What's new
Fantasy Football - Footballguys Forums

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Ran a 10k in June (3 Viewers)

Thanks for all the advice! Great thread!

Just curious...any of you east coast guys ever run this race in Philly? Schuykill River Run

Looks like it's 8.4 miles along the river around Nov 10

Just wondering if it's a good course, how cold Philly is in Nov 10, and whether I should try it!
I'm from the area (DE), but haven't run this race. I have run parts of this course, since it looks like it's overlapping the second part marathon course. That section is super flat/easy. Very nice area too. I say go for it! Don't worry about the weather, it may get into the 30s, but thats no biggie.
 
Not much for me to report right now. My cold has gone away, but it left behind a hacking cough that I haven't been able to shake. I'm going to try to do a few easy miles later on and see how it goes. Right now I'm starting to worry that I'll have to bag my 5K this weekend. This is sort of obvious, but it goes without saying that I can't run a quality 5K if my respiratory system isn't working right.

 
Thanks for all the advice! Great thread!

Just curious...any of you east coast guys ever run this race in Philly? Schuykill River Run

Looks like it's 8.4 miles along the river around Nov 10

Just wondering if it's a good course, how cold Philly is in Nov 10, and whether I should try it!
I'm from the area (DE), but haven't run this race. I have run parts of this course, since it looks like it's overlapping the second part marathon course. That section is super flat/easy. Very nice area too. I say go for it! Don't worry about the weather, it may get into the 30s, but thats no biggie.
Thanks!!
 
2 nice days of training the past 2 days.

Yesterday was 9 w/5x1000m intervals. Intervals were about 20sec/mile (pace wise) faster than my last training cycles speed run and getting better results HR wise.

Today was 8 miles with 4 recovery miles. The recovery miles went smooth (bit of a cold wind getting the fingers today)...and then the 4 GA miles were so easy to me after those.

HR stayed at the low part of both zones (recovery at 10:35 pace...which is about where my GA pace was in the summer heat), and GA miles were at 9:58/mile while keeping a 144 HR (it was closer to 147-148 for those 10:35 GA runs this summer).

12 tomorrow, then off on Thursday, then 18 w/14 pace miles on Friday.

 
Just got through my first interval workout in about 6 months... 6 x 400m with 1 minute rest

10 minute warmup

400m - 1:18

400m - 1:16

400m - 1:26

400m - 1:27

400m - 1:29

400m - 1:28

10 minute cooldown

Hammy held up pretty well with just a bit of soreness. I'm getting there...

 
Thanks for all the advice! Great thread!

Just curious...any of you east coast guys ever run this race in Philly? Schuykill River Run

Looks like it's 8.4 miles along the river around Nov 10

Just wondering if it's a good course, how cold Philly is in Nov 10, and whether I should try it!
I'm from the area (DE), but haven't run this race. I have run parts of this course, since it looks like it's overlapping the second part marathon course. That section is super flat/easy. Very nice area too. I say go for it! Don't worry about the weather, it may get into the 30s, but thats no biggie.
Just signed up for it! Back to the training...have about 3 weeks to get my self from 6 mile range to 8.4 mile range.....thinking just to add a few more long runs in?
 
I've failed to get out for a long (5+) run in the last week+, but I've been consistent with putting on 2-4 miles at a time. Big run Thursday, hopefully... Since the 3rd, I've run ~38 miles, which is already a monthly record for me.

 
I made it with a new PB. I am waiting for official results but my Garmin has me at 2:01:08 with avg pace 9:12 :pickle:I am ecstatic. Best race I have ever run. The mountain got me but I had sanded/banked time and I made time up coming down the mountain.My goal was 9:30-10:00 avg pacemiles 1-5 were 9:03,8:58,8:48,8:49,9:00In past I have always started in the back because I did not want to be the guy who held a fast runner up. I have learned that starting at the back sucks unless you are walking or just dont mind dodging people. Today I got close to the front. Not front but close. It helped tremendously. I was sanding and I had to reign myself in. I kept feeling like I was going to slow but the Garmin does not lie. I was holding back and thinking of trying to save for the mountain.miles 6-7 9:26,11:30Hello A Mountain. I hate that mountain. I was getting concerned here for sure. I was doing math in my head trying to calculate how bad this could be but still get the time I wanted. I did a walk run deal up the mountain. Lots of walkers here. This is a brutal climb. Last year I did the worst mile in over 13:00 so i did improve quite a bit. I was also sick last year and running with a chest cold. Like I said I was concerned but I thought the math was gonna work out.miles 8-9 8:13,8:56 Good bye A Mountain. It would be real easy to lose all control running down this thing. I was using the down hill to make up for the up hill. It worked out pretty well but I did start to feel some blister pain. #### that I made the time up and I am winning. #### eating grin as I go down watching people walk wishing they were coming down :lmao:miles 10-12 9:16, 9:05,9:08 I am really starting to work now. I was tired and my feet were killing me. Legs very sore now to. I question the up and down of A Mountain. I dont run hills and I am sure I used muscles that have not been used in previous runs. I keep thinking about my 15 miler I did last week and the 3 mos of really good training I had under my belt. Found a nice girl to follow for a bit and I was sad when I had to pass her.mile 13 9:26 I am really hurting now. I wonder how big the blisters are. I have lost the ability to do the math but I feel I am ok. I want to stop and walk a bit but at the same time I did not want to blow my goal in the last mile. This last mile was a real struggle but I did not stop.I saw that finish line and picked it up some. I have never felt so happy at the end of a race. I really surpassed my goal. I did not expect to get what I got today. I though I would get this in my December half. I have to rethink Decembers goal. Off the top of my head I would like to get under 2 hrs and I think that is with in reach.Thanks to everyone in here for all you do.Looking forward to hearing from Ned. I saw his pic on facebook and he destroyed his half :excited:My official results are in 2:01:11 9:15
Great job Pros. You're making huge strides. Given the miserable training conditions you have in the desert, this much improvement deserves high praise. Good luck int he next half, you'll kill it.
 
