gruecd
Footballguy
I wouldn't want to be the guy betting against me.BnB - I guess gruecd's going to have to do the Half-IM to settle the debate!

I wouldn't want to be the guy betting against me.BnB - I guess gruecd's going to have to do the Half-IM to settle the debate!

My last chance to post here before I head to NYC for the marathon on Sunday. I knocked out 7 miles last night with 2 miles at 8:15 pace. My body feels rested and ready to take on the big one. I've been very conscious of getting lots of sleep this week (8+ hours a night) and I'm planning on starting my carb loading tomorrow night with plenty of rice. My only fear is bonking like I did in Orlando in January but my training was much more effective this time around (the PFitz 18/55 plan) and I'm planning on being smarter about my on-course refueling (more frequent water/gatorade/gels) to get me over the dreaded 5th avenue hump.Feel free to track me on Sunday: Race number - 20-099.I'll post a race report sometime early next week.
What a major f-up.We're sorry.Due to the high demand on Athlete Tracker and the excitement for the ING New York City Marathon 2010, our servers are temporarily overloaded.
That sucksMy last chance to post here before I head to NYC for the marathon on Sunday. I knocked out 7 miles last night with 2 miles at 8:15 pace. My body feels rested and ready to take on the big one. I've been very conscious of getting lots of sleep this week (8+ hours a night) and I'm planning on starting my carb loading tomorrow night with plenty of rice. My only fear is bonking like I did in Orlando in January but my training was much more effective this time around (the PFitz 18/55 plan) and I'm planning on being smarter about my on-course refueling (more frequent water/gatorade/gels) to get me over the dreaded 5th avenue hump.Feel free to track me on Sunday: Race number - 20-099.I'll post a race report sometime early next week.What a major f-up.We're sorry.Due to the high demand on Athlete Tracker and the excitement for the ING New York City Marathon 2010, our servers are temporarily overloaded.

$60 by 12/31 ....hmmmmmmmm, indeed!!!
You'd think they would have learned from the DC Marathon (which was a major cluster#### with the same issues). For crying out loud, you don't use your own servers for a once a year surge. You rent servers and bandwidth from IBM or Amazon or Google or something. For them this kind of traffic is a blip.Idiots.That sucksMy last chance to post here before I head to NYC for the marathon on Sunday. I knocked out 7 miles last night with 2 miles at 8:15 pace. My body feels rested and ready to take on the big one. I've been very conscious of getting lots of sleep this week (8+ hours a night) and I'm planning on starting my carb loading tomorrow night with plenty of rice. My only fear is bonking like I did in Orlando in January but my training was much more effective this time around (the PFitz 18/55 plan) and I'm planning on being smarter about my on-course refueling (more frequent water/gatorade/gels) to get me over the dreaded 5th avenue hump.Feel free to track me on Sunday: Race number - 20-099.I'll post a race report sometime early next week.What a major f-up.We're sorry.Due to the high demand on Athlete Tracker and the excitement for the ING New York City Marathon 2010, our servers are temporarily overloaded.![]()
34 degrees when we left the house and about 40 at the gun. Nothing but blue skies & sun. Seemed like I ran pretty hard, but the result will likely be the worst of the 3 years I've run this race. Ran a 46:00 last year and think I'll be in around 49:00 today (4.8 mile SUPER technical track). Got held up bad at the start and spent the first few miles "on-yer-lefting" my way through the crowd. I home-made garlic pickles & pickled jalapenos back in August just for for the Bloody Marys after the race.
Thought I was done trail racing for the year, but just found out about a wicked one next Sunday with multiple river crossings and a sprint up a toboggan hill. We got plans the night before, so it will likely be a race day decision to run it.Still down.You'd think they would have learned from the DC Marathon (which was a major cluster#### with the same issues). For crying out loud, you don't use your own servers for a once a year surge. You rent servers and bandwidth from IBM or Amazon or Google or something. For them this kind of traffic is a blip.Idiots.That sucksMy last chance to post here before I head to NYC for the marathon on Sunday. I knocked out 7 miles last night with 2 miles at 8:15 pace. My body feels rested and ready to take on the big one. I've been very conscious of getting lots of sleep this week (8+ hours a night) and I'm planning on starting my carb loading tomorrow night with plenty of rice. My only fear is bonking like I did in Orlando in January but my training was much more effective this time around (the PFitz 18/55 plan) and I'm planning on being smarter about my on-course refueling (more frequent water/gatorade/gels) to get me over the dreaded 5th avenue hump.Feel free to track me on Sunday: Race number - 20-099.I'll post a race report sometime early next week.What a major f-up.We're sorry.Due to the high demand on Athlete Tracker and the excitement for the ING New York City Marathon 2010, our servers are temporarily overloaded.![]()

