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 - Official Thread (8 Viewers)

What’s with all this sportsmanship bull####?

Team juxt came

Team juxt saw

Team juxt drank the beet juice and BMFd the living daylights out of that chump of a wanna be running slobs teamgrue 

Next event is just going to be more of the same. The better team winning and teamgrue losing. GET USED TO IT!!

Someone has to finish second place, not that teamjuxt would know

 
Well my charger came in today so I laced them up for the first time in 6 weeks.  Team Gru can hang the loss on me and it wasn't even close.  Goal was to break 30 minutes and kick off some serious training for the 10k event.

1.5 mile warmup - Not sure why I did this other than to cut down on the walk back at the end, probably just made me tried.

Mile 1 - 9:06 pace, HR 132, 70 ft net down.  Didn't feel too bad.  Looking forward to the one miler in June.  Started off faster than goal pace to take advantage of the lower heart rate.

Mile 2 - 9:52 pace, HR 163, 30 ft net up.  My HR, is now right against threshold and my legs are starting to feel heavy.  WTF am I doing this.  Starting to have thoughts that my motor is going to blow and I'm not going to make it.  How the F did I run a marathon 6 weeks ago?  Gaining huge respect for you shovel toting BMFs who would be in the home stretch now and cussing you dum-dum sucking fools who would be done with their cool down lap by now.

Mile 3 - 9:30 pace, HR 167, 88 ft net down.  I wave zone 4 goodbye this mile for the duration.  Starting to feel sick to my stomach and this mile seems like it's never going to end.  Looking for the aid station with beer but I never saw it.  

Mile 3.1 - 8:36 pace, HR 174, flat.  Finally the home stretch.  Head is spinning and HR is pegged at max.  Finish and immediately start dry heaving.  Looked at the watch and am happy that I cracked 30....29:23.
Glad to see you're back out there feeling decent and happy with the result.

 
What’s with all this sportsmanship bull####?
Lighten up, Francis!  The competition was a means to an end ...motivation to train and race while other racing is shut down; and competition and camaraderie among an unusual group of i-/real friends .  While very friendly, it was a wonderfully competitive few days.  Half the group set PRs, despite the circumstances and generally limited training.  Let's just celebrate those successes and enjoy it together ...no losers here.

 
Lighten up, Francis!  The competition was a means to an end ...motivation to train and race while other racing is shut down; and competition and camaraderie among an unusual group of i-/real friends .  While very friendly, it was a wonderfully competitive few days.  Half the group set PRs, despite the circumstances and generally limited training.  Let's just celebrate those successes and enjoy it together ...no losers here.
I'm pretty sure he was just having some fun there. Lighten up, Francis! 

;)  

 
  • Thanks
Reactions: JAA
Glad to see you're back out there feeling decent and happy with the result.
Happy is relative.  What ever I had sickness wise kicked my butt.  Cough and tired for 3.5 weeks.  Been working 10-12 hours days for ages with all of my staff watching netflix working from home.  Looking forward to getting is a training routine.  Need to find something challenging late in the year as additional motivation.  Just scared to sign up for anything now knowing I'm likely donating a entry fee for nothing.

Watching you guys destroy this 5k event was pretty inspirational.  

 
I want to thank all of you guys. Seriously. These last 4 days were so much fun to be a part of. The experiences I've had with so many of you now are things I would have never guessed I'd be a part of. Running has really been a life changing thing for me and I only wish I had started sooner in life.  But, I also don't think it would have been the same without you guys here teaching, guiding, supporting, and sharing.

You could try to explain what we just did to other people and they just wouldn't get it. Reading these reports of most of us hallucinating, dry heaving, vomiting, curling up in the grass next to the road for precious seconds in a "meaningless" online competition is just crazy. Yet a ridiculous number of PRs later, and here we are. 

I'm not looking forward to this 10K but I'll be there. And best of luck to @JShare87 and @SFBayDuck to heal up soon and join us. I know it sucks being on the sideline and yet you guys still showed up to follow along which is hard to do.

