RUNCULTURE - Hardlopend persoon

Running plans & training

The Standard method balances easy runs, intervals and long runs. Accessible, flexible and proven for runners of all levels.

01 · What is the Standard method?What is the Standard method?

The Standard method is the "down-to-earth foundation" of training planning. No complicated terms that you have to study first, but a clear line:

    Build what your body can handle
    Stimulate at the right time
    Recover before you overshoot
    Start fresh at the start of your goal moment

Think of it like building a house. You start with a solid foundation. Then you put floors on it. In between, check whether everything is still stable. Only at the end do you finish and focus.

That sounds simple, and that is exactly its power.

02 · The phases in ordinary human languageThe phases in ordinary human language

Basic phase

In the basic phase you put your system at rest.

Build phase

In the build phase you add more training stimulus step by step.

Deload phase (recovery week)

This phase is often underestimated, but is exactly where a lot of progress "lands".

Peak and sharpening phase

As you get closer to your goal, the emphasis shifts.

Taper phase

Taper means that you become fresher towards the goal moment.

1) Basic phase

In the basic phase you put your system at rest. Your body gets used to regularity: several running days a week, rhythm, technique, strain on tendons and muscles.

The most important thing here:

You don't have to "prove" yourself yet.
Consistency is more important than heroic workouts.
You build confidence: you notice that your body can hold out.

Many runners skip this phase too quickly, especially if they are motivated. That seems smart, but often causes problems later.

2) Build phase

In the build phase you add more training stimulus step by step. Not in one fell swoop, but in a controlled manner.

You can think of this as:

A little more scope in your week
A little more quality in some training sessions
A more logical division of heavy and light days

The core of build is not "maximum everything", but "just enough extra" so that your body adapts and becomes stronger.

3) Deload phase (recovery week)

This phase is often underestimated, but is exactly where a lot of progress "lands". In a deload week the pressure decreases.

Why this works:

Fatigue subsides
Small aches and pains are given rest
Your nervous system relaxes
You make room for the next structure

So deload is not a step back. It's a smart step forward without stupid damage.

4) Peak and sharpening phase

As you get closer to your goal, the emphasis shifts. You no longer have to mainly "build", but you want to become more specific and sharper.

That usually means:

Still quality, but more focused
Less unnecessary mess training
Better connection to your target pace and competition feeling

You prepare not only your fitness, but also your head: rhythm, confidence, pacing, control.

5) Taper phase

Taper means that you become fresher towards the goal moment. You let fatigue subside without stopping everything.

Important to understand:

Doing less is not laziness here
Your shape doesn't disappear in a few easy days
Your goal is: energetic, sharp and recovered at the start

Many runners get nervous in taper and still want to do "one big blast." That is often exactly what you don't want.

03 · How weekly volume is logically built up (without spreadsheets)How weekly volume is logically built up (without spreadsheets)

In the Standard method, your weekly volume does not grow in a straight line. That is conscious.

The logic is usually:

You have build-up weeks in which you add something
You have weeks in which you stabilize
You have recovery weeks in which you switch back

So not: more every week. Well: rhythm of load and recovery.

That makes the scheme stronger in the long term. You then train not only for "this week", but for the coming months.

04 · Why this approach often worksWhy this approach often works

The Standard method works for many runners because it solves three problems that almost everyone recognizes:

Problem 1: too much too quickly

You feel motivated, throw in a lot, and a few weeks later you are tired or injured.

Solution: build up in phases, not on emotion.

Problem 2: always "just too hard"

Your gentle workouts are secretly too intense, so you never really recover.

Solution: clear role per week and per training.

Problem 3: no structure towards the goal

You do train, but without a clear line to a peak moment.

Solution: phasing with build-up, focus and taper.

05 · For whom is Standard a good choice?For whom is Standard a good choice?

Choose Standard if you:

Want a clear diagram without excessive technical jargon
You want to build up calmly and injury-consciously
Looking for a method that works for many different goals
You don't want to manage every training based on data and formula
You want progress, but without unnecessary risk

06 · When might Standard be less appropriate?When might Standard be less appropriate?

There are situations in which you would prefer to choose a different method:

You want to work very specifically on training zones and fixed pace divisions
You actually enjoy highly data-driven training
You already have a lot of experience with a specific approach that demonstrably works for you

Then a more explicit method may be a better fit. But for most runners, Standard is a very strong basis.

07 · Common misconception: \Common misconception: "harder = better"

The Standard method breaks exactly that pitfall.

More and harder is only better if you can handle it. And processing happens in recovery.

That is why this approach always contains a balance between:

provide stimulus,
allow recovery,
and build again.

That may be less spectacular on paper, but much more sustainable in practice.

08 · This is what this practically looks likeThis is what this practically looks like

In plain language this often means:

A week with a clear long training
A week with one or more targeted quality moments
Enough quiet days to get better from that
Regularly a week in which the pace or volume drops somewhat
Towards your goal moment, less "stacking" and more "finishing"

You do not train from individual day to individual day, but with a line through your entire schedule.

09 · Why you don't immediately need to know percentages hereWhy you don't immediately need to know percentages here

You don't have to be a training scientist to use this method. You don't have to be able to explain everything in percentages and tables to train well with it.

If you understand this, you're already in the right place:

Build first
Then apply targeted loads
Repair on time
Fresh peaks

That's the gist.

10 · ConclusionConclusion

The Standard method is not a "simple version" for those who do not take it seriously. It is actually a mature approach that takes into account how people really train: work, family, stress, sleep and recovery.

If you choose Standard, you choose sustainable progression. No hype, no rush, just structure.

And that is precisely why this is the best route to better performance for many runners.