I've been on the Higdon Intermediate and he's got me running 12 next week (1 week before the HM). Today's Sunday was 11. I like the layout, but some of his description on what to do is a little lacking.This topic has come up before. I honestly don't like Higdon's HM plans. A few other posters in this thread feel the same way. The problem is that he maxes you out at only 10 miles. If you're new to this distance, you really need to do at least one 13-miler before race day. This isn't like training for a marathon where nobody trains all the way out to the full race distance on account of injury risk and recovery considerations. For a half, training to at least 13 should be standard IMO. (If you had several HMs under your belt already, then maxing out at 10 would probably be okay, but then you wouldn't be using a "novice" program).I found this:
http://www.halhigdon.com/halfmarathon/novice.htm
Does that appear to be good? I seem to remember a free one where you could plug in what days you would do the long runs on but I dont recall where.
Limped around for about a tenth and then started back up. It took a few minutes to get back into the groove, but settled back in to a 9:30ish pace. I did my usual Gatorade/Gu at 5mi and felt pretty good. It all came crashing down on me around 8.5mi. My body just took a nose dive and I had absolutely nothing left. The last 2.5 was a total test of HTFU. I finished it, but I really paid for it. I'm now pretty sore and completely exhausted. I was awarded a nice knot on top of my knee for my efforts today. I finished it in 1:46:31 with some time for traffic, eating dirt, and fueling up. I still averaged 9:41 (which shocks me somewhat), but it was 100x harder than it should've been.If so, great run!! These mid 3hr marathons blow me away. Absolutely impressive.If 20-099 is 20099 then Workhorse had a great race...Name Marker Bib 5K 0:25:35 10K 0:50:58 15K 1:16:41 20K 1:42:23 Half 1:47:59 Mile 14 1:55:22 Finish 3:35:53 David Skalka 20099 Negative split it by 6 or 7 seconds.
WOWIf 20-099 is 20099 then Workhorse had a great race...Name Marker Bib 5K 0:25:35 10K 0:50:58 15K 1:16:41 20K 1:42:23 Half 1:47:59 Mile 14 1:55:22 Finish 3:35:53 David Skalka 20099 Negative split it by 6 or 7 seconds.

Yep, that's me.I'll post a full race report once I'm back home but safe to say that this was the race of my life. Never hit the wall and felt strong the whole time. Every marathoner should run NYC at least once. Put your name on your shirt and the crowd will carry you the whole way.Time for breakfast.If 20-099 is 20099 then Workhorse had a great race...Name Marker Bib 5K 0:25:35 10K 0:50:58 15K 1:16:41 20K 1:42:23 Half 1:47:59 Mile 14 1:55:22 Finish 3:35:53 David Skalka 20099 Negative split it by 6 or 7 seconds.
Maybe I've been thinking this way, because I'm still such a total wreck in recovering from the marathon. Even though I didn't start running until after turning 40 last year, I've never felt of myself as an "old" runner in any way. But I think I've discovered two areas in which my age does have an impact on what I'm able to do physically. One is speed work. It's very hard for me to incorporate speedwork into my training without it just beating me up and tearing up my legs. The other is recovery. Man, is it hard for me to come back from a race. When I raced a Half in September, it took every bit of two weeks to get over it. And now that I'm 8 days post-marathon, I find myself hoping that four weeks under the "a day to recover for every mile raced" formula is all I'll need.
I'm 38, and it took me every bit of a month to recover from Twin Cities.I'm 38, and it took me every bit of a month to recover from Twin Cities.now that I'm 8 days post-marathon, I find myself hoping that four weeks under the "a day to recover for every mile raced" formula is all I'll need.

Are you going to do this???Along those lines...finally looked at the course profile for the 50k/50M http://www.badtothebone.biz/docs/profilebmer.pdf![]()
You're friggin insane if you do that.finally looked at the course profile for the 50k/50M http://www.badtothebone.biz/docs/profilebmer.pdf![]()