2012 Atlantic City Half Marathon

My whole body was screaming at the finish. Hell I was wheezing like a 25yr smoker at the finish. I left every single ounce out there. Very proud of this finish, even though I got out kicked by 2 of the 3 guys. I realized later that I'm up here racing with a different breed of runners. These guys have speed. I'm not going to be able to outkick everyone I catch like I have in the past.

Official time was 1:35:07 which was good for 39/1,468 OA and 11/156 AG. Finally got that monkey off my back and shed 13+ minutes from my stale PR. The HM has kicked my ### the last few attempts.

I don't really know what to say about this, other than I'm in complete shock and totally friggin' stoked. What an amazing ride this training cycle has been. :banned:
Plan your race and race your plan! ..and race it you did. Very cool.
Ned - :tebow: :jawdrop: Huge training cycle paying off. You've officailly graduated to fast guy territory.

You realize that you're getting close to the point where BQ is a reality for you in the future...

 
'DanFouts said:
Just signed up for it! Back to the training...have about 3 weeks to get my self from 6 mile range to 8.4 mile range.....thinking just to add a few more long runs in?
And you can't improve much during the two weeks prior to a race. :P Yup, get a long run or two or three in to acclimate to that distance and build some confidence. Maybe this weekend run a shorter run on Saturday then a longer run on Sunday (which will be on tired legs) ...convince yourself that if you can run, say, 7 miles on tired legs, you'll be able to run 8.4 on fresh legs.
 
2012 Atlantic City Half Marathon

My whole body was screaming at the finish. Hell I was wheezing like a 25yr smoker at the finish. I left every single ounce out there. Very proud of this finish, even though I got out kicked by 2 of the 3 guys. I realized later that I'm up here racing with a different breed of runners. These guys have speed. I'm not going to be able to outkick everyone I catch like I have in the past.

Official time was 1:35:07 which was good for 39/1,468 OA and 11/156 AG. Finally got that monkey off my back and shed 13+ minutes from my stale PR. The HM has kicked my ### the last few attempts.

I don't really know what to say about this, other than I'm in complete shock and totally friggin' stoked. What an amazing ride this training cycle has been. :banned:
Plan your race and race your plan! ..and race it you did. Very cool.
Ned - :tebow: :jawdrop: Huge training cycle paying off. You've officailly graduated to fast guy territory.

You realize that you're getting close to the point where BQ is a reality for you in the future...
Man............... I was hoping this wouldn't come up so soon, but I might as well come out with it. When I posted about rethinking all of my goals, a BQ certainly came to mind. Grue - this was why I was asking 101 questions about your big jump in your third marathon. :mellow: I honestly never considered myself to have the endurance to make a run at a BQ, but now I think I can do it once I move up to the next age bracket. I'm turning 34 in November, so a 3:05 ain't happening. 35-39 is a 3:10 and gives me 5 years to hit that mark. I hate that I'm thinking past Philly, but I need to set long term goals. What better goal than to shoot for Boston?

 
2012 Atlantic City Half Marathon

My whole body was screaming at the finish. Hell I was wheezing like a 25yr smoker at the finish. I left every single ounce out there. Very proud of this finish, even though I got out kicked by 2 of the 3 guys. I realized later that I'm up here racing with a different breed of runners. These guys have speed. I'm not going to be able to outkick everyone I catch like I have in the past.

Official time was 1:35:07 which was good for 39/1,468 OA and 11/156 AG. Finally got that monkey off my back and shed 13+ minutes from my stale PR. The HM has kicked my ### the last few attempts.

