Darrinll40
Footballguy
I ran 8.2 miles today with Steve in about 1:24. A pretty good pace for having run the race the day before.
Looking forward to my run on Tuesday.
Looking forward to my run on Tuesday.
That's faster than my half marathon time!http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/more...d.ap/index.html
BERLIN (AP) -- Haile Gebrselassie took advantage of a perfect course and ideal conditions to set a world record at the Berlin Marathon.
Gebrselassie raced through Berlin's flat and fast course to set his 25th world record in 2 hours, 4 minutes, 26 seconds. That lowered the time of his good friend Paul Tergat by 29 seconds.
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Ah, they get pacers leading the way through the first half, motorcycles clearing the path throughout, and special tables with their fluid bottles. So how tough can it be, right? Right??http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/more...d.ap/index.html
BERLIN (AP) -- Haile Gebrselassie took advantage of a perfect course and ideal conditions to set a world record at the Berlin Marathon.
Gebrselassie raced through Berlin's flat and fast course to set his 25th world record in 2 hours, 4 minutes, 26 seconds. That lowered the time of his good friend Paul Tergat by 29 seconds.
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We are driving to Iowa City on Friday night and then going the remaining 4 hours on Saturday morning. We are going to check into our hotel-can't remember the name-and then go get our running packet. One of the guys did worked in Chicago for a year or two after college so he knows it better than us. We are going to catch the Iowa-Penn St game at a bar, no booze, and then find somewhere to eat pasta. I don't know how we will get to the race etc. but I'm not sweating it. I will find out the name of the hotel this week and then ask questions for the resturant .Hey, what are your Chicago plans? When do you and your buddies (how many?) arrive? Have any of you been to Chicago before? You driving in, I presume?El Floppo, I think I am ready.
Way to tough it out, but you make a great point. Since most races are held early in the morning, it's a good idea to do at least some of your quality workouts in the morning, too. You need to acclimate your body to running at that time of day.finished in 29.09, but am disappointed in my finish....had to run the last mile into a 35mph headwind, which really took it out of me...
like furley, I ended up behind a youngin...I think she was 13-14 as she was the only runner in the Under 14 age group. I make myself feel better since she is the daughter of one of the few marathon runners in the area...she finished about half a block in front of me...tried to catch her, but just didn't have enough left at the end.
I've always ran at nighttime (around 9pm), so taking on a morning run was somewhat a concern. It wasn't as bad as I thought, but I'm completely drained right now.
You've run 21, so don't sweat it. Your body will remember well enough. And hey, you're at where you're at.I have a couple concerns at this point. It seems like it has been months since I ran the 21 miler. I really tapered down fast with my bad cold. This is purely mental and I will be forced to get over it. I haven't eaten before running during all my training. I usually run at 5am or 4am on long runs. This will start at 7:30 and I will start running around 8am. So 8-12:30ish on no food. I will have gels and gatorade for calories but still I am a little worried. That brings me to my last and probably biggest concern. I don't have a belt for holding gels, asprin, migraine medicine, and body glide. I have looked at Scheels and on the internet but really never found anything I liked. This is my falut and I realize that but I am still wondering about this. I have safety pinned a ziploc to my shorts by my groin area and ran with that 6 times or so. The bags rip and it isn't the most comfortable. So my options are 1)run with a bag in my hands 2)safety pin the bag to the front on my shorts 3)buy a belt in Chicago and use totally untested equipment 4)Wear some other shorts I have ran in that have pockets-this may unbalance me. Stupid and completely my fault. What would you do?
Pre-running food: Target a good pasta meal on Friday night, and then eat well on Saturday morning/noon. Eat sensibly Saturday night (pasta's still good - but it's too late for a big carbo load). Sunday morning, you'll need to eat something ...maybe a bagel with fluids. You won't want to eat, due to the excitement/nerves, but by race time your tummy will be growling.Race supplies: You shouldn't need to carry body glide. "Lube up" before you start. I'd recommend some gloves. You can stick a gel inside each (by your palms), and maybe pin your drugs in a small bag on the outside (if you really need to carry them during the race). If the day warms up, and after the gels are gone, you can discard the gloves. Won't they hand out some items during the race? Ask at check-in.
