Running Hill Reps

Introduction

Running hill reps is a great way to improve your stride length and therefore speed, without quite the same risk as running track intervals.

Speed work for running will always carry some level of injury risk, but this seems magnified when running repeats on a flat, hard surface like a running track.

Of course, you could run them on grass, but many places with grass surfaces can have uneven surfaces, hidden beneath the grass - my local playing field is a good example; looks like a bowling green until you try to run fast on the surface!

Also, running intervals on the flat magnifies the impact forces you experience.

Running hill reps, on the other hand, increases the resistance you experience, but doesn't magnify those impact forces as much. They're a great introduction to speed work, providing the necessary level of conditioning for muscles and connective tissue that will allow you to progress to fast work on the flat.

How to do it...

Warm up by running at an easy pace for at least 10 minutes (longer is better because you want to be properly warm before running hard). Add any dynamic mobility exercises that you need.

Find a fairly steep hill and select two markers, approximately 60m apart.

Run 6 -10 repeats up the hill.

Walk back down to recover.

Cool down by running 5-10 minutes at an easy pace and performing mobility exercises as needed.

On the repeats, focus on...

  • Hip position - up and forward, maintain neutral hip girdle position
  • Drive the foot backwards and down on every foot-strike
  • Strong knee drive 
  • Strong arm drive
  • Relaxed upper body

IMPORTANT: These are not hill sprints. Instead, the focus is on relaxed, efficient and fast running uphill.

For more about running and how to do it well: Running (A Guide for Non-Runners)

Related Posts

Italian-Style Meatloaf

Introduction This Italian-style Meatloaf recipe results in a meal that’s high in protein with the concentrated flavour you’d find in many Italian dishes. We’ve long made a very simple meatloaf with turkey mince, but I’ve always found it a little bland and dry. The fact that it’s quick and easy to make has kept it on

Read More

Katsu Chicken Recipe

Introduction This Katsu Chicken recipe is my take on this dish, inspired by reading the horrid ingredients list on a store-bought ready-meal. This Katsu Chicken recipe came about when my wife brought home a Katsu ready-meal for herself one evening (I refuse to eat “processed food slop”, so I wouldn’t even be offered a mouthful

Read More

Your Warm-Up Matters, This is Why

Introduction Doing a good warm-up can make a huge difference to your workout as well as competition results. It’s not just something to do halfheartedly. I’m a coach and an athlete. As much as I like to know WHY something works, the fact THAT IT DOES WORK is all I really care about. This sometimes puts

Read More

Freestyle Swimmer: Why You Should Swim All Four Strokes

Introduction Every swimmer should swim all four strokes. It’s a bold claim and one which strikes fear into the hearts of most triathlete freestylers. If there is one word uttered on the pool deck that strikes fear into the hearts of triathletes the world over, it’s this…”BUTTERFLY” Of all the ways there are to imitate someone drowning,

Read More

Grip Training Drills

Introduction Many people make the mistake of resorting to lifting straps long before they should need them. These grip training drills will help. At it’s most basic, training your grip means heavier lifts. But it goes a little deeper than that because there’s a correlation between grip strength and longevity, albeit it’s only a correlation

Read More

Ladder Workouts

IntroductionLadder workouts are a way to structure volume in your workouts to balance the load you’re moving with a degree of strength endurance. We’re all familiar with the standard way of structuring workouts that look a bit like this… 3 sets of 10 reps with 1 minute rest (3 x 10) OR 5 sets of 5 reps with 3

Read More

Will Newton


In over twenty years of coaching, I have coached everyone from absolute beginners to world champions.
My interest in getting the best results for people who train for health and fitness or the love of sport, rather than as professionals, drives me to find the most effective ways to get results.
My mission is simple: Be in better shape at 70 than most people are at 20, and to help you do the same.