| Location: Fort Collins,CO, Member Since: May 15, 2003 Gender: Male Goal Type: Local Elite Running Accomplishments: Unaided PR's:
5K: 14:48 (Track - 2001)
10K: 30:45 (Track - 2001)
10K: 31:32 (Bolder Boulder - 2013)
Half Marathon: 1:06:09 (Duluth - 2013)
Marathon: 2:17:54 (Grandma's) - 2014)
Marathon: 2:19:47 (Indianapolis Monumental - 2013)
Marathon: 2:19:49 (Indianapolis Monumental - 2010)
Aided PR's:
10K: 29:38 (Des News - 2011)
Half Marathon: 1:05:30 (TOU Half - 2011)
Marathon: 2:18:09 (St George - 2007)
Marathon: 2:17:35 (Boston - 2011) Short-Term Running Goals: Diagnosed with Ankylosing Spondylitis in June of 2008. Started taking Enbrel in March, 2009.
Run as much as I can, and race as well as I can. Make the most of however much time I have left as an able-bodied runner.
Training for the 2018 Colorado Marathon Long-Term Running Goals: Run until I'm old, and then run some more. Stand tall. Personal: 1 wife, 2 kids. 1 cat. Work as a GIS Specialist/Map Geek
Endure and persist; this pain will turn to your good. - Ovid
Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not disappoint us, because God has poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has given us. - Romans 5:1-5
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 3303.80 | 204.70 | 172.55 | 44.55 | 39.50 | 3765.10 |
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 12.00 |
| Oh boy, a blank training calendar! Started the year out by running to the gym, doing 30 minutes on the elliptical, lifted, stretched, and then ran back home and continued north to 2200 N, out-and-back. Left the watch off, since it's a holiday and all.
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I've added a new blog entry on my webpage about New Years Goals |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.30 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.30 |
| Did a modified Providence Hill Loop with 6x100m strides in the middle. Covered 8 miles in 55:10 (6:53/mile). Strides were on a slight downhill and I tried to focus on leg turnover and form. Jogged around the block with the dog afterward. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 11.00 |
| Warmer out today. I ran from work to the gym and hit the paved River Trail on way. I did the Golden Mile each way at brisk pace and collected 5:30 splits (6:03/mile pace). Then I stopped at the gym and did 30 minutes on the elliptical, and then some chin-ups and lunges. Ran back to work via the TOU course and average around 7:00/mile. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Day off
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I've posted a new blog entry on my webpage on "Itchin' to Race" | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
| AM - Went to gym and lifted weights, stretched. PM - Ran a brisk-pace run, a similar landfill loop to last week, except added a mile by doing an out-and-back to 200N near the landfill. Picked it up for the middle three miles and ran mile splits ranging 6:05-6:15 for that stretch. Added 4x100m strides near end. They felt slow, but I tried to focus on form. Averaged 6:24/mile for the entire 9-mile run. It's interesting reading people's logs who live along the Wasatch Front. It sounds like they have received much worse weather than Logan all winter. I have only had to shovel snow once, and it was only about 2 inches. Footing and road/sidewalk conditions have been excellent here. It's surprising to me, because usually I'm envious of people running in Salt Lake since Logan tends to get the short end of the weather stick. Oh well, it's been a really bad winter here for skiing, but fantastic for running. I'll take it while I can get it! | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.00 |
| Ran a big loop out to Young Ward and around through Icon and back on Golf Course Rd. Ran with Cody, who has one of those fancy Garmin 305 thingys. Our first four mile splits were in the 6:40's and 6:50s, then we turned into a headwind and hit 7:10-7:15 for awhile, and then picked it up to 7:00 pace when we got more favorable wind again. With 1 mile to go we were averaging 7:01/mile, so we picked it up a little to dust the 7-minute guy, who made a guest appearance in Logan. All in all, a pretty good run, and I'm happy to be holding 7:00/mile pace on my longer runs. 53 miles running this week, 55 scheduled for next week. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
| Ran a modified Providence Hill Loop in 61:10 (6:48/mile pace) with 6x100m strides in the middle. Beautiful sunny day here with no hint of haze in the air.
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I've posted a new blog entry about How fast "Super-Tergat" could run at St George. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.00 |
| AM - easy 8 miles, out to First Dam and back, then 1 mile with dog. Ran close to 7:00/mile pace. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
| Gorgeous day today, short-sleeves weather. I decided to do my long run of week today, since the weather is forcasted to get very cold soon, plus I am leaving on a yurt trip Saturday morning and probably won't be able to run. I ran a big loop into Millville and up onto the bench, and back through Providence and River Heights and then on into Logan via Center St. It's a hilly route, and I tried to work the hills to start building that "hill strength". Ended up running 6:38/mile pace for the run. I am very pleased with how training is going right now. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 12.00 |
| Ran to gym and did 30 minutes on elliptical, then some chinups and stretching. Ran back home via the TOU course and grabbed the dog for a half mile, dropped the dog off, and did an out-and-back to the end of the paved river trail, with 6x100m strides in the middle. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.00 |
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I didn't have time to run until night, so I slipped on my reflective vest and braved the icy Logan roads to the gym. I wanted to do a Tinman tempo today, so I decided to try the treadmill rather than slide around on the dark roads the entire time. I've probably ran on a treadmill two or three other times, so had to focus on not flying off the thing. Looking at the TV above and to the right of my head definitely was not an option due to safety reasons. I started off at 6:45 pace, and kept myself entertained by increasing the speed by 0.2 mph every 5 minutes. I hit 5:49/mile pace near the end and was feeling pretty good at that effort. Running is a lot easier without wind resistance. 6:18/mile pace for the overall workout. Ran back home to cool down. I weighed in today at 130.5 lbs. I'm wearing jeans that I had in high school again.
Sasha, you're my hero. Thanks!
Click here for an update an my webpage blog. Big bloggy news.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 2.50 | 11.50 |
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Butt-cold this morning with some new snow, so I decided to opt out to the treadmill again. This time I got one farther back for a better TV viewing angle. It was sweet. This treadmill also had a little feature that showed your position if you were running on a track and counted your track laps. So basically it was trying to take your mind off something boring (treadmill) with something equally boring (track). I wasn't too keen on that feature. But I did appreciate the dual fans to keep me cool. After a 5-minute warmup on elliptical, I jumped on the treadmill for 30 minutes at 6:40/mile, then did 10 minutes on the elliptical, and another 30 minutes on the treadmill at 6:40/mile. Cooled down with 10 minutes on the elliptical. Way too much indoor training for me. Hopefully that is all the treadmill I will have to do for the year. Did some light lifting and stretching afterward. This is the end of my running week, as I will be going on a yurt trip from Saturday through Monday. Hopefully I will get back in time on Monday to get a run in so that I can keep up with the 6 days/week thing. 55 miles total for this week, 60 scheduled for next week.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
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Yurt trip. Left Logan at 8AM and hiked up to the Bunchgrass Yurt. Skiied a few shots, and I managed not to kill myself in the trees. I haven't skiied as much this year as I anticipated due to poor snow, but I was pleased with how my running fitness carried over to the uptrek. I felt good and was not very tire from the hike in.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Day two of yurt trip. Epic day. Skiied the toughest shot I've ever attempted, an avalanche chute off of White Pine Knob into the White Pine drainage. Snow conditions were safe, but I was more concerned about cliffs and rocks. We all made it down, although I had my share of spills, but nothing life threatning. When I looked back up at it, I thought it was pretty stupid to ski that, but what's done is done. Home sweet yurt Twin peaks, Mt Gog and Magog
That's what we skiied down...what was I thinking?! After that we toured up the White Pine drainage and summitted a ridge that we fondly called "Mt Crustmore", because it ended up be very icy and almost impossible to skin up. It took hours to get everyone up it, and by the time we all made it, it was time to turn around and go back to the yurt because of darkness. Half our group, including myself, did a shot on the face called "Magic Land" which was the destination of the horrendous uptrack. Magic Land was quite magical, and I finally got some good turns in the trees. We then uptracked and skidded down Mt Crustmore and reached the bottom by dark. We then hiked back to the yurt the dark. Very cold. Top of Mt Crustmore, entering the realm of MagicLand.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
| Skiied out of yurt back to vehicle by 1PM. Other than dead truck battery, no mishaps. It was good to take my mind off running for a few days, but now it's back to the grind! I did a 9-miler as soon as I got home, otherwise I probably wouldn't get around to it. It took me a few miles to get my running legs back, but I managed to average 6:55/mile pace for the run, and felt pretty good aside from sore quads and butt.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
| Still working the yurt trip out of my legs. Ran 9 miles easy plus 6x100m strides. Very cold. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Waited to run until 2PM to maximize sun and warmth. It wasn't too bad, according to my beard-o-meter (if the beard accumulates ice, it is too cold!). Did a Tinman tempo on the First Dam Run 10k course in 37:55 (6:05/mile pace). It took me a couple miles to get going, but ended up being a decent run. Cooled down afterwards back to the office.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
| Easy 10 miles on Providence Hill Loop, with 6x100m strides. 7:19/mile pace for entire run. I've had a hard time getting going this week. It might be the cold, but is more likely just a "tired" phase of my training. Or maybe a combination of both. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 12.00 |
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AM - Went to gym and did 30 minutes on elliptical. Stretched afterward. Weight 130. PM - Warmer today. Modified Landfill loop from work, with 4x3-minute CV fartlek in middle. I have a new toy to wear, the Timex Bodylink. It is a GPS and HR monitor. I figured out how to use it during the first few minutes of my warmup, and then ran the fartlek. CV pace is supposed to be in between V02Max and LT, a little slower than 10-k pace. My 3:00 intervals were: 5:16/mile pace (HR 164) 5:18/mile pace (HR 171) 5:11/mile pace (HR 173) 5:17/mile pace (HR 175 Average pace for entire run 7:10/mile (skewed due to walking and figuring out toy). Ave HR for run 146. Max for run 181. Fun stuff. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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Did 8 miles with Cody, 4 miles on my own, and 1 mile with the dog. Route was all over the place. Pace was around 7:10/mile. Cold, but felt pretty good. Ave HR 140.
60 miles for the week, 60 scheduled for next week. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
| The snow last night cleared out the air and the inversion has temporarily lifted. Much warmer and less "soupy" today, which made for an enjoyable run. I ran an out-and-back into Millville. I was testing the Adeo for the first time, and it took me awhile to get the gps connected reliably, but eventually it worked and held the satellites. The mile splits I was getting were all the 6:35-6:55 range, and I felt pretty good. Listened to a Toad the Wet Sprocket concert and This American Life podcast through the Adeo. This was my first experience with running with music and it wasn't half bad. Ave HR 150 |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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AM - lifted weights PM - Backward landfill loop; did 3.5-mile Tinman tempo in middle with 6:00 mile
splits. Felt good. Did 4x100m strides near the end. 6:18/mile pace for
overall run. Average HR 163 for tempo, 145 for non-tempo.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Did a 10-mile out-and-back up to North Logan on 1200 E. 6:50/mile pace for the run. Today is a GREEN burn day in Logan, making for nice running. Ave HR 148.
I'm still looking for 4 more runners for my Relay del Sol team. Entry fee has been comped. We are a "competitive" team, meaning 7:00/mile pace or faster. But the main focus is fun. Interested bloggers feel free to contact me.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 3.00 |
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Day off. Went to the gym and did 30 minutes on the treadmill. Weighed in a 130 lbs. Today is a YELLOW burn day in Logan. Please idle your truck for only 30 minutes or less.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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CV fartlek run out to Millville and back on TOU course. 4x100m striders during cooldown. Fartlek was 4x4-minute intervals with 3-minute rest. 0.75 miles (5:20/mile pace), ave HR 166 0.73 miles (5:28/mile pace), ave HR 174 0.75 miles (5:20/mile pace), ave HR 176 0.77 miles (5:10/mile pace), ave HR 176 (slight downhill, so faster) Felt good. Ave HR for workout 158. Max HR during fartlek 184. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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AM - lifted weights at gym. Weighed in at 130 lbs. PM - Easy run; did big loop around Logan and rocked out to Mutual Admiration Society. 6:41/mile pace.
Red burn day in Logan today. The air is pure soup. I was feeling sick to my
stomach during the run because of it. I'll try to get up either Blacksmith or Logan Canyon tomorrow for my long run.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
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Jogged around the block with the dog. Then Cody came by and picked me up (and Dan too) to run in Blacksmith Fork. The goal was to get out of the inversion and we were successful in that. We parked near the 6.75 mile mark of the TOU course and ran up the canyon toward Hardware Ranch. Turned around at 6.5 miles (near the start line) and came back downhill. I did 6x100m strides near the top. We kept a good pace for most the run, and my mile splits were 7:05, 7:05, 7:12, 7:17, 7:17, 6:54, 6:49, 6:51, 6:40, 6:17, 7:11, 7:08, 6:28. 6:56/mile pace for the entire run. HR monitor was having a hard time. It was great getting out of the smog and seeing blue sky and breathing clean air. Toward the end of the run it actually started getting pretty warm. 61.5 miles this week, 63 scheduled for next week. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.25 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.25 |
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Easy out-and-back to Millville. 6:48/mile pace. Air quality was a bit more tolerable today. I didn't feel sick while I ran. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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AM - Lifted weights 10-mile run (modified Landfill Loop) with 4.5-mile Tinman tempo in middle and 4x100m strides near end. Tempo part was 6:01/mile pace with ave HR 167. Overall run was 6:23/mile pace with ave HR 158. Yellow burn day today. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 1.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 4.00 |
| Crosstraining day. Had my wife drop me off at the gym on the way back from the chiropractor, and did 30 minutes on the elliptical. Jogged home 1 mile from the gym. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Easy run (Providence Hill loop) with 6x100m strides in the middle. 7:03 pace for the entire run. The inversion finally blew out (for now), so a pretty nice day today. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Today Cody, Dan, and I did a 2-mile time trial on part of the Landfill Loop. The purpose of this was to give me an idea of my current fitness and an estimate of an appropriate 5k pace for the upcoming Striders 5k in 9 days. The time trial course is very flat, and the weather was very nice with no snow or wind, and not too cold either. Other than an isolated splot of ice and slush on the first mile, road conditions were good. Did a 2-mile warmup with 4x100m strides. I was hoping to run 10:00, but ended up at 10:27. First mile was around 5:04, so the second was 5:23, very lopsided. This was measured with my Timex GPS, so give or take a couple seconds. I had forgotten how much it hurt to fun that fast, so this was good to do before the 5k race. I think with proper pacing, competition, pushing myself harder, and some "raceday magic" (adrenaline), I can probably hold 5:15 pace for a 5k (16:20). The Ogden course will be slower due due a sizeable hill, so I think I will be happy with under 16:40 for that race. Regardless, I did learn today that I shouldn't go out in 5:00, which will be key. I cooled down with Cody and Dan and then turned off on 1400 N, and did 4x100m strides, which felt good. In all, my recovery from the time trial was pretty fast, a good sign. Tried to keep the pace under 7:00/mile the last two miles of the run. ****** I have added a new (original) entry to my personal blog regarding the upcoming Striders Series. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Easy day, North Logan out-and-back. Caught the 7-minute guy with 2 miles left and said, "Smell ya' later!" 6:57/mile pace for entire run. I can feel yesterday a little, but not too much. Ave HR 153.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.75 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.75 |
| Jogged around the block with the dog, and then met Cody for a 13.2-mile jaunt up and around Millville, Prov-town, and River Heights. Followed the new Wasatch Back Relay course on the way out, then got up on the bench for the return trip, and some running on the TOU course as well. 7:15/mile pace for the run. Felt okay, but a bit stiff. Nice morning. 65 miles total for the week, the same schedule for next week. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
| Out and back route to Logan Canyon River Trail. Trail had packed snow, with pretty good footing. 6x100m strides on the way back. 6:51/mile pace for the run. Ave HR 154 |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.00 |
| Beautiful, warm day in Logan; wore short sleeves and sweat a lot. Did a 5-mile Tinman tempo, with splits of 6:00, 6:00, 5:59, 5:48, 5:50. Felt easy. HR stayed around 164 for the tempo. Followed it up with 4x 30-second hill surges up Country Rd. HR peaked at 173 at the end up each surge. Ave pace for entire run was 6:31; ave HR was 155 |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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AM - Inspired by Sasha and Ted, I decided to try running before noon. I only managed to do 6:30AM, so I still have a ways to go. Easy jog around block with the dog, followed by an out-and-back to the end of the paved river trail. 4.5 miles total. It was a very nice morning, and I was pleasantly surprised to see it growing light before 7AM. Legs feel great, but the top my left foot to my lower shin feels very irritated. It don't feel it when I wear sandals or go barefoot, just with shoes. I'm wearing my birks for work today; hopefully this is nothing more than a distraction, but I'll keep tabs on it. I have an afternoon run scheduled as well. PM - easy 7.5 miles with Cody, Dan, and Jon. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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For all those interested in the Striders 5K coming up this Saturday, I've posted some maps and profiles on my personal blog. Ran 10 miles from work (Providence Hill Loop). Did 8x100m strides on the downhill part to help calibrate my legs to the trashing they're going to take on Saturday. 6:49/mile average pace for the run. Ave HR 150. Top of my foot felt a little better today, but still some irritation.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Day off. Wore birks all day to let my irritated foot heal. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.00 |
| Ran an easy 7 miles with Jon at 7:58/mile pace. Landfill Loop. I laced my shoe differently (didn't go all the way to the top) and between that and wearing sandals the last three days, it feels fine again. I'm pretty sure what was happening was that the tendons at the top of my foot were being aggravated by tying my shoes too tight. I'm ready to go in the 5k tomorrow. The course will be brutal, but fortunately success in a racing circuit is measured not by how fast you run, but by where you place. And we all run the same course! |
| Race: |
Striders Winter Racing Circuit 5K (3.1 Miles) 00:16:36, Place overall: 3 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.10 | 0.00 | 13.60 |
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Striders 5K this morning. Abnormally warm day for early February, mid-40's for temp, overcast, no wind. In other words, perfect. I arrived to the Start about 50 minutes before the race, checked in, and warmed up for a few miles. I knew from my elevation profile that this race would be very hilly, as we will essentially run up and down the highest Bonneville Shoreline terrace. I was rather dreading it. At the start line, it appeared that there was a very good field: Joe, Corbin, Bob, Steve, Sasha, Leon, Nate, and so on and so on. Basically all the usual suspects, and then some. I put Top 3 and money out of my head and decided to just focus on running smart and "my race". The first mile felt pretty easy and had a good amount of flat and slightly uphill terrain. Sasha's GPS beep cued me to look at my watch at 0.5-mile, which I hit in 5:34. The gradient increased substantially by the end of the mile. Went through the mile in 5:23, which was right where I wanted to be. I was in 5th place at that point, further up than I expected given the field. By the end of the 1st mile and into the 2nd mile, things got really steep. I focused on trying to stay smooth, not make any foolish moves, and keep from going too anaerobic. The crest of the big hill came sooner than I expected, and I was still feeling quite good, so I knew at that point that I was going to have a good race. I moved into 4th, passing Leon at some point, and then Joe started falling off Corbin and Bob. I realized that if I kept my pace, I would pass him. The downhills were like roller coasters, and I just flailed my arms for balance and let gravity chunder me down at high speeds. I passed Joe on the downhill, and I was then in 3rd. If I could hold that, I would take a home a little cash which is always nice. Mile 2 split was 5:39 (11:02 2-mile). The last mile had mixed up and downs, but mostly downhills. I just tried to keep momentum going and my form good. With about half a mile left, I realized that no one was going to catch me, plus I was starting to gain on Bob and Corbin. Unfortunately, I couldn't quite get enough oxygen into my gaping mouth, but still tried to push it the best I could. Corbin made a move up front, dropped Bob, and put more distance on myself as well. Bob came back to me a bit, but I ran out of road, and he ended up finishing a couple seconds ahead. I finished strong, but it wasn't exactly a blazing sprint either. I would describe the race in general as a steady effort without too many surges, very even "pacing" and effort given the terrain. Last mile split was 4:59. Last 200m was 35 seconds. Overall time was 16:36. 3rd place. Also noteable: a 1-2-3 finish for the Wasatch Running Center. Overall results are here.