I don't really know what to say about this, other than I'm in complete shock and totally friggin' stoked. What an amazing ride this training cycle has been. :banned:
Plan your race and race your plan! ..and race it you did. Very cool.
Ned - :tebow: :jawdrop: Huge training cycle paying off. You've officailly graduated to fast guy territory.

You realize that you're getting close to the point where BQ is a reality for you in the future...
Man............... I was hoping this wouldn't come up so soon, but I might as well come out with it. When I posted about rethinking all of my goals, a BQ certainly came to mind. Grue - this was why I was asking 101 questions about your big jump in your third marathon. :mellow: I honestly never considered myself to have the endurance to make a run at a BQ, but now I think I can do it once I move up to the next age bracket. I'm turning 34 in November, so a 3:05 ain't happening. 35-39 is a 3:10 and gives me 5 years to hit that mark. I hate that I'm thinking past Philly, but I need to set long term goals. What better goal than to shoot for Boston?
Sub 3:00? ;)
 
2012 Atlantic City Half Marathon

My whole body was screaming at the finish. Hell I was wheezing like a 25yr smoker at the finish. I left every single ounce out there. Very proud of this finish, even though I got out kicked by 2 of the 3 guys. I realized later that I'm up here racing with a different breed of runners. These guys have speed. I'm not going to be able to outkick everyone I catch like I have in the past.

Official time was 1:35:07 which was good for 39/1,468 OA and 11/156 AG. Finally got that monkey off my back and shed 13+ minutes from my stale PR. The HM has kicked my ### the last few attempts.

I don't really know what to say about this, other than I'm in complete shock and totally friggin' stoked. What an amazing ride this training cycle has been. :banned:
Plan your race and race your plan! ..and race it you did. Very cool.
Ned - :tebow: :jawdrop: Huge training cycle paying off. You've officailly graduated to fast guy territory.

You realize that you're getting close to the point where BQ is a reality for you in the future...
Man............... I was hoping this wouldn't come up so soon, but I might as well come out with it. When I posted about rethinking all of my goals, a BQ certainly came to mind. Grue - this was why I was asking 101 questions about your big jump in your third marathon. :mellow: I honestly never considered myself to have the endurance to make a run at a BQ, but now I think I can do it once I move up to the next age bracket. I'm turning 34 in November, so a 3:05 ain't happening. 35-39 is a 3:10 and gives me 5 years to hit that mark. I hate that I'm thinking past Philly, but I need to set long term goals. What better goal than to shoot for Boston?
Sub 3:00? ;)
 
2012 Atlantic City Half Marathon

My whole body was screaming at the finish. Hell I was wheezing like a 25yr smoker at the finish. I left every single ounce out there. Very proud of this finish, even though I got out kicked by 2 of the 3 guys. I realized later that I'm up here racing with a different breed of runners. These guys have speed. I'm not going to be able to outkick everyone I catch like I have in the past.

Official time was 1:35:07 which was good for 39/1,468 OA and 11/156 AG. Finally got that monkey off my back and shed 13+ minutes from my stale PR. The HM has kicked my ### the last few attempts.

I don't really know what to say about this, other than I'm in complete shock and totally friggin' stoked. What an amazing ride this training cycle has been. :banned:
Plan your race and race your plan! ..and race it you did. Very cool.
Ned - :tebow: :jawdrop: Huge training cycle paying off. You've officailly graduated to fast guy territory.

You realize that you're getting close to the point where BQ is a reality for you in the future...
Man............... I was hoping this wouldn't come up so soon, but I might as well come out with it. When I posted about rethinking all of my goals, a BQ certainly came to mind. Grue - this was why I was asking 101 questions about your big jump in your third marathon. :mellow: I honestly never considered myself to have the endurance to make a run at a BQ, but now I think I can do it once I move up to the next age bracket. I'm turning 34 in November, so a 3:05 ain't happening. 35-39 is a 3:10 and gives me 5 years to hit that mark. I hate that I'm thinking past Philly, but I need to set long term goals. What better goal than to shoot for Boston?
Sub 3:00? ;)
There will always be that part of us that thinks we can do a little better...if only we did this or that. Within 5 minutes of getting my BQ 3:08 this Spring I remember thinking to myself, "Uh-oh! Now you're going to shoot for sub 3:00". Of course, alternatively, you could always decided to run ultras or do Ironmans.
 
I am feeling pretty sore and I have not run since Sunday. Funny how it has only been two days but it feels like weeks and I am worrying about losing conditioning.

I had a massage today which was excellent. I will do a nice slow run tomorrow to work out the soreness.