Spinning guy had a spare, cheap pair and I was good to go again. Against floppo's recommendation I took a calculated risk by starting with a bottle of Accelerade (brought a spare powder for one more bottle). I know and preach the dangers of new foods on hard efforts, but I also know my body and how it has responded to food on rides. A banana at halftime of a soccer game and I was hurting, but on a bike I have an iron stomach. The gamble payed off. I left my gel flask in the car, having found out grapes, bananas and peanut bars were waiting at the stops. I carried three gels in single packs, though.
Given the various stops, that's a strong average speed. As many of us start to reach the end of our race seasons, we'll have to start talking about off-season conditioning ...core training, strength training, and flexibility training.
sounds like an interesting run.at what mile is the 59th street bridge during the Marathon? about 18Did a 20m (MILES, not meter/res) run today. Gimme that damn PTTS back Tri-man... it was a rough one. The wife threw her back out 2 days ago, which coincides with the last time the baby pooped. Both were cranky and helpless, putting more stress and lack of sleep than Floppo needed going into the run. I knew from the first 2 miles that it was going to be tough going, but I decided to push it some, especially on the back half to try and negative split it.Did the Williamsburgh bridge through Brooklyn to the Brooklyn Bridge back to Manhattan (6m) and out and back along the E River, around the Battery and up the Hudson 4m. Had the return Brooklyn Bridge (ie: hill) at about the same point in the run that I'll have the 59th St Bridge on raceday. El Sucko. As did running through pretty barren parts of Brooklyn past the Navy Shipyard, through the Hasidic neighborhood under the W'burgh bridge and back across it and it's steep approach... felt like I was going backwards.Did the out in 1:25 and the back in 1:26 for 2:51 total. Considering how hard it felt like I was pushing and how worn out I've been since getting back, I'm not as happy with the time as I probably should be.Plus I came home to a pissed off, quasi-invalid wife who passed on the baby who wouldn't stop crying (not at all like him- normally a pretty happy guy) until he finally dropped his deuce at 4:30 this afternoon.![]()
Part of that soreness is unavoidable. However, in the future try to remember to bring some carbs and protein for immediate post race consumption. Easy to digest stuff like fruit, peanuts, gatorade (my favorite is lowfat or skim chocolate milk). Taking in 30-40gs of carbs and 8-10g of protein within half an hour of a long effort will help recovery and reduce soreness. Also, taking in a good meal within an hour to an hour and a half will help too. Gives your body a way to refuel and begin the repair process.I'd say don't take today and tomorrow off completely. Yes, rest, but also get the legs warmed up. If you can't do "the slowest jog ever," even walking for 20-25 minutes will help. Just get the blood pumping without taxing the system.I felt good yesterday, even last night, not really sore or anything. This morning, different story! Not "can't walk without a limp" sore, but definitely feeling it in my calves, hammies, and quads, and one of my knees is pissed at me. I assume water, strech, walk, etc, is the course of action?How long 'til I should run again? I'm thinking just a couple of days off and then back for a slow one on Wednesday or Thursday, depending on how I feel. No long run this weekend, just another short one, and then back to a normal schedule next week. Does that sound about right?
