SFBayDuck
Footballguy
25th and 26th through 30K, 1:39 and change. 2:22 estimated finish. C'mon fellas!Steve 1:05:35 through 20K, 31st. Other guy I know, Jorge, three spots back at 1:06:42
			
				Last edited by a moderator: 
			
		
	
								
								
									
								
							
							25th and 26th through 30K, 1:39 and change. 2:22 estimated finish. C'mon fellas!Steve 1:05:35 through 20K, 31st. Other guy I know, Jorge, three spots back at 1:06:42
He toyed with the 10K field in the Trials yesterday, which were on live. I'm sure it's out on the interwebs somewhere.Link?
Doesn't he have to do 2:20? I forget what his bogeys were.25th and 26th through 30K, 1:39 and change. 2:22 estimated finish. C'mon fellas!
2:19 or top 10, and top 2 Taiwanese.Passing people like they're standing still. Up to 22nd!
All of this. Such an inspiration to us plodders. You're ####### awesome Steve!Damn. 2:28:33. 27th.
Congrats Steve for having the guts to chase that dream, and thank you for allowing us all a peak into that world. Mad props.
 
  .
 .67 and rain? Yes please. Good run!Tale of two runs yesterday. Went with my neighbor, who is also running (well, is signed up for) the Chicago Marathon. Her training is pretty sporadic, so she is pretty slow. First 6 miles were just that. A little frustrating, but in retrospect was good just for some slow running.
Miles 1-6: 136 HR. 11:54 Pace. (like I said, a little frustrating.)
Decided to pick it up and see if I could sustain my goal MP, which is a 9:00 mile:
Mile 7: 9:29 Pace. 158HR
Mile 8: 8:59 Pace. 158HR
Mile 9: 9:31 Pace. 166HR
Mile 10: 9:10 Pace. 161HR
Mile 11: 8:58 Pace. 168 HR
Miles 12 and 13 were cool down miles. 10:10 pace with a 158HR.
You can tell where my uphills were..
Oh, and this entire run was in the rain. The first 4 miles or so was a nice steady slow rain. The last 9 were in a much harder rain. Awesome. The plus was that is was about 67 degrees, so it felt awesome.
 
   
   
  I had to look up pierogi. That's an odd thing to put on a medal.Official time - 17:00.8, overall winner, and a kick ### medal with a giant fake gold pierogi.
Nice job!19:03 this morning. Forecast was for partly cloudy 72 with 61 dew point. Of course we woke up to steady rain. Weird.
I started really out well but the monkey jumped squarely on my back after mile 2. It was weird how I felt REALLY good for the first mile. It then ended up being a big fight to not quit and just keep the legs churning for the last mile. I got chicked at 2.5 by the OA female winner.
@SFBayDuck - Michael Wardian ran with us today. Was cool to see him - I knew I was going out fast when he was only 20yds ahead of me after the first quarter mile or so.
It isn't until October, but given my schedule that's probably a good thing. Timing works out for 3 quality cycles between now and when things get nuts late August. I have enough time in between stuff during those 3 weeks or so to maintain, but there probably won't be any progress. I'll have enough time after all is said and done for one more good cycle (and to get all the toxins out of my body) before I taper though. Just going over my next 3 weeks now actually - looks like the first 20 miler will be done sometime this month!You're a BEAST @MAC_32 ! I hope your marathon is sooner rather than later because I think you only need to a couple 20 milers under your belt and we'll see you in Boston next year.
 