 
I am feeling pretty sore and I have not run since Sunday. Funny how it has only been two days but it feels like weeks and I am worrying about losing conditioning.I had a massage today which was excellent. I will do a nice slow run tomorrow to work out the soreness.
I've been very sore following the 5K, which I can't remember happening before ...the quads were stinging; the hammies were tender. I blame Sand.
 
I was a little achy today so I contemplated passing on this week's tempo run but with any races at least 2 1/2 weeks out I decided to do it anyway. Worst case, it goes poorly, stop early, and I take an extra day off.

Glad I did it. Realized right as I was getting to the end of mile 1 and ready to start the hard 3 mile portion that I had a good day in me. Coasted through the first mile and a half in a shade under 9 minutes, the second half was a notch uphill (steady, the whole way - poorly planned on my part) and I did notice fatigue signs towards the end as my HR climbed. Still hit the 3 mile mark in 18:30 and my HR topped out at 176. The achyness returned on my 1 mile trot home but that's what tomorrow's off day is for, feeling pretty good right now though.

Plan is to do trial 3 of the science experiment Thursday, not sure about Fri-Sun - going to let my body talk to me after the 12 on Thursday as I have one more 12 next Tues or Wed and I want to do a time trial the weekend of Nov 4 - whether that's a 5K or 5 miler depends on how the race calendar looks for the month.

Going to blow 100 miles out of the water this month (looking like 120ish - previous season high was 106), something I haven't done since marathon training in 2003.

 
Man............... I was hoping this wouldn't come up so soon, but I might as well come out with it. When I posted about rethinking all of my goals, a BQ certainly came to mind. Grue - this was why I was asking 101 questions about your big jump in your third marathon. :mellow:

I honestly never considered myself to have the endurance to make a run at a BQ, but now I think I can do it once I move up to the next age bracket. I'm turning 34 in November, so a 3:05 ain't happening. 35-39 is a 3:10 and gives me 5 years to hit that mark. I hate that I'm thinking past Philly, but I need to set long term goals. What better goal than to shoot for Boston?
I know. Almost didn't post it. On one hand you should enjoy and celebrate what you've accomplished. But on the other hand, you're now fast. 39th of a 1500 person race is the definition of top caliber runner.
 
Recovering from someheavy training days...

Saturday - 9.86 mi uphill trail run followed by 8.25 downhill hill road run. You can tell by the splits this kicked my butt.

1 - 15:30, 141 hr, 364 up, 285 down

2 - 11:30, 136, 26 up, 151 down

3 - 13:09, 148, 272 up, 0 down

4 - 15:37, 145, 404 up, 16 down

5 - 16:16, 149, 482 up, 243 down

6 - 14:33, 141, 256 up, 266 down

7 - 17:05, 143, 397 up, 276 down

8 - 13:41, 137, 131 up, 108 down

9 - 15:43, 143, 318 up, 62 down

9.85 - 13:47, 141, 151 up, 66 down

8.25 mi return trip - 9:47, 135, 164 up, 1493 down

Sunday - 3 mi hike (out and back), 750 ft ascent

Monday - Altitude training. 11 mile @ 10:10 pace, 141 hr. 1476 ft climbing. 80% of the run at 5000+ ft elevation. Legs were toast before this run but I pushed through and knocked out the last two relatively flat miles in 8:55 and 9:10. Had to walk some of the extreme downhills mid run due to quads cramping.

Tuesday - 1.5 recovery miles on the stair mill. Was supposed to do speed work but the body said NO.

Last week I had 38.5 on the slate and finished at 42.5 miles for the week. Lost 4 pounds for a second consecutive week.

 
Recovering from someheavy training days...Saturday - 9.86 mi uphill trail run followed by 8.25 downhill hill road run. You can tell by the splits this kicked my butt.1 - 15:30, 141 hr, 364 up, 285 down2 - 11:30, 136, 26 up, 151 down3 - 13:09, 148, 272 up, 0 down4 - 15:37, 145, 404 up, 16 down5 - 16:16, 149, 482 up, 243 down6 - 14:33, 141, 256 up, 266 down7 - 17:05, 143, 397 up, 276 down8 - 13:41, 137, 131 up, 108 down9 - 15:43, 143, 318 up, 62 down9.85 - 13:47, 141, 151 up, 66 down8.25 mi return trip - 9:47, 135, 164 up, 1493 downSunday - 3 mi hike (out and back), 750 ft ascentMonday - Altitude training. 11 mile @ 10:10 pace, 141 hr. 1476 ft climbing. 80% of the run at 5000+ ft elevation. Legs were toast before this run but I pushed through and knocked out the last two relatively flat miles in 8:55 and 9:10. Had to walk some of the extreme downhills mid run due to quads cramping.Tuesday - 1.5 recovery miles on the stair mill. Was supposed to do speed work but the body said NO.Last week I had 38.5 on the slate and finished at 42.5 miles for the week. Lost 4 pounds for a second consecutive week.
There's the BnB we know. NICE!You and SFB are beasts with these mountain runs. :thumbup:
 