My wife's job was to get herself and my daughter to the finish line by 9:00, and to bring a SlimFast shake with her for me to drink post-race to get some carbs and protein. At least she got there on time.I already went for a 15 minute walk this morning, I'll do another later today. Maybe I will try and do something slow tomorrow, or at least wait no longer than Wednesday.Part of that soreness is unavoidable. However, in the future try to remember to bring some carbs and protein for immediate post race consumption. Easy to digest stuff like fruit, peanuts, gatorade (my favorite is lowfat or skim chocolate milk). Taking in 30-40gs of carbs and 8-10g of protein within half an hour of a long effort will help recovery and reduce soreness. Also, taking in a good meal within an hour to an hour and a half will help too. Gives your body a way to refuel and begin the repair process.I'd say don't take today and tomorrow off completely. Yes, rest, but also get the legs warmed up. If you can't do "the slowest jog ever," even walking for 20-25 minutes will help. Just get the blood pumping without taxing the system.I felt good yesterday, even last night, not really sore or anything. This morning, different story! Not "can't walk without a limp" sore, but definitely feeling it in my calves, hammies, and quads, and one of my knees is pissed at me. I assume water, strech, walk, etc, is the course of action?How long 'til I should run again? I'm thinking just a couple of days off and then back for a slow one on Wednesday or Thursday, depending on how I feel. No long run this weekend, just another short one, and then back to a normal schedule next week. Does that sound about right?
. I can run maybe 2 or 3 times a week, but I always do my long run. The training schedule has the longest run at 10 miles, but a few weekends ago I still had gas left in the tank so I ended up doing 12. Then the next weekend I did the entire 13.1 miles. I had to see if I could do it. What an absolute confidence builder. I was so psyched when I was done. My calves were sore for the next day or two, but that was about it. This past weekend I just did 8. My legs were done. Probably b/c I only had 5 hours of sleep and was out the door at 5:30 in the morning so I could finish before my son's swimming lesson.That's the key! You should be fine. SFDuck - the general rule is a day off for each hour of racing. Some walking and stretching should help until you feel like running again.Less than 2 weeks to my Atlantic City ½ marathon. I have been trying to follow Hal Higdon's training schedule, but I just don't have the time to run 5 days a week I can run maybe 2 or 3 times a week, but I always do my long run.
I pretty much agree with Tri-man here.Taper and 21m...You've run 21, so don't sweat it. Your body will remember well enough. And hey, you're at where you're at.I have a couple concerns at this point. It seems like it has been months since I ran the 21 miler. I really tapered down fast with my bad cold. This is purely mental and I will be forced to get over it. I haven't eaten before running during all my training. I usually run at 5am or 4am on long runs. This will start at 7:30 and I will start running around 8am. So 8-12:30ish on no food. I will have gels and gatorade for calories but still I am a little worried. That brings me to my last and probably biggest concern. I don't have a belt for holding gels, asprin, migraine medicine, and body glide. I have looked at Scheels and on the internet but really never found anything I liked. This is my falut and I realize that but I am still wondering about this. I have safety pinned a ziploc to my shorts by my groin area and ran with that 6 times or so. The bags rip and it isn't the most comfortable. So my options are 1)run with a bag in my hands 2)safety pin the bag to the front on my shorts 3)buy a belt in Chicago and use totally untested equipment 4)Wear some other shorts I have ran in that have pockets-this may unbalance me. Stupid and completely my fault. What would you do?Pre-running food: Target a good pasta meal on Friday night, and then eat well on Saturday morning/noon. Eat sensibly Saturday night (pasta's still good - but it's too late for a big carbo load). Sunday morning, you'll need to eat something ...maybe a bagel with fluids. You won't want to eat, due to the excitement/nerves, but by race time your tummy will be growling.
Race supplies: You shouldn't need to carry body glide. "Lube up" before you start. I'd recommend some gloves. You can stick a gel inside each (by your palms), and maybe pin your drugs in a small bag on the outside (if you really need to carry them during the race). If the day warms up, and after the gels are gone, you can discard the gloves. Won't they hand out some items during the race? Ask at check-in.
Did anyone see The Office this week? Awesome running humor. Carbo loading and bloody nipples. Just gold!!!
Loved seeing him wolfing down a big plate of fettucine alfredo right before the race to carbo load... and the chaffing nipple..
... glad somebody else caught it.I was joking, really- it's nice out there all year (but those 4 months are pretty prime).What a great course. Again- nice work!And yeah... lunges for me too.April/May, September/October - really you can't lose.

Great job, D&J!That's great Darrin and Steve!![]()
I've never come close to getting hardware... great job!