 Not in Ohio it's not.I had to look up pierogi. That's an odd thing to put on a medal.
Good run, though!
A little bit from column A and a little bit from column B. Knee jerk, that's a big jump so I'd plan to back it off a bit this week. That said, if you're still feeling good and want to push yourself come this weekend then I say go for it. I think your base can handle that workload, but I don't think the reward outweighs the risk in continuing on as if that's the new norm. Use this week to see if it really is the new norm and if you still feel good this time next week then it probably is.Question - when you're coming back from injury or just time off, do you increase running by feel or do you stick to a plan?
I've been averaging 16 mpw but this week put out 32. I also had my biggest week of riding this year at 174. Didn't swim at all (I've been away from the pool). Legs feel tired but not overly sore. I'm hoping to keep 30 mpw running through August and bring down cycling a bit.
seems like a good way to sweat off a quick 15....... 20 lbsToday is an all-timer for SI. I was planning on running 5 this evening, but it's not gonna happen.
The SI right now at noon is 169. Tomorrow morning when I run at 5 in the morning it should drop to a heavenly 150.
 
 Yeah, I'm curious of this as well.@MAC_32 that 5K was filthy, congrats.
In your report you talk about saving your upper leg muscles for later, then activating your glutes and hammys at some point to deal a death blow to your competition. How does this differ from simply pushing the pace and turning your feet over more quickly? I don't have any sense of engaging certain muscles when I run. I just try to find the fastest pace I think I can sustain then try to hold on. I'd love to be able to activate some secret #### when I need it though so please unpack that a little bit if you don't mind.
I started writing out a response yesterday. It was long, convoluted, and confusing. I re-wrote it and the same thing happened. So, I've come to terms with that's how it will be. I'm going to try my best for it not to be (not confusing, it's going to be long), so here goes. I'll also add-in tl; dr notes. So, overall - tl;dr --> it's somewhere between a long stride, high knees, and a walking lunge...only it's still a running motion.Nigel said:@MAC_32 that 5K was filthy, congrats.
In your report you talk about saving your upper leg muscles for later, then activating your glutes and hammys at some point to deal a death blow to your competition. How does this differ from simply pushing the pace and turning your feet over more quickly? I don't have any sense of engaging certain muscles when I run. I just try to find the fastest pace I think I can sustain then try to hold on. I'd love to be able to activate some secret #### when I need it though so please unpack that a little bit if you don't mind.
 .  I used a short stride early on, the foot turnover is obviously quicker than I do on really any normal workout but the idea is to not use too much of my muscles above my knee.  Are they engaged?  Absolutely, but I have reserve muscle strength to go to once my foot turnover slows down.  I wish I had video, but stills from the race can somewhat explain what I am talking about.
 .  I used a short stride early on, the foot turnover is obviously quicker than I do on really any normal workout but the idea is to not use too much of my muscles above my knee.  Are they engaged?  Absolutely, but I have reserve muscle strength to go to once my foot turnover slows down.  I wish I had video, but stills from the race can somewhat explain what I am talking about. 
 she's diggin your chiliMAC_32 said:
See, someone would put my poorly written essay into something clear and concise - one sentence even!So more or less it's about building the strength to be able lengthen your stride when you're trying to empty the tank in a race @MAC_32?
Also, it was hot a #### this morning.
No, don't get me wrong...glad you took the time to add the detail about the "how" and the "why". Good info for sure.See, someone would put my poorly written essay into something clear and concise - one sentence even!
Yes, that's really it. Honestly.
 
  after bruising my big toenails by trying to brake downhill at the #### Lytie this spring, i finally decided to try and run down hills with a longer stride. it really adds to the excitement when you feel like you're careening out of control and may just tumble downhill like a bowling ball taking people out as you go.This fall, when I'm cheering on my university's cross country team, it will be fun to encourage them to "engage your glutes!" late in the race.
I actually focused on MAC's concepts during a wonderful 8 mile trail run this morning, especially when I was going downslope. I usually shorten my stride and almost baby step down, but worked to more aggressively lengthen the stride and put some pop in the downhills.
 
 That's a cool story.http://www.runnersworld.com/olympic-trials/meet-the-mustachioed-beer-drinking-hero-who-crashed-the-trials-10k
awesome
i remember seeing that dude and thinking "#### yeah, man!"
 
 