When did you realize you were ready to run after Boston?
I don't understand the question. :confused:
Ah, poorly worded on my part. :bag: When did you realize that you had a real shot at running the BQ or did it come out of nowhere? That was a huge jump in your 3rd marathon.
It came out of nowhere. I'd been training for the half, but after running a different half in 1:32:41 with five weeks to go, I decided to make the jump up to the marathon. IIRC, I hadn't done anything longer than 13-14 miles to that point in my training, so I did a couple of longer runs the next two weekends, and then I did a 3-week taper.A guy I knew (who's since become a good friend) was pacing 3:10 that day, and the weather was perfect (40ish), so I decided to go for it. His pacing was perfect. I hit the half at 1:34:09, and despite battling some nasty GI issues the last 8 miles or so (later diagnosed as ischemic colitis), I hit the finish line at exactly 3:10:00 for my first BQ. (Splits here.)

Still no idea how I did it, except that it's probably a matter of less is more. I was definitely undertrained, but my legs were fresh, and the weather was perfect. That's all I can come up with. :shrug:

I'd fail to BQ in my next four marathons, coming up short for various reasons at Boston '08 (3:42:28), Green Bay '08 (3:34:34), Memphis '08 (3:20:18), and RNR Arizona '09 (3:42:09). As such, I didn't get to run Boston '09. I finally got the BQ monkey off my back at Chicago '09, running my best race ever to that point (3:06:10) under near-perfect conditions.

I've since run three more BQ marathons (Boston '10, Chicago '10, and Milwaukee '11). By now I know I can do it, but more importantly, I know how to do it, so I expect to do it.

There, now I've appropriately answered your question. :D

 
When did you realize you were ready to run after Boston?
I don't understand the question. :confused:
Ah, poorly worded on my part. :bag: When did you realize that you had a real shot at running the BQ or did it come out of nowhere? That was a huge jump in your 3rd marathon.
It came out of nowhere. I'd been training for the half, but after running a different half in 1:32:41 with five weeks to go, I decided to make the jump up to the marathon. IIRC, I hadn't done anything longer than 13-14 miles to that point in my training, so I did a couple of longer runs the next two weekends, and then I did a 3-week taper.A guy I knew (who's since become a good friend) was pacing 3:10 that day, and the weather was perfect (40ish), so I decided to go for it. His pacing was perfect. I hit the half at 1:34:09, and despite battling some nasty GI issues the last 8 miles or so (later diagnosed as ischemic colitis), I hit the finish line at exactly 3:10:00 for my first BQ. (Splits here.)

Still no idea how I did it, except that it's probably a matter of less is more. I was definitely undertrained, but my legs were fresh, and the weather was perfect. That's all I can come up with. :shrug:

I'd fail to BQ in my next four marathons, coming up short for various reasons at Boston '08 (3:42:28), Green Bay '08 (3:34:34), Memphis '08 (3:20:18), and RNR Arizona '09 (3:42:09). As such, I didn't get to run Boston '09. I finally got the BQ monkey off my back at Chicago '09, running my best race ever to that point (3:06:10) under near-perfect conditions.

I've since run three more BQ marathons (Boston '10, Chicago '10, and Milwaukee '11). By now I know I can do it, but more importantly, I know how to do it, so I expect to do it.

There, now I've appropriately answered your question. :D
:lol: thanks man. Appreciate it. Fascinating to see the history and just how unpredictable 26.2 really is.
 
A guy I knew (who's since become a good friend) was pacing 3:10 that day, and the weather was perfect (40ish), so I decided to go for it. His pacing was perfect. I hit the half at 1:34:09, and despite battling some nasty GI issues the last 8 miles or so (later diagnosed as ischemic colitis), I hit the finish line at exactly 3:10:00 for my first BQ. (Splits here.)
That's awesome. Back then you did have the 59 second buffer. Today you would have qualified by tenths of a second...
 
When did you realize you were ready to run after Boston?
I don't understand the question. :confused:
Ah, poorly worded on my part. :bag: When did you realize that you had a real shot at running the BQ or did it come out of nowhere? That was a huge jump in your 3rd marathon.
It came out of nowhere. I'd been training for the half, but after running a different half in 1:32:41 with five weeks to go, I decided to make the jump up to the marathon. IIRC, I hadn't done anything longer than 13-14 miles to that point in my training, so I did a couple of longer runs the next two weekends, and then I did a 3-week taper.A guy I knew (who's since become a good friend) was pacing 3:10 that day, and the weather was perfect (40ish), so I decided to go for it. His pacing was perfect. I hit the half at 1:34:09, and despite battling some nasty GI issues the last 8 miles or so (later diagnosed as ischemic colitis), I hit the finish line at exactly 3:10:00 for my first BQ. (Splits here.)

