Thanks for the responses. So Paul if I understand you correctly, you think the down time recovering from injury lead to you having breakout years? My question is, why isn't rest preached more? Why do we only hear run x number of miles 6 days a week year round? Should we all act like we have an injury and take off running time each year in order to get faster?
Well, I'm being mostly tongue-in-cheek. But I do think some down time is good. It can either be a couple weeks completely off, or just really easy miles for a few weeks or a month or so. Injuries are never good things, but obviously some good can come out of it. But we should be doing these good things anyway (rest), rather than waiting for an injury to force the issue. Again, this doesn't have to be complete time off, but could be simple
running for a while rather than
training. (the two are different).
I think that rest periods are indeed preached by running experts, but not so much within actual runner communities. It's just too fun to race a lot, and the feeling of fitness is rather addicting, so I think it's in our nature to push the envelope too far.
Just to balance things out, I also think
continuity of training is very important. Injuries, sickness, and other interruptions disrupt this and impede increases in fitness. To once again draw examples from my own life, my best racing years (mentioned above) also came during long periods of interrupted training. Never missed more than a day or two in a row during these times. Some magical happens during these really consistent periods, and fitness seems to build very fast. In some ways, I think that
consistency is almost more important than
total volume. In other words, I think I can run faster on a steady 60 mpw, and not missing any days, than doing 90 miles/week but being really inconsistent by missing weeks or days and letting mileage wildly fluctuate.
Another concept that I feel is important (but under-utilized) is
periodization. For example, going through a phase of base, a phase of 10K, then marathon. Repeat the theme and variations. A period of base, a period of half marathon training, a period of rest (easy base), then more half marathon, and then marathon. Rest (or active rest) is part of periodization and has a role in "training". Doing the same training (esp marathon training) over and over again, all year long, IMO leaves runners stale and open to injury. Mix things up a little, train for different distances over the course of a year, and you will have opportunities to work on both speed and endurance. I think many runners
only train for the marathon...which hurts them in the long run. A nice 10K cycle, or a season-long focus on the half marathon, will keep things fresh and ultimately decrease marathon times too. Yeah, running 3-4 marathons/year can be fun, but I've become convinced (the hard way) that it's a bad way to go if you are serious about getting the best performance out of yourself in the marathon. If your goals are to run a lot of marathons, travel, and do the whole "multiple marathon" thing, then that's great. Been there myself, so I understand. But I think two, or even one, marathon per year is probably optimal in terms of pure performance. Just my opinion, so no need to get upset if you disagree.