First off, it depends on where you start, and what skill level you're aspiring to. The ability to complete a half-marathon at any given time while having a 500lb deadlift, is not the same as training to take first place in said half.xfitxm wrote: I often read this information. But is it possible to accomplish those 2 goals while on operator black?
Running a half marathon need more volume than 1 E session every other week. I think.
Am I wrong?
Is it more for the green protocol?
If you're no stranger to running and have Base Building under your belt, then even 1 E every other week is sufficient for half-marathon capacity year round while progressing strength. Is it the optimal way to train if you want to take first place? No, you won't break any records.
Let's break it down. You get 2 HICs + 1 E every other week. If running's a personal weakness and one wanted to do the minimum to build half-marathon capacity while still lifting (year round), then it would make sense to do Fast-5 and Hills as your 2 HICs every week. Every other week a long run, 60 mins +.
8 weeks of Base already behind said runner. Doing that for most of the year would easily build the capability to complete a half-marathon at any given time. If the same trainee does mostly heavy bag or short sprints for HIC (with the goal of half marathon capacity), then common sense is lacking.
If you're a weak runner and completing something like a half is a major undertaking that you want to master sooner rather than later, then it stands to reason you'd want to run Black Professional, not Standard. Now you're running 3x week, Hills, Fast-5, plus 1-2 hour LISS.
Green would be overkill, unless you're training for a competitive race result. Green would make it harder for you to build a 600lb deadlift on the side. Not impossible by any means, but most people in the real world don't have the discipline or time to manage the nutrition and recovery needed to get a competitive half-marathon time and a monster deadlift.
The point I'm trying to make is that being able to pick up and run a half marathon anytime, while having a 500-600lb deadlift is not the same as being able to run a half-marathon and take first place while sporting a 500-600lb deadlift. The first is very do-able for the average person with the right program (TB). The second is another story.