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I better get my butt in gear if I'm to break 2hrs first! These guys are getting so close!Rock Lonemilk said:That's faster than my half marathon time!mr. furley said:http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/more...d.ap/index.html
BERLIN (AP) -- Haile Gebrselassie took advantage of a perfect course and ideal conditions to set a world record at the Berlin Marathon.
Gebrselassie raced through Berlin's flat and fast course to set his 25th world record in 2 hours, 4 minutes, 26 seconds. That lowered the time of his good friend Paul Tergat by 29 seconds.
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Now I just have to figure out how to run twice as fast, as this too is faster than my half-marathon best (by 61 seconds)!
Eating: Yeah, you're really too late in the game to start experimenting now, but you really do need something in your belly. Bagel with peanut butter, bowl of oatmeal, banana, something that you've eaten before (generally speaking, not wrt to running) that you're confident your stomach can handle. Of course, once you start running, that bagel that hasn't given you problems before could become a problem, but this is really one dice roll that you want to take. Eat at least an hour before the gun, so that'll give your stomach a chance to digest it at least somewhat (i.e. don't be eating 5mins before the gun). You might be tempted to sample the local flavor (Chicago-style pizza, calzones, whatever), but don't! Save that for AFTER the race. Avoid the spicey, exotic, etc stuff before the race. You don't have to get hospital food-bland, but you do want to keep it mellow.Gels/meds: I've been using a plain ol' sandwich-sized Ziplock bag, with five gels and four Tylenol. The gels pretty much stack into a nice palm-sized wad, then you wrap the rest of the bag around it, and carry it in your hand (switch hands every now and then as you run, to alleviate the sweating). You don't want to buy a new belt at this point. The potential blisters/chafing really aren't worth the reward. Carry your gels as I've described, or pin them individually to your shorts waistband. I know of runners who swear by pinning, but personally, I'd think it would bounce too much and bug the crap outta me, but that's just me. I've had good success with the baggie method. The only problem is that you have to dig out any meds (they tend to bounce around the baggie), but I'm nowhere near world record pace, so I can slow down/walk and take a little time to dig as needed.You've run 21, so don't sweat it. Your body will remember well enough. And hey, you're at where you're at.I have a couple concerns at this point. It seems like it has been months since I ran the 21 miler. I really tapered down fast with my bad cold. This is purely mental and I will be forced to get over it. I haven't eaten before running during all my training. I usually run at 5am or 4am on long runs. This will start at 7:30 and I will start running around 8am. So 8-12:30ish on no food. I will have gels and gatorade for calories but still I am a little worried. That brings me to my last and probably biggest concern. I don't have a belt for holding gels, asprin, migraine medicine, and body glide. I have looked at Scheels and on the internet but really never found anything I liked. This is my falut and I realize that but I am still wondering about this. I have safety pinned a ziploc to my shorts by my groin area and ran with that 6 times or so. The bags rip and it isn't the most comfortable. So my options are 1)run with a bag in my hands 2)safety pin the bag to the front on my shorts 3)buy a belt in Chicago and use totally untested equipment 4)Wear some other shorts I have ran in that have pockets-this may unbalance me. Stupid and completely my fault. What would you do?Pre-running food: Target a good pasta meal on Friday night, and then eat well on Saturday morning/noon. Eat sensibly Saturday night (pasta's still good - but it's too late for a big carbo load). Sunday morning, you'll need to eat something ...maybe a bagel with fluids. You won't want to eat, due to the excitement/nerves, but by race time your tummy will be growling.
Race supplies: You shouldn't need to carry body glide. "Lube up" before you start. I'd recommend some gloves. You can stick a gel inside each (by your palms), and maybe pin your drugs in a small bag on the outside (if you really need to carry them during the race). If the day warms up, and after the gels are gone, you can discard the gloves. Won't they hand out some items during the race? Ask at check-in.
