Sasha Pachev
|
|
« Reply #5 on: August 21, 2008, 11:45:14 am » |
|
Dale - things are a bit more complex. To run a good marathon you need to have very solid overall body health in addition to the specific fuel storage training. Underperforming liver, for example, could annul an incredible amount of aerobic conditioning in the last 8 miles of a marathon. My advice on bridging the gap is to eat consistently healthy, sleep consistently well, and keep on training consistently. Your body right now is in a remedial phase transitioning from being an American runner to a Kenyan runner, if we can use this politically incorrect metaphor. That phase may last a while, and complete only partially, but there will be progress overtime. Be patient.
Jeff - indeed Hobble Creek half is an aided course, so my 1:07:03 (which was done on a faster version of the course than what they have now, BTW, probably by a minute) cannot be compared with my 5 K performances. Nevertheless, it is not uncommon for me to run a 5 K on the same type of terrain on a bad day slower than my average pace in a half marathon on the same terrain on a good day. Even comparing apples and apples, good day for both. This year my three fastest non-aided 5 Ks have been 16:20, 16:25, and 16:28. 16:20 was done off poor sleep, in cold weather, and with little warmup. 16:25 was done on a slippery road. But nevertheless in spite of running numerous other 5 Ks I never went faster on a non-aided course, so we have to use those.
At the same time I've run a non-aided 10 K in 32:59 closing the second half in 16:16. I suspect the second half may have been slightly aided by the tail wind. But I still got 16:29 average. I've also run a non-aided 15 K on a rather off day in 50:43. That is 16:54 average. I ran a very non-aided and windy half in 1:13:19, which comes out to 17:22 per 5 K. The first 5 K in that race was on a non-windy section, and I covered it in 16:43.
So the bottom line - not much of a difference between 5 K and half marathon, enough to where with a little of bit of good luck for the half, and a little bit of bad luck for the 5 K the half could be run at a faster pace. Some more food for thought. In the last 4 years when running over 80 miles a week I never saw my HR over 174. One time when I cut the mileage to 70 for a couple of months I managed to hit 175 on a hill in a 5 K race on a brutal course. I've never seen it any higher than that period since 2004. I have a hard time keeping HR over 168 for more than a couple of minutes in any race, even just a 5 K. Yet on a good day I can maintain 163 or even 165 in a half-marathon. 163/175 is 93%.
Why? My number one suspect is the neural drive. In 2000 my max HR was over 190. In 2002 during a treadmill test I sustained 175 fairly comfortably. Do not remember what I maxed out at, but I do recall seeing it at 178 and not being exceptionally miserable. However, it was in 2004 that I discovered that my running HR patterns have settled into their current shape (I suspect it actually happened around the summer of 2003, but I never used an HRM around that time). All this happened with no changes in the resting HR (has been the same since the age of 16), and correlated with improved performances in all distances, smaller in shorter distances and larger in longer ones. I also stopped feeling normal pain (with only very few exceptions) after workouts and races in spite of trying very hard to do my best. During the race the normal discomfort from breathing hard and burning or sore legs has been replaced with the mere frustration of seeing the competition pull away while there was nothing I could do to go faster for apparently no good reason.
I suspect that my heart could still hit 183-185 max, and be able to sustain 170 in a long race. But I would have to sustain about 5:00 pace to hold the HR of 170, and probably 4:20 for a mile to go over 180. The neural drive to do it is just not there. So I am stuck with racing at speeds that are still respectable, but below the cardio and muscular potential for a while. On the positive side of things, the risk of injury is very low, and the recovery is very fast.
|