Epic weekend gents.

 
I enjoyed this but must admit I'm kind of hoping they postpone the HIM on May 24. They haven't yet, it's fairly small. Other events around that time are postponed.

I am really looking forward to the sprint tri in mid June. 

 
Lighten up, Francis!  The competition was a means to an end ...motivation to train and race while other racing is shut down; and competition and camaraderie among an unusual group of i-/real friends .  While very friendly, it was a wonderfully competitive few days.  Half the group set PRs, despite the circumstances and generally limited training.  Let's just celebrate those successes and enjoy it together ...no losers here on team juxt
FYP

 
Alright, Virtual 10K'ers....

Could use some guidance. I should be starting week 5 of 18 in marathon training. I've completed 0 weeks so far as my time off started 1 week before I was to start.

To recap, it's a modified plan with 3 workouts/week (Tu/Th/Sat) with easy running 3 other days. With that, it averages 35-45 now.

My thinking was to take it easy this week and go for maybe 20-25 miles, all easy running. Make sure the knee feels fine, do a couple 5-6 mile runs and a couple shorter runs. Then, assuming it goes well, try to jump into week 6.

Reasonable? Other suggestions?

 
Alright, Virtual 10K'ers....

Could use some guidance. I should be starting week 5 of 18 in marathon training. I've completed 0 weeks so far as my time off started 1 week before I was to start.

To recap, it's a modified plan with 3 workouts/week (Tu/Th/Sat) with easy running 3 other days. With that, it averages 35-45 now.

My thinking was to take it easy this week and go for maybe 20-25 miles, all easy running. Make sure the knee feels fine, do a couple 5-6 mile runs and a couple shorter runs. Then, assuming it goes well, try to jump into week 6.

Reasonable? Other suggestions?
What are the 3 workouts/week?  And what are the easy days consisting of? Six days per week could be a lot when trying to ramp up from injury IMO. Unless I"m reading that wrong.

I'm usually on the conservative approach regarding training and dealing with injuries though. For example, when I feel something coming on in the middle of a training block I have no issues with shutting it down for three or four days in a row and doing some stretching/core work while the ship rights itself. 

I think you're right on track with 20-25 miles/week starting out and getting some base miles in to see how things feel. Coming back from injury I feel that there's no harm in taking it a week at a time and not thinking too much into the future. My advice would be to complete this week's workouts and take note of how the body is feeling overall (sometimes knees can throw other things out of alignment), get some good stretching/core work in and then plan next week over the weekend. You'll have a better idea of what the knee is capable of next week after this week.

 
Alright, Virtual 10K'ers....

Could use some guidance. I should be starting week 5 of 18 in marathon training. I've completed 0 weeks so far as my time off started 1 week before I was to start.

To recap, it's a modified plan with 3 workouts/week (Tu/Th/Sat) with easy running 3 other days. With that, it averages 35-45 now.

My thinking was to take it easy this week and go for maybe 20-25 miles, all easy running. Make sure the knee feels fine, do a couple 5-6 mile runs and a couple shorter runs. Then, assuming it goes well, try to jump into week 6.

Reasonable? Other suggestions?
I would not do anything > easy between now and after your first stepback week - whenever that is.

 
What are the 3 workouts/week?  And what are the easy days consisting of? Six days per week could be a lot when trying to ramp up from injury IMO. Unless I"m reading that wrong.

I'm usually on the conservative approach regarding training and dealing with injuries though. For example, when I feel something coming on in the middle of a training block I have no issues with shutting it down for three or four days in a row and doing some stretching/core work while the ship rights itself. 

