What are the benefits of hill training?
Like snow and sand, hills provide a resistance to the locomotion of the athlete; to run uphill you need to overcome the resistance of your own body weight.
Benefits
- Increases your aerobic capacity
- Promotes strength endurance
- Improves your running economy so that you use less oxygen to run at a given velocity
- Increases strength of the gluteals, quadriceps, gastrocnemius (upper calf), and soleus (lower calf) muscles, providing a base for potential speed increments.
- Improves stride length and frequency and with it running efficiency.
- Increases your ankle flexion to help reduce ground contact time and thereby improve efficiency and speed.
- The downhill phase helps improve control and stabilisation of the target muscle groups
Different hill lengths and gradients impart different training effects. A hockey player is perhaps best served with mixing up the hill lengths throughout their program but perhaps leaning towards mid-sized hills in base phase and short hills closer to pre-competition phase through to season start. One person's short is another person's long; most of the content available is skewed to distance runners. For the field hockey player, these are my personal definitions
Short hills
15 to 35 degrees less than 30 metres
Medium Hills
10 to 25 degrees 30 to 70 metres
According to (2) short hills of 5 to 10 second duration will help improve the Adenosine Triphosphate and Phosphate-creatine (ATP+PC) energy system and hills of 15 to 30 second duration will help develop the ATP+PC+muscle glycogen energy system.
I'm not here to prescribe a free 12-16 week program but I will share a favourite session I use for a microcycle prior to transitioning from base and temp work to intervals; I call it "round and round and up and down." Find a grassed oval of 400-500m+ that features nearby grassed slopes of 10m-30m. Warm up- 2 km steady with stretches and wind sprints of 20m slow 20m jog 20m striding x 5; do 4 to 8 x3 laps sets as follows:
lap one zone 2; lap 2 zone 3; lap 3 zone 2; hill reps max.speed x 5 to 10; walk down slope
References
Connolly,
D. a. J., Henkin, J. A., & Tyzbir, R. S. (n.d.). Changes in selected
fitness parameters following six weeks of snowshoe training. Journal of
sports medicine and physical fitness, 42(1), 14–18.
Mackenzie, B. (2007) Hill Training [WWW] Available from: http://www.brianmac.co.uk/hilltrain.htm@althockey
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