It sucks that you wasted money on a race, but in the end I think it improves your chances of having a successful marathon. The fresher you are on marathon day the better. I know that races take a lot out me, my most disappointing marathon performance occurred when I raced a half within a month of the marathon.I also have a big conflict that I knew would happen sooner or later... Both boys are on travel soccer teams and both have tournaments on 11/19 which just so happens to be the Philly HM. I was already upset that they split the race out from the marathon (moved it from Sunday to Saturday), but now this really screws me up. I'm 99% sure I'm not going to run it - the kids are more important.
F-ING A!!!!!!!! Fantastic news, man.On my end I am starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel. Two nights ago I had my best run in months. I got the results of my echocardiogram back yesterday and the doctor said that I have the heart of a 25 year old, I’m 38. Plan on attempting a 10 miler tomorrow, something I haven’t done since August.
Great way to put it.I think I'm out of the woods. Steadily ramped up activity this week and nothing unusual has surfaced. Groin was tight after my weird day Wednesday, but fine again today so I chalked it up as general soreness. It's been a long week, so I am sleeping in tomorrow and have my first appt at 10. I'm running trail miles before, but am not forcing a number. if I get out there early enough and can do an hour plus, awesome. If I don't and only end up with a handful, whatever. I'd like to do the former to see how I feel Sunday and definitely say that I'm good to go, but I need rest more than I need miles right now. We'll see if I can do both.
I know it’s irrational, but I really was more excited/relieved about Wednesday night’s run. I forgot what it feels like to have a good run, and missed it.F-ING A!!!!!!!! Fantastic news, man.![]()
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ETA: Dang that's gotta be such a huge weight off your shoulders!
Well, duh. There are horses wandering around out there in the dark.Now, there haven't been any 10 or 11 pm workouts as there were on occasion a few years ago
A finely tuned machine.One thing sucks about getting injured this close to marathon besides the obvious is that I have to work extremely hard cross training to get my HR up. Aqua jogging is crazy intense to just get into the 170's. It's nuts. First time in my life where I've worried about my HR not being high enough!
Finishing a half marathon is never a bomb. Nice job. It still counts, especially against all the other lazy ####s who never get off their asses.prosopis said:I ran the Tucson half marathon this morning and I bombed.![]()
I was running at aprox 11:00 min pace and I was really enjoying myself. Listening to tunes, checking out the sites, not in a lot of pain, just having fun. I was running by HR. I had been training at about 145-150 HR and I decided I could do this and if I stayed under 160 I would be good. This held true for the most part.
This course has A mountain at about mile 7-8 which really slowed me down. I had planned to do a fast walk up it which I did. I then ran down and I had read to alternate gates to avoid injury coming down hill. About 1/4 mile? after running downhill I started getting a sharp pain laterally in my left knee. It hurt pretty good and I was gutting it out but it became to much. I ended up walking the last 3 miles and it sucked.
I dont know what to say about that it is what it is. I will continue to plug along. This was my slowest half marathon ever.
It was also hot as hell out there. It had hit 90 before I finished.![]()
The crash and burn is on Strava for those of you there.
This is the part where you know you're running the correct pace.I’m starting to seek out the mile marker sign, constantly wondering how much farther I need to go.
Week 13 was abetterfan-#######-tastic week.
think 10k is my favorite race distanceigbomb said:Wicked Halloween 10K
While I still like the longer distances, this was easily the most fun I’ve had in a race this year.
Exactly. I was able to actually jog home afterwards. Then I took a 30 minute nap in the early afternoon and was good to go.think 10k is my favorite race distance
far enough to feel like i've done something but not so far that i'm a wreck afterwards.
Don't want to jinx myself, but looking good right now. Temps in mid 50's. 10% chance of rain.@SteelCurtain So what does the weather look like?![]()
My only other advice is to make sure you warm up before the race. Nothing crazy but nice and easy mile to get the legs warmed up. As you push those paces, especially as temps start to fall this time of year, I don't want you pull a muscle by starting quickly.Thanks all! My last couple of races had been pretty demoralizing so it's nice to have a good experience to keep me motivated.
So this race I ran is part of a series with the last one in three weeks on the exact same course. I'm thinking I'll sign up and give it another go. I'm going to use the last three weeks of Hal Higdon's Intermediate 10K to get ready. Other than to start a bit more forward in the pack and to go out a bit harder, any other advice? I'd try to get that first mile down to 8 or so and then get down to 7:30 and under a bit quicker. Maybe I can knock a minute or so off my time that way. Tough to think I can do much more with only three weeks in between.
