance and pace

The prescribed workout is 1.5 miles (2.4 km). 1 That distance lands at roughly 18–25 minutes for most beginners depending on pace — and pace is the one thing the program does not prescribe in minutes-per-mile.
Hal Higdon's guidance:
"Don't worry about how fast you run; just cover the distance — or approximately the distance suggested. Ideally, you should be able to run at a pace that allows you to converse comfortably while you do so." 1
In practice: if you can say a full sentence out loud without gasping, your pace is correct. If you're too breathless to speak, slow down. If walking is the only way to finish, that is a valid approach — Hal explicitly endorses a run/walk method for beginners who need it. 1

Running form

Good form from the first run prevents the compensatory movement patterns that cause overuse injuries later. Two things matter most today:
Foot strike and cadence. Land with your foot underneath your body, not out in front of it (overstriding). As GTN coach Heather explains, "you want your foot to be landing underneath your body whilst it's already started to move backwards." 4 A cadence of around 180 steps per minute keeps your stride compact and reduces impact — running coach Sam Candler sets that as the efficiency target for beginners. 5
Posture. Stand tall with a slight forward lean from the ankles (not the waist). Shoulders stay relaxed and slightly back, arms swing from hip to shoulder height with elbows bent at roughly 90°, hands loose as if holding an uncracked egg. 5 Eyes look 10–15 feet ahead, not down at the pavement.
📹 Video demos:

Cool-down (5–6 min)

Walk slowly for 1–2 minutes after your last running stride to bring your heart rate down before stretching. Your muscles are warm right now — this is the best time to address the areas that take the most load during a run: hamstrings, hip flexors, and lower back. 6
Hold each stretch for 30–40 seconds per side unless noted. No equipment needed.
StretchExecutionDuration
Standing hamstring stretchStand, extend one leg forward with heel on the ground and toe up, hinge at hips until you feel the stretch behind the thigh; add a slow torso rotation toward the extended leg for a bonus hip opener30–40 sec each side
Forward fold lower back releaseFeet hip-width, soft bend in knees, hinge forward and let your torso hang heavy; clasp opposite elbows30 sec
Standing back extensionHands on lower back, gently arch backward to relieve lumbar compression built up from the forward lean during your run5–8 slow breaths
Upper back roundingInterlace fingers in front of you, round your upper back and push palms forward; chin drops to chest20–30 sec
High lunge hip flexor stretchStep into a lunge, lower the back knee to the ground, drive hips forward; add a side bend away from the front leg for a deeper hip flexor stretch30–40 sec each side
Wide-leg groin stretchStand with feet 3–4 feet apart, toes angled slightly outward, sink into a wide squat; rotate your torso gently to each side30 sec each side
📹 Video guide:

Scaling guide

If 1.5 miles feels too hard: Run until you feel the need to stop, then walk until you've recovered enough to run again. Repeat this run/walk cycle for the full distance. Hal Higdon explicitly supports this approach: beginning runners do not need to complete the distance continuously. 1 Over the 8 weeks, the run intervals naturally extend as fitness improves.
If 1.5 miles feels too easy: That is a good sign, and the program accounts for it. If this distance feels comfortable throughout, Hal suggests you may be better placed in the Intermediate or Advanced 5K program rather than the Novice plan. 1 For now, resist the urge to run further — Week 1 is about establishing the habit and keeping the body fresh for Thursday's repeat.
Rest days matter. Wednesday is a rest or optional light run/walk day. Hal's note on recovery: "Rest days are as vital as training days. They give your muscles time to recover so you can run again." 1

Week 1 at a glance

DayWorkout
MondayRest or light run/walk
Tuesday1.5 mi run ← today
WednesdayRest or light run/walk
Thursday1.5 mi run
FridayRest
Saturday1.5 mi run
Sunday30 min walk
Three runs, three days of rest or easy movement, one walk. 1 Thursday's workout is identical to today's — same distance, same pace target, same warm-up and cool-down structure. Treat today as the template.

참고 출처

  1. 1Novice 5K
  2. 25 Minute Warm-Up You NEED before EVERY RUN — Yoga With Tim
  3. 3Start Your Runs Faster
  4. 4How To Run Properly
  5. 5Proper Running Form for Beginners
  6. 65 MIN Post-Run Stretching Routine to Maximise Recovery — Run Better with Ash

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