I think you're right on track with 20-25 miles/week starting out and getting some base miles in to see how things feel. Coming back from injury I feel that there's no harm in taking it a week at a time and not thinking too much into the future. My advice would be to complete this week's workouts and take note of how the body is feeling overall (sometimes knees can throw other things out of alignment), get some good stretching/core work in and then plan next week over the weekend. You'll have a better idea of what the knee is capable of next week after this week.
This is the plan.  It's one speed workout (intervals), one tempo run, one long run.  It's a relatively low mileage plan which is why I was modifying the cross-training days to be easy running.  Anything from 3-5 miles and I can adjust how I feel.  So I can keep it at 5 days to start if need be.  I was at 40 mpw prior to shutting things down 6 weeks ago.  So the initial plan was to keep the same-ish volume while incorporating the workouts.  None of those workouts are going to be terribly difficult as our goal pace is relatively conservative.  Those speed workouts I'll be planning a 7:00 pace (like what I just ran yesterday for almost a mile).  I can even dial that back to 7:15 to start.  The tempo pace is going to be at 8:00-8:15 pace.  And our GMP is 8:40 so most of those long runs will be > 9:00. 

I would not do anything > easy between now and after your first stepback week - whenever that is.
I don't quite understand what that means.  In the link above, I should be starting on the week labeled 14.  Next week is when I'd start with #13.  Overall it's not a bad week of workouts, I don't think.

 
@El Floppo @JAA  Gianmarco was joking.  The 10K is the weekend of May 16.  The mile is the weekend of June 13.
If things get back on track that's the date of my local sprint tri. 

I don't think I'd want to count a mile in that race here, so I need to figure out if running a mile on Thursday is better for the race on Saturday or if I'd be okay to run a quality mile the day after the tri. Thankfully it's not a long race either way. (Will probably go Thursday)

 
I don't quite understand what that means.  In the link above, I should be starting on the week labeled 14.  Next week is when I'd start with #13.  Overall it's not a bad week of workouts, I don't think.
You've ran 29 miles in the last 5 weeks. I think it's a great thing that you identified the source of the problem, but the problem also developed immediately after you raced two times in less than a week, which was some of the first something of substance you had done since...I don't remember when.

I'd focus on (easy running!) raw mileage between now and the mini taper for the 10K with plans on using that race to springboard you into the SoS workouts the plan calls for. Too much, too hard, too soon and you're gonna end up right back where you were at the end of March.

 
I get it, you are starting behind. You think if you get further behind then it's going to snow ball. But I think you'll surprise yourself. That's why you did all of that volume from Dec-Feb. It'll be a frustrating month, but if you manage this healthy your fitness will bounce back - probably very suddenly.

 
This is the plan.  It's one speed workout (intervals), one tempo run, one long run.  It's a relatively low mileage plan which is why I was modifying the cross-training days to be easy running.  Anything from 3-5 miles and I can adjust how I feel.  So I can keep it at 5 days to start if need be.  I was at 40 mpw prior to shutting things down 6 weeks ago.  So the initial plan was to keep the same-ish volume while incorporating the workouts.  None of those workouts are going to be terribly difficult as our goal pace is relatively conservative.  Those speed workouts I'll be planning a 7:00 pace (like what I just ran yesterday for almost a mile).  I can even dial that back to 7:15 to start.  The tempo pace is going to be at 8:00-8:15 pace.  And our GMP is 8:40 so most of those long runs will be > 9:00. 

I don't quite understand what that means.  In the link above, I should be starting on the week labeled 14.  Next week is when I'd start with #13.  Overall it's not a bad week of workouts, I don't think.
Step one - overthink it

step 2 - couple of easy weeks with 3-5 runs and 20-30 miles

step 3 - stay easy @ volume,  add a few miles at tempo mid run

step 4 - more easy days, add some strides like 20 seconds to a couple

step 5 - more easy days, longer run with a bit of tempo

You’ll know when to go for speed workout.  More structured speed seems to re-injure me more in hindsight than doing speed in midst of runs. 

 
Thanks, guys.  That makes sense.  I'll keep the next 2 weeks easy and then reevaluate.  If things cooperate, I'll try and get a longer run in at the end of the 2 weeks to see how things feel as well. 

 
Alright, Virtual 10K'ers....