I was VERY pleased with this race. I did not expect to finish in the top 3 in that particular field, and was quite tickled to finish that close to speedsters like Bob and Corbin. This is a great start to the season! Cooled down a few miles with everyone afterward. PM - Did an easy 5.5-mile afternoon run to get some more mileage and shake the race and car trip out of my leg. Felt pretty good.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
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Crummy rainy day. I decided to wait for a day not so crummy to run. Recovery from the race has been good. Very little residual soreness and I don't feel "pounded" at all (partially due to wearing lightweight trainers rather than racing flats). **** For those interested in the Wasatch Back Relay, I have posted an entry on my MarathonGIS blog describing the 2007 course changes, and a link to some sweet flash maps. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.00 |
| Tinman Tempo on Landfill Loop. Did a couple miles at 6:20-6:30, and then held 6:00-6:10 for the 6-mile tempo duration. HR was in the upper 160's up to 170 for the tempo. Did 4x100m strides afterwards. Ave pace for run was 6:28/mile. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Ran to gym and lifted weights this morning. Today was supposed to be "bagel Tuesday" at the gym, but there were no bagels there. Needless to say, I was vexed. After lifting, I ran home and scarfed a cliff bar, then continued with my run. Very easy pace day; not a whole lot of energy. 7:30/mile pace for the run. I did my run on the canal trail loop, and there was no snow to be found. It's been a very strange February. I bought some trail shoes (Brooks Cascadia) at the WRC last Saturday, so I may be able hit some trails sooner than later! Weighed in today at 128 lbs. That was before breakfast, but still, oh my! I actually need to put on a few pounds now. However, I know that the general weight loss has been key to improving my race times and staying injury-free. I was 145 lbs last year at this point, and fighting knee and back problems. According to my blog, I was 143 lbs a couple days before I PR'ed in the half marathon last April; I am now 15 lbs lighter than that. Just running a quick, generic calculation, since V02Max is a volume (mL) divided by mass (kg), if my oxygen volume is roughly the same, given the fact that I've dropped 6.5 kg, my V02Max could be up to 7 units higher due to just dropping weight. I know that's a simplistic calculation, but the general idea holds true. I think the fact that I just ran a 5k about a minute faster than at this point last year adds some validity to the calcualtion as well.
All that being said, I'm already chowing down as it is, and am still losing weight, so I need to chow down some more. I added an addition PB&J sandwich to my lunch today as a start. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
| North Logan out-and-back, easy pace. 6:53/mile. Did 6x100m strides in middle. Feeling totally recovered from Saturday, and ready to work again. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.00 |
| CV fartlek, 5x4-minutes, 3 minutes rest. Overall 5:20 pace for intervals. 6:28/mile pace for entire run. Millville out-and-back route. Did 2x30s hill charges at end. Ave HR for intervals in low 170s, maxed at 186 on last interval. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
| Met Dan, David, and Jon at the Logan Canyon River Trail (ran from work). Ran the trail from the gate to Spring Hollow campground and back. Very easy pace. The trail was very muddy, and icy in some spots still. The single track was especially slick. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
| Awesome, warm sunny day today; ran in shorts in t-shirt. Did a 15-miler, with Dan and Cody for most of it. We held 6:57 pace for the first 11.5 miles, then dropped off Dan. Then Cody and I did 2 miles of loops in the LHS grass field at around 7:20/mile. It was good to get on the softer surface. I finished off the run with my dog. I took my dog to the vet today for a routine checkup, and he weighed in at 98 lbs, almost 20 pounds heavier than last year. I told him afterwards he needs to get his butt into shape, so I'll try to take him out for longer runs to help him accomplish that. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
| Easy distance today. Started out with a few miles on the track to calibrate the Suunto Foot Pod that I'm testing. I did 6x100m strides on the track, and decided to time them just see to see how fast I'm running. The strides were all between 14.5 - 16.0 seconds. They were very hard, but not all-out, so I reckon I can probably run 13.5 in an all-out sprint right now. Went out after that to the paved river trail and back, then grabbed my fat, out-of-shape dog and dragged him the last three miles through some neighborhoods. Gil went out hard, but after one 6:30 mile, he was sucking wind, and I had to work to get him under 8:00/mile pace the rest of the way. Pretty sad; he used to do 13-milers with me. Nice day, wore short sleeves and shorts. Ave HR 139. Got up to 179 on the strides. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
| Did 6.5-mile Tinman tempo on First Dam Run course. 6:00/mile pace for the first 3 miles, 5:45/mile pace for the remainder. Felt kind of lazy before the run, but it ended up feeling really good, especially biomechanics. Did 4x30-second hill charges up the Boulevard after then tempo. Cooled down with the dog. He made it two miles this time without bonking out, so some improvement. Lots of snow this morning, but roads were quite clear by the time I ran at 3PM. Averaged 6:30/mile pace for the entire run. Ave HR for entire run was 166. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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AM - ran to gym, lifted weights, and then ran home via TOU course. Did another half mile with the dog. 5.5 miles total at easy pace. Weighed in at 130 lbs.
PM - 7.5 easy. Landfill loop at 7:00/mile pace, then a couple miles with the dog. 7:15/mile pace for entire run. Ave HR 134, max 148. The Suunto unit is a much better, more stable HR monitor than anything else I've used. It has yet to give me a weird reading, even on cold days. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
| North Logan - Campus Loop. 7:00/mile pace. Did 6x100m strides. Ave HR 136, max 166. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Day off. My work for the week is done. Now it's just time to freshen up my legs for the 10K this weekend. Speaking of Striders10K this weekend, I've posted an entry and some maps today on my MarathonGIS blog. Check it out if you're interested.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 |
| Easy distance for mini-taper. I wanted to do 7 miles, but ran out of time due to dinner obligations. It's unfortunate when having a life butts into my running. I should have planned better. |
| Race: |
Striders Winter Racing Circuit 10K (6.2 Miles) 00:34:47, Place overall: 4, Place in age division: 1 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.80 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.20 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
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Striders 10-K. I got up a bit early and used TP Massage Ball to work over my lower back, which had been bothering me a little over the last few days. Weather was a little chilly, but sunny with no wind to speak of. Good racing weather. The competition was the same as last time, with the addition of Dennis. I was not sure what kind of race Dennis was going to run, but decided not to worry him too much and worry about myself instead. Warmed up 2 miles.
For details of the 10k course, click here. By the way, my memory during races tends to be a bit fuzzy, so some of the following may be slightly inaccurate. Because of all the hills, I wanted to go out rather conservatively, but still keep contact with the lead pack. The pack accomodated this by going out quite slow, so I found myself right up front without expending much energy. There was about a pack of 6-10 during the first half mile, which thinned out to a group of 4 by the end of the second mile: myself, Joe, Corbin, and Bob. The third mile featured a very large climb (~300ft) that kicked my butt, and made me go anaerobic. This worried me a little, as I have done zero anaerobic or V02Max training (besides the 5k race). Fortunately, I stayed close to the leaders through this stretch. At the 3-mile point (18:03 for the split), it was Bob and Joe, and then Corbin, followed by me. On the downhill, I recovered a bit and started moving. I caught and passed Corbin by 3.5, and then caught Bob and Joe by the 4-mile point (or so, I can't remember). Traded leads with Bob and Joe during the 5th mile, and at one point I tried a weak attempt of breaking away (I was feeling pretty good still), but with no success. Passed the 5-mile mark still feeling decent, but it's hard not to feel good when running downhill. The last climb with about a mile left took the wind out of my sails, and it was a struggle. Bob had made a really nice move just before that and broken away, and continued to pull farther from everyone going up the hill. Joe was a few seconds ahead of me, and I retained the spread, but felt myself getting weaker as the hill went on. Once we got back to the downhill, I struggled to regain my speed, and Corbin went by me into 3rd place. Corbin soon passed Joe as well, but Bob was a ways ahead. Joe was still in striking distance for me, but I could not close well, and the gap widened a little. Meanwhile, Corbin was still closing like a madman. Apparently he ran a 4:21 indoor mile last week. But Bob's earlier surge had put enough distance on the rest of the field to secure his win without challenge. Bob - Corbin - Joe - Me - Dennis - Someone - Sasha. Nice race everyone. My final time was 34:47. Mile splits were 5:57, 12:05 (2-mile split -- missed mile 2), 4:58, 5:02, 5:36. Several people suspected the first mile was long, and perhaps the course was a little long (although we all took horrible tangents due to snow/ice), but it's a race, so who cares? This was more like a cross country race in some ways; time didn't matter, just place.
I was pretty happy with this race. I was off my predicted time by about 20 seconds, but the winners were much slower than my predictions as well. Thus, I can assume that the prediction was wrong. In the 5k I was 11 seconds behind the winner; today in the 10k I was 19 seconds behind the winner. Looking at it in this light, I probably ran equal to or slightly better than my 5k performance two weeks ago. I enjoyed mixing it up and racing with Joe, Corbin, and Bob, and I don't feel like I made any strategical errors. My only downfall was not being able to hold it the last mile and finish off the race with a surge. I'm still missing a little bit of the "killer racing instinct" as well, that is required to win 5k's and 10k's. But all things considered, it was a pretty good race for me, and I look forward to the 10-miler. Cooled down ~3.5 miles immediately after race.
Official race results are up impressively quick. Click here. Ran another 4 miles around 2PM to get some more mileage and work the race and car ride out of me. All body parts feel intact. Pace: 7:45/mile. Ave HR 145. This heart rate is high for the pace. I must be fatigued or dehydrated....hmmm...I wonder why! 67 miles total for this week. I will bump it up to 70 miles for the next two weeks.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 |
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AM - Woke up and my legs felt like I ran a hilly 10K yesterday...quads a bit tired and sore, outside of the calves battered, and general fatigue. I ran an easy mile with the dog to test things out. No pains, just the usual effects of a hard 10K, so that's good. The legs felt better after the little jog. I'll try another short run later today to continue to work the race out. PM - Easy 4 mile out-and-back on paved river trail. Legs are feeling better. 7:40/mile pace. Ave HR 137 - a sign of good recovery. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
| Easy 10 miles (Millville out-and-back) at 7:30/mile pace. Did 6x100m strides midway through the run, and stopped at the gym near the end and lifted weights. Finished up with a block with the dog. Ave HR 141. Max 169 during the strides. Still recovering from the race, but I think I'll be ready for a workout tomorrow. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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I've posted a new entry on my personal blog about a cool race result database called Athlinks. Check it out if you're interested in that sort of nerdy stuff. ************** Snow this morning, so I waited until 3:30PM to do my run. It's nice having a very flexible job, and I actually owe some of my winter fitness to being able to wait around to run on good footing. Indeed, the snow today had melted, and roads were wet, but grippy. The sun came out as well, and it was actually very nice out. Good day for a workout. I had a 7-mile Tinman tempo scheduled, but I wasn't sure how it was going to go due to some of the 10K still being in my legs. I wanted to work on hills some, so I did the 12-mile Millville-Providence-River Heights loop, which goes up and down the benches. I warmed up for three miles, then started the tempo. I was sluggish the first miles, but then things clicked during the remaining 6 miles, and it ended up being an excellent workout that felt good. I was able to work the hills, but still feel fast and strong on them, so I think the races have served to increase my fitness over the last couple weeks. Tempo mile splits were 6:08, 6:00, 6:26, 6:12, 6:03, 5:47, 5:52. First two miles were rolling, the next three had a lot of uphill, and the last two had a lot of downhill. HR stayed in the 170 range during the tempo, and peaked at 180 on the hills. Average pace for entire 12-mile run was 6:24/mile. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
| North Logan out-and-back. 7:10/mile pace. Did 6x100m strides midway. Ave HR ~145. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.20 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.20 |
| Got up at 5:30AM, commuted to Denver. 4 hours of meetings. Commuted back to Utah. Got home at 10PM. I hate commuting, especially the airplane kind. I'll be glad for my 4-block walk to work tomorrow. I managed to squeeze in 5 miles when I got home (Gym-to-gym loop), despite just wanting to go to bed. But it felt good to work the travel out of my legs. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.25 | 0.00 | 3.75 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
| Did 5x4-minute CV fartlek (2:30-minute rest) on Mendon Road. Pace was 5:20-5:30/mile for all the intervals. Did a mile at "brisk" pace (6:20) before and after the fartlek session. Finished off the workout with 4x100m strides. I didn't feel very sharp today, but still gave myself a good workout without wearing myself out too much. Kind of a "blah" week this week; I'll be glad when it's over. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
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Long run with Jon and Cody. Long and slow. And cold! It was about 0 degrees when we started, and 10 degrees when we passed the Providence bank near the end at 9AM. My hands and other certain appendages were in a fair amount of pain. We finally caught the 8-minute guy by the end. I needed slow today, it's been a long week with both work and running. I look forward to tackling a good week of training next week. 70 miles total for the week, the same scheduled for next week. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.50 |
| Easy run to First Dam and back. 6:52/mile pace for run. Did a block with the dog afterwards. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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12-mile run (Millville-Providence Loop) with 7-mile Tinman tempo within. It is a rolling course with a lot of uphill in the middle and downhill at the end. Tempo splits were 6:03, 5:54, 6:18 (uphill), 6:45 (uphill), 6:14, 5:51 (downhill), 5:38 (downhill). I threw in a couple hill surges before the tempo, and a few 100m strides afterwards. Stopped at gym toward end of run and lifted weights and ate free pizza before waddling home. Gotta love free food. All-in-all, felt very good today, better than most of the past week. 6:28/mile pace for the entire run. Ave HR 163.