Still no idea how I did it, except that it's probably a matter of less is more. I was definitely undertrained, but my legs were fresh, and the weather was perfect. That's all I can come up with. :shrug:

I'd fail to BQ in my next four marathons, coming up short for various reasons at Boston '08 (3:42:28), Green Bay '08 (3:34:34), Memphis '08 (3:20:18), and RNR Arizona '09 (3:42:09). As such, I didn't get to run Boston '09. I finally got the BQ monkey off my back at Chicago '09, running my best race ever to that point (3:06:10) under near-perfect conditions.

I've since run three more BQ marathons (Boston '10, Chicago '10, and Milwaukee '11). By now I know I can do it, but more importantly, I know how to do it, so I expect to do it.

There, now I've appropriately answered your question. :D
:lol: thanks man. Appreciate it. Fascinating to see the history and just how unpredictable 26.2 really is.
:goodposting: It's great to be able to go back and re-visit this sort of stuff in this thread.

 
I tried to get out there today for my first run since last Friday, but I only made it two minutes before I was gasping for air, even at an easy recovery-type pace. Then that was followed by several minutes of coughing and hacking to the point that I almost made myself throw up. I think it's safe to say that there's no way I'm in any condition to race my 5K this Saturday, and I'm just going to let this chest congestion / cough pass before I try running again.

 
Don't know if anyone is looking for new kicks or not, but runningwarehouse.com is having a shoe sale. You'll need to put whatever you're purchasing in your cart for the sale price to come up, but it looks like approximately 40% off.

 
'IvanKaramazov said:
I tried to get out there today for my first run since last Friday, but I only made it two minutes before I was gasping for air, even at an easy recovery-type pace. Then that was followed by several minutes of coughing and hacking to the point that I almost made myself throw up. I think it's safe to say that there's no way I'm in any condition to race my 5K this Saturday, and I'm just going to let this chest congestion / cough pass before I try running again.
Ugh, that blows. At least its a 5K and not the marathon. Rest up.
 
'IvanKaramazov said:
I tried to get out there today for my first run since last Friday, but I only made it two minutes before I was gasping for air, even at an easy recovery-type pace. Then that was followed by several minutes of coughing and hacking to the point that I almost made myself throw up. I think it's safe to say that there's no way I'm in any condition to race my 5K this Saturday, and I'm just going to let this chest congestion / cough pass before I try running again.
Ugh, that blows. At least its a 5K and not the marathon. Rest up.
Seriously. I have never had a cold this bad that hung on this long before, not since I was a little kid. As irritating as it is to not be able to get back into the swing of things, I keep reminding myself that this would have completely derailed my marathon.
 
'Ned said:
Recovering from someheavy training days...Saturday - 9.86 mi uphill trail run followed by 8.25 downhill hill road run. You can tell by the splits this kicked my butt.1 - 15:30, 141 hr, 364 up, 285 down2 - 11:30, 136, 26 up, 151 down3 - 13:09, 148, 272 up, 0 down4 - 15:37, 145, 404 up, 16 down5 - 16:16, 149, 482 up, 243 down6 - 14:33, 141, 256 up, 266 down7 - 17:05, 143, 397 up, 276 down8 - 13:41, 137, 131 up, 108 down9 - 15:43, 143, 318 up, 62 down9.85 - 13:47, 141, 151 up, 66 down8.25 mi return trip - 9:47, 135, 164 up, 1493 downSunday - 3 mi hike (out and back), 750 ft ascentMonday - Altitude training. 11 mile @ 10:10 pace, 141 hr. 1476 ft climbing. 80% of the run at 5000+ ft elevation. Legs were toast before this run but I pushed through and knocked out the last two relatively flat miles in 8:55 and 9:10. Had to walk some of the extreme downhills mid run due to quads cramping.Tuesday - 1.5 recovery miles on the stair mill. Was supposed to do speed work but the body said NO.Last week I had 38.5 on the slate and finished at 42.5 miles for the week. Lost 4 pounds for a second consecutive week.
There's the BnB we know. NICE!You and SFB are beasts with these mountain runs. :thumbup:
I was just going to say, this is my type of run!My quads finally calmed down and felt semi-normal again and I got in 4 miles on Sunday (rolling stuff) and a little over 6 yesterday. My HR monitor wasn't working yesterday (it was just all over the place, mostly way lower than realistic range) and the legs felt pretty good so I pushed it a little on a run with some nice little climbs. Was kind of nice to not be paying attention to it constantly and just let go a bit, I must admit. That being said, my current training block is all about building aerobic base, so I ordered a new HR monitor for my 305 last night so that I can get back to it.Prop and tri and anyone else I missed - GREAT results last weekend!
 