), etc), stretch, get ready to run, eat, drink, and be merry. If you're in corral 20, you don't need to jump into your corral right away. Stay out of it completely, find yourself a place to relax (why stand around for a half-hour in the corral?). When the gun goes off, the lines to the portapotties should disappear. Go to the bathroom one last time. Now, you can go find your corral. Jump in, get ready, get set, go! But not too fast! It should be crowded enough that you won't be burning rubber, but try to stay relaxed and run your NORMAL pace. It's very easy to get excited and use up all your energy in the first mile.
Dash - good read! Good ride.Given the various stops, that's a strong average speed. As many of us start to reach the end of our race seasons, we'll have to start talking about off-season conditioning ...core training, strength training, and flexibility training.gruecd, I'll have to read through that article. I agree with the basic logic that you discuss. The end of my long runs become limited by the quads and butt muscles ...the tightening up of the muscles. So I agree that some fast-paced running can be important during the taper. We can't improve our endurance at this point, but we can strengthen/lengthen the key muscles that keep us going steady. Accentuating the leg rotation should help for the easier rotation of the long race at slower pace.
Great work, Dash! Sounds like you could've busted that one out a lot faster if left to your own devices (and with your usual riding partner)... which is even that much more impressive because you averaged a decent time considering all the stopping. Awesome! We've got to get you into some tris or duathlons next season- sounds like you'd kick butt and have a blast doing them.and re: gruecd's taper article- haven't read it yet, but is the crux about not needing so much taper, or about using the taper more efficiently?ExcellentlyDash said:Part of that soreness is unavoidable. However, in the future try to remember to bring some carbs and protein for immediate post race consumption. Easy to digest stuff like fruit, peanuts, gatorade (my favorite is lowfat or skim chocolate milk). Taking in 30-40gs of carbs and 8-10g of protein within half an hour of a long effort will help recovery and reduce soreness. Also, taking in a good meal within an hour to an hour and a half will help too. Gives your body a way to refuel and begin the repair process.I'd say don't take today and tomorrow off completely. Yes, rest, but also get the legs warmed up. If you can't do "the slowest jog ever," even walking for 20-25 minutes will help. Just get the blood pumping without taxing the system.SFBayDuck said:I felt good yesterday, even last night, not really sore or anything. This morning, different story! Not "can't walk without a limp" sore, but definitely feeling it in my calves, hammies, and quads, and one of my knees is pissed at me. I assume water, strech, walk, etc, is the course of action?How long 'til I should run again? I'm thinking just a couple of days off and then back for a slow one on Wednesday or Thursday, depending on how I feel. No long run this weekend, just another short one, and then back to a normal schedule next week. Does that sound about right?
Along with Dash's great points- even though it's tough to do post-race when you're all fired up- try your best to stretch out right after finishing (in the future).Right on! Bring on the 1/2- sounds like you're more than ready! Any idea when and how you'll treat your taper?fwiw- I've only been running 2-3 days a week straight along for my marathon, same as you mentioned, while also always doing the long run on the weekend. I'm sure I'd be better off with 5 days, but I'm finding it's still enough training to get me through the race while not draining my schedule or breaking my body down.DolphinsPhan said:It's been a while since I have posted in this thread. Trying to keep up with everyone though. Sounds like everyone is doing really well. Congrats on all of the race/training success.Less than 2 weeks to my Atlantic City ½ marathon. I have been trying to follow Hal Higdon's training schedule, but I just don't have the time to run 5 days a week, especially since I started a new consulting assignment that has a 90 minute commute each way. I can run maybe 2 or 3 times a week, but I always do my long run. The training schedule has the longest run at 10 miles, but a few weekends ago I still had gas left in the tank so I ended up doing 12. Then the next weekend I did the entire 13.1 miles. I had to see if I could do it. What an absolute confidence builder. I was so psyched when I was done. My calves were sore for the next day or two, but that was about it. This past weekend I just did 8. My legs were done. Probably b/c I only had 5 hours of sleep and was out the door at 5:30 in the morning so I could finish before my son's swimming lesson.Anyway, I feel ready. Got my running gear all set. I have been breaking in my new Mizuno Wave Inspire 3s. I used to run in the 2s, but needed new shoes. Love them! Got my food/liquid intake schedule in working order. I have been following it for a month now and it works out pretty well. I take a Gu at 45 minutes/5 miles and another at 90 minutes/10 miles, always with water.Anyway, glad everyone is doing well. Keep it up. FYI…the iced gingerbread CLIF bars are awesome.
