Published: 12/06/2026, By: Kate Hutchinson
Kate Hutchinson goes from 16 weeks of marathon grind straight into something completely different. Now she’s running less, lifting more, and training like a hybrid athlete for the HYROX World Championships. And somehow… she’s getting faster. Wondering why? Read on – in this piece, she breaks down what she’s changed, why she made the switch, and how her new training split is reshaping everything she thought she knew about running.
I can't quite believe it, but it's already been one whole month since the London Marathon. I was delighted with how it went, to be honest. After 16 weeks of high mileage (for me), long, hard sessions on wet Sundays, and lots of afternoons spent not in the company of friends but recovering on the sofa, I achieved a 16-minute PB and a time that looks like it's going to qualify me for the Championship wave next year (3:09!). And while I found the Strava stats incredibly satisfying to look at, I was rather glad to see the back of marathon-specific training for a while.
My mileage wasn't necessarily as huge as other people's – my peak week was around 60km – but it was a lot for me to manage, particularly when trying to balance a full-time teaching career and some lofty HYROX goals too.
My marathon-specific block started on January 16th: genuinely the perfect time to “lock in”, as the kids say. The post-Christmas blues were in full swing, the weather was suitably dark and miserable, and I really benefitted from having a clear reason to get my running shoes on.
My weeks consistently involved four running sessions: a short easy run on a Tuesday, a track session on a Wednesday, a slightly longer easy run on a Saturday, and my key marathon session on a Sunday – a long run with efforts which progressed in mileage over time.
During the marathon build, these were my non-negotiables. It was incredibly important that as few long runs as possible were missed, as these were going to be the cornerstone of my success – the sessions that not only prepared me physiologically for the race, but psychologically too.
However, never one to be satisfied by an easy life, my HYROX goals during this build were also important, meaning I needed to maintain my strength and ensure I was doing enough conditioning to get me through some really high-stakes Elite 15 doubles races.
So, while prioritising my runs, I also made sure I completed my upper and lower body strength days and fitted in HYROX-specific training once or twice per week. To keep me racing strong and relatively fatigue-free, long runs never exceeded 2 hours 30, and although we knew that would mean I might struggle in the final 5km, it was the right decision for me.
Since completing the marathon, my training split has really shifted. I still complete four runs per week as I did during the marathon build, but now the long run has been swapped for a session focused on getting back some of the top-end speed required to excel in HYROX racing and to put in solid 5km and 10km performances.
And even if I didn't have the HYROX World Championships in mid-June to train for, the training would have shifted quite significantly anyway. For your average person, the training involved in a marathon block is simply not sustainable all year round, nor is it even necessary.
A marathon block done properly places immense physical and mental stress on the body, and can lead to overuse injuries, vulnerability to illness, and psychological burnout. If you want to get quicker, it's important to cut back on excessive mileage and train for speed and power too – which is exactly what I'm doing now.
The phrase “hybrid training” gets thrown around a lot, but to be clear: hybrid training is essentially a structured mix of running, strength, and conditioning. It's not purely endurance-focused, and not purely gym-based. While a lot of people train hybrid, it's not always to become a “Hybrid Rockstar” (HYROX athlete for short) – for many people it's simply about improving overall athletic performance.
It differs from a marathon block significantly: lower peak mileage, a higher strength emphasis, more variation in intensity, and greater recovery integration built throughout the week.
In a week, my training split generally looks like this:
· 3 strength sessions (upper, lower, full body)
· 4 HYROX-specific conditioning pieces (10–40 minutes, sometimes at the end of strength sessions)
· 4 runs (2 quality sessions, 1 easy, 1 longer)
· 1 full rest or active recovery day
Obviously, I'm in training for the HYROX World Champs, so I'm putting in quite a lot of hours. How you structure your own week will depend hugely on your goals, time, and level of experience.
1. Easy / aerobic run
My easy aerobic run is there for aerobic base maintenance, with the focus on recovery and movement quality. I tend to do around 35 minutes at conversational pace, with 5 minutes of strides at the end (20 seconds hard, 40 seconds easy) to help with form, running economy, and a touch of top-end speed.