Could use some guidance. I should be starting week 5 of 18 in marathon training. I've completed 0 weeks so far as my time off started 1 week before I was to start.

To recap, it's a modified plan with 3 workouts/week (Tu/Th/Sat) with easy running 3 other days. With that, it averages 35-45 now.

My thinking was to take it easy this week and go for maybe 20-25 miles, all easy running. Make sure the knee feels fine, do a couple 5-6 mile runs and a couple shorter runs. Then, assuming it goes well, try to jump into week 6.

Reasonable? Other suggestions?
Im thinking we run the 10k in 2 weeks

 
You've ran 29 miles in the last 5 weeks. I think it's a great thing that you identified the source of the problem, but the problem also developed immediately after you raced two times in less than a week, which was some of the first something of substance you had done since...I don't remember when.

I'd focus on (easy running!) raw mileage between now and the mini taper for the 10K with plans on using that race to springboard you into the SoS workouts the plan calls for. Too much, too hard, too soon and you're gonna end up right back where you were at the end of March.
Agree.  MAF this ####.  Lots of z0/z1

 
@El Floppo @JAA  Gianmarco was joking.  The 10K is the weekend of May 16.  The mile is the weekend of June 13.
As said, I've already started my taper and this new news changed nothing 

If things get back on track that's the date of my local sprint tri. 

I don't think I'd want to count a mile in that race here, so I need to figure out if running a mile on Thursday is better for the race on Saturday or if I'd be okay to run a quality mile the day after the tri. Thankfully it's not a long race either way. (Will probably go Thursday)
How long is the sprint? 

Thursday is definitely better...unless you're concerned about fitness or time for the tri.

 
Damn. May 16 isn't much time.

What did I say my time would be? And where is that info saved...other than this thread? I'm imagining Gian with a large Carrie/Homeland wall covered with photos and stats connected by different colored string.

 
As said, I've already started my taper and this new news changed nothing 

How long is the sprint? 

Thursday is definitely better...unless you're concerned about fitness or time for the tri.
Definitely concerned about the time for the tri. Just because I want to do well 

400 meter open water swim, 15k bike ride, 5k run. I'd love to break my time from 4 years ago (last time I did it) 54:04. Under an hour is the backup goal. 

 
  • Love
Reactions: JAA
It might be nice to get new projected times/goals for the 10K.  There were a lot of sandbaggers for the 5K and this weekend's races should give us a better idea.

My goal is 37:11 which is 5:59 pace.

 
Jack Daniels' VDOT Calculator has an equivalent result that I find to be fairly accurate
HAHAHAHAH it gives me a 3:15 marathon time and a 1:33 HM, based on my 5K from this weekend.  No way on this earth I could do either of those.

Given this, I think it's also being aggressive predicting a 42:18 10K for me.

At this point I'll sign-up for 44:59.  Which is more than a minute faster than the 46:03 it predicts if I use my November HM time and calculate down to 10K (instead of up from the 5K).

 
HAHAHAHAH it gives me a 3:15 marathon time and a 1:33 HM, based on my 5K from this weekend.  No way on this earth I could do either of those.

Given this, I think it's also being aggressive predicting a 42:18 10K for me.

At this point I'll sign-up for 44:59.  Which is more than a minute faster than the 46:03 it predicts if I use my November HM time and calculate down to 10K (instead of up from the 5K).
You could do a 1:33 HM, I'm sure of it. Full marathon is about getting you to eat more cheeseburgers and have some fat to burn late in the race, IMO. You are a lot faster than you give yourself credit for. 

 
HAHAHAHAH it gives me a 3:15 marathon time and a 1:33 HM, based on my 5K from this weekend.  No way on this earth I could do either of those.

Given this, I think it's also being aggressive predicting a 42:18 10K for me.

At this point I'll sign-up for 44:59.  Which is more than a minute faster than the 46:03 it predicts if I use my November HM time and calculate down to 10K (instead of up from the 5K).
That marathon time and half marathon time is totally achievable for you.