Fantastic advice from RS there...RoarinSonoran said:Gels/meds: I've been using a plain ol' sandwich-sized Ziplock bag, with five gels and four Tylenol. The gels pretty much stack into a nice palm-sized wad, then you wrap the rest of the bag around it, and carry it in your hand (switch hands every now and then as you run, to alleviate the sweating). You don't want to buy a new belt at this point. The potential blisters/chafing really aren't worth the reward. Carry your gels as I've described, or pin them individually to your shorts waistband. I know of runners who swear by pinning, but personally, I'd think it would bounce too much and bug the crap outta me, but that's just me. I've had good success with the baggie method. The only problem is that you have to dig out any meds (they tend to bounce around the baggie), but I'm nowhere near world record pace, so I can slow down/walk and take a little time to dig as needed.
.re: carrying the gels in your hand... that sounds like misery- to me at least. I guess if you're used to carrying a walkman/ipod/phone in your hand, it might be ok- but for 4hours?I'm currently running three times a week in prep for the San Jose half. I was running five times a week (currently Mon-Thu-Sat, training calendar has Mon-Tue(track)-Thu-Fri(easy)-Sat), but that was mainly gearing for a marathon, and I've pretty much ptts'd it to "meh, it's only a half, so three days is enough". You should be fine. See our marathon tips to Rusty above, as most of it applies to a half as well.DolphinsPhan said:I can run maybe 2 or 3 times a week, but I always do my long run.
I haven't had a problem with this.El Floppo said:- 1)run with a bag in my hands.... X
As for gels on the course, according to the course map, they'll provide gels just before mile 18. Rusty will probably need 'em well before then. And then, you have to consider that what they offer may not be what you like/can tolerate, so he's better off BYOG. Races I've been in usually offer chocolate (which may as well be pudding) and some caramel mix flavor.
I'll stick to my strawberry-banana thank you very much. 
Meh, not too much misery. Main problem is that it gets sweaty (at least in the warmer races). Changing hands helps that. If you think about it, changing hands also gives you a little distraction from the monotony of the run.re: carrying the gels in your hand... that sounds like misery- to me at least. I guess if you're used to carrying a walkman/ipod/phone in your hand, it might be ok- but for 4hours?Speaking of ipod... how about an mp3 carrier-case/armband type of thing? That should hold a handful of gels and some pills, no?
Also, in the warmer runs, the warmth of your hand can be enough to melt the meds. Again, switching hands helps. It's a little bulky at the start, five gels is a full handful, but as you use the gels, it's less of a problem. You also have to avoid getting a death-grip on the gels, much like not running with clenched fists. For me, it's the most-convenient way to carry my gels/meds. I feel pinning and belts will bug the crap outta me.
Re: ipod carrier, again, that's one of those only-if-you-trained-with-it items. 
Actually, for Chicago, the inside of the course route works best for viewing. Mile 2 ..13 ..17 ..20, then a late point or the finish. Access via Harrison or Roosevelt (E, W) and Canal or State (N, S) ...use Roosevelt to get on Halsted for viewing at miles 17 and 20. State St. can be used to slip down around mile 23 or 24 (be a bit careful with the neighborhood). In general, parking south of Congress might work best - north of Congress (in the "loop") is limited/prohibited. The website should have more info.RoarinSonoran said:At least the day before the race (not the night before, and especially not the morning of), study the course, figure out how you're getting there, figure out where your wife will cheer for you, etc. The course is a big loop, don't get caught inside the loop, unless she plans to stay inside. The race folks/cops not too keen on letting cars cross the course. Just taking a quick look, I'd suggest she see you off at the start, walk over and see you at mile 2, then meet you at the halfway (13.1) point, mile 17 or 20, then the finish (this depends on being "inside the loop").
