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Fin Dearsly posing in the gym

BUILDING FITNESS WITHOUT RUNNING: THE POLARISED APPROACH

Published: 31/12/2025 | Written by: Fin Dearsly

Sport has always been a big part of Fin Dearsly's life. Like every athlete, he’s experienced both the highs and the lows that come with it. Whether you’re injured, want to protect your joints, or prefer low-impact training, this plan from our training ambassador is designed to help you build and maintain fitness without running.

Many people think that to improve fitness you must run or push hard in every session, but that simply isn’t the case – especially if you’re injured, managing niggles, returning from time off, or want to protect joints and stay consistent without high impact.

A well‑structured training approach that emphasises mostly easy, sustainable work with a smaller amount of targeted intensity allows your body to adapt, recover and grow stronger without the stress that too much moderate training or repeated impact can cause. This is particularly important for athletes who can’t run due to injury or who are looking for a way to maintain or even improve endurance while reducing the risk of aggravating pain or overtraining. ** This plan is based on the science of polarised training – a method that spreads your workouts across easy, moderate and hard intensities in a way that’s been shown to give excellent aerobic results without unnecessary fatigue.

Rather than spending too much time in that “comfortably hard but not great” middle ground, polarised training focuses on:

  • Plenty of low‑effort, easy sessions that grow your aerobic base
  • A small but effective dose of high‑intensity work to push your cardiovascular limits
  • Very little moderate effort that tends to create fatigue without maximal gains

This approach supports consistency, keeps training enjoyable, and helps reduce the risk of overtraining. You’ll combine this with strength sessions to keep your muscles strong, balanced and ready for everything life throws at you – all without pounding the streets.

WHAT THE INTENSITY ZONES MEAN

In this approach, we use three intensity zones:

  • Low Aerobic (S1 / Zone 1–2) is easy effort. You should be able to breathe comfortably and hold a conversation. This builds your aerobic foundation, enhances fat utilisation and lets you recover well from harder sessions.
  • Tempo / Threshold (S2) feels “comfortably hard”. It’s not easy, but you can sustain it for a block of time without maxing out. These sessions improve your ability to tolerate lactate and maintain a strong pace.
  • Super‑Threshold / VO₂ Max (S3) is genuinely hard – short bursts at near‑maximum effort that push your upper aerobic system. These are tough but brief, and they stimulate big fitness gains.

TRAINING PLAN – WEEKLY BREAKDOWN

Low Aerobic Work (S1) – ~75 % of the Time

  • Long bike ride (60–90 mins @ easy conversational pace)
  • Row erg steady session (45–60 mins @ easy pace)
  • Ski erg steady state (40 mins continuous & easy)
  • Brisk walk or incline treadmill hike (~60 mins with heart rate easy, < 70 % max)

Tempo / Threshold (S2) – ~10 %

  • Bike tempo block:
    • 2 × 15 mins at ~80–85 % max heart rate
    • 5 mins easy recovery between efforts

High Intensity (S3) – ~15 %

  • VO₂ Max intervals (row or ski erg):
    • 6 × 3 mins at ~95–100 % max heart rate, with 2 mins easy in between
  • Assault bike/conditioning circuit: 4 rounds of:
    • 45 sec max effort bike
    • 45 sec rest
    • 45 sec max ski erg
    • 45 sec rest
    • 45 sec max burpee‑to‑box jump
    • 90 sec rest between rounds

STRENGTH TRAINING OVERVIEW

Strength sessions help you maintain muscular balance, support joints and improve overall movement. You’ll do three strength sessions per week:

Lower Body A – Power & Posterior Chain

This session focuses on power and strength in the back chain – the hips, glutes and hamstrings:

  • Trap bar deadlift (or dumbbell Romanian deadlift) – 4 × 6
  • Bulgarian split squat – 3 × 8 each leg
  • Hamstring curl – 3 × 10
  • Calf raises – 3 × 12
  • Core stability (Pallof press or planks) – 3 × 20 seconds

Upper Body – Strength & Stability

Here you build upper‑body pushing and pulling strength along with shoulder stability.

  • Bench press or dumbbell floor press – 4 × 6
  • Seated row – 3 × 10
  • Shoulder press – 3 × 8
  • Pull‑ups or lat pulldown – 3 × 10
  • Accessory superset: biceps curl + face pulls – 3 × 12

Lower Body B – Strength Endurance

This session emphasises muscular endurance in the legs.

  • Back squat – 4 × 8
  • Weighted step‑ups – 3 × 10 each leg
  • Glute bridge or hip thrust – 3 × 10
  • Leg press – 3 × 12
  • Lateral lunge – 3 × 8 each leg
Fin Dearsly doing a lower body workout

TIPS FOR INJURED ATHLETES AND THOSE BUILDING BACK SLOWLY

If you’re dealing with an injury or easing back into training, the priority is to protect your body while still stimulating adaptation. Focus on non‑impact conditioning such as bikes, rowers and ski ergs – these let you work aerobically without stressing joints.

Most of your sessions should be at the easy, conversational pace that builds resilience without aggravating pain. Save your energy and nervous system resources for the quality parts of the programme – the hard intervals and strength sessions – because these give the biggest training stimulus.

Only reintroduce impact such as incline walking or pool running as your pain and mobility allow. The idea is that by stacking your plate with mostly low‑intensity work and just enough high‑intensity, you can rebuild and enhance fitness without compromising recovery or risking further injury.

BOTTOM LINE

This polarised, non‑running training approach lets you stay or get fitter without running, while also keeping your body strong and well‑balanced. By spending most of your time in easy, low‑impact aerobic work you build a robust cardiovascular base and enhance recovery. Periodic hard intervals stimulate top‑end fitness, helping to boost VO₂ max and performance capacity without excessive fatigue. Strength training ensures muscular balance, stability and resilience.

All together, these elements create a sustainable training model that helps you improve safely and effectively, whether you’re recovering from injury, avoiding impact or simply seeking a fresh way to train.

Let’s get it!

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