adam
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« Reply #2 on: March 17, 2008, 03:10:34 pm » |
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I agree with what Sasha said here. Tapering helps if done right, but sometimes you can do better when you aren't so concerned about every little thing during the week/days before. If you are running significant miles the months before your marathon, and have been running well on your long runs without tapering for those, then you probably won't hurt yourself in the race by running normal during the week of the race and cutting back on some of the intensity and miles a few days out to keep fresh.
I especially believe in running something normal the day before a race, just like something you would run the day before or after a hard workout. If you would normally feel stressed because you only ran 4 miles one day, and not your normal doubles or whatever, you probably aren't going to like it when you do that during a taper. Even after you try and convice yourself it's good for you, you still can feel more stressed than usual. So to counteract that stress feeling, go out easy for a bit longer run or still run doubles and just do much less. But do something that makes your body feel as it normally does, fresh and happy. Your body is used to that, and will be ready to roll on race day.
Just ask yourself this: How many times have you ran well some random day during training with what felt like no effort at all? You weren't thinking about running so well the weeks before that day, didn't taper, and you felt relaxed and great. Granted, tapering may help you reproduce this effect, but if it the cutdown is giving you more time to think too much and stress yourself out, it may not help as much. Your training and mindset is what is going to make the bulk of the race happen for you. During a race you don't think "I should have run x less miles during my taper", but rather, "I am glad I did so many miles in training, because I am flying today!".
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