Hear ya.I used to run with a walkman... god- remember those?... and I didn't mind it, unless I ran more than 10k. (ETA- I didn't like having to clench my fists enough to hold something... anything to get away from expending unneeded energy for me is key, even if it's from such small-ticket things as clenched fists or squinting eyes).I think that race number belt w/pouch is the least invasive, or maybe the clip-on pouch (although I'm guessing that the clip on will bounce more as it doesn't have the tension of the belt to keep it in place). You've never run with a race-belt? great for tris, and really non-invasive while running- don't have to worry about the safety pins chaffing (which has happened to me). But agreed, using for the first time on race day = meh.Meh, not too much misery. Main problem is that it gets sweaty (at least in the warmer races). Changing hands helps that. If you think about it, changing hands also gives you a little distraction from the monotony of the run.re: carrying the gels in your hand... that sounds like misery- to me at least. I guess if you're used to carrying a walkman/ipod/phone in your hand, it might be ok- but for 4hours?Speaking of ipod... how about an mp3 carrier-case/armband type of thing? That should hold a handful of gels and some pills, no?Also, in the warmer runs, the warmth of your hand can be enough to melt the meds. Again, switching hands helps. It's a little bulky at the start, five gels is a full handful, but as you use the gels, it's less of a problem. You also have to avoid getting a death-grip on the gels, much like not running with clenched fists. For me, it's the most-convenient way to carry my gels/meds. I feel pinning and belts will bug the crap outta me.
Re: ipod carrier, again, that's one of those only-if-you-trained-with-it items.
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Still figuring that out. I try and do a quick 2-3 mile run at my 5k pace in the early part of the week, usually Tuesday. Then a 5-6 mile run on Friday with my long run on Sunday mornings...same time as the actual race. I found that I am much better at my long run when I get that 5 miler in at the end of the week. I am going to stick to my standard schedule this week. Tues low miles, but fast, 5 miles on Friday, and then I will probably do between 10-12 on Sunday for my last long run. Then for the final week I will probably do my short run on Tues, maybe a little slower than 5k pace and my 5 miler on Thursday instead of Friday...rest Friday/Sat. Who knows what will work. I guess I will find out in 2 weeks. I have never run more than a 5k race before!Right on! Bring on the 1/2- sounds like you're more than ready! Any idea when and how you'll treat your taper?fwiw- I've only been running 2-3 days a week straight along for my marathon, same as you mentioned, while also always doing the long run on the weekend. I'm sure I'd be better off with 5 days, but I'm finding it's still enough training to get me through the race while not draining my schedule or breaking my body down.DolphinsPhan said:It's been a while since I have posted in this thread. Trying to keep up with everyone though. Sounds like everyone is doing really well. Congrats on all of the race/training success.
Less than 2 weeks to my Atlantic City ½ marathon. I have been trying to follow Hal Higdon's training schedule, but I just don't have the time to run 5 days a week, especially since I started a new consulting assignment that has a 90 minute commute each way. I can run maybe 2 or 3 times a week, but I always do my long run. The training schedule has the longest run at 10 miles, but a few weekends ago I still had gas left in the tank so I ended up doing 12. Then the next weekend I did the entire 13.1 miles. I had to see if I could do it. What an absolute confidence builder. I was so psyched when I was done. My calves were sore for the next day or two, but that was about it. This past weekend I just did 8. My legs were done. Probably b/c I only had 5 hours of sleep and was out the door at 5:30 in the morning so I could finish before my son's swimming lesson.
Anyway, I feel ready. Got my running gear all set. I have been breaking in my new Mizuno Wave Inspire 3s. I used to run in the 2s, but needed new shoes. Love them! Got my food/liquid intake schedule in working order. I have been following it for a month now and it works out pretty well. I take a Gu at 45 minutes/5 miles and another at 90 minutes/10 miles, always with water.
