Jeff Linger
|
|
« Reply #2 on: December 10, 2008, 01:38:01 pm » |
|
I'll throw my 2 cents in and back up the "go out at a dream pace and see how long you can hold it" bit. I did a 5 month season that culminated with a BQ performance at St Louis last April (3:11:31). I began another training season in June and after 4 months felt that I should be able to run better than I was. I had previously hit a 1:30:35 half last November and in September was only able to run about 5 seconds/mile faster than I had done last November. I couldn't figure it out. I had this hankering that it was my race approach. I tend to go out conservative until about the half-way point and then drop the hammer. Most of this was based on a fear that I couldn't do it. So in October I went out for a training run. I did a 2 mile warm-up at 7:45 pace, then hit 2 miles at 7:00 pace, then I dropped the hammer down to 6:15 and just tried to see how long I could hold it. To be honest, I didn't realize I was running 6:15s, which was probably an advantage, had I known this, I might have convinced myself that I couldn't hold it. I was able to hold the pace for 7 miles before I found myself back at home. My splits were 6:13s for 3 miles, 6:11s for 2 miles, and 6:09s for the last 2. I didn't check my splits while I was running though. Somewhere around mile 8 of the 11 mile total run I found myself talking out loud. Saying things like, ok, lets try to hold this for 5 more minutes, ok, lets go for the crossroad of such and such, ok, lets go for 1 more mile. Had I not run out of real estate I might have been able to hold it longer, who knows. But the short of this long was that a month later I was confident in my ability to run a sub 6:30 pace for a half marathon or better. I went out at this pace and ended hitting a 6:28/mile ave pace. There is no doubt in my mind that this single workout was the breakthrough workout that I needed.
|