Don't know if anyone is looking for new kicks or not, but runningwarehouse.com is having a shoe sale. You'll need to put whatever you're purchasing in your cart for the sale price to come up, but it looks like approximately 40% off.
:goodposting: While I snagged a great deal on some LunarGlides last week...planned on putting them up for spring (ran once in them and liked it ok).Still wanted another pair of Mizunos to work in the next few weeks and wear for the marathon as I may have about 300 miles on the Inspires I have by then (though, put over 500 on the inspire 7s...and think the 8s will get more than that...but wanted another pair).
 
Feeling some tenderness between my left achilles and calf today after 12 on Friday, yesterday's 5 mi tempo run, and a recovery run in the middle - thinking off today + lift only tomorrow, maybe a couple mile jog just to loosen up, then push experiment day #3 back to Friday.

Don't want to get hurt again with races coming up, can I get a thumbs up or down from the peanut gallery?

 
Feeling some tenderness between my left achilles and calf today after 12 on Friday, yesterday's 5 mi tempo run, and a recovery run in the middle - thinking off today + lift only tomorrow, maybe a couple mile jog just to loosen up, then push experiment day #3 back to Friday.Don't want to get hurt again with races coming up, can I get a thumbs up or down from the peanut gallery?
Might be my old friend Achillies tendonosis. Did you feel it strongly when you first got out of bed this morning?
 
Feeling some tenderness between my left achilles and calf today after 12 on Friday, yesterday's 5 mi tempo run, and a recovery run in the middle - thinking off today + lift only tomorrow, maybe a couple mile jog just to loosen up, then push experiment day #3 back to Friday.

Don't want to get hurt again with races coming up, can I get a thumbs up or down from the peanut gallery?
If its above your Achilles but below the main calf, that's your soleus. I battle tight soleus in either leg all the time, so I'm always running through some sorta pain there. It always loosens up after a minute or so and is completely fine. Calf sleeves +
does the trick for me. As always, stretch after a workout. :2cents:
 
Feeling some tenderness between my left achilles and calf today after 12 on Friday, yesterday's 5 mi tempo run, and a recovery run in the middle - thinking off today + lift only tomorrow, maybe a couple mile jog just to loosen up, then push experiment day #3 back to Friday.

Don't want to get hurt again with races coming up, can I get a thumbs up or down from the peanut gallery?
If its above your Achilles but below the main calf, that's your soleus. I battle tight soleus in either leg all the time, so I'm always running through some sorta pain there. It always loosens up after a minute or so and is completely fine. Calf sleeves +
Sounds like this is it.Jux, didn't feel anything strong this morning, really haven't all day. I feel something but it's nothing too bothersome, going to treat this like Ned suggested then re-evaluate Saturday after the 12 on Friday. Here's hoping for no sharper pain first thing Sat mronign!

 
So I'm doing a final run today before a 10k this Saturday and here's what an old training program I've used said to do...

1 mile warmup

3 miles at easy pace

1 mile cooldown

WTH is the difference?? :confused:

 
'Hang 10 said:
So I'm doing a final run today before a 10k this Saturday and here's what an old training program I've used said to do...1 mile warmup3 miles at easy pace1 mile cooldownWTH is the difference?? :confused:
This could be stated much more concisesly as "5 miles easy."
 
'Hang 10 said:
So I'm doing a final run today before a 10k this Saturday and here's what an old training program I've used said to do...1 mile warmup3 miles at easy pace1 mile cooldownWTH is the difference?? :confused:
This could be stated much more concisesly as "5 miles easy."
Right. I don't see the point in going for 1mi at recovery pace, then 3 at GA type pace, then 1 recovery. I'd just do 5 easy and call it a day. Being 2 days out from the 10K, I don't think it matter much as long as you don't go out there and hammer it.What's your goal time?
 
'Hang 10 said:
So I'm doing a final run today before a 10k this Saturday and here's what an old training program I've used said to do...1 mile warmup3 miles at easy pace1 mile cooldownWTH is the difference?? :confused:
This could be stated much more concisesly as "5 miles easy."
Right. I don't see the point in going for 1mi at recovery pace, then 3 at GA type pace, then 1 recovery. I'd just do 5 easy and call it a day. Being 2 days out from the 10K, I don't think it matter much as long as you don't go out there and hammer it.What's your goal time?
Good question. Did my last 10k in 40:55 but not really realistic that I'm gonna touch that coming off my injury. I'm just hoping to average under a 7 minute pace. I'd be good with that.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Was gonna take a half-day vacation today so I could do my 30-miler today and my 20-miler tomorrow, but now I'm seeing 100% chance of showers and thunderstorms this afternoon, temps in the upper 60s, and winds at 20+ mph. Eff that. Next 3 days are supposed to be perfect for running (upper 40s and sunny), so I'll do the 30 tomorrow afternoon and 20 on Saturday.