(Adrenaline orange: 94 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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Easy 9-mile run (North Logan Out-and-Back). I had passed the 7-minute guy near the end, but with two blocks to go, some lady about hit me in her car. Why is it Logan drivers are incapable of looking for pedestrians, runners, and cyclists? The end result was me stopping abruptly, and then manuevering around the car. In the meantime the 7-minute guy passed me back, and I ran out of road before I could catch him again. Oh well. (Adrenaline black: 319.5 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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AM - Easy 6 miles. Went and ran on the paved river trail, and bumped into Cody on the way back. We ran together until the end of the trail, then I diverted off to the new Macys. They are having their grand opening of their new store, and mailed out coupons for free eclairs, free sausage, and free deli salad. I hate Macys almost as much as Walmart, but love free stuff even more, so I decided to check it out. I managed to get the sausage and some seafood salad, but they were out of eclairs and wouldn't have more until 10AM. Seeing as to how is was 6:45AM, I wasn't about to wait around, so I took my other plunder and ran back home 2 miles carrying a bag of meat and salad. Al Gore would have been proud, especially since today is a Red Burn Day here in Logan. It's too bad, though, because I really wanted the eclairs. I was looking forward to eating a six-pack of them at work this morning with multiple cups of coffee. Oh well. Oatmeal it is.
My SI joint had been bothering me for the last two weeks, but I went in to the chiropractor for my monthly appointment last night, and he got my hips rotated back into alignment. Running felt much smoother today. It's always great to get the ol' body fixed up and tuned correctly. Running has been "blah" over the last week or so, mostly because of SI discomfort and feeling biomechanically "off". This morning was very enjoyable, and I had more hop in my step. Hopefully it will stick and not immediately slide back. (Adrenaline yellow: 416 miles) I just had a good laugh. I clicked on the "real age" banner ad out of curiosity and annoyance (I'm kind of sick of seeing it), and I took the "real age" test. Although my calendar age is 27.7 years, my RealAge is 18.5! That's funny to me, since that's exactly how old I look. Whenever I fly with my boss for business trips, the ticket counter people assume I'm his son and ask me if I even have a drivers license. It's one thing to get carded at the bar, but another to be asked if you're even 16-years old! Anyway, click on that banner ad for a good chuckle to give Sasha a little ad revenue. PM - Did 8 miles (Landfill Loop) at 6:48/mile pace. 8x100m strides near the end. Nice day, other than the inversion. (Adrenaline orange: 102 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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For those interested in the Striders 10-miler this weekend, I've posted my thoughts and some analysis of it on my personal blog. Ran an easy 10 miles in the evening around River Heights and Providence, most of it with Jon. Beautiful day. (Adrenaline black: 329 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.00 |
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I've posted a map-making tutorial on my personal blog, and some screenshots of the WRC 10-mile course. Check it out if you're interested. Easy 8 miles out to First Dam and back along 10k course. Did some very short striders too.
(Adrenaline yellow: 424 miles) |
| Race: |
Striders Winter Racing Circuit 10-miler (10 Miles) 00:55:20, Place overall: 2, Place in age division: 1 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
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Striders 10-miler. Dee Events Center (again). Weather was overcast with an occasional ray of sun. Light breeze, enough to be noticeable as a headwind at times, and cool temperatures, in the lower 40s. Pretty good racing conditions, and just warm enough to go with the singlet and shorts (and gloves). My goal today was to back off a little at the beginning and then race very hard the last half. This would ensure a quality workout, a good overall finish, and faster recovery. I also wanted revenge on that last hill of the race from the 10K, and going out a little slower would help that cause. The field was good, but a little less dense that the 5k and 10k. I think people are a little tired of racing every other week, and are tired of painfully difficult courses. Plus, 10 miles is not a popular distance. I suspect that those not committed to the entire series just stayed home. Right at the gun, Joe jumped out to a lead, and no one bothered going with him. I soon found myself running with Bob, and by the end of the first mile, we had separated from the rest of the pack. Joe was already was out ahead by that point. I did not intend to get out this fast relative to the pack, but I had someone to run with and the pace felt good, about MP. However, the first couple miles were downhill, and although it felt very easy, I was a little worried about coming back up them the other way and wondered if I should have stayed back with the others. But for now things were good, and working in with Bob was helping. First two-mile split was 10:55 (missed the 1-mile mark), 3rd mile was 5:53 (long?), 4th "mile" was 4:19 (short; apparently the race cut off a block).
Things got hard around Mile 5, where the course climbed a bit more steeply before it went back down toward the Ice Sheet. Bob dropped me temporarily here, and I went a little bit anaerobic up the hill. This made me uneasy, since there was still over four miles and a really big hill left. But I recovered on the downhill and caught back up to Bob right before we started the "real" climb during Mile 7. Joe, meanwhile, was somewhere out there still, a distant speck. He looked strong, but seemed to have stopped pulling away at least. Mile 5 was 5:43, Mile 6 was 6:17.
Bob and I worked up the big hill (which I've nicknamed "Stairway to Hell"), and again, Bob pulled away toward the crest. But I was still feeling okay and knew that I would be basically home free at the top. I crested the hill and started hammering back down, made up lost ground on Bob, and caught him before Mile 8. We then started working together to try to catch Joe, who seemed to finally be coming back a little. I started to struggle a little, and Bob took over and blocked the headwind for me, and also started surging pretty hard. I was able to work in with him and stay tucked in. But unfortunately Bob's calf went out right before 9 miles, so I went on solo. It was really too bad, because I was just starting to remember how to work with a teammate again. Two people working together can always pull more load than the summation of two individuals working by themselves. Basic rule of pack running, and something I haven't done much since college. It gives me hope for marathon pack running with teammates though. Mile 7 was 6:26, Mile 8 was 5:01, Mile 9 was 5:16.
Regardless, I was feeling good enough with a mile to go to make a good charge up that final hill (a big goal for me) and then have a very good kick during the last 800 meters. I still finished about 25 seconds behind Joe, so some ground was gained, but he ran a very strong, complete race. Final time was 55:20. Last mile was 5:28. Final results are here.
All in all, I was quite happy with this race. It was definitely better than the 10K, and maybe a bit better than the 5K. I still struggled on some of the uphills, but I think there was some improvement, and I seemed to be able to recover and surge well on the downhills. Looking back at the splits, perhaps my uphills were a little better than I originally assessed, but I can only gauge at the time by how I feel (hurting a lot) and by the competition around me (Bob and Joe). So maybe I'm an okay uphill runner, but Bob and Joe are just really good at it, I don't know. Talking to people with Garmins and to Bill, we generally agreed that the course that was run today was a little short, probably about 0.12 miles, which is exactly one block. Bill said that a block was cut off from the certified course, so there you have it. Regardless, even with adding a minute or so, I'm still very pleased with my time, as I didn't expect to run much under 58:00. The course was pretty fun, and seemed to allow more recovery than the 10K course. It's no wonder that times were relatively faster. (Burn: 66 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Day off. Went for a long walk with my wife and dog to enjoy the nice day. My legs are feeling pretty good after the race yesterday, with less soreness and fatigue compared to the 10K. I think this is due to: - The 10-mile course was slightly more forgiving (particularly the first half)
- Threshold pace is easier to recover from than V02Max (at least for me)
- The previous races have stressed my body in a positive way and promoted good adaptation
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Gorgeous, wonderful day. About 60 degrees and sunny. I ran the the North Logan-USU loop and did 6x100m striders in the middle. 6:54/mile pace for the run. Felt good, with little soreness or fatigue from the race. I'll try a workout tomorrow. (Adrenaline black: 339 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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Yet another awesome day out. I did an 8-mile tempo today on the Young Ward Loop. I didn't have a GPS, so used the grid system wherever I could in order to get splits. First mile was about 5:55. The next couple miles I couldn't get because of irregular-spaced roads. The next four miles I was hitting MP, and was locked in on 5:40/mile. The last mile I scaled it back some and tried to hit about 6:00-pace. The 5:40's felt very comfortable, and I was very happy with this workout. It's nice to run on something pancake-flat, rather than those hills in Ogden! 6:10/mile pace for the overall run.
Did some running with the dog to round out the mileage. (Adrenaline orange: 115 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.50 |
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Ran from work to the canal trail and met James. We then ran out to 2nd Dam and back on the River Trail. The trail was free of snow and mud in most places (not all though). In a few days it should be totally dry. Easy pace today, but picked it up on the way back. (Adenaline black: 350 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.50 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
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Did a bit of a "fun run" today. I was supposed to do 8x1000m on the track, but I lost my spirit when the the LHS track was in use by a bunch of high school kids. Go figure. So I ran 2 miles at "brisk" pace in the grass field around the school. 6:30/mile pace on the grass. Then I took the shoes off and did 4x200m barefoot strides in the grass. Times were in the 33-34s range. It felt good to go barefoot again. Then I headed up toward USU's campus to try to hit their track, and surged up every hill I hit along the way for a bit of a hill fartlek. Once I got to the track (thankfully it was empty), I did 800m to calibrate the Polar RS800 I'm testing. Then I did a 3200m tempo in 10:40 (5:22, 5:18), which is my goal half marathon pace. It felt pretty solid, but I don't think I could have held it for 11 more miles...Ran down the hill back to my office to finish up. 13.5 miles total for the day, a good overall workout with a lot of variety. Some Polar RS800 stats: Ave HR: 149, Max HR 180 (during tempo); Ave HR during tempo: 172
Ave stride length: 4ft, 2in, ave stride length during tempo: 4ft 11in
Ave Cadence: 89, Max Cadence: 103 (during tempo); ave cadence during tempo: 98 It's evident to me that I can waste tremendous amount of time playing with this thing.
Still having some SI irritation. It often goes away by the end of the run, but I just need to keep stretching it, and the chiro will help too. Also, the ball of my foot (just underneath my big toe) has been hurting lately. I need to keep an eye on it, but I'm not sure what it is. It has been going on at very low levels for several weeks, or even months, but became more pronounced after the 10-mile race. Maybe it's time to ditch the orthotics... (Adrenaline orange: 129 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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Easy distance. Ran around Providence and then on paved river trail, then back home. Nice day. I ran today without my custom orthotics, just my OTC PowerSteps. It felt a little weird, and definitely a lot lighter. And my head didn't explode, nor did the sun crash into the moon because of it. The reason I tried this is because I was hypothesizing that the ball of my foot was hurting because of too much pressure due to the heel lift of the orthotic. Today the ball of my foot felt a bit better, a good sign, but more runs will prove this or not. It's possible that I've worn out the orthotic (I've already put 1400 miles on them, which is probably beyond "typical" use), or my body has changed since the pressure test, thereby making the orthotic ineffective. Or both. SI joint felt a bit better this morning as well, and stayed good during the run.
7:30/mile pace. Ave HR 141. (Adrenaline black: 359 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.70 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.70 |
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Went to Lava Hot Springs last night, and then soaked in the springs most of this morning. Needless to say, when I got home I felt more like taking a nap than doing on long run, but fortunately I had Jon, James, Cody, and Dan to run with today. We ran from the canal trailhead (dugway) and ran to the end of the River Trail and back (Guivena Malibu). The trail was icy and muddy in some spots, but much of it was in very good shape. Another week like this last week should melt the rest of the ice. Conversation abounded and pace was slow (8:15/mile). Just what the doctor ordered for today. Plus the soft surface was good, and I broke in my new Brooks Cascadia's. They are now completely covered with mud, so no longer tennis ball green. Ave HR 139 Ave Cadence 89 Ave stride length 3ft 7 in (much shorter strides on the slippery trail) (Cascadia: 20 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.00 |
| Easy run to end of paved river trail and then to LHS rec fields to do a couple laps in the grass and then 4x200m barefoot striders. Ran home and then did a few blocks with the dog. Didn't bother wearing a watch today, so no idea of pace. The ball of my foot has been feeling pretty stable, and seems to have even gotten a little better since Thursday. I still feels a little bruised/inflammed when I push down on it, but doesn't bother me much while walking or running. I think switching to the lower-heel OTC insert has helped. So far no complications from not wearing my custom orthotics, now for the third day in a row. (Adrenaline yellow: 430 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.50 | 0.00 | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
| Workout day. I ran up to the USU track, and did a 2-mile tinman tempo along the way (6:00/mile pace or so) to warm up. On the track, I did 8x1000m at CV pace (~5:15/mile) with 200m rest (1:10). I took 600m (3:00) after the 4th interval to break it up into two sets. The workout felt very good, and I hit my time goals. The ball of my foot was rather tingly and swollen-feeling by the end, but not really it any pain. Ran home afterward, iced the foot, drank some gatorade, and ate couple cookies before going back to work. HR peaked at 187 on the last interval, when I cranked it up a little bit the last lap. Feels good to be on a track! (Adrenaline orange: 143 miles)
Interval | Time | Ave HR | Cadence | Stride Length
| 1 | 3:14.5 | 171 | 102 | 4'10" | 2 | 3:16.3 | 175 | 100 | 4'10" | 3 | 3:16.0 | 178 | 100 | 4'10" | 4 | 3:15.6 | 179 | 100 | 4'11" | 5 | 3:15.6 | 177 | 100 | 4'10" | 6 | 3:16.3 | 178 | 99 | 4'11" | 7 | 3:15.1 | 181 | 100 | 4'11" | 8 | 3:11.8 | 181 | 101 | 4'11" |
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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Easy 9-mile North Logan out-and-back. 7:08/mile pace. Ave HR was 146 (a little high), perhaps not as easy as I thought...some recovery is needed from the workout yesterday. Ball of foot felt pretty good. SI feels decent.
Ave stride length: 4'0" Ave cadence: 91 (Adrenaline black: 368 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.50 |
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Easy distance (Landfill Loop), plus 4x150m barefoot striders in the grass. 7:06/mile pace. Ave HR 150. Over cast and cool, a nice day for running. (Adrenaline yellow: 439 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.30 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.30 |
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For anyone interested, I've posted on entry on my personal blog about the potential effects of taking days off. The entry stems from a message board discussion here, so mostly other people's ideas, but an interesting topic. ********************************** Ran up to Dry Canyon, then did the Deerfence/Bonnville trail over to Millville Canyon. No snow, very little mud, and generally good footing (for that trail anyway). I tried to work the hills up to the trail and then work hard on the trail itself to get a good aerobic (and occasionally anaerobic) workout it. Kept the HR above 160 for most of this run and averaged around 7:30/mile. Once I got off the trail, I tried to keep a 6:30 pace for most of the rest of the run, which put my HR in the mid- to upper-150s. All in all, a good medium-long run and a good workout without being too format about it. (Cascadias: 34 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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9 miles, easy pace. Ran up to 1st Dam and came back on canal trail, then ran south to Stewart Nature Park, did a loop, and came home. Feel a little beat up from the hills yesterday. Ave HR 143. (Adrenaline black: 377 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.50 | 0.00 | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 19.50 |
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AM - Easy 8.3-mile run with Cody this morning. Ran up to USU track and did some 100m striders. Hit a nice pace going back down. 7:15/mile pace overall. (Adrenaline orange: 151 miles) PM - Ran 11.2 miles with Cody and James down Blacksmith Fork via 2-car shuttle. I wanted to get a good downhill workout in preparation for the Ogden half and the Ogden marathon. The plan was to warm up for a couple miles and then do a 4-mile tempo at half marathon pace. I would hoping I would be able to run 5:15-5:20 pace on the downhill and have it feel easy. Unfortunately, a strong headwind damped both my spirits and my stride. I ran 22:20 for the tempo, so a 5:35/mile average. HR was in the upper 170s (88-89% max) for the bulk of it. I felt like I could never get going and that there was never "enough" downhill. Still, it was a good workout, and my pace was very steady on all the splits I got. I actually felt pretty good afterwards during the rest of the run (aside from being very hungry), and the 7:00-pace was comfortable. So that was good. Ave HR for entire run: 152 Max HR during tempo: 181 Ave pace for entire run: 6:30/mile I feel like I don't really have a great indicator of my true race potential right now. All of the Ogden races have been so hilly that times are meaningless. I was hoping this workout would give me an idea of where I'm at, but the headwind made it hard to correlate to the Ogden course. My body got the workout it needed for sure, but my mind is still wondering. I'm pretty sure that sub-1:10 should be doable though.
