I still have some time to think about this, but I am starting to research the training recommendations more in-depth because I feel that I should be adding some speed and weight training to my workouts if I really want to be serious about this.

Marathon Training Plan:
I've shown in orange the criteria that I exceed and in green the ones I meet; based on these I definitely qualify as an Intermediate; however, the red shows that although my runs are long enough, I have not been doing them long enough, even for a beginner. Highlighted are the key points in training guidelines, and I will simply need to adjust the intensity of tempo runs and speedwork to my personal fitness level.Beginner You've run 15 to 20 miles a week for at least six months, completed a 5-K or 10-K--perhaps even something longer. You can run five or six miles without collapsing afterward and want to gradually become a stronger runner able to finish your first marathon, in the words of Portland, Oregon, coach Bob Williams, "feeling good and excited to run another one in six months."
Your Plan Surprise, you're going to train just three to four days a week and gradually increase your weekly mileage from around 15 to 35-plus miles a week. The biggest key of all will be to gradually increase your mileage, especially that of your weekend long run. "The beginner needs to focus almost entirely on the long run," says Anaerobic Management coach Jon Sinclair (anaerobic.net), "but it's also good to throw in a little hillwork and some aerobic intervals on alternate weeks to bolster your stamina and to liven up your training." Lastly, we're going to have you running two low-key races to get the feel of competition before the big day.
Intermediate You regularly run 20 to 30 miles a week, and have done so for a year or more. You do a weekly long run of eight to 10 miles and have some experience with tempo runs or intervals. You've run 10-K races, probably finished a half-marathon, maybe even a full marathon. But now you have a specific marathon goal time in mind, and you want to do the training to make it a reality.
Your Plan "Long runs are the basis of marathon training, but at this level it's important to add some intensity to the program," says Sinclair. So, you'll gradually increase the length of the weekly long run to adapt your mind and body to the rigors of running nonstop for several hours. But running 18 to 20 miles at a time isn't all you need, so you'll supplement these runs with some higher-effort running twice weekly, including sustained tempo runs at your half-marathon race pace. These promote aerobic strength and efficiency and will help you find that groove you'd like to be in when you run a longer race, according to Sinclair. You'll also be doing a smattering of speedwork.
One of the key highlighted elements is:
Become Race Fit Short races (5- to 10-K) are terrific fitness boosters that let you run much faster than your marathon goal pace--an effort that you just cannot replicate in training, no matter how motivated you are. So all three schedules feature two races because, according to a recent study, race efforts can dramatically boost aerobic capacity and lactate threshold. This can only help your marathon performance.
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