Why Running at "Medium" Effort Won't Make You Faster

Key Takeaways

- The 'gray zone' is training that's too hard to recover from and too easy to build speed
- Zone 2 training alone won't break a speed plateau. You need both slow easy days and truly hard intervals
- Most runners' 'easy pace' should be far slower than it feels comfortable
You lace up four or five times a week. You push hard enough to feel pleasantly wrecked. You watch your mileage climb. And after months of honest effort, you're running the exact same pace you ran a year ago.
Sound familiar? If so, you've likely fallen into what coaches call the 'gray zone.' It's an effort level that feels productive but, from a physiological standpoint, collects fatigue without collecting much fitness.
The Problem With 'Moderate' Effort
The gray zone is deceptively comfortable. It's too hard to be truly easy and too easy to create meaningful high-end adaptation. You could hold a conversation at this pace, but it wouldn't be comfortable. Runners sometimes call these 'junk miles.'
These miles aren't without benefit. Running is still good for you. But if you spend the vast majority of your training at moderate intensity, you'll struggle to get faster. The reason is simple: you never recover enough to go truly hard, and you never go truly hard enough to push your aerobic ceiling.
Zone 2 Isn't the Whole Answer
If you've been anywhere near running content in the last few years, you've heard about Zone 2 training. It's been evangelized. The appeal is obvious: who doesn't want to hear that less effort yields greater results?
Zone 2 is a term from the five-zone system of heart rate training. For runners, it translates to 'easy pace' or 'long slow distance pace.' The science is real. It's useful for runners who chronically overtrain. But Zone 2 alone won't break your plateau.
The tricky thing: for most recreational runners, Zone 2 pace is far slower than it feels like it should be. Your ego resists it. Other runners pass you. It feels like you're not working.
The Fix: Polarized Training
The best way to improve your running can be boiled down to one sentence: slow down on your easy days, and go harder on your hard days.
This is called polarized training. Instead of spending most of your time in the gray zone, you split your effort between two poles. About 80% of your runs should be genuinely easy. The remaining 20% should be genuinely hard: intervals, tempo runs, hill repeats.
- Easy days: You could hold a full conversation without gasping. Your breathing is relaxed. You feel like you could keep going for hours.
- Hard days: You're at or near your limit. Talking is difficult or impossible. These sessions are short but intense.
- No middle ground: Avoid the 'comfortably hard' pace that dominates most amateur training.
What happens at truly easy, low-intensity effort is that you lay the aerobic infrastructure that eventually makes everything faster. Your body builds more capillaries, improves fat oxidation, and strengthens slow-twitch muscle fibers. Then, when you do go hard, you can actually go hard enough to create adaptation.
How to Know You're in the Right Zone
A heart rate monitor helps. Zone 2 typically falls between 60-70% of your maximum heart rate. But perceived effort works too. If you can't hold a conversation, you're going too fast for an easy day. If you can sing, you might be going too slow.
The mental shift is harder than the physical one. Slowing down feels like regression. But it's the foundation that makes speed work effective.
Logicity's Take
A Simple Starting Framework
If you run four times a week, try this split: three easy runs at a pace where you could easily chat with a friend, and one hard session of intervals or tempo work. Resist the urge to push the easy days. The slower you go on recovery runs, the harder you can go when it counts.
Give it eight weeks. Track your times on a benchmark route. The plateau often breaks not because you trained more, but because you finally trained smarter.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why am I not getting faster even though I run regularly?
You're likely stuck in the 'gray zone,' an effort level that's too hard to recover from and too easy to create speed adaptation. Try polarizing your training: 80% truly easy, 20% truly hard.
What is Zone 2 running and why does it matter?
Zone 2 is the lowest aerobic zone in heart rate training, typically 60-70% of max heart rate. Running here builds aerobic base without accumulating fatigue, allowing you to recover for hard sessions.
How slow should my easy runs actually be?
Slow enough to hold a full conversation without gasping. For most recreational runners, this pace feels embarrassingly slow. That's the point.
Can I get faster by only doing Zone 2 training?
No. Zone 2 builds your aerobic foundation, but you also need high-intensity work to push your speed ceiling. The combination of both is what breaks plateaus.
Need Help Implementing This?
Source: Lifehacker
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
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