Sasha Pachev
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« Reply #3 on: June 17, 2008, 12:05:54 pm » |
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James:
Something is not quite right. I cannot quite figure out what it is right now. One day you race very well, and then a short while later you are way slower than the other race would predict. Some possibilities:
a) Overtraining b) Nutritional errors c) Lack of sleep
Whether it is a problem or not, addressing all of the above is a good idea. You will not make things worse by improving in each of the areas above.
To address a) - ease off on your runs to no faster than 8:00 pace. If you do speed at all, keep the interval to no longer than 200 meters, and do no more than 5 of those. Occasional 5 K races could serve as tempo runs.
To address b) - do not eat junk. Eat foods, not brand names. Oatmeal, apples, bananas, cherries, strawberries, nuts, etc. Not Brand Name 1, Brand Name 2, Brand Name 3. Make sure to eat a healthy breakfast. Get some food in you as soon as you finish a workout. Drink water or juices, not soda pop. Less processed, more natural. It may be a good idea logging everything you eat and when. Then you might be able to detect patterns of correlation between nutrition and performance. Discipline and consistency are the key.
For c) , go to bed early and be consistent about it. Take naps in the afternoon as well. Make it a practice to lay down for 15-20 minutes every day to see if your body needs a nap.
I would also make sure that you get to run at your top end speed for a little bit once or twice a week. This could be a formal workout where you run 100 all out a couple of times on the track, or you can just play an active game that involves occasional running at top speed.
My philosophy on running performance - you run 90% off your health and 10% off your training. By building your health at young age you will have more Quality X as an adult, and your training will take you a lot further. Therefore, at this point you should not care very much about how well you run in the upcoming race X or race Y, but everything should be focused on helping your body properly go through maturity so that both speed and endurance age-progress appropriately. A natural consequence of that is that you will eventually find yourself doing better in every race without trying too hard.
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