Train smart & listen to my body! Become a D1 All American!
Long-Term Running Goals:
One step at a time...
Personal:
Attend CU in Architectural Engineering.
"If you can fill the unforgiving minute With sixty seconds' worth of distance run, Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it, And - which is more - you'll be a Man, my son!"
Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:
This week:
0.00
Month:
0.00
Year:
0.00
Tue, Jul 04, 2006
Easy Miles
Marathon Pace Miles
Threshold Miles
VO2 Max Miles
Crosstraining miles
Total Miles
0.00
0.00
0.00
3.10
0.00
3.10
Ran a 5k today and did so in 16:49. I am dissapointed because I felt that I did not run my best, and that I could have improved my time by a factor of at least 45 seconds.
Comments
From Sasha Pachev on Thu, Jul 06, 2006 at 11:19:30
Nick:
It is hard sometimes for an altitude runner to take advantage of sea-level right away. It may take a while to convince your mind that your legs can and should really move that fast.
Also, you might possibly be overtrained from pushing the pace every day. Try doing hard-easy combinations. Go hard one day, then jog very easy the next day or maybe even two, then repeat.
Add Your Comment.
Keep it family-safe. No vulgar or profane language.
To discourage anonymous comments of cowardly nature, your IP
address will be logged and posted next to your comment.
Do not respond to another person's comment out of context. If
he made the original comment on another page/blog entry,
go to that entry and
respond there.
If all you want to do is contact the blogger and your comment
is not connected with this entry and has no relevance to others,
send a private message instead.