Anyway, glad everyone is doing well. Keep it up.
FYI…the iced gingerbread CLIF bars are awesome.
The question is... Do you know the Way to San Jose? ...7mi yesterday morning in 1:06:51. Felt ok, but I think the heat/humidity might have been up a touch, so I had to do some walking. I had my Ipod, so did some pseudo-fartleks on the way back by getting a good fast song playing and then burning rubber for ~0.4mi at a time. I was flying at times with a ~7:00 pace.13days to San Jose, and the 10day forecast looks like it'll be nice and cool on race day (<60?). If I can find the right gear early on (instead of going out too fast), and keep my mental edge (find some cute chick to run behind, and don't get bummed if it looks like my time goal is slipping away), I really feel sub-2hrs is within reach. Five more 5K training runs are on the schedule, so I'll work on consciously slowing down to find that ~9:00 gear. I've been training pretty well these past couple of weeks since it cooled off, so great things await if Mother Nature cooperates.![]()

I realize trying things on race day is crazy. If only one of you had mentioned it.
I was supposed to get the belt almost a month ago but my buddy let two of us down. My friend asked me to bring the body glide but I will skip it. I am heavily leaning towards running with the gels in my hands. Great stuff. I will also have a bagel the morning of the race. I am more venting nervous energy than concerned about things at this point.RustyFA said:Thanks again for the great advice guys.I realize trying things on race day is crazy. If only one of you had mentioned it.
I was supposed to get the belt almost a month ago but my buddy let two of us down. My friend asked me to bring the body glide but I will skip it. I am heavily leaning towards running with the gels in my hands. Great stuff. I will also have a bagel the morning of the race. I am more venting nervous energy than concerned about things at this point.Thanks again guys. I got in a 3miler this morning. Forecast says 50 as a low and 79 as a high. I hope it stays like that. 85 and rain is the day before.
I think you can bring the lube, just ditch it before you start running.weekend's 10-miler. (Also, the forecast is calling for a high temp of 47 degrees.)
jeebus. fall just couldn't wait for October, huh?It'd probably be good to do something on Sunday to prep for the week ahead. A bit of running would be an option, of course (maybe do something different ...focus on some brief, strong striding, etc.). Maybe some strength work (push-ups; dumbells) or just stretching - gotta do something during the early football games beforemr. furley said:Question: should i be running every other day instead of M,W,F??i find that i'm sore and not running as far as i can on Monday.. Wednesday is the day i feel the best..with Friday being the day i run furthest. wondering if i should just go every other day to cut out the soreness on Monday?
As that cold weather works its way to you, you might as well get some indoor routines going sooner rather than later!No better weather for running! :(weekend's 10-miler. (Also, the forecast is calling for a high temp of 47 degrees.)
jeebus. fall just couldn't wait for October, huh?
NIce!I was able to get in 5.7 yesterday, with 7 planned for this evening. I was about 3.5 miles in and just over two miles from my house, when it started to pour. It was great, the temp dropped about 10 degrees and I actually sped up. Maybe it will rain on me again tonight.ETA: They finally posted the results of the last race online. The link for the South Daytona race works.
All I can think of when I see your posted times is that Nike commercial from a few years back with Michael Johnson sitting in the support group saying "I heard this little girl say: mommy, why is that man all blurry" It's ok to be fast.Very impressiveFour miles total this afternoon with two tempo miles at 6:38 and 6:40. Definitely feeling ready to go sub-1:10 in this coming weekend's 10-miler. (Also, the forecast is calling for a high temp of 47 degrees.)
You're too kind.DolphinsPhan said:All I can think of when I see your posted times is that Nike commercial from a few years back with Michael Johnson sitting in the support group saying "I heard this little girl say: mommy, why is that man all blurry" It's ok to be fast.Very impressiveFour miles total this afternoon with two tempo miles at 6:38 and 6:40. Definitely feeling ready to go sub-1:10 in this coming weekend's 10-miler. (Also, the forecast is calling for a high temp of 47 degrees.)
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