81 miles for the week (yea!). 79 miles scheduled for next week. (Burn: 77 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.50 |
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Easy run out to the end of the canal trail and back. Didn't wear a watch. Glorious morning out.
(Adrenaline yellow: 445 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Ran the landfill loop with Dave. Dropped Dave off and did a couple extra miles with 6x100m strides. Averaged 7:05/mile pace for the run. Ave HR 143. Felt very good today. (Adrenaline orange: 153 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.20 | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.20 |
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Rainy, nasty day today. Unfortunately, I needed to do a longer workout today, weather good or bad. I ran the first 7 miles with Dave, averaging around 7:10/mile. It rained pretty hard on us, and my shirt was soaked, plus I lost feeling in my hands. I dropped Dave off at home, changed my shirt and shoes, and put some gloves on, and then ran over to the gym. I ran 6:20/mile pace on the way to the gym. The rain let up a little bit too, which helped. At the gym I jumped on the treadmill for 40 minutes, and started at 6:30/mile pace, and bumped up the pace every 5 to 10 minutes -- 6:15, 6:00, 5:52, 5:45, 5:39. So it was a nice progression up to marathon pace. At 5:39 pace my HR was steady at 168. Ave HR for the run was 150. Ave pace for the entire run was 6:45/mile. I wore the Polar foot pod while on the treadmill. Its pace measurement was dead on up to 6:00/mile pace. Then as I ran faster and faster, and the pod drifted, displaying slower speeds. I found this same trend while doing track intervals last week; the pod was accurate at normal pace, but not at CV interval pace (5:10-5:15/mile). This is because (I suspect) that the my stride is different enough at higher speeds to invalidate the calibration, which was performed at lower speeds. For this one reason (in my mind), GPS is superior to foot pods: it works at any speed and any stride.
(Cascadia: 41 miles) (Adrenaline black: 387 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.50 |
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Ran with the del Sol team through Providence before our pre-race meeting and BBQ. Nice easy pace. It made up for the nasty cold, wind, and rain. It's fun running with a pack. Makes me feel tough. I fly to PHX tomorrow.
(Adrenaline yellow: 454 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.50 |
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Nice easy run with Dave and Clyde in Phoenix. We found a very nice paved trail to run on near our hotel on 44th and McDowell. Ran near 6:30 pace and slower. Did 4x100m strides. (Adrenaline orange: 162 miles)
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| Race: |
Relay del Sol (187 Miles) 19:10:57, Place overall: 2, Place in age division: 1 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.50 | 0.00 | 5.80 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.30 |
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AM - Easy 5-mile pre-race morning run with Clyde and Dave. Pace around 7:30/mile. Similar route to last night. (Adrenaline orange: 167 miles)
8 PM - My first leg of Relay del Sol (Leg 5). Borrowed Sasha's Garmin and warmed up for 1 mile. Since AZ doesn't do daylight savings, it was quite dark by this time. Temperatures were in the low 60's, and very little wind. Dan came in to the exchange and we had a clean handoff, and I took off. I basically wanted this to be a good threshold run. The leg started on a gentle downhill, and I did the first half mile in 2:30, 5:08 for the first mile. Everything felt very good, and I could feel the lower elevation difference. There was a gentle climb from Mile 1.5 to Mile 3.5, and my pace slowed to 5:30/mile on this stretch, but still felt very strong. From 3.5 to the finish (5.8), I had a nice gentle downhill, and I opened it up along this stretch and averaged 5:00/mile, including a 4:58 mile near the end. Average pace for the overall leg was 5:15/mile. I was very pleased with this, as I felt like I could have kept going at this pace for another 5 miles or so. Good start to the relay. Cooled down about a half mile afterwards.
Team-wise, at this point we were running very well. Dave, Clyde, Dan, Jon, and I all exceeded our projected paces by quite a bit, and Sasha was right on his projected pace. We started the race with 4 teams in our wave (the other 70 teams started in waves earlier in the morning and afternoon), and it became apparent after the first couple legs that it would be a two-team race between ourselves and Google; the other two teams were way back. Google, however was putting distance on us with most of their runners. They have a very good team, including a 3:39 1500m runner who has run Oly trials. They also had very nice matching warmups and uniforms. We had a scruffy-looking bunch of people and a van without working doors. It had all the makings of a really bad sports movie. To be continued. (Burn: 84 miles)
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| Race: |
Relay del Sol (187 Miles) 19:10:57, Place overall: 2, Place in age division: 1 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 2.00 | 0.00 | 7.40 | 3.40 | 0.00 | 12.80 |
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Day 2 of Relay del Sol Caught a couple hours of sleep at Exch 12, on the wrestling mats in the high school gym the exchange was at. It wasn't the best-quality sleep, but I definitely dozed a bit. Van 2 came in around 12:30AM. They too were exceeding their projected times, and they managed to close the gap on the Google team by a few minutes. I can't remember exactly, but I think we were about 4 minutes behind after 12 legs. Dave, Clyde, Sasha, and Dan all ran exceptionally well again, to start our next series (leg 13-18), but Google ran even better, and by the time I got the baton for Leg 17, we were slightly over 10 minutes back. I could be wrong here, as my memory is fuzzy. I'm sure Sasha will know. My Leg 17 was around 3:30AM, so it was still, and around 50 degrees temperature. No wind. Good conditions for fast running. This leg, though, was 7.3 miles and on a steady 1% uphill grade that gained 384 ft over 7.3 miles. I was a bit concerned about it, but once I started running, it didn't seem very bad at all. I guess all those Ogden Striders races have served a purpose in that I can't feel hills anymore until they are over 6% in gradient. I wanted to get another threshold workout out of this leg, and just let my body guide my pace and the garmin report it. For the first half of the leg I was running consistent 5:40 miles. I was feeling very good, so I pushed it a little harder on the second half of the leg to 5:35 miles. I lost 15 seconds slowing down and even stopping for various stop lights, but other than that, no mishaps. The leg ended up being about a block long, as exchange 17 was a bit further than my maps had it. Oh well. Ended up averaging 5:40/mile for the leg. By this point in the race, we were passing teams that started before us, and I mananged to pass 4 other runners during this leg. Better yet, I was able to close the gap on Google by 4 or 5 minutes. I was very happy with how it went, and felt that I would have enough juice for a good V02Max workout on the final leg. Jon ran very well on his leg, and we gave the baton to Van 2. Time for another siesta. This time I didn't have much time to sleep, but did managed to close my eyes for a few minutes in the van while sitting at the Exch 24 parking lot. Van 2, meanwhile, ran the legs of their lives and amazingly closed the gap on Google to 20 seconds by the time they handed the baton back to us. Over 110 miles into it, we had a true race on our hands! We thought that if we could just keep things close during our final leg set, we could at least give Van 2 a chance to win it. Google's Van 1 was definitely faster than our Van 1, but we hoped to do some damage control. It was light again by this point. Dave, Clyde, Sasha, and Dan all ran their hearts out, and when I received the baton, we were about 4 minutes back. This was a lesser spread than our previous sets, so we were "outperforming" them in a way, by reducing the relative difference. My last leg (28) looked to be quite fast, judging by the profile. It was only 3.4 miles and mostly downhill, with about a 2.5% gradient. This is somewhere between Top of Utah and St. George, as far as downhills go. I've been running downhill well so far this year, and hoped to hit 5:00 miles or under for this last leg, and leave whatever energy I had left out on there on the road. Temperature was about 70 degrees, so a little warm, but not too bad. However, there was a noticeable headwind, not a total killer, but big enough to slow me down a bit. I averaged 5:06/mile, which I was happy with considering the headwind. I mananged to dip under 5:00/mile pace during the last half mile. Plus I closed the gap on Google by about a minute. Jon maintained the gap, so Van 2 started their last set of legs only 3 minutes behind. However, we did not have our cheesy, stereotypical sports movie ending. Google pulled away from our rag-tag bunch during the last 6 legs and won by about 10 minutes. They ran 18:59:39, which is 6:05/mile for 187 miles. We ended up around 19:10:57, which is 6:08/mile. We finished 45 minutes ahead of our original projected time, meaning everyone ran incredibly awesome as a team. Third place was an hour and 40 minutes behind us. Results are here. Not only did the race end not end like a Hollywood sports movie, but Google did not turn out to be the Hollywood sports movie villain either. They did not cheat, try to sabotague us, or wear evil mustaches. Rather, they were very nice, were great competitors, and gracious winners. We enjoyed talking to them throughout the race and afterwards at the finish line. Great job Google! Cody and James (who were in Van 2) may write about this to verify, but
it seemed like we gave it our all during the middle of the race just to
surge up to Google and stay as close as we did. By the very end, Google
had a bit more gas left in the tank for a knockout punch. But this is how
to race, whether it be a relay or individual event. Sometimes it's
necessary to take a gamble and surge hard just to stay with someone,
and they pray that either you can do it one more time or that the
competitor is hurting worse than you are. But races are often won by
taking chances like that. And there was certainly nothing to lose. I also think that one reason (besides altititude reduction, nice weather, and good training) that we all ran so well is that during events like relays you can relax and run without pressure. You can try things you wouldn't normally try, as there is really no consequence. Yes, we competed with Google, but really it was a big game, one that was fun to play. Being able to relax and "play the game" without worrying about PR's and such I think helps people to run faster in some cases. Just my opinion. Check out the blogs of Cody, Dan, Dave, Jon, James, Clyde, and Sasha for their personal experiences and thoughts about the relay. (Burn: 93 miles) (Adrenaline orange: 166 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Scheduled day off. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Easy distance run from my office to a couple miles of the Logan River Trail and back via the canal trail. Aside from tight hamstrings and a "beat-up" feeling near my ankles, I feel alright after Relay del Sol. I think I'll recover alright for the half marathon this weekend, although it's yet to be determined whether I'll do any workouts this week or just rest up instead. Oh, our del Sol team is famous now. (Adrenaline black: 397 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
| Ran from work to canal trail to Bonneville Shore Trail to Green Canyon, then up Green Canyon, turned around and went back down into Logan. Tried to get a good aerobic workout in, and worked the uphills on the trail pretty hard. I hit 5:40/mile pace coming out of Green Canyon, including a stretch at 5:10/mile pace. It's a nice downhill. Did 4x100m strides after Green Canyon, then tried to keep a good 6:30/mile pace back to the office. Alas, it was not enough to catch the 7-minute guy, as all of the slow hills and trail running in the first half slowed me down. Finished averaging 7:04/mile for the run. Ave HR 152. Soreness is gone from del Sol, although there is some residual fatigue. I'll imagine I'll freshen up during my mini-taper before the half marathon. (Adrenaline orange: 180 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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For anyone interested, I've added a post to my personal blog about running doubles. ****** Easy run - landfill loop via paved river trail. Didn't track pace, but felt like 7:00-7:30/mile range. Went to LHS fields afterwards and did 4x200m barefoot strides in grass - 37, 36, 35, 33. Felt okay, but not great. (Adrenaline yellow: 464 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.50 |
| Easy run with Jon. Did canal trail loop with little out-and-back to 1st Dam. Legs are feeling a bit better, but are still thankful for rest. Hopefully they will be fully recovered by Saturday. I think based on my race performances and especially del Sol, I should be able to break 1:10 on Saturday, assuming conditions are good. I still have "Bingo" stuck in my head. B - I - N - G - O !!
(Adrenaline orange: 188 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.50 |
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Easy taper day. Ran Landfill Loop with Jon.
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| Race: |
Striders WRC Half Marathon (13.1 Miles) 01:09:27, Place overall: 1, Place in age division: 1 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.50 | 0.00 | 13.10 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 17.60 |
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Striders Half Marathon today. Weather was absolutely perfect for fast running: clear, cool (~45-50 degrees), and no wind. The course has a good layout for fast running: Gentle downhill for 7 miles, followed by small rolling hills for the last 6. My training and racing has been good lately, but my only worry was whether or not I was recovered from Del Sol. I didn't feel very spunky for most of the week, although I was feeling better on Friday. I jogged around a for about a mile before the race, and everything felt pretty good. Competition at the starting line looked to be excellent: Joe, Bob, Steve, Sasha, Neal, and others who I did not know as well. I was most worried about Bob and Joe, although I had a strong gut feeling that Steve would bust out this race and bring some competition as well. Special guest Jeff Galloway started the race. Although I'm not a big fan of his methods, I do like what he has done for the sport and all the new people and exposure he has brought. So that was neat. I took to the lead of the pack from the gun. I'm not sure why I did this, as I usually like to hang back, but today it felt right. The first half mile was probably the slowest of the race, due the the race starting on an uphill. Once we crested the hill, I got my coveted downhill, and opened it up to try to get into my race rhythm and also to start stringing out the pack, which seemed too large and was making me uncomfortable. We soon broke out into a pack of 6: me, Bob, Joe, Sasha, Steve, and Neal. First mile was long (5:52). I think I heard Sasha's GPS beep around 5:25 or so, but not sure. We kept rumbling down the canyon, and I felt very smooth. Mile 2 was 5:12. That's better. I wanted to hit 5:15's in on the downhill, figuring I could hold 5:25's on the last half to come in at 1:10. Mile 3 was 5:15. Mile 4 was 5:10. Still feeling very very good. By now I wasn't hearing Sasha's beeps, so I knew he had dropped back. I was still leading the pack with Bob, but could count a total of 5 shadows, so I knew Joe, Steve, and Neal were still there. Mile 5 was 5:12, Mile 6 was 5:13. Nothing hurting, good rhythm. I felt confident that I would at least not fall apart on the last half. Hamstrings were a little tight, but the calves were good and breathing was easy. By the end of Mile 6 there were only two shadows, just Bob and I. Mile 7 was 5:09. We turned the corner in here somewhere to start our circumnavigation of Pineview Reservoir. No more downhill. Rats. We'll see what the "rollie-pollies" (as Bob called the rolling hills) would do to our pace. Right now I knew I was on pace for 1:09, if I could just hold it... Mile 8 was 5:13. Apparently losing the downhill would not be a killer. Still working with Bob, but rather surprised we had broken away like that. Running out front makes me paranoid. Mile 9 was 5:35. Mile 10 was 5:06. I imagine 9 was long and 10 was short, but none of the race mile marks were that trustworthy anyway. Regardless, 5:20/mile pace for two miles, which I could dig. Bob fell back a little during Mile 10, and I started laboring in here more as well. But I still felt strong and decided to make a big push over the last 5K and finish off the race. I've only won one road race in my life (PC Marathon), and I always get scared when I'm leading. My hands were also pretty numb by this point, and it was difficult to push my watch button to get splits, so I decided to just forget it and do mental math instead, as the watch was a distraction. Mile 11 was 5:25. I had lost a good amount of leg power by now, and started focusing very hard on increasing my turnover to compensate. Whenever my speed lapsed, I would throw another surge to keep my mind and body focused on the task. Mile 12 was 5:20. Better. By now I was making weird noises, as I usually do late in a race when I'm pushing hard. Fortunately no one was around to make fun of me. Still running paranoid though. I pushed as hard as I could the last mile. At this point I wasn't sure if the course would be short, long, or correct, but either way I would hate to barely miss 1:10. I turned the last few corners, and knew I must be getting close, but couldn't see the finish line. Finally turned one more corner and had a 200m straight shot. At this point I knew I would break 1:10, but still tried to finish it off hard. Final time was 1:09:27, a new PR by 3:20. Split for last 3.1 miles was 16:28, meaning my last 1.1 miles was somewhere around 5:12/mile-pace. Bob finished 2nd (1:10:11), then Steve (nice job!, 1:10:57), then Joe (1:11:26), then Neal (1:11:49). Fast times on a fast course! Full results are here. I'm amazed how fast they get these results up! Cooled down several miles with Bob and the Logan crew, then did another mile on my own. The more I cooled down, the better I felt, but this race definitely worked me over. Judging by how I feel as I type this, I will be sore tomorrow!