One of my best friends is having his annual Halloween bash on Friday, so I was hoping to avoid having to run on Saturday, but it is what it is. Won't be my first hungover 20-miler, and I'm sure it won't be my last. :shrug:

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Ok Ned...this was either some breakthrough (which recent HRs and paces have me contemplating whether it is)...or I was pushing too fast...

Background on yesterday's run...

Scheduled for 12 GA miles.

Nice cool 50 degree day with a light breeze keeping it nice and cool.

Slept just over 9 hours the night before (rare for me to actually be that rested).

Garmin screwed up when I got to the greenway and would not pick up the satellite. HR part was working so I used it only as an HR monitor and to keep the time. I know the greenway mileage well and its marked in a few places as well. I later reset it after loading my data and its now picking up the satellites again.

Mile 1...just getting a feel for pace...looked down and finished the first mile at 9:43 (HR was steady at 133...this is about midway of my projected recovery zone).

Miles 2-7...I was hitting the lap button when I got to the listed mile markers...so it should be pretty accurate. 9:38 average pace...HR steady from 137-141 (141 is in the lower part of my GA range...and I was hitting some hills in this area).

Miles 7-12...9:33 average 140-146 (146 is just getting to the upper range of GA...147-148 is what I try to keep it under).

Now, I did not know the paces til any mile was done really...or overall til I was back at home looking at the numbers.

My original plan (some of this being conservative backing off of McMillan which says 9:11) was to run the marathon starting at 9:25-9:30 pace and see how my HR was going. Because really, after about 14 miles...Im not sure how my body will respond to this pace.

But if my HR is going to be in GA range that long at that pace (and in low GA range...should I quit being a wimp and up my expectations? Or stay conservative and make darn well sure I don't death march the end of this thing).

 
Was gonna take a half-day vacation today so I could do my 30-miler today and my 20-miler tomorrow, but now I'm seeing 100% chance of showers and thunderstorms this afternoon, temps in the upper 60s, and winds at 20+ mph. Eff that. Next 3 days are supposed to be perfect for running (upper 40s and sunny), so I'll do the 30 tomorrow afternoon and 20 on Saturday.One of my best friends is having his annual Halloween bash on Friday, so I was hoping to avoid having to run on Saturday, but it is what it is. Won't be my first hungover 20-miler, and I'm sure it won't be my last. :shrug:
Have fun, gru. This is your first 30/20, right? I'm looking forward to hearing how this goes. This is territory most of us can only imagine.
 
Was gonna take a half-day vacation today so I could do my 30-miler today and my 20-miler tomorrow, but now I'm seeing 100% chance of showers and thunderstorms this afternoon, temps in the upper 60s, and winds at 20+ mph. Eff that. Next 3 days are supposed to be perfect for running (upper 40s and sunny), so I'll do the 30 tomorrow afternoon and 20 on Saturday.

One of my best friends is having his annual Halloween bash on Friday, so I was hoping to avoid having to run on Saturday, but it is what it is. Won't be my first hungover 20-miler, and I'm sure it won't be my last. :shrug:
Have fun, gru. This is your first 30/20, right? I'm looking forward to hearing how this goes. This is territory most of us can only imagine.
Correct. I'm gonna take it pretty slow, so I'm not horribly worried. Probably 8:30-8:45 on the 30-miler, and then whatever my legs can muster for the 20-miler. I'm gonna try eating some real food (PB&J, pretzels, M&Ms) on the 30-miler, so that'll be the really interesting part.
 
Feeling some tenderness between my left achilles and calf today after 12 on Friday, yesterday's 5 mi tempo run, and a recovery run in the middle - thinking off today + lift only tomorrow, maybe a couple mile jog just to loosen up, then push experiment day #3 back to Friday.

Don't want to get hurt again with races coming up, can I get a thumbs up or down from the peanut gallery?
If its above your Achilles but below the main calf, that's your soleus. I battle tight soleus in either leg all the time, so I'm always running through some sorta pain there. It always loosens up after a minute or so and is completely fine. Calf sleeves +
Tight soleus muscles are the root of the issues I've had as well (PF and Achilles issues). Those damn things just pull on everything more than they should and I'm always trying to get them loosened up. I do some dynamic stretching before runs, often stop during the first mile once or twice to do that again, and always stretch and roll them afterward. Like you, I also find they usually get loosened up after a mile or two and the discomfort stops, but I know if I could figure out how to increase my flexibility there the likelihood of the foot/heel issues I've had recurring would drop dramatically.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top