 
It might be nice to get new projected times/goals for the 10K.  There were a lot of sandbaggers for the 5K and this weekend's races should give us a better idea.
I think it was a combination of sandbagging and also people finding some very favorable courses.  The overperformance would not have been as severe if people had been running loops.

I was considering doing a point to point for the 10K along a rail trail about 30 minutes from me that has a nice decline and will often have a tailwind, but that leads me to the aforementioned conundrum about warmup and cooldown.  I will probably do ~1 mile warmup, and the thought of a 5 mile cooldown after a 10K is awful.  I might try to start the race at a flattish section, run "uphill" for 1-1.5 miles, then turn around and run the rest of the 10K in the favorable direction.   

I don't remember what I put in, but on a fair course I should be able to do 42:30 with a puncher's chance of breaking 42:00, which would be my goal.  I'm sure the calculators would put me lower than that, but playing with them in the past the 5K is definitely my strongest distance.

 
You could do a 1:33 HM, I'm sure of it. Full marathon is about getting you to eat more cheeseburgers and have some fat to burn late in the race, IMO. You are a lot faster than you give yourself credit for.


That marathon time and half marathon time is totally achievable for you.
I love you guys, and appreciate all the faith you have in me.  Based on my 5K this weekend, I feel good that I could run a 1:39 HM right now (back to the fall when I basically did it in training), maybe even a couple minutes faster -- given how I sandbag myself on goals.  

But the marathon is a whole different animal.  There's something about the 30K mark where I just fall apart.  I feel like I could run a strong pace for 30K, but beyond that my muscles just decide they're done.

I would consider it a monumental achievement to BQ (currently 3:20 in my AG), but it feels like it's at least a couple more years of training away.

 
HAHAHAHAH it gives me a 3:15 marathon time and a 1:33 HM, based on my 5K from this weekend.  No way on this earth I could do either of those.

Given this, I think it's also being aggressive predicting a 42:18 10K for me.

At this point I'll sign-up for 44:59.  Which is more than a minute faster than the 46:03 it predicts if I use my November HM time and calculate down to 10K (instead of up from the 5K).
Well assuming you've put in the mileage to run those distances it's definitely achievable I would say. I will say that usually the calculators work best when you're stepping down in distance because the shorter distances are built into the longer times that are already achieved.

 
I will say that usually the calculators work best when you're stepping down in distance because the shorter distances are built into the longer times that are already achieved.
Which is why I feel better deducting a minute from the "down from HM calculation" than sticking with the "up from 5K" calculation.

44:59.  

Which is also faster than the time I provided for @Juxtatarot draft decisions!

 
Last edited by a moderator:
I love you guys, and appreciate all the faith you have in me.  Based on my 5K this weekend, I feel good that I could run a 1:39 HM right now (back to the fall when I basically did it in training), maybe even a couple minutes faster -- given how I sandbag myself on goals.  

But the marathon is a whole different animal.  There's something about the 30K mark where I just fall apart.  I feel like I could run a strong pace for 30K, but beyond that my muscles just decide they're done.

I would consider it a monumental achievement to BQ (currently 3:20 in my AG), but it feels like it's at least a couple more years of training away.
I totally know you could do the HM, probably close to 1:30 if you sets your sights on it and got good weather, etc. I'm sure of it. I'm no expert by any means but solving the problem with the marathon seems to be nutritional, imo. You are like 6'10 and weigh like 105. Find a way to keep your body from digesting itself the last 1/4 and you'll be golden! 

 
Hey, what ever happened to the "draw something an Strava" monthly challenge that our real resident doctor proposed?  Seems like that could be some quarantine fun.

 
JD calculator has 15 second / mile differential for 5k to 10k paces.

I think that’s bat #### crazy for me even fit - more likely I have never been fit per se. 

I am thinking 7:15 per is my estimate (45 mins).  My 47 min est was very baggy. Will spend my training paces 7-715ish and see what route I can dial up. 

 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top