Needless to say, I was thrilled with how today went. I knew I was capable of breaking 1:10, but it's a huge release and monkey off my back to actually do it. Also I'm pumped about winning the race amongst such strong competition. In my experience, you only get a couple races a year, or every couple years, where everything just "clicks", and you can tell your body what to do, and it obeys. Today was one of those days. The last day I had like that was St. George in 2005. According to a race calculator, my time equates to a 2:25:30 marathon, so I suppose my next goal is to break 2:25 at the Ogden Marathon. I still have to register for the race, but I'm for sure planning on running it now. I definitely need to put in some more miles and long runs first, and I plan to hang in the upper 80s to 90 for miles over the next four weeks before my taper. My new blog mascot is Multiple Man (see photo). Multiple Man was one of my favorite comic book superheroes when I was a kid. He a fairly ordinary guy (couldn't fly, no superstrength, etc.) with one and only one superpower: he could create multiples of himself (dopplegangers). Over the next four weeks I need to be Multiple Man in order to juggle work and family, and still get in my training and proper sleep. Time management is key. And yes, I will be doing "doubles" several days a week now too.
(Burn: 110 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.50 |
| I got up early before church this morning and did a nice, easy post-race shakeout run. Ran to the end of the paved river trail and back out, then through Willow Park, and back home, plus another mile with the dog. It was a beautiful morning: it had just rained, so the air was humid and had that "fresh" feeling to it. Reminded me of running back in Indiana. Plus, I didn't see a single other soul during the run; it was just me, God, and the birds in our outdoor sanctuary. A perfect way to start my Easter morning! I wasn't as sore as I thought I would be from the race. Just that "beat-up" feeling around my ankles, and a little fatigue in the quads. The run went quite well. I didn't wear a watch, but it was probably around 8:00/mile pace. Yesterday after the race I massaged everything, took a nap, and then went out and played some frisbee with my wife, so did some barefoot running in the grass. My legs actually felt a lot better after that, so I think it's good to keep moving after a race. Happy Easter everyone!!! (Adrenaline yellow: 475 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.00 |
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AM - Slept in until 7AM, then got up and ran an easy 4 miles (paved river trail). Legs are still in recovery mode, but have improved noticeably each day since the race, so that's good. If I feel completely recovered tomorrow, I'll try some tempo running. PM - Another easy 7 miles, this time out to the Hydro Park and back via the canal trail. Pace was 7:35/mile. Ave HR hung out in the upper 130s for most of the run. Everything is feeling pretty good. (Adrenaline black: 408 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
| stupid blog lost my entry when I hit submit and I don't feel like typing it all again. Did a workout. 6.5 miles tinman tempo. Windy. 6:30pace into the wind, 5:50 pace with tailwind. 4x100m strides.
(adrenaline orange: 202 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.25 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.25 |
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AM - Ran an easy 6 miles with Cody. We did the River Heights Loop. Ave 8:00/mile pace. (Adrenaline yellow: 481 miles) PM - Gym-to-gym loop from work, with out-and-back on paved river trail in
middle. 8 miles total, 7:10/mile. Felt okay but not great. Stopped at gym in middle of
run to weigh myself and do some chinups and arm curls. Weighed in at
130 lbs. (Adrenaline black: 416 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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AM - 4 easy miles. Paved river trail. Did 6x100m striders, which felt pretty snappy. (Adrenaline orange: 206 miles) PM - Jogged the dog around the block, then ran with Ben and Jon on the Logan Canyon River Trail. We took the upper loop to the top of Spring Hollow, and then back down through Spring Hollow Campground and back on the River Trail. It was longer than what I set out to do, but a fun run. It was good to run with Ben again, despite his stinky butt. (Cascadia: 51 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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CV interval workout on the track today. Did 6x1000m with 200m jog in between (~1 minute). Started out by warming up 1 mile, and then doing Tinman Tempo on the way up to the USU track. Averaged around 6:00/mile during tempo, half of which was uphill. I was feeling good, which I was thankful for, since I hate doing track workouts when I'm tired, as they are mentally difficult as it is. The intervals went well too. They were 3:13, 3:15, 3:13, 3:15, 3:13, 3:08. My goal pace was 3:15 (5:12/mile pace), so I hit that. The last interval I opened it up a little bit on the last 600m. HR averaged in the mid-170s for the intervals, and peaked at 184 on the last one. It definitely doesn't tick like it used to... Ran up through campus after the intervals, and then down to the mouth of Logan Canyon on Hwy 89, and back on Canyon Rd and the canal trail. Ave HR for entire run 154. Ave pace for entire run 6:45/mile. (Adrenaline orange: 219 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 19.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 19.00 |
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Jogged around the block with the dog, and then did a long run from my house to the end of the river trail and back (Guiveva Malibu campground) with Jon, James, Dan, Cody, and Mark. We had a big group and beat up some cub scouts here and there. Overall pace averaged around 8:00/mile, but the last mile we did in 6:10 or so just for fun. Didn't feel great today, but got the distance in. 90 miles this week (most since '04), upper 80's scheduled for the next two weeks. (Cascadia: 70 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 |
| Travel day to El Centro, CA for work. Flew out of SLC into San Diego at 8AM. Had brunch (it's a combination of breakfast and lunch, and comes with a piece of melon, you'll love it...), then drove over to beautiful El Centro. Piddled around for a few hours getting the conference room ready and touching up powerpoints. Finally got out for a run around 6:30PM, and easy 6-miler along the canals with Bryan (guy on project team who happens to be a pretty good runner). Did I mention that El Centro is 100 ft below sea level? Ah, oxygen. The run felt pretty good despite all the travel and a brutal headwind from the west. Hopefully I can get some decent runs in on Monday and Tuesday. It's pretty much damage-control on business trips like this, a getting in a 10-miler is bonus. We'll see... | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
| Day 2 in El Centro. Did a 6AM 10-miler with Bryan along the canals south of time. Beautiful morning, as far as Imperial Valley goes, shorts and t-shirt weather. This place is a flat as a pancake, and has bad air to boot, thanks to all the bovine universities and Mexicali to the south. But the dirt canal access roads make for some decent running. Don't have any idea of pace, but the Bryan and I agreed that the last half of it felt like sub-7 pace.
(Adrenaline orange: 235 miles |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.00 |
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Only had time for 7 miles this morning (Day 3 in El Centro). The rest of the day was filled with non-stop meetings, tutorials, and travel. I'll be glad to be home tomorrow. It took about half the run to wake up this morning, but then Bryan was game for doing a little "brisk" pace on the way back, so we did a few miles at 6:20/mile pace. (Adrenaline orange: 242 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.50 |
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Got up at 4:30AM and flew out of San Diego back to Logan. Slept the entire flight. Then slept for the entire shuttle ride home. Then crawled into bed and slept for 3 hours. Finally got around to going for a run around 5PM, and fortunately the rain and snow had cleared up to sun. I did a tinman tempo today on the Millville Hills loop. My legs felt pretty bad the entire run, and I knew I was in for a long day when my HR was in the upper 140s at 7:00-pace (about 10bpm high). Still, I managed to average 6:03/mile pace for the 8-mile tempo, which has a lot of long hills. Ave HR for the tempo was 169, and maxed at 181 on one of the long uphills. Ave pace for entire run was 6:23/mile and ave HR was 162. Floundered through 4x100m strides at the end of the workout. I'm glad I got the workout in, but hope very much I get the trip out of me and feel better tomorrow. (Adrenaline orange: 256 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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AM - easy 4.5 to end of paved river trail and back, with jog around the block with the dog. (Adrenaline yellow: 486 miles) PM - 10.5 miles out to climbing wall on River Trail and back, via canal trail. Felt okay, probably 7:00/mile pace or so. (Adrenaline black: 426 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.50 |
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AM - Easy 6 miles - landfill loop plus around the block with the dog. SI was stiff for the first mile or so, then loosened up. Felt okay during run. Kind of a blah week so far. (Adrenaline orange: 262 miles) PM - 9.5 miles or so with James. We ran out to Logan Canyon and just on the Pipeline Trail and took it to the end, then came back on the river trail and the canal trail. I've haven't done the Pipeline in a couple years, so it was fun to get out on it. (Adrenaline yellow: 496 miles -- retired!)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 4.00 | 2.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 20.00 |
| Long run with James and Cody. We drove up to the mouth of Blacksmith Fork Canyon and ran 9 miles up, averaging around 7:15/mile. When we turned around, I did some MP and LT intervals, using the TOU mileposts. 2 miles at MP (11:20), 1 mile at LT (5:15), 2 miles at MP (11:10), 1 mile at LT (5:30). Two minutes rest between each interval. A headwind picked up over the course of the workout, which slowed things down a little, but not too bad. I then rejoined Cody and James, and we did 6:30 pace the rest of the way down the canyon, including 6:10 for the last mile. It felt pretty decent, as far as long runs go, and I'm glad I did some faster running during it. 6:45/mile pace for the entire run. Ave HR 152 for the entire run, upper 170s during the intervals (181 max). (Adrenaline blue: 20 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Day off. Congrats to all those who ran SLC races this weekend! | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.50 |
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AM - 4.5 miles to end of paved river trail and back, plus some running with the dog. Did 6x100m strides. Felt pretty good, as far as morning runs go. (Adrenaline black: 430 miles) PM - 11 miles - Pipeline trail out-and-back with Jon. Good run. Easy pace. Ave HR was 133, which is quite low, especially for an evening run. It sank into the upper 120s at times. I guess that means that my stroke volume is increasing or something like that. I view it as a positive. (Adrenaline orange: 273 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.75 | 0.00 | 3.75 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
| Met Cody at 6AM and then ran from my house up to the USU track, where we met James. I ended up doing 6x1000m at CV pace, with 1:00 rest between intervals (200m). I was hoping to get in 8 intervals, but I knew when I started feeling some burn in my legs on the 6th interval, it was time to call it quits, as the workout is supposed to be completely aerobic. No sense in putting myself in the tank if I am already in the tank. I wanted 3:15's, and ended up 3:15, 3:17, 3:17, 3:16, 3:17, 3:17. HR during intervals averaged in the low-to-mid 170s, and peaked at 181. This was a little bit slower than the same workout I did two weeks ago; I just couldn't seem to get going or find a proper pace. Perhaps part of this is due to the early morning workout (I usually do afternoons), but I think it is mostly due to increase and mileage and some accumulated fatigue. But that is part of marathon training, right? I can say this, though, I am already looking forward to tapering! Only two more weeks of hard training... Cooled down several miles with Cody and James, then took the dog out for his morning jog. A good quality day, all things considered. Beautiful morning too. I fly to the Twin Cities for a training class later today, so I'll get some more low-elevation running tomorrow and Thursday. Maybe that will help my recovery. I should have a lot more time to run this trip, as I won't be with anyone or have anything else to do in the mornings and evenings. Hopefully I can find a nice trail along the Mississippi River to run along.
(Adrenaline blue: 33 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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AM - 5 miles through the mean streets of Eagan, MN. Actually the entire run was on bike paths; Eagan is full of them. It's a very nice town. Near my turn around point, I found a paved trail system, and took that for a half mile before I had to come back. It was a gorgeous morning and a great morning run. Sometimes I miss the midwest. The terrain here is quite rolling, but the low altitude makes the hills a lot easier, as I could hold sub-7 pace uphill and keep my HR at 140 or so. Coming back was definitely a lot faster, and hit sub-6:30-pace for some stretches. HR in the 120s on downhills. All in all, it was a very enjoyable run, as far as mornings go. I look forward to running again this evening for a bit longer. Ave HR 133. Ave pace 6:55/mile.
(Adrenaline orange: 278 miles)
PM - 9 miles, exploring more of the Eagan trails. After sitting in a GIS web server training session all day, I was quite ready to run. SI was a bit sore from all the sitting, but felt okay during the run. I love these rolling hills out here. Averaged 6:30/mile for the run, HR in upper 140s. Mmmm...oxygen!
(Adrenaline black: 439 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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Easy 9 miles this morning. I explored more of Eagan, this time running down a road named "Wildnerness Run Road". Sounded good to me, and it was. I was actually on a bike trail the whole time, since that's all they have here. It's amazing; this town has been planned very well. Trails and parks everyone you go, and the traffic and big box stores were mysteriously missing. Certain Utah towns should take note (Logan, I'm looking at you). Felt pretty good this morning, but slower than my last couple runs. Did 6x100m strides on the way back. Average pace 7:09/mile, average HR 137.
(Adrenaline orange: 287 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.00 |
| Nice easy run with Jon. I'm not sure of pace, but it actually felt pretty good. 30k tomorrow. (Adrenaline black: 446 miles)
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| Race: |
Striders Winter Racing Circuit 30K (18.65 Miles) 01:45:18, Place overall: 1, Place in age division: 1 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 2.40 | 18.60 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 21.00 |
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Striders 30K today. I was little concerned about this race, since I have been traveling so much and since it is only three weeks before the marathon. I was concerned about how much fatigue I had from traveling, and also worried about depleting myself too much. At the same time, I wanted to retain my standings in striders circuit, and get some good LDR circuit points as well. In order to achieve all these goals, this race would have to go out slow and be more about tactics than all-out effort. It was an absolutely beautiful morning, about 50 degrees, sunny, and no wind at the start. It would get to be pretty warm later in the day, but I was pretty sure heat wouldn't be an issue during my race itself. So optimal conditions. The course is an out-and-back semi-loop, so no net elevation change. But the terrain is rolling and has a long gradual uphill and subsequent downhill in the three miles adjacent to the turnaround. Combined with the elevation (~5000ft), it is not a fast course, but compared to the 5k, 10k, and 10-miler earlier in the series, it is not too difficult either. The start line was a lot thinner than the other WRC races. A lot of familiar races were missing. From the gun, it was me, Bob, Steve, and Sasha. Pace started very slow (5:50-ish), and gradually inched up each mile, until we were doing 5:20's on the gradual downhill until the turnoff to go around Pineview Reservoir. Sasha dropped around Mile 9, right before the turnaround, so it was just me, Bob, and Steve from there on. On the rolling hills we did 5:30s for a while. Although the pace felt conversational during the first half of the race, I was laboring a lot more by this point, and no one else was talking much either. Bob put in a surge around Mile 14 that dropped Steve and I pretty quick. I didn't have willpower to go with him, and stayed with Steve. I thought at first we just slowed down, but we were still 5:30 that mile, so Bob must have thrown a 5:20 or so. Bob seemed to have stabilized about 15 seconds ahead of us, but neither Steve nor I were making any moves to fill that gap. I was just trying to finish the race at that point, not feeling particularly great. I think the 5:20s earlier took a bit out of me. Around Mile 16, Bob's calf went out and he pulled up, so it was just Steve and I to the finish. I still wasn't feeling great, but at the same time the pace slowed to 5:45. It was playing out to be a tactical finish. Most of the tactics were going on in my own head, as two different voices kept trying to tell me what to do. "Slow down more, ease in and take 2nd (which is good enough, after all). Save it for the marathon," said one voice. The other said, "Win the darn race. $25 extra is worth it, and the LDR points are major as well. Quit slacking!" This basic conversation went on in my head for the next two miles, and in the meantime I sat behind Steve and just tried to stay on him. Finally we hit the 18-mile mark, and I thought, "Nuts to these voices! I'm just gonna go!" I let my body over (since my mind wasn't doing me any good), and went into 1000m interval mode, kicking the last 0.65 miles very hard. Steve didn't go with, and I ended up in 1st. Steve was 2nd and Sasha came in 3rd. I was very impressed with how Steve ran, especially considering he ran a marathon the week before! I think he could have just kept going and finished a marathon under 2:30 today.
