Sasha Pachev
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« Reply #1 on: June 04, 2008, 02:47:05 pm » |
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When a race is only a couple of days away, 95% of the outcome has already been decided by your preparation, be it good or bad. It is a time to relax . Once the gun goes off, just immerse yourself in the race, let it happen, and happily take whatever it gives you as an indicator of your current fitness. Then look at the time, splits, and overall experience, learn from it, and adjust your training appropriately.
The "run fast while I can" strategy is not necessarily bad. Your body might be prone to developing certain problems as the race goes on regardless of the pace. In that event you want to run as fast as possible before the problems develop, and mentally prepare yourself to deal with them when they arrive.
A common mistake made by optimistic and ambitious runners is thinking that somehow the problems they experienced in earlier races will not happen in this one. If your training, nutrition, sleep, and other activities relevant to your performance have not drastically changed, much more likely than not the next race will be a repeat of the last one. With only two days to go it is too late to do anything to reduce the possibility of the crash. However, you can still gain a significant chunk of time by making plans on what you are going to do to deal with it when it happens.
One thing I would suggest is find a faster friend that would be willing to run with you at least the final miles of the race if not from start to finish. When your pace starts to slow your friend will naturally keep the pace you were going earlier. You can instruct your friend to challenge you to slap his hand every 30 seconds or so without making it too easy. When you are fatigued it is very easy to get angry at the friend and rebel against the idea. Make a promise to yourself that you will humbly obey your friend's instructions and make keeping that promise the utmost focus of the race.
Also drink lots of Powerade/Gatorade if you can stomach it once you start feeling depressed. Low blood sugar causes depression, which is why it is common to have negative thoughts towards the end of a long race. One time I was in the lead of marathon at mile 23 with nobody in sight, and still holding good pace. I was headed for a 5+ minute PR, $1000 cash prize + a treadmill. All of a sudden I felt an overwhelming urge to lay down and just quit. Knowing the source of the thought as well as the absurdity of the idea quickly brought me to my senses, but this goes to show that odd thoughts can enter your mind even when the race is going very well.
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