Abstract Twenty-one middle-aged males who participated in a jogging program performed a 6-minute submaximal exercise bout on a bicycle ergometer to determine if any differences existed between the results of heart rate and blood pressure tests taken before and after 10 weeks of training. Heart rates were obtained from electrocardiograph tracings and blood pressures were measured by a manual sphygmomanometer. The t test for differences between the means of related measures of heart rates and blood pressures was used with the .01 level selected for significance. Differences between the means of pre-and post tests of heart rate, under pre-exercise, submaximal exercise, and postexercise conditions, were all statistically significant. The jogging program did not produce any significant change in either systolic or disastolic blood pressure. It was concluded that 10 weeks of participation in a systematic jogging program will produce reductions in heart rates for middle-aged men at rest, during submaximal exerci...