It was a very good overall race, and I met my goals. I don't think I gassed myself by any means, but still did some very hard running and got some fast splits, which is good for both the body and mind. It was an interesting race, since it was rather tactical, and we got more surges and pace variations than in most of the other WRC races. I need to obviously work on some of my mental dialog, but it did come through in the end, so I can't complain too much. It's just frustrating (and amusing) how my mind plays so many games with me at times. 1 | 5:50
| 2 | 5:54 | 3 | 5:46 | 4 | 5:42
| 5 | 5:43 | 6 | ?? - watch malfunction
| 7 | ?? - watch malfunction
| 8 | 5:50 | 9 | 5:41
| 10 | 5:35 | 11 | 5:24 | 12 | 5:21 | 13 | 5:33 | 14 | 5:21 | 15 | 5:35 | 16 | 5:31 | 17 | 5:45 | 18 | 5:48 | 0.65
| 3:21 | (Burn: 131 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 3.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 |
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Nice easy 3 miler before lunch. My legs feel pretty decent after the 30k yesterday. Hamstrings are bit tight, and there is some general fatigue, but my calves and ankles do not feel "pounded" like they often do after races. Good sign. (Adrenaline blue: 36 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.50 |
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AM - Easy 4.5 miles, out-and-back on paved river trail, plus a block with the dog. Feel pretty good. (Adrenaline black: 451 miles) PM - 8-mile loop through Providence with Jon. Hot. (Adrenaline orange: 295 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.50 |
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Jogged a block with the dog, then ran from my house to the canal trail to the Bonneville Shoreline Trail to Green Canyon, up Green Canyon to the end of the single-track, and then back home the same way. I tried to keep the pace honest and work the hills a little, but wasn't really looking for a killer workout today, just some good distance and some hills. Did 6x100m strides in the middle of the run, the last 3 as hill surges on the Bonneville Trail. I measured out the route to best of my ability on G-Maps, and figured I averaged about 7:30/mile. I feel pretty much recovered from the race on Saturday. (Adrenaline blue: 50 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
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AM - 6.5 miles with Cody (canal trail loop) and then 0.5 miles with dog. Pace varied between 7:00 to 7:30/mile. SI is a bit irritated, but I see the chiro this evening. (Adrenaline black: 458 miles) PM - Easy run with James and Jon. Talked about kicking dogs for most of the run. (Adrenaline orange: 302 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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Raining buckets this morning, plus my legs felt like lead weights when I got out of bed, so I waited until about 5PM to run. My body is usually a bit more charged up by then, plus it had stopped raining (mostly). Today was my last Big Workout before the marathon (Big Workouts = hard workout that lasts over an hour and a half, usually 14-16 miles total). The workout today was 4-3-2-1 miles at MP, with 2:00 rest in between, so 10 miles at MP total. I ran from my office to Mile 24 of the TOU course and started the workout, running backward on the TOU course to Mile 18, and then turning around and coming back. I used the mile markers to get pace, although I'd miss one here or there. All my splits were in between 5:30-5:40/mile, which I was pretty happy with, considering how I felt this morning. Good workout. (Adrenaline blue: 65 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.00 |
| Easy recovery day. Once again I waited until it stopped raining, so weather was pretty good for running: cool and calm. Did the landfill loop via paved river trail. SI is still irritated. (Adrenaline orange: 310 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 18.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 18.00 |
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Boy, I'm glad today's run is over with. Mid-30s for temperature, wind, and snow. Gotta love that spring weather! Today was my last long run before Ogden, and we did virtually all of it on trail. It was not very fast, but we were out there for awhile. 18 miles in 2:30 or 2:35 or so. 8:30/mile pace, or something like that. James, Cody, and I met at the canal trailhead and ran the canal trail, then jumped on the Bonneville Trail, and then up Green Canyon. We went all the way up Green to the single track, and then almost a mile on the single track until it was time to turn around. Well over 1500 ft of net climbing. Coming down, we had a nasty headwind, and the snow picked up as well, to the pount where we were getting substantial accumulation, not only on the ground but also on our faces. Yuck! Once we got out of Green Canyon and back on the Bonneville trail, the wind died down a little, and so did the snow. It's as though Green Canyon had its own little microclimate today. I didn't feel particulary great today, and we were pretty miserable, but I was happy to get in the miles and complete my training clycle properly. Now it's time for a taper! 85 miles this week. 60-65 next week, and 30 the week of the marathon (plus the marathon). I'm looking forward to feeling fresh again. I've felt worn down the last couple weeks from the mileage. I don't know how you 100-mile/week guys do it... (Cascadia: 88 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.00 |
| Ran out-and-back on paved river trail nice and easy. Beautiful day. My legs feel better today than the last few days, so maybe they just needed a long, slow 18-miler in the snow to revitalize them. (Adrenaline blue: 69 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.00 |
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AM - easy 4.5 miles to end of paved river trail and back, then a block with the dog. Did 3x100m strides. Everything felt pretty good. (Adrenaline black: 455 miles) PM - easy 6.5 miles. Ran up the Center Street hill and turned off into River Heights, then into Providence. Stopped at the gym to eat pizza, lift a few weights, and cancel my membership, then continued home. Did 3x100m strides in the middle of the run. Average pace for run was 6:53/mile. (Adrenaline orange: 316 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Gorgeous sunny day up here in Cache Valley. My legs got spring fever and were in the mood for a strong aerobic run. Did the North Logan-USU loop in 65 minutes (6:30/mile). LT intervals tomorrow. (Adrenaline blue: 79 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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5x1600m repeats at Logan High track today, LT pace. Great temperature to run at 6AM, plus no wind, so ideal for a good workout. I felt pretty decent, especially after the first few intervals. Cody showed up and ran with me on the 4th interval, during my first and last lap. Having someone there to run alongside me got me going a lot faster, and "primed" my engine for the last interval too. Interval splits were 5:18, 5:18, 5:19, 5:11, 5:11. Ironically, the 5:11's felt easier than the first three. 1 lap rest between intervals (2:00)
Cooled down a couple laps then did about three miles at 6:15-6:20 pace, then cooled down more with the dog. Good workout. (Burn: 143 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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Ran up to the USU track from home, where I met Cody and James. Cody was going to make his sub-5:00 mile attempt, and James and I were going to pace him. Did a few strides, and then we started the time trial. Since I did an interval workout yesterday, I just paced Cody for the 1st and 3rd laps. My first 400 was a high 73. My second 400 (the 3rd lap of the 1600m) was a 75, so right on pace. They felt pretty good. Cody ended up at 5:00.00 for his 1600m, a 3-second PR. Ran back home afterward and then did a block with the dog. (Adrenaline blue: 88 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 |
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Ran at noon from my office. It was pretty hot out, but I enjoyed a good sweat. Did the Landfill Loop. Legs were feeling good and wanted to do 6:20 miles, so I let them. Did 6x100m barefoot strides in the grass at LHS near the end. (Adrenaline black: 461 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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Started at Dry Canyon and ran the Bonneville/Deerfence Trail down to Blacksmith Fork Canyon and back. It's about a 14-mile out-and-back. I used to call this route "18 miles", but that was back in the day before Garmins and G-Maps. This was one of my two "long runs" before the Ogden Marathon in 2003. Now it's one of my taper runs. My, how technology and better information changes things. Hopefully I will do better this year in Ogden than I did in 2003 (2:43:46). Twenty minutes faster would be nice. The cows are out in the section between Millville Canyon and Blacksmith Fork. None of them got aggressive on me, but I did have to jump over their dung, plus the trail was badly trampled (rolled my ankle a couple times). I would consider becoming 100% vegetarian and dairy-free if it would get rid of all the cattle on my favorite running routes.... Legs are feeling good. It's been a couple years since I've done this full route, but the rolling hills seem a lot easier than before. I think all those Ogden races helped. Run took about 1:52:00 or so. Probably about 8:00/mile, a good pace for me considering the difficulty of the trail. Nice day. 66 miles for the week. The taper intensifies next week...
(Cascadia: 102 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Day off. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 0.00 | 12.50 |
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AM - Got up early, ran a mile with 4x100m striders, and did a short track workout - 2x1600m @10K pace, with 1 lap rest (2 minutes). Intervals were 5:02 and 5:01. Everything felt pretty smooth and sharp, with fast recovery. Cooled down a couple miles. Will go a few more miles this evening. (Burn: 149 miles) PM - Did canal trail loop (6.5 miles) after work, then another half mile with the dog. 6:40/mile pace for the run. I had a teammate back in college who always used to say it "hurts to run slow" when you're starting to peak. I think I'm getting near that point. Starting to get very excited for the marathon. (Adrenaline black: 468 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.00 |
| Easy 7-ish mile run in the afternoon. No watch. Need to adjust to heat to get ready for Ogden... (Adrenaline orange: 323 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 1.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 |
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Did the landfill loop, with a 5:45 tempo mile in the middle. Felt only so-so on the tempo. Near the end of the run, I stopped at the LHS rec fields and did 4x200m barefoot strides in the grass (34, 34, 34, 33). After the striders, I felt much better and much smoother. It's funny how barefoot strides always seem to do that. I think they help get the biomechanics in sync or something. (Adrenaline blue: 94 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 |
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Easy run with Cody on paved river trail. (Adrenaline black: 473 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 1.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 1.50 |
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For anyone interested, I've posted a map, profile, and discussion about the Ogden Marathon course on my personal blog. ********************************************* Slept in until 7AM, and then jogged out to LHS rec fields and did a couple easy barefoot striders in the grass. Jogged back home, and did a few blocks with the dog. The temperature is alarmingly warm for 7AM. I just got another week increase in vacation, so will use a few hours this afternoon so that I can relax, lounge around, and take it easy before we head to Ogden. Also scheduled for a quick stop at the chiro for a final tune-up this afternoon. Will get a haircut as well, to make me more aerodynamic. So many pre-race preparations...
(Adrenaline orange: 325 miles) | |
| Race: |
Ogden Marathon (26.2 Miles) 02:26:24, Place overall: 1, Place in age division: 1 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.80 | 26.20 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 27.00 |
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Ogden Marathon. My watch completely died on me this afternoon, so I can't get at my mile splits, but I'll do the best I can off my memory. Here goes. Cody, Dan, James, and I stayed at James' inlaws in Willard, so we had about a 15-minute drive to the race busing area. Weather in Ogden at 5AM was pleasant, but too warm for 5AM. T-shirt and shorts were comfortable. Fortunately, once we bused up 1200' in elevation to the start line, the air was much more brisk, and good running conditions. No wind either. However, the temps in Ogden served as bad omen for what it would be like during the last few miles. The start line featured pretty much everyone I expected, so no big surprises there. After a false start, the race finally started for real, pretty much on-time. The first mile was slow, too slow: 5:42. I wanted 5:30s for the first 8 miles, which is a nice, fast, 1% grade downhill. So I sped up and no one sped up with me; I was all alone, and footsteps faded within a mile. My next 7 mile splits were pretty much all at 5:28. Seriously, it was weird, I was just locked into 5:28 until the downhill ended and we turned to go around Pineview. Everything was feeling good, and it felt like I had build a decent lead, so I decided to to maintain the same effort on the rolling hills around Pineview Reservoir. Same effort = slower pace, but I was fine with this, as I assumed everyone behind me would slow down too. Sure enough, my 5:28's turned into 5:40s. I wanted to hold this until Mile 17 or so, when the course veers downhill again. I hoped to even- or negative-split the race. Went through the half marathon in exactly 1:13:00. This was right where I wanted to be, especially given the warmer temps. Still no headwind of any sort, which was good. I was afraid when I broke away and went solo that I might hang myself out to dry if there was any sort of headwind, but so far so good. I could tell by the roar of the crowd that the next runners were about 2:00 behind me. This is good; if I can maintain for the rest of rolling section and then go back to sub-5:30s on the downhill part, I doubted that anyone would catch me. Did another 5:40, and then came to the only hill worth noting on the course. It is a decent climb, but nothing like Vejo; not too steep or too long. However, I had been experiencing mild stomach cramping for a little while, and it suddenly got a bit worse, to the point where it was slowing me down. I tried some breathing exercises, but the only thing that helped was grabbing my gut with my hand. Not an effective way to run a marathon. This resulted in a 6:10 mile and me walking through the next aid station. I knew that if I couldn't get back on track soon, my race was going south. It was frustrating because my legs still felt good. Walking through the aid station and taking a good amount of water seemed to help. I think my stomach was just upset from too much sugar from the Gu and PowerAid, and the water helped dilute it. In any case, after a bit more deep breathing exercises, I had worked the cramp out completely, and was rolling full-tilt again my Mile 17. The course resumed a big downhill starting right before Mile 18, as it winds down Ogden Canyon (1.8% downhill gradient). Mile 18 was 5:28 again, which made me laugh a little. I can't remember all my splits, but most were 5:30 or under, with a 5:20 as the fastest. My quads were feeling fatigued by Mile 20, but the rest of my systems still felt good. I wasn't breathing hard, I wasn't dehydrated, and I didn't feel glycogen-depleted. Quite a bit of general fatigue, but I could mentally focus through it. At Mile 20, I mentally turned the race into a 10K, and then mentally turned it into a 5K at Mile 23. I was drinking quite a bit of water and PowerAid at aid stations, but was dousing my head and body with even greater amounts of water. This kept me wet and cool between aid stations, and also shocked my nervous system from the sudden cold, and caused me to increase my pace. Ogden Canyon spit me out onto the Ogden River Parkway (a paved bike trail) around Mile 23. At this point I was smelling the barn enough to get excited about finishing strong, plus kept trying whatever I could think of to give me adrenaline surges and internal encouragement. I was dousing myself with even more water, and then doing double-fisted slam-dunks of the paper cups into the trash bins, while grunting. Seriously. The volunteers and half marathoners I was passing must have thought I was nuts, but I was still holding 5:30/mile pace, and that's all I cared about. I knew at this point from crowd response (or lack thereof) that victory was pretty much a done deal, but I really wanted to make sure to finish the race as hard as could, and potentially PR over my old St. George time. The Parkway segment finally ended with less than a mile to go, the course finished on the road into downtown Ogden. It's pretty much dead flat, but the building were casting good shadows, which helped keep things cool. I knew that the race ended on 25th Street, and started counting blocks. 20th Street: 1000m. 21st Street: half mile. 22nd Street: 600m. 23rd Street: 400m. At this point, the crowd was completely lining the street, and was very loud in cheering me on. That was the final bout of adrenaline I needed, and kicked it in hard, finishing the the final 400m with a good sprint, and relishing the moment. I realize that winning a race like this is nothing to take to for granted, and this particular finish is something that I will remember for a long time. What a rush! There was an issue with the timing due to the "false start", but I'm pretty sure my final time was 2:26:24-ish, which is a good 10-second PR from St. George in 2005. I thought after the Striders Half Marathon that I might have 2:25 or 2:24 in meon the Ogden Marathon course, and I think I do, but just not with the heat and with running solo. So as far as I'm concerned, I met my time goal, got a non-St George PR, and also met another goal of breaking the course record (2:29-something). My my primary goal was simply winning the race, and to be honest, I didn't even think about my PR until the last couple miles. So with all goals met and with the thrill of victory, I'm ecstatic with today, and am so thankful just to get to run a marathon again. A year ago, I could barely hobble, and I wasn't even sure if running competitively ever again would be an option. This marathon was a sweet way to cap off the road to recovery and finish out my first full training cycle back. I look forward to building on this and gradually adding more mileage and more training cycles. I'm not sure which fall marathon I'll do to try to get my Trials Qualifier, but for now I'm going to take a few days completely off, reverse taper, and then start a 5K-10K mesocycle to see if I can get some speed back. Then start a marathon mesocycle in late July to add more endurance to that speed. Steve Ashbaker outleaned Joe Wilson for 2nd (and his first sub-2:30
performance!!). Neal Gasmann was 4th with somewhere under 2:32. I
forget who was 5th, but Sasha was 6th (I think) with 2:32:00. So a very
solid field. Other bloggers ran very very well with some long-awaited
performances and PR's, but I won't steal their thunder! (Burn: 176 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Day off. Quads are very sore, hammies very tight. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Day off. Quads as sore as yesterday, hammies are less tight. Usually it takes me two days to start feeling better after a marathon, so I expect tomorrow to be better. I've definitely felt worse, in any case. ******************* I've posted an entry on my personal blog weighing the pros and cons of running St. George vs. Chicago vs. Twin Cities as my fall OQ attempt. Read, if interested, and input is welcome.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
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Less sore today. Should be ready to run again tomorrow. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 |
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My legs are ready to go again (no soreness), but my body decided at exactly 3:30PM yesterday to become sick. It was amazing: one minute I felt fine, and the next minute I had a cold! The last time I was sick was last September (a benefit of not having kids), so I'm going to use a few of those 130 sick hours I've accrued (but never use) at work. This exact same thing happened after St. George in 2005. Combine a hard marathon with a little heat, and the result is a destroyed immune system, at least for me. If I improve over the day, I may do some jogging this evening, but no hurry. Rest. PM - felt a little better, so ran the dog around the block, then ran to work and back, and then did the paved river trail. My hamstrings tightened up a little on the last part of the run, but other than that my legs felt pretty good. (Adrenaline blue: 99 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.50 |
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Feeling a bit better today, but still dealing with the head cold. Ran 7.5-mile landfill loop, nice and easy. Hamstrings are still tight, but legs don't feel beat up anymore. (Adrenaline black: 481 miles) ************* I've decided on my fall marathon and am officially registered. Thanks for all your feedback. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.50 |
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Easy easy distance out to paved river trail and then to Blackhawk condos, where I stopped to feed my vacationing friends' cat. It's a nice kitty, but is no dog. Ran back the same way. Still pretty congested and yucky-feeling, but energy levels are returning. (Adrenaline orange: 332 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.50 |
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Ran to the Temple Fork sawmill from the parking lot off of hwy 89. The single-track trail is in very good condition, and the run finally felt good too. My cold is nearly over and so is my recovery week. Back up to 65 miles or so next week. Played two hours of ulimate frisbee after the run and it kicked my butt. Lot of fun though.