2. Quality Sessions
I currently do two of these per week – one at the track and one usually on a residential loop. The goal shifts from week to week depending on what my coach thinks is most important at that point: sometimes lactate shuttling and clearance at higher intensities, sometimes aerobic development, and sometimes building resilience to discomfort.
3. Longer Run (Reduced From Marathon Block)
My longer run is currently around one hour, which is quite a drop from the 2–2.5 hour long runs I was completing during the marathon block. The focus is maintaining endurance without accumulating marathon fatigue – time on feet, not maximal distance.
I've really grown to love my strength sessions. Not only do they make me feel more robust and less injury-prone, there's something genuinely satisfying about tracking progression across weeks and months.
Strength is a big priority right now: it prepares me for HYROX race demands, helps prevent injury, and increases force production during speed work.
· Lower body focus: back squats, front-foot elevated split squats, dumbbell lunges, and wall sits.
· Upper body focus: pull-ups, dumbbell Z press, supinated bent-over rows, dumbbell alternating chest press, and clean and press.
· Full body focus: trap bar deadlifts, hip thrusts, Copenhagen planks, and L-sit isometric holds.
Before all strength sessions, I warm up thoroughly, working through activations prescribed by my physio targeting hip tightness, ankle instability, and glute weakness.
The conditioning work is probably where I notice the most direct carryover into my HYROX performance. It's building fitness, improving efficiency during station work, and, frankly, getting me comfortable with suffering in a way that mirrors race day.
I have two workouts that progress week on week:
· Rowing/burpee intervals, with wall balls in the remaining time
· Echo/air bike intervals
I also have a HYROX-specific workout focused on transitions, running compromised, training at heavier weights than race day, and flowing through stations with minimal rest. The sprint session at the end of the week is short and brutal – it’s about pushing hard and holding on.
One thing I've really noticed is how much the strength work feeds back into my running. Being stronger supports the muscles that carry you through week after week of training, reducing the risk of overuse strains and keeping you on the road more consistently.
The combination of a maintained aerobic base, targeted speed work, and regular strength training means I'm genuinely running better – and with less volume – than I was at peak marathon training. It's a good reminder that more isn’t always more.
· Higher intensity, lower volume
· More structured rest and recovery
· Strength training integrated year-round
· Less reliance on long runs
· More emphasis on athleticism over pure endurance
The biggest takeaway is that you don't need maximum mileage year-round to keep improving. Strength training has a direct and meaningful impact on running performance, and consistency over time matters far more than extreme volume in any single block.
I've also come to really value recovery as a performance tool rather than something you fit in when you're forced to stop.
More broadly, the transition has made me think differently about longevity in running – hybrid training feels like something that could keep me doing this for a long time, in a way that a year-round marathon block simply wouldn't.
While the UK doesn't exactly bombard us with hot days, it's worth knowing how to adjust when it does warm up. The main things I focus on are shifting intensity earlier in the day, staying on top of hydration and fuelling (electrolytes become even more important), reducing unnecessary volume in poor conditions, and being willing to take sessions indoors if needed.
None of it is complicated – it's just about being sensible rather than stubborn
In my experience, this kind of split works really well for:
· Marathon runners coming out of a race block who need a change of stimulus
· Athletes who want to build strength and speed alongside endurance
· Runners prone to overuse injuries at high mileage
· Anyone looking for a more balanced, year-round approach
· Hybrid athletes combining running with gym-based goals like HYROX
I love hybrid training because it genuinely feels like the best of all worlds. The marathon block was a brilliant experience and a brilliant test, but it's not something I'd want to sustain indefinitely.
Hybrid training, on the other hand, feels like something I could do long-term: the variety is there, the stimuli keep changing, and the strength element feels like an investment rather than a grind.
I've already noticed real improvements in speed, power, and muscular endurance, and I'm curious to see how much further those gains go over the coming months.
The split will keep evolving as my goals and race schedule change, but for now it's all eyes on World Champs, and then we'll see what comes next.