It's not so bad, once you get to the top you can just roll down the other side.Or maybe you could wear a pair of those shoes with skates hidden in them for the downhill.finally looked at the course profile for the 50k/50M http://www.badtothebone.biz/docs/profilebmer.pdf![]()
Nice race, looking forward to the report.Today I feel great. A lot of the problems I had last week seem to be gone, at least for now. When I get home today I am going to take a walk, probably just a mile, but I have to start somewhere.Yep, that's me.I'll post a full race report once I'm back home but safe to say that this was the race of my life. Never hit the wall and felt strong the whole time. Every marathoner should run NYC at least once. Put your name on your shirt and the crowd will carry you the whole way.Time for breakfast.If 20-099 is 20099 then Workhorse had a great race...Name Marker Bib 5K 0:25:35 10K 0:50:58 15K 1:16:41 20K 1:42:23 Half 1:47:59 Mile 14 1:55:22 Finish 3:35:53 David Skalka 20099 Negative split it by 6 or 7 seconds.
Congratulations on a fantastic race! Looking forward to the complete report.Yep, that's me.I'll post a full race report once I'm back home but safe to say that this was the race of my life. Never hit the wall and felt strong the whole time. Every marathoner should run NYC at least once. Put your name on your shirt and the crowd will carry you the whole way.Time for breakfast.If 20-099 is 20099 then Workhorse had a great race...Name Marker Bib 5K 0:25:35 10K 0:50:58 15K 1:16:41 20K 1:42:23 Half 1:47:59 Mile 14 1:55:22 Finish 3:35:53 David Skalka 20099 Negative split it by 6 or 7 seconds.
DO IT!!Great job, Workhorse. Can't wait to read your report.Workhorse said:Yep, that's me.I'll post a full race report once I'm back home but safe to say that this was the race of my life. Never hit the wall and felt strong the whole time.Finish 3:35:53
David Skalka 20099
Every marathoner should run NYC at least once. Put your name on your shirt and the crowd will carry you the whole way.
Time for breakfast.
Easy 6-mile recovery run for me this morning, and I think I'm getting some bounce back in the legs. Good stuff. Tomorrow is the race-week staple, 7 miles with 2 at GMP (6:53).
PSL, awesome!Totally hard-core to get as far as you did. That was a fantastic effort.
It's great that your ex brought your daughters out!!Personally I think I'd go Tamme. I still don't trust MN.** ACTUAL FANTASY FOOTBALL QUESTION ** Normal scoring, no PPR, TE not required....want to pick up a WR to replace Miles Austin in my starting line-up. Do I pick up Tamme or Sidney Rice?
Agreed.I also forgot to post that my annual Chondromalacia (runner's knee) is full-bore this morning. I literally get it with my first cold weather workout each year. Great to get it right now, as I'll need to shut it down for a few weeks to let me calf repair anyway. I'm contemplating selling my Houston marathon entry (very easy to do), to run Galveston's new marathon. I'll be able to make $100, and will have three extra weeks to train. This would give me at least a slim chance of being able to BQ, while trying to train for the Houston marathon (8 or 9 weeks of training), would give me virtually no chance. I could also sign up for both, but the three weeks recovery wouldn't bode too well.Personally I think I'd go Tamme. I still don't trust MN.** ACTUAL FANTASY FOOTBALL QUESTION ** Normal scoring, no PPR, TE not required....want to pick up a WR to replace Miles Austin in my starting line-up. Do I pick up Tamme or Sidney Rice?
AGREED, absolutely awesome effortPSL, awesome!Totally hard-core to get as far as you did. That was a fantastic effort.![]()
It's great that your ex brought your daughters out!!

