Thursday Run — Hal Higdon Novice 5K, Week 4 Day 2 (1.5 mi)

Thursday Run — Hal Higdon Novice 5K, Week 4 Day 2 (1.5 mi)

Week 4's short recovery run: 1.5 mi easy, Talk Test pace, 6 video embeds.

Workout Plan Pick
2026. 6. 11. · 17:38
구독 1개 · 콘텐츠 26개
Today is a short one — and that's the point.
Week 4's Thursday run is 1.5 miles at conversational pace, the same distance you've run on every Thursday since Week 1. It's the week's shortest run by design. Hal Higdon built the Novice 5K program so that the mid-week Thursday run stays short while Tuesday and Saturday carry the volume load. 1 Today's job is active recovery and aerobic maintenance, not fitness gains — you preserve what Tuesday built and keep your legs fresh for Saturday's 2.25 miles.

Session at a glance

FieldDetail
DateThursday, June 11, 2026
ProgramHal Higdon Novice 5K — Week 4, Day 2
Distance1.5 miles
PaceEasy conversational pace (Talk Test / Zone 2)
Total session time~30 min (5-min warm-up + run + 5-min cool-down)
EquipmentRunning shoes; outdoor path, track, or treadmill

Warm-up (~5 min)

Don't skip it. Cold muscles and a tight hip flexor are the main reasons short runs turn into sore legs. Five minutes of dynamic movement before you step out the door primes your joints and gets blood moving to the muscles you're about to use.
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Ohio State Sports Medicine — 15-movement dynamic warm-up, 3:46 (1.37M views). Works hip flexors, hamstrings, glutes, calves, and ankles — all the structures that take the first impact of a run. 2
Run through the full sequence before heading out.

Why today's run should feel easy — really easy

This is the single most common mistake beginner runners make on short mid-week runs: they go faster because the distance feels low-stakes. Don't. The Thursday run exists to keep your aerobic engine running without taxing your legs before Saturday.
Steve Magness, running coach and author of Do Hard Things, breaks down the science and history behind easy runs — why training slower on recovery days actually builds aerobic capacity faster over the full program cycle.
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Steve Magness — "You Need to Run SLOWER | Your Comprehensive Guide to Easy Runs," 24:16 (176K views). Covers Arthur Lydiard's aerobic base principles, training zone research, and practical pace guidelines. 3 The video is long — bookmark it for the cool-down or your next rest day. The core message is directly relevant to today: if you can't hold a full conversation, you're running too hard.

The Talk Test

Hal Higdon's pacing instruction for every run in this program is consistent: run at a pace that allows you to "converse comfortably." 1 The Talk Test is your on-the-fly check:
  • Can speak in full sentences without gasping → pace is correct
  • Short, clipped answers → back off 15–20 seconds per mile
  • Can't finish a sentence → slow down or walk until you recover
Jason Fitzgerald (founder of Strength Running, USATF-certified coach) explains what "easy effort" actually means in practice and how to dial in your conversational pace if you're not sure where to start.
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StrengthRunning — "How to Determine Your Easy Run Pace," 11:18 (21.4K views). Covers effort-based cues, common pacing mistakes, and why heart rate alone can mislead new runners. 4

The run: 1.5 miles easy

Step outside, start your watch, and run 1.5 miles. That's it. The only rule is the Talk Test — keep the effort low enough to hold a conversation the entire time. Walk breaks are fine; Higdon explicitly says there's no rule that requires continuous running. 1
Route options:
  • Out-and-back: run 0.75 miles out, turn around
  • Track: 6 laps (standard 400 m track)
  • Treadmill: set distance to 1.5 mi and don't touch the speed once you've settled in
If you finish feeling like you could have run another mile at the same effort, the pace was right.

Running form

Relaxed, efficient form keeps easy miles from accumulating unnecessary stress on your joints. Two videos cover the key cues from different coaching angles.
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Global Triathlon Network (GTN) — "How to Improve Your Running Technique," 9:35 (4.42M views). Heather covers posture, foot placement, torso position, hip drive, shoulder and arm mechanics, head position, and breathing. 5
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Runna TV — Running form coaching, 8:03 (77.1K views, published April 2026). Ben Parker covers posture, foot strike, cadence, upper body position, and how form shifts at different speeds. 6
Form focus for today's easy run:
  • Upright posture — slight forward lean from the ankles, not a hunch from the waist
  • Arms at 90° — elbows bent, hands loose (imagine holding a potato chip without breaking it)
  • Short, relaxed stride — land under your hips, not in front of them
  • Look ahead — eyes on the path 10–15 feet ahead, chin level

Cool-down (~5 min)

Even at easy pace, your hip flexors, calves, and hamstrings tighten during a run. A dedicated cool-down after 1.5 miles takes less time than the ache you'll feel tomorrow if you skip it.
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Tom Peto — Lower-body runner's cool-down, 5:43 (96.7K views). Follow-along routine targeting hip flexors, hamstrings, adductors, and glutes/piriformis — the exact muscles that work hardest during an easy run. 7
Stay on the mat for the full 5:43. Saturday's 2.25 miles will feel better for it.

3-level scaling

BeginnerIntermediateAdvanced
PaceSlow jog/run-walk intervals; walk whenever the Talk Test failsSteady easy jog, Talk Test passing throughoutEasy jog at the low end of Zone 2; resist the urge to push
Distance1.0–1.5 mi total (walk breaks count)1.5 mi continuous or near-continuous1.5 mi exactly — no bonus miles on a recovery day
Walk breaksTake them freely; aim to run more than you walkUse only if Talk Test fails; no planned walk intervalsNone — if you need one, your base pace is too fast
TerrainFlat road, track, or treadmillAny flat or gently rolling routeYour standard neighborhood or park loop
Chelsea Trevor beginner resourceWatch this 16-minute beginner guide before heading out if you're still building confidence: 8

Coming up: the rest of Week 4 and Week 5

Saturday, June 13 — Week 4 Day 3 (2.25 mi easy run) Same conversational pace, longer distance. This is the week's key aerobic session — the reason Thursday's mileage stays low is so your legs are ready for this one. Same Talk Test rule applies.
Sunday, June 14 — Week 4 Day 7 (45 min walk) Active recovery. Any comfortable walking pace for 45 minutes. 1
Tuesday, June 16 — Week 5 begins Week 5 increases the volume. Stay consistent through the weekend and you'll be in good shape for the step-up.
Cover photo: A woman running on a tree-lined road by Quang Nguyen Vinh / Pexels

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