(Cascadia: 112 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 |
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Easy 6 miles along paved river trail to Blackhawk condos to feed friends' cat. The cat was glad to see me. I'm quite sore from frisbee yesterday, as I apparently used muscles I haven't used in years. As a result, pace today was around 8:00/mile. After church, me, my wife, a group of friends, and a couple dogs are heading up for a one-night backpack trip up High Creek near Richmond. It's a beautiful area, although I'm crossing my fingers that there won't be much snow up at 8500 feet. It's not too bad of a hike though, about 3000' elevation gain over 5 miles. (Adrenaline black: 487 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| No running today. I'm pretty beat from the backpack trip, plus still have some congestion and phlem from being sick. I haven't been very motivated to run since the marathon, mostly due to just not feeling 100% with this head cold. I'm 80% leaning toward just not doing any USATF races until July 4, and focusing instead on getting a solid training foundation going again. The backpack trip was fun. We had 8 people and two dogs, and were able to beat up and intimidate all the other groups we came upon on the trail. We didn't make it up to High Creek Lake due to snowpack, but did manage to finally find a sweet spot about 50 meters off the trail at the base of Cherry Peak, after a bit of backtracking. Dinner always tastes better when you have to backtrack and wander aimlessly to find a camping spot. Coming back today, we bumped into Dan, his wife, his father-in-law, and his dog, going the other way. Dan was wearing his Relay Del Sol shirt and I was wearing my Wasatch Back shirt. It was all very orange. The FastRunningBlog community is a small world, even in the backcountry.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
| Still very sore, but pushed out a slow 10-miler out onto the Logan Canyon river trail and back. My cold has developed into a bit of a cough as well.
(Adrenaline blue: 109 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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AM - Providence Loop, 6 miles. Turtle-like pace, once again. I'm a little less sore than yesterday, still coughing some though. (Adrenaline black: 493 miles) PM - 4-mile out-and-back on paved river trail. Felt a bit better than this morning, and hit a couple sub-7 miles. Oh yeah. (Adrenaline orange: 336 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Out-and-back run on Mendon Road. Feeling a little better today, but still not very sharp. The miles that I clocked were in the 7:00-7:15 range, so much improvement from earlier in the week. (Adrenaline blue: 119 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.00 |
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Ran some with the dog, then drove out to the Logan Canyon River Trail and ran to Spring Hollow and back. It was a good run, definitely my best run of the week. Did some up-tempo running on the way back. I think I'm just about recovered from my cold and frisbee/backpacking, and will be able to proceed with real training next week. But no races until Wasatch Back. (Adrenaline black: 501 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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Did an afternoon trail run with Jon, Dan, and Cody...and my new Toy, the Garmin 205. We drove up Logan Canyon and ran the Beaver Creek-Sink Hollow loop, which starts at 7100 ft and peaks out at about 8200. So its a run that makes you work, but still mellow enough to hold a decent pace. We did 8:25/mile pace for the uphill portion, then some mid-7's on the flatter spots up top. Going down Sink Hollow, we got motivated to catch the 8:00 guy, and did so by finishing off the run with a 6:40, 6:15, and 6:30 miles. Not too bad for dodging rocks. I'm not a good downhill runner on technical terrain, but had a lot of fun on the last half of the run today. Temperature was perfect up at 8000 ft, and I can't get enough of that pine smell. Good day. 7:50/pace average for the entire run. (Cascadia: 125 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 |
| Did the Planet Walk and then a little bit with the dog. 7:09/mile average. My bashed my knee pretty good against my desk yesterday, and it will quite stiff and sore in the evening. However, after icing it last night and taking some ibuprofin, it's a lot better today.
(Adrenaline black: 506 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.00 |
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Back at it today with the tempo runs. Ran out to Millville and back, doing a 5-mile tinman tempo along the way. I had a hard time getting going during the first half, and splits were 6:09, 6:05, 6:05, 5:52, 5:56. After the tempo, I ran over to the LHS rec fields and did 4x200m barefoot in the grass in 34, 34, 32, 32. I ran these very hard. The garmin consistently said that the distance was actually 0.14 miles, which is 225 meters. If this is true, it would put my splits more in the 29-30s range. But the garmin may be rounding up as well. Either way, I'd like to get my speed down to under 30s on these grass 200's by the time Draper Days rolls around. I figure if I combine that with my standard training, I should be pretty fit to run to a good 5K/10K. (Adrenaline blue: 129 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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Providence Hill loop, 6:44/mile average pace. Held 7:00 pace up the hills, and 6:15-6:30 on the downhills. Good run. Did a mile with the dog afterwards. (Adrenaline orange: 345 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.50 |
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Rain rain rain. I put off running until after work, hoping to catch a break in the precip at some point, but no luck. I finally got out at 5:30, and did an 8-mile loop around Logan. It let up quite a bit while I was out there, so I guess timing wasn't too bad. Plus, I felt fantastic, and had a very enjoyable run, daydreaming about St. George the entire way. 6:29/mile average pace. Did 6x100m striders in the middle. Finished out the run with a block with the dog.
(Adrenaline black: 515 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.50 | 0.00 | 12.50 |
| Workout day. Again, I waited until after work to run, and this time my patience paid off: no rain. I wanted some hills today, so did a 6-mile tinman tempo on the Millville Hill Loop. Did a few 6:30 miles to warm up, then mile splits were 5:54, 5:52, 6:24 (all uphill), 5:46, 5:40 (all downhill), 5:48. I felt pretty good for the most part. I had some 200's on the track scheduled for afterward, and although I really didn't feel like doing them after 6 tempo miles, I forced myself to go home, put on the racing flats, and head out to the LHS track. Did 4x200 hard (31, 31, 31, 31), with ample recovery. I couldn't go much faster than 31s, but that's okay because it's still early June. I tried to focus on form and turnover. My flats felt pretty funny. It's been 14 months or so since I've worn racing shoes. (Adrenaline blue: 140 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.50 |
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AM - easy 4.5-mile recovery run on Planet Walk. Bumped into Cody, who ran with me for a while. Didn't wear a watch, but pace was very slow, as I was a bit stiff and tired from yesterday. Plus, my bruised knee that I had bashed into my desk last Saturday was a bit flared up, which made things uncomfortable. Ice and ibuprofin when I got home. (Adrenaline black: 520 miles) PM - easy 7-mile recovery run on Canal Trail Loop. 7:37/mile average pace. (Adrenaline orange: 352 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.50 |
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Ah...Saturday. Slept in until 8:30, then puttered around the house and yard for awhile before running errands. Eventually ended up at the Cache Gardeners Market, which is usually the place to be on Saturday morning. It's worth your time, if you're ever in Logan between 9AM-1PM on a Saturday. After working for awhile, I finally got around to doing my Saturday trail run by mid-afternoon. James was the only taker this week, and the two of us headed up Logan Canyon to the Right Hand Fork trailhead. From there we did a big 16+ mile loop: started up the Willow Creek Trail, then turned onto Steel Hollow and took it to its terminus at FR 056. We turned north onto FR 056 (Long Hollow) and paid homage to Old Ephraim by visiting his grave memorial. Old Ephraim was a legendary 9'11" grizzly bear that terrorized sheep during the 1920s, until a brave rancher repeatedly shot him to death with his gun. Pity. Now there are no more grizzlies in our area, but we seem to be overrun with livestock, most of which trample and poop all over my trails. Anyway, after stopping at the Ephraim memorial, we continued on Long Hollow, and then turned west onto FR 007 and headed toward Mud Flat. We then took Mud Flat all the way around to Cottonwood Spring and then Little Cottonwood Creek. And then we were back at the car. It's a great loop, and I've never done that particular variation of it (I usually come down Willow Creek instead of Mud Flat). The views are splendid on this run, particularly the second half, and everything is very very green right now. According to the Garmin, our average pace was 9:07/mile. Total time 2:29:10. Fastest mile was 7:40, slowest was 10:31. Also according to the Garmin, total ascent/decent was ~4250 ft, which maybe why we ran so slow. it definitely kicked my butt. Good run, though. I enjoyed yakking with James the entire time. (Cascadia: 141 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.50 |
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Did some barefoot running while throwing the frisbee around at our church picnic this afternoon. That loosened me up. After a good long nap, I ran the dog around the block then jumped in the car and went out to the River Trail, which is always a great Sunday run. Went a little past the end of the single track and back for 6 miles. According to the Garmin, it is exactly 3 miles from the parking lot to the gate after the single track (end of single track is 2.8 miles). Good things to know for future reference. (Adrenaline black: 526 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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AM - forced myself to roll out of bed, put some clothes on, and hit the road. I strongly considered just sleeping instead, as no single part of my body felt very good this morning. I went on to run 5 very very slow miles on the Planet Walk, plus some with the dog. Felt pretty bad. I'll try again this afternoon. (Adrenaline blue: 145 miles) PM - 8 mile North Logan out-and-back. Felt better than this morning. 6:53/mile average pace. Did 4x100m strides in the middle. Nice and cool still for a June afternoon. (Adrenaline orange: 360 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.50 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 0.50 | 0.00 | 11.00 |
| CV fartlek this morning. I did a couple miles at 7-minute pace to warm up, and then started the session: 4 repeats of 4 minutes hard, 3 minutes easy. The last two intervals felt a lot better than the first two. Results: 0.71 miles - 5:36/mile pace (gentle uphill the whole way) 0.74 miles - 5:24/mile pace (rolling) 0.75 miles - 5:21/mile pace (rolling) 0.76 miles - 5:15/mile pace (gentle downhill the whole way) Not my most stellar workout, as I was running this fast or faster back in February, but at least I got it in. I seem to have trouble getting moving in the mornings, but it's getting too hot to do hard workouts in the afternoons. Oh well, I suppose that effort matters more than anything. After the fartlek, I ran brisk pace (6:20/mile or so) to the LHS rec fields, and then did 5x200m barefoot in the grass (33, 33, 33, 33, 33). Nothing blazing, but at least they were consistent. Cooled down a mile with the dog. (Adrenaline blue: 150 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.50 |
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AM - easy 7 miles on canal loop, plus a block with the dog. 7:19/mile average pace. (Adrenaline black: 533 miles) PM - easy 4.5 miles on Planet Walk, and a block with the dog. 7:00/mile average pace. (Adrenaline orange: 365 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Traveling and meetings all day. Then bed. No running. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Got up at 5:15AM and ran from the Days Inn near Golden, CO. Ran about a mile down Hwy 40, then jumped onto a paved trail that paralleled Hwy 6 going north into Golden. I was warmed up after about two miles and started easing into a Tinman tempo. Terrain was very rolling, so I was averaging around 6:20/mile during most of it. Eventually I made a right turn (19th street?) and I passed the School of Mines (homage to Jon Allen) and got into downtown Golden. I found the Coors plant right when it was time to turn around, so mission accomplished. No time for a tour, though, as I had to turn around and run back. Good overall run with a good effort. 6:32/mile average pace for the entire run. I liked Golden, as it felt rather cut off from the the rest of the Denver metro due to topography.
