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You have a freshman running 22-minute 5Ks and a senior running 16-minute 5Ks on the same team. Give them the same workout at the same pace and you're either undertraining one or destroying the other. But you can't write 30 individual programs every day. There's a better way. In this video, I break down the pace group system I use with my middle and high school athletes — how to write one workout structure that every athlete executes at their own appropriate intensity and volume, without losing your mind as a coach. What's covered: The pace group system — how to establish current fitness, use a pace calculator like the Tinman or Jack Daniels VDOT to determine training paces, and create groups that give every athlete the right physiological stimulus. I also walk through how athletes earn the right to level up, and why I don't drop athletes based on a single bad race. Volume by training age — why a freshman and a senior with the same 5K time shouldn't be doing the same amount of work, and how to scale volume appropriately so athletes are challenged without breaking down. How the balance between team and individual shifts across the year — cross country season is team first, track season is individual development. Both matter, and the timing of when you emphasize each one matters too. Real workout examples with all the individualization layers applied — the same Thursday threshold session looks completely different for a 23-minute middle schooler, a 17:30 sophomore, and a 15:45 senior, and that's exactly the point. The six most common mistakes coaches make when trying to individualize — including trying to do too much too soon, making pace groups too narrow, not updating groups after breakthrough races, and not explaining the system to athletes. You're writing one workout. Athletes execute it based on their pace group, their training age, and their event focus. That's how you coach a team and develop every individual on it. Follow me on X and Instagram: @coach_kevinkuhn