yes, but only the 50k. I'm a slacker.BassNBrew said:Are you going to do this???Along those lines...FUBAR said:finally looked at the course profile for the 50k/50M http://www.badtothebone.biz/docs/profilebmer.pdf![]()
http://www.blackmountainmarathon.com/
10 miles shorter (only 40 mi) but a massive elevation gain. The February event date usually means snow and below freezing temps.
Way to tough it out, liquors! Way cool about the girls.The later marathon makes a lot of sense. Trying for Houston doesn't sound like a good idea at this point.AGREED, absolutely awesome effortPSL, awesome!Totally hard-core to get as far as you did. That was a fantastic effort.![]()
It's great that your ex brought your daughters out!!
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Instead of setting the pace alarms, put up the average pace and speed up or back off accordingly. The only PIA here is that the pace will get skewed if you end up waiting for a light here or there.Today was day one of my structured half marathon training. I am using smart coach/mcmillan times.Today was an easy 2 miles at 12:08. I had a hard time keeping it at 12:08 but did the best I could. I ended up with an 11:40 pace. Biggest PIA for me is programming the garmin. I dread programming it for the speed workouts. I failed when I tried to create a workout in personal trainer and transfer it to the garmin. I ended up programming it on the street today.In the 80s today and windy.
What did you program? Runs such as these I just press start and go by feel/check the watch.Curious why the program has you doing just a slow 2mi as your very first run? That's weird...Today was day one of my structured half marathon training. I am using smart coach/mcmillan times.Today was an easy 2 miles at 12:08. I had a hard time keeping it at 12:08 but did the best I could. I ended up with an 11:40 pace. Biggest PIA for me is programming the garmin. I dread programming it for the speed workouts. I failed when I tried to create a workout in personal trainer and transfer it to the garmin. I ended up programming it on the street today.In the 80s today and windy.
I programmed 2 miles @ 12:08 pace.For Wednesday I just programmed warm up 1 mile @11:38-12:38, 3 miles @ 10:07-10:33, cool down 1 mile @ 11:38-12:38Next week is one I need a translation for if you dont mind. Plan says: Speedwork Dist: 5 mi, inc warm, 2x 1600 in 9:53 w/800 jogs.I think that means 1 mile warmup, 2 miles @9:53, 1 mile jog, 1 mile cool down. Am I correct?I am using runners world smart coach and I told it I wanted Sat to be my long run. Maybe that is why my first run was a slow 2 miles?edit to ask if maybe the w/800 jogs means a half mile of jog between the 1600 in 9:53 and not 1 mile jog as I wrote above?What did you program? Runs such as these I just press start and go by feel/check the watch.Curious why the program has you doing just a slow 2mi as your very first run? That's weird...Today was day one of my structured half marathon training. I am using smart coach/mcmillan times.Today was an easy 2 miles at 12:08. I had a hard time keeping it at 12:08 but did the best I could. I ended up with an 11:40 pace. Biggest PIA for me is programming the garmin. I dread programming it for the speed workouts. I failed when I tried to create a workout in personal trainer and transfer it to the garmin. I ended up programming it on the street today.In the 80s today and windy.
I think it's a process of elimination to get to your warmup/cool down.1600 + 800 + 1600 + 800 = 4800That leaves you 3200 so 1600 warm up and cool down makes sense.I'd just program the Garmin with 3 steps:1 - 1600 @ whatever pace2 - 1600/800 repeat 2x3 - 1600 @ whatever paceI programmed 2 miles @ 12:08 pace.For Wednesday I just programmed warm up 1 mile @11:38-12:38, 3 miles @ 10:07-10:33, cool down 1 mile @ 11:38-12:38Next week is one I need a translation for if you dont mind. Plan says: Speedwork Dist: 5 mi, inc warm, 2x 1600 in 9:53 w/800 jogs.I think that means 1 mile warmup, 2 miles @9:53, 1 mile jog, 1 mile cool down. Am I correct?I am using runners world smart coach and I told it I wanted Sat to be my long run. Maybe that is why my first run was a slow 2 miles?edit to ask if maybe the w/800 jogs means a half mile of jog between the 1600 in 9:53 and not 1 mile jog as I wrote above?What did you program? Runs such as these I just press start and go by feel/check the watch.Curious why the program has you doing just a slow 2mi as your very first run? That's weird...Today was day one of my structured half marathon training. I am using smart coach/mcmillan times.Today was an easy 2 miles at 12:08. I had a hard time keeping it at 12:08 but did the best I could. I ended up with an 11:40 pace. Biggest PIA for me is programming the garmin. I dread programming it for the speed workouts. I failed when I tried to create a workout in personal trainer and transfer it to the garmin. I ended up programming it on the street today.In the 80s today and windy.
ThanksI think it's a process of elimination to get to your warmup/cool down.1600 + 800 + 1600 + 800 = 4800That leaves you 3200 so 1600 warm up and cool down makes sense.I'd just program the Garmin with 3 steps:1 - 1600 @ whatever pace2 - 1600/800 repeat 2x3 - 1600 @ whatever paceI programmed 2 miles @ 12:08 pace.For Wednesday I just programmed warm up 1 mile @11:38-12:38, 3 miles @ 10:07-10:33, cool down 1 mile @ 11:38-12:38Next week is one I need a translation for if you dont mind. Plan says: Speedwork Dist: 5 mi, inc warm, 2x 1600 in 9:53 w/800 jogs.I think that means 1 mile warmup, 2 miles @9:53, 1 mile jog, 1 mile cool down. Am I correct?I am using runners world smart coach and I told it I wanted Sat to be my long run. Maybe that is why my first run was a slow 2 miles?edit to ask if maybe the w/800 jogs means a half mile of jog between the 1600 in 9:53 and not 1 mile jog as I wrote above?What did you program? Runs such as these I just press start and go by feel/check the watch.Curious why the program has you doing just a slow 2mi as your very first run? That's weird...Today was day one of my structured half marathon training. I am using smart coach/mcmillan times.Today was an easy 2 miles at 12:08. I had a hard time keeping it at 12:08 but did the best I could. I ended up with an 11:40 pace. Biggest PIA for me is programming the garmin. I dread programming it for the speed workouts. I failed when I tried to create a workout in personal trainer and transfer it to the garmin. I ended up programming it on the street today.In the 80s today and windy.
