Saturday Run — Hal Higdon Novice 5K, Week 3 Day 3 (2.0 mi)

Saturday Run — Hal Higdon Novice 5K, Week 3 Day 3 (2.0 mi)

Today's run is the final session of Week 3 — a 2.0-mile easy run at conversational pace. The article covers the Ohio State 15-movement dynamic warm-up, the Talk Test and Zone 2 pacing explained, running form guidance from GTN and Runna TV head coach Ben Parker, a Tom Peto lower-body cool-down, a 3-level beginner/intermediate/advanced scaling table, and a preview of Week 4 kicking off Tuesday with 2.25 miles.

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2026. 6. 6. · 22:17
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Week 3 closes today. You've already banked 2.0 mi on Tuesday and 1.5 mi on Thursday — this 2.0-mile Saturday run wraps the week and completes the third of eight weeks in the Hal Higdon Novice 5K plan. 1
The goal is exactly what it's been all week: conversational pace. Hal Higdon's direction is direct — "Ideally, you should be able to run at a pace that allows you to converse comfortably while you do so." 1 No time target, no pace target. Cover the distance, keep it easy, and finish feeling like you could have gone further.

Session at a glance

FieldDetail
ProgramHal Higdon Novice 5K — Week 3, Day 3 1
Distance2.0 miles
EffortConversational pace (Talk Test)
Warm-up~5 min dynamic drills (video below)
Cool-down~6 min lower-body stretch (video below)
Total time on feet~30–40 min depending on pace
Week 3 total5.5 miles (2.0 Tue + 1.5 Thu + 2.0 Sat)
Tomorrow40-min walk — no running

Warm-up (~5 min)

Cold muscles are less efficient and more injury-prone. Five minutes of dynamic movement before you start your run gets blood moving and "turns on" the muscles you're about to use. Ohio State Wexner Medical Center's 15-movement dynamic warm-up routine (3:46, 1.36M views) was designed specifically for pre-running and endurance activity by the OSU Sports Medicine team. 2
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Ohio State Wexner Medical Center — 15 movements to warm up before workout, 3:46 (1.36M views). 2
The sequence covers head rolls, shoulder rolls, arm circles, walking lunges, Spider-Man lunges (a deep lunge with a rotation that opens the hip flexor and thoracic spine), lateral shuffles, walking hamstring toe touches, ankle rolls, and leg swings. Run through the full sequence at a relaxed pace — by the end your heart rate should be gently elevated and your hips loose.

Pacing: the Talk Test explained

Today's run has no pace requirement. Hal Higdon explicitly allows run/walk intervals: "There's nothing in the rules that suggests you have to run continuously, either in training or in the 5K race itself. Run until fatigued; walk until recovered." 1
The only pacing guideline that matters is the Talk Test: if you can speak in full sentences without gasping between words, you're in the right zone. If you're too winded to talk, slow down or take a 30-second walk break. From a physiological standpoint, that conversational effort corresponds roughly to Zone 2 heart rate (about 60–70% of max heart rate) — the aerobic base-building zone where your body becomes more efficient at using fat as fuel and recovering between harder sessions.
Jason Fitzgerald (USATF-certified running coach and 2:39 marathoner) of StrengthRunning explains the full toolkit for finding and maintaining easy pace in his 11-minute guide: 3
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StrengthRunning — Master Easy Running: How to Find "Easy Pace", 11:18 (21K views). 3
His key point: easy running is sometimes the hardest part of training — most beginners run their easy days too hard, which slows adaptation and extends recovery time. Deliberately slow down if the Talk Test starts to fail.