As long as you have a decent idea of what you want your goal to be, I can't think of a good reason to run your first mile slower than average goal pace. I think you should try for even pacing. As you mention, you should be able to shave a decent about of time off that way. Good luck!Thanks all! My last couple of races had been pretty demoralizing so it's nice to have a good experience to keep me motivated.
So this race I ran is part of a series with the last one in three weeks on the exact same course. I'm thinking I'll sign up and give it another go. I'm going to use the last three weeks of Hal Higdon's Intermediate 10K to get ready. Other than to start a bit more forward in the pack and to go out a bit harder, any other advice? I'd try to get that first mile down to 8 or so and then get down to 7:30 and under a bit quicker. Maybe I can knock a minute or so off my time that way. Tough to think I can do much more with only three weeks in between.
Not much can be gained in 3 weeks, so I wouldn't drastically change anything you've been doing up to this point. For example - if Higdon's intermediate plan calls for intervals and you haven't done them yet, I'd suggest easing yourself into them.Thanks all! My last couple of races had been pretty demoralizing so it's nice to have a good experience to keep me motivated.
So this race I ran is part of a series with the last one in three weeks on the exact same course. I'm thinking I'll sign up and give it another go. I'm going to use the last three weeks of Hal Higdon's Intermediate 10K to get ready. Other than to start a bit more forward in the pack and to go out a bit harder, any other advice? I'd try to get that first mile down to 8 or so and then get down to 7:30 and under a bit quicker. Maybe I can knock a minute or so off my time that way. Tough to think I can do much more with only three weeks in between.
think 10k is my favorite race distance
far enough to feel like i've done something but not so far that i'm a wreck afterwards.
I couldn't disagree more. 10K is the most miserable distance conceivable. Almost all the pain of a 5K but for over twice as long.Exactly. I was able to actually jog home afterwards. Then I took a 30 minute nap in the early afternoon and was good to go.
October:September:
B: 7x / 17.25 hrs / 327 miles (none since the 17th)
R: 24x / 23.75 hrs / 166.7 miles (over half in the last 10 days)
S: 3x / 2.5 hrs / 7,500 yards
ST: 5x
YTD:
B: 88x / 136 hrs / 2687 miles
R: 160x / 146.75 hrs / 1,026.7 miles
S: 68x / 53.5 hrs / 176,150 yds
ST: 53x
Hit most of September's goals but once again I need to do more strength training. (this is all too common, I gotta get my ### in gear) but with the century ride, recovering, and ramping up running I haven't felt like squatting or doing anything extra. Swimming took a big hit and I might be out of the pool for a while, haven't quite figured that out yet. I might go at lunch a couple times a week.
But what does it look like now?Don't want to jinx myself, but looking good right now. Temps in mid 50's. 10% chance of rain.
But what does it look like now?
you're running too fastI couldn't disagree more. 10K is the most miserable distance conceivable. Almost all the pain of a 5K but for over twice as long.
you make a good point. 1 - yes, Juxt runs entirely too fast. 2 - it's only miserable if you're working.you're running too fastI couldn't disagree more. 10K is the most miserable distance conceivable. Almost all the pain of a 5K but for over twice as long.![]()
i've found the key to the 10k is just run it casually and enjoy the sightsyou make a good point. 1 - yes, Juxt runs entirely too fast. 2 - it's only miserable if you're working.![]()
What is your normal diet plan for the week leading up to the race? Always interested in this to see if there is something I can do better.Just ordered my custom pacing bands for NYC. Decided to go with 3:19:59 (sub 3:20) and also 3:18:49 (7:35/mile pace).
Now that we are five days out, the weather starts to actually come into focus. Looking good. High of 56, low of 41. "Breezy with some sun." 3% chance of rain.
When I ran NYC in 2014, I dealt with 40-50 mph winds, so I'm used to "breezy".
Eat more than 800cal a day.What is your normal diet plan for the week leading up to the race? Always interested in this to see if there is something I can do better.
For all that went wrong with my race if there's one thing I think I nailed it was the diet. Veering from your question some, I think the most important thing that I did was really clean it up a month prior. From a high level, I tightened some things up the last 10 days, but by mostly maintaining my usual routine my body didn't give me the finger (food-wise anyway) race day. I added a few pounds during the taper, but due to the forecasted heat I believe it was all water weight. Next time around I don't want to think much about diet during training; I want it to be instinctive from previously developed habits.What is your normal diet plan for the week leading up to the race? Always interested in this to see if there is something I can do better.
I actually eat normally. I don't do dessert or fatty foods or anything. Just normal eating and healthy eating.What is your normal diet plan for the week leading up to the race? Always interested in this to see if there is something I can do better.