Running form refresher

Good form makes easy running feel easier and reduces the impact stress that accumulates over a training block. Two form resources stand out for different reasons.
The GTN (Global Triathlon Network) video by coach Heather covers the fundamentals in 9:35 — posture, foot placement, torso angle, hip position, shoulder and arm mechanics, head position, and breathing. With 4.4M views and captions, it's one of the most-referenced running technique guides available. 4
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Global Triathlon Network — How To Run Properly | Running Technique Explained, 9:35 (4.4M views). 4
For a more recent take, Runna head coach Ben Parker's 2026 guide covers the same checkpoints with an important addition: how to implement form changes without disrupting a training block. His advice — "don't implement everything at once — especially mid-training block" — is particularly relevant at Week 3, when a full form overhaul would do more harm than good. 5
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Runna TV — How to Run with PERFECT FORM | Coach Explains, 8:03 (72K views). 5
Pick one or two cues to think about during today's run — not six. Posture (tall, slight forward lean from the ankles, not the waist) and arm swing (elbows at roughly 90 degrees, hands relaxed) are good starting points if you're unsure which to choose.

Cool-down (~6 min)

After the run, walk for 2–3 minutes at a slow pace to bring your heart rate down before stretching. Then follow Tom Peto's lower-body cool-down routine (5:43, 95K views), which targets the four muscle groups most stressed by running: hip flexors, hamstrings, adductors (inner thigh), and glutes/piriformis. 6
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Tom Peto Training — 5 Min LOWER BODY COOL DOWN STRETCH ROUTINE | Follow Along, 5:43 (95K views). 6
Hold each stretch for 20–30 seconds and breathe steadily through it. Avoid bouncing into the stretch — static holds at mild tension work better than forced range of motion.

Scaling

LevelDistancePacingWalk breaks
Beginner2.0 mi total (run/walk OK)Talk Test throughout — slow to a walk any time you can't hold a conversationTake a 60-second walk break after every 5 minutes of running if needed; no minimum continuous run requirement
Intermediate2.0 mi continuous runConversational pace; heart rate stays below 75% of maxWalk only if Talk Test fails; aim to keep running breaks to 1–2 max
Advanced2.0 mi continuous runTrue Zone 2 effort — comfortable enough to hum; perceived exertion 3–4 out of 10No walk breaks; if the run feels too easy, resist the urge to push the pace — save it for Week 4

Week 3 complete

With this run finished, Week 3 is done: 5.5 miles across three sessions (2.0 + 1.5 + 2.0). Three weeks of the 8-week program are in the books, five to go. 1
Tomorrow is a 40-minute walk — the program's weekly recovery day. Hal Higdon treats rest as a training tool: "Rest days are as vital as training days. They give your muscles time to recover so you can run again." 1 Keep the walk comfortable and use it to stay loose rather than to add load.

Week schedule

DaySessionStatus
Tuesday, Jun 2Run: Week 3 Day 1 — 2.0 mi✅ Done
Thursday, Jun 4Run: Week 3 Day 2 — 1.5 mi✅ Done
Saturday, Jun 6Run: Week 3 Day 3 — 2.0 mi← Today
Sunday, Jun 7Walk — 40 min (recovery)

Coming up: Week 4

Week 4 starts Tuesday, June 9. The Tuesday run steps up to 2.25 miles — the longest single run in the program so far. 1
Week 4 DayDateDistance
Day 1 (Tue)Jun 92.25 mi
Day 2 (Thu)Jun 111.5 mi
Day 3 (Sat)Jun 132.25 mi
Walk (Sun)Jun 1445 min
The pattern stays the same: easy conversational effort throughout. The Saturday long run will grow by 0.25 miles each week from here — 2.25, then 2.5, then 2.75 — building to a full 5K (3.1 mi) by the end of Week 8.

참고 출처

  1. 1Hal Higdon — Novice 5K Training Program
  2. 2Ohio State Wexner Medical Center — 15 movements to warm up before workout
  3. 3StrengthRunning — Master Easy Running: How to Find "Easy Pace"
  4. 4Global Triathlon Network — How To Run Properly
  5. 5Runna TV — How to Run with PERFECT FORM
  6. 6Tom Peto Training — 5 Min LOWER BODY COOL DOWN STRETCH ROUTINE

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