(Adrenaline blue: 160 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.50 |
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Reluctantly rolled out of bed at 7:30AM in to hit the trails. 6AM would have been better due to the heat, but I was exhausted from traveling (didn't get home until 10:30 last night). I met James at First Dam, and we started the run, which I call the Wind Caves-Green Canyon Loop. We went through the Hydro Park, then up onto the Pipeline Trail, which spit us out onto Hwy 89. We then crossed 89 and jumped on the River Trail and took it to its terminus at Guineva Malibu campground. Then we crossed 89 again and started up the Wind Caves trail. Heard (and saw) a rattlesnake, which literally startled me enough to jump halfway off the trail. After about a mile, we took a little side trail that takes us up to the ridge. Here, things got tough. This trail is is a bit less-traveled and has poor footing and a steep gradient. Plus it was getting pretty hot. We did the best we could and run/walked up to the ridge, at 7300', where we were treated to panoramas of Logan Canyon and the Bear River Range. From the ridge, we then dove down into Green Canyon on the Bierdeneau Trail, which was in much better shape, plus was shaded. We made it to Green Canyon Road (dirt road) and ran out of Green Canyon and then linked up with the Bonneville Shoreline Trail, which took us back to our cars at First Dam. 1 loop, 4 different trails, 16.5 miles total, with 4400' total feet of climb/descent. A mark of a good Saturday morning. Average pace was right around 10:00/mile. Cache Valley is really a quite a trail running mecca, but no one knows about it. I encourage you Salt Lake folks to come out and run our trails sometime. Some people want to guard them and keep them a secret, but in order to protect them, people have to know that they are worth protecting. So I say the more the merrier. (Cascadia: 158 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Laid around most of the day and took naps. Hammocks are a wonderful invention. Went up to Green Canyon in the evening with our Bible study group and did a hike up to the cross that is on the ridge at the mouth of Green Canyon after our study. About 10-15 years ago, some guys from my church lugged some huge wood beams a couple miles up the ridge (about 2500 vertical feet), and constructed a a cross. It's a great place to go and look over Cache Valley. Everything is very tiny from up there, but the cross is very big. Quite symbolic and meditative. It is also very very steep, and I ended up running most of the way down in order to keep from fall out falling down the mountain. I'm not counting it as mileage though. Gorgeous day today, in the upper 70s and breezy. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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Ran from my office during the early afternoon. I figured today would be the last mild day for awhile, so I decided to take advantage of it. Mid-70s is nice running weather for a June afternoon. Ran the North Logan-USU loop. Warmed up for 3 miles, then did a 6-mile tinman tempo. Mile splits were 5:38 (downhill), 5:56 (uphill), 5:48, 5:40, 5:44, 5:44. Felt quite excellent. After about a half mile of cooldown, I did 4x30-second hill charges up the Boulevard Hill. Cooled down for another mile or so and called it a day. This is probably my best workout since the marathon. 6:18/mile average pace for entire run. (Adrenaline blue: 172 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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AM - easy 8 miles on Canal Trail Loop, plus a few blocks with the dog. 7:22/mile average pace. (Adrenaline orange: 373 miles) PM - easy 5 miles on Planet Walk. Hot out. 6:55/mile average pace. (Adrenaline black: 538 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.00 |
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Met with Jon and James at First Dam in the evening and ran the entire River Trail to Gueneva Malibu and back. 8:09/mile average pace. Did more talking than running. It was hot at first, but became very pleasant by the second half of the run. (Cascadia: 169 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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AM - wanted to avoid all hills, so I did the flattest run I know of: Landfill Loop via Planet Walk. With a block with the dog, it came out to about 8 miles. 7:05/mile average pace. Also did 4x100m striders near the end. This run could be described as "beh" or perhaps "sna". (Adrenaline blue: 180 miles) PM - easy 4 miles on Planet Walk. No shirt. No watch. No dice. (Adrenaline black: 542 miles) | |
| Race: |
Wasatch Back Relay (178 Miles) 18:29:29, Place overall: 3, Place in age division: 3 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.00 | 0.00 | 7.40 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.40 |
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AM - got up and ran over to the WBR start line at Merlin Olsen Park to check things out and drop off my Marathon GIS banner for them to put up. The start line was pretty much constructed by 6:30AM, including what I've been calling "The Four Pillars of Ragnar". If you've seen the start or finish line, you'll know what I'm talking about. From there, I ran a little bit on Leg 1, up into River Heights, and then back home. I'm glad to have this race starting 5 blocks from my house now, in the middle of Logan. Not only is it incredibly convenient for me, but it will be good for the town of Logan to host an event of this magnitude. This event is now twice the size of Top of Utah, and is the 3rd-largest relay in the U.S. It is growing so fast, that I expect it to exceed Reach the Beach by next year and become the 2nd-largest. Pretty cool. The race directors have worked hard and have earned it. Our team (MarathonGIS.com) starts at 5PM this evening, with Weber State, BYU, Runners Corner, and 26.2 Running Company. It will be a very good competition. (Adrenaline orange: 376 miles) PM - Wasatch Back Relay. Did Leg 5 in 46:17 (7.4 miles, 6:16/mile). Considering 3% uphill grade and 1200' of climbing, I was pretty happy with it. Splits were 5:42, 6:05, 6:11, 6:01, 6:16, 6:27, 7:00, 2:31 (0.4 miles, 6:31 pace). First 5 miles were great, but the gradient plus the distance/duration of sustaining that effort got to be too much for me. Will write more later. (Burn: 184 miles)
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| Race: |
Wasatch Back Relay (177 Miles) 18:29:29, Place overall: 3, Place in age division: 3 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.50 | 0.00 | 9.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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Day 2 of Wasatch Back. Started Leg 17 at exactly 1AM. I felt like I had recovered pretty well from my first leg, and was looking forward to running on rolling hills and asphalt rather than straight uphill on gravel. Felt very good, and finished the 5.4-mile leg in 29:58 (5:27/mile - the garmin measured 5.49 miles). Mile splits were 5:21, 5:32, 5:31, 5:25, 5:26, 2:41 (0.49 miles, 5:29 pace). Not necessarily an easy leg (~200 ft of net climb), so I was happy to get my goal of sub-5:30 pace. Caught an hour of quality sleep at Exch 24 (Rockport State Park). My legs felt surprisingly rejuvenated after that short rest. Started Leg 29 at 7:49 AM, so it was light out again, and starting to warm up. I had been looking forward to Leg 29, as it is only 4.1 miles and virtually all downhill, with an average downhill gradient of nearly 4%. Most of the drop comes in the first 2.5 miles, then it levels out over the last 1.5 miles, so the first half felt similar to the Alta Peruvian Dash (Little Cottonwood Canyon), with several stretches of 6% and 8% downhill gradient. My projected pace based on our magic spreadsheet (which uses elevation gain/loss) was 4:47/mile, which seemed a bit ambitious, but I decided to give it a try. Total time was 19:41 (4:49/mile), so I came very close. Mile splits were 4:50, 4:40, 4:46, 5:00. I was very pleased to hold 5:00-pace when the downhill diminished. I was feeling pretty good after my last leg and ran to Exch 30 (3.6 miles) with Sasha to cool down. (Burn: 192 miles) This race was a big confidence booster for me, as I was able to come very close to my projected times on each leg. Since the Ogden Marathon a month ago, my training quality has been up-and-down; I've been getting the miles in, but haven't felt so good about all my workouts. However, this race proved to me that I haven't lost any fitness and can still push myself to run well. Weber State ended up winning with 17:40:40. Congrats to them. BYU was second with 17:51:51. We were a distant 3rd with 18:29:29 (6:16/mile), with Little Team Provo behind us (without us knowing it) in 18:50:09. 26.2 Running Company rounded out the top 5 with 19:18:18. Full results are here.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.50 |
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Jogged a block with the dog to loosen up a little. My quads are a bit sore from the last downhill leg of WBR, but not too bad. Definitely tired though.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.50 |
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AM - easy 7-mile recovery run on canal trail loop. Quads still a little sore, and hamstrings were very tight. SI is sore too. I think it's about time to start paying my massage therapist some more visits to see if I can kick this chronic SI issue. 8:02/mile aveage pace. (Adrenaline black: 549 miles) PM - easy 5.5-mile recovery run on the landfill loop. Didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline orange: 379 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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Started my run around 11:30AM, so temps were getting a little warm, but still pretty nice. I ran out to the start of the River Trail single track and back, via the Canal Trail. First couple miles were around 7:15, but then I started to pick it up a little and started working the uphill section of the River Trail. I probably got in 4-5 miles at Tinman tempo effort, including a couple sub-6's on the downhill. I tried to keep it pretty relaxed and mellow though, as my legs are still a little tired from the relay. Did 4x100m strides on the way back. Average pace for run was 6:48/mile. Tomorrow I fly out to Montrose, CO for a couple nights for a meeting. I should have plenty of spare time to run, so am looking forward to that. (Adrenaline blue: 192 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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AM - ran from my house up to Dry Canyon, and then a mile up the Dry Canyon trail. Quite a bit of climbing; 1500' in 4 miles. On Saturday I am doing the Logan Peak Trail Run, which goes up the Dry Canyon trail (among others), and has over 7000' up cumulative gain/loss over 25 miles. It will be challenging, but I also intend to walk much of it, and am doing it "just for fun" and to support our local trail scene. Today's run was kind of a prep for Saturday and to see what sort of pace I can do up Dry Canyon comfortably. The answer is: about 11:00/mile pace. On the way back down, I ran into my friend Kelly, who is the race director. She and some volunteers were lugging up water to the 4-mile mark, which is the 1st and 4th aid station. Aid stations for single-track trail races definitely take a lot more work! Chatted with Kelly for awhile, and then continued my run back down the bench and into the netherworlds of Inner Logan. 8:13/mile average pace for entire run. (Adrenaline orange: 388 miles) PM - ran aimlessly through random streets in Montrose, CO. 7:08/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 197 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 2.50 | 0.50 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
| AM running in Montrose. I had a CV fartlek scheduled for today and decided to give it a shot. I warmed up for a couple miles, heading east, at about 7:15/mile pace. Then I wanted to do a mile at tinman tempo pace to prime my body before the fartlek. However, all I could do was 6:40 for that mile. I figured it might have been due to a slight headwind, the higher elevation (6000'), and not being awake yet. I started the fartlek, and all I could do was hold 5:43/mile pace for 2 minutes, then I quit. Took a 1:30 break and decided to try again. 6:03/mile pace for two minutes, then I went anaerobic. Quit again. I decided to turn around to see if I'd have better luck. Turned around and saw the city of Montrose several hundred feet below me. The problem was that I was going uphill (about 100'/mile)! It was such a steady incline, I just didn't notice, other than pace. And the headwind didn't help either. Now with a decline and a tailwind I was able to really get going. 4 minutes hard at 5:12/mile pace (0.77 miles). 2.5 minutes recovery. 4 minutes hard at 5:07/mile pace (0.79 miles). 2.5 minutes recovery. 4 minutes hard at 5:04/mile pace (0.79 miles). Ran a few miles easy and then found a large grassy park. Here I decided to take my shoes off and do 4 strider repeats in the grass. They were all about 32 seconds, but start and stop point was not constant. According to the garmin, my pace splits were 4:31/mile, 4:08/mile, 4:15/mile, and 3:57/mile. So the equivalent of running 200's in 31s or so. I'm not sure how accurate the garmin is at those short distances though. (1120: 12 miles --yeah, new shoes!) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 |
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Easy 6-mile run in Montrose. It was a warm morning with strong winds out of the east (again). Needless to say, I preferred running west! 7:27/mile average pace. Logan Peak 25-miler tomorrow... (Adrenaline blue: 203 miles) | |
| Race: |
Logan Peak Trail Run (26.5 Miles) 05:29:37, Place overall: 5 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 26.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 26.50 |
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This morning I did my first trail race: the Logan Peak Trail Run. It is a 25-mile semi-loop up in the Bear River Range in Logan. Actually, it was more like 26.5 miles, but whatever. Start elevatoin is about 5000'. Max elevation (Logan Peak) is about 9700'. Total elevation gain/loss is around 7200'. Course map is here. Course profile is here. The race started at 6:30AM from a park up in the Logan Cliffside neighborhood. I have never been to this park because I am not rich enough. There were 27 runners, which was a good turnout, because the race director's goal was only 20 for this first year. But several of the participants were seasoned, decorated trail runners, so I knew stealing a win would be out of the question, especially since I wanted this race to be a "fun run". Cody and I were planning on running the entire race together, and I was looking forward to the trail, the scenery, and the company. Start to Mile 4.5 -The first part of the course leaves the park and hits the Bonneville Shoreline Trail. There were some immediate rolling hills. Cody and I found ourselves in 4th or 5th place by the time we departed the BST at the mouth of Dry Canyon, around Mile 1. At Dry Canyon, the race really begins, as there is non-stop climbing to Mile 4.5 on rocky single-track. We started ascending Dry Canyon and caught a few people. However, we would get passed whenever I stopped to take pictures. It was a slow grinding climb (3000' in 3.5 miles), and we were glad to see the first aid station. Mmmm...trail mix and pretzels. Mile splits were first 4 miles were 9:45, 12:31, 14:41, 16:02. This includes stops, as I wouldn't stop my watch when we took breaks. Mile 4.5 to Mile 11 - After departing the aid station, the course turned off of Dry Canyon and onto the south portion of the Syncline Trail. Finally, we got some relief from the constant uphill. Terrain was variable - flat, up, down. But in general, this portion of the race was really nice. I had never been on this trail, and was treated to some good views of the Cache Valley and Providence Canyon. We were holding steady somewhere near the Top 5 for position. After a couple miles of single-track, we got on the Welches Flat jeep trail, which wraps around the north side of Providence Canyon. Around Mile 10 we were spat out at the top of Providence Canyon, above the old rock quarry. Terrain was still quite variable, but there was a lot of uphill that we were walking. Once again, we were quite glad to see the second aid station, near Mile 11. This station had even better food, and we took a 5-minute siesta where we focused on cramming food down our mouths. Mile splits for this stretch were 16:50 (includes stop at first aid station), 9:05, 7:59, 13:55, 10:09, 14:23, 16:45 (includes stop at second aid station). I accidently stopped my watch at the first aid station and didn't realize it until 0.6 miles into this segment, so that threw things off a little. Mile 11 to Mile 16 - This segment was an out-and-back to the namesake of the race: Logan Peak. We faced a 1000 overall vertical ft climb in 2.5 miles to reach our destination, which for all intents and purposes served as the halfway point of the race. As usual, we were walking the uphills, and running the best we could on the flat and downhill parts. The hardest thing was that we could see Logan Peak the entire time (big radio towers), we had to circumvent a ridge to get up on it first. I was planning on doing the Rocky thing at the very top of Logan Peak, but after the final quarter mile shuffle up to it, I didn't have the energy to jump around, make jabbing motions, and yell "Yeah! Yeah!". Instead I just filled up my water, ate a Gu, and talked to the volunteers. Several people passed Cody and I up here, since we were once again eating, chatting, and taking pictures. Everyone else seemed focused on running or something. Finally, we started back down Logan Peak, back to aid station #2. We passed back several people, and also got to see the people behind us, who were going up on the out-and-back. It was nice to see the whole field and give them encouragement. Trail races are laid-back events, and it's cool to give and receive smiles from your competitors. We noticed that the first woman (Sarah Evans, a Wasatch Running Center teammate) was about 10 minutes behind us. The downhill was very good to have after the long climb, and we made it back pretty quick to the aid station at the junction. Once again we stopped for trail mix, cookies, drinks, etc, etc. Several people passed us back. I took their picture. Mile splits for this segment were 14:36, 19:53, 8:07, 8:52, 14:02 (includes aid stop). Mile 16 to Mile 22 - We turned right at the aid junction this time and continued on the jeep trail. Terrain was undulating (a pattern for this race). Walk, run. Walk, run. I was still feeling pretty good, thanks to the frequent and long aid stops. Around Mile 18, we turned left onto the north segment of the Syncline Trail, and started traversing the south rim of Logan Canyon. Views were fantastic, and I had never been on the stretch before. US-89 was about 4000' below us. After a couple miles on the Syncline Trail (on which we were moving pretty good), we caught up to runner ahead of us, who had come to a stop at a junction in the trail. We soon saw the dilemma. There was a race sign pointing right, and some flagging on the right junction, but all common sense told us "go left". We decided that someone was playing a mean trick and that going right would take us off a cliff, so the three of us agreed to go left. We soon saw flagging again on our chosen course, and were 99.9% sure we made the correct choice. We found out later that some random jerk turned the sign around and messed with the flagging to be a wise guy. Ah, Cache Valley. Cody and I ran with the other runner for several miles and chatted a little bit. He was from Salt Lake, that's all I remember. This stretch of single-track dragged on and on, and I kept expecting to see Dry Canyon again "any time", but it never came. Cody and I passed the other runner, who had decided to walk more than we wanted to. Finally, we came to the nose of the ridge and started winding back down to Dry Canyon. Hurrah, no more uphills! On this stretch we passed a guy that I'm pretty sure was in the Top 3 earlier in the race. That was satisfying; we were tired but not slowing down at all. We soon made it to the Dry Canyon aid station, the same station that was our first stop nearly 4.5 hours earlier. Mile splits for this segment were 12:01, 9:58, 11:37, 13:41, 12:04, 14:24 (includes aid stop). Miles 22 to 26.5 (finish) - I wasn't intending to spend much time at this aid station, since all we had left was 4.5 miles of sheer downhill, but then we got incentive to take off even faster: the top woman (Sarah Evans) came into the aid station while we were still eating. I didn't say anything, but gave Cody the universal telepathic signal of "We can't get chicked." I don't care that it was a "fun run", it just wasn't going to happen, especially on my home course. I was actually quite impressed with Sarah, though; she must have been hauling over the last 8 miles. Myself, Cody, and Sarah started down the trail, beginning our 3000', 4.5-mile descent. We just pointed ourselves downhill and went. We soon lost her within a mile or so. Crisis averted. With about 2 miles to go, I was really smelling the barn, but momentum was halted when I hit a big rock at 7:00/mile pace. Gravity + steep downhill + lots of rocks is a bad combination, and I took quite a tumble. I think I absorbed most of the fall with both shoulders, as they really hurt afterward. My left palm got bloodied pretty good, and my right calf cramped up at same time. I peeled myself off the rocks and took a quick assessment: scraped hand with a flat of skin hanging, but nothing deep. Shoulder hurts, but not dislocated. Calf is starting to unlock. Nothing to do but start running again. We found our groove again within a few minutes. I was happy to draw a little blood in my first trail race.
Somewhere in there we passed a runner who had been quite a ways ahead of us. Always a good thing. Some hiker at the botton of the canyon yelled at us we were 4th and 5th. We didn't believe him. We exited Dry Canyon with a mile to go, and climbed up onto the Bonneville Shoreline Trail. The rolling hills of the BST were most unwelcome, but we were almost there, and my legs still had some pop. We made the turn off of the BST, back onto the grass leading back down to the park. I missed the flagging for a turn and Cody corrected me, but got out in front in the process. There was one last very steep downhill going into the park, and Cody looked back and told me he wanted to beat me while I was still stumbling down the grade. I told him he better start sprinting if that was the case. Cody started sprinting. He finished a couple seconds ahead; Cody was indeed 4th overall and I was 5th. The random dude was right. The winner (Leland Barker) was a little more a half hour ahead. Third place was only 5 minutes ahead, and 6th place (the top woman) was two minutes behind. According to my Garmin (SportTracks) we spent about 42 minutes stopped. I suppose if we hadn't have taken so many breaks we could have placed higher...or we might have run slower. In any case, I think I'll recover pretty well due to all the breaks, food, and water I took during the race.
Mile splits for this segment were 9:01, 7:33, 8:30 (with tumble), 7:56, 3:06 (11:08-pace). This blog entry turned into a book, but it was my first real trail race, and was memorable to me. I enjoyed the vast majority of it, and had a lot of fun running with Cody. It definitely beat doing chores. The race organization was quite good, the course was well-marked (except for vandalized areas), and the aid/food/voluteers were all awesome. Shirts were very cool too. And Cody won a huge vat of HammerGel. Good times. Again, I must say that our Cache Valley trails rock, and I encourage people to come up and run them. (Cascadia: 196 miles)
Some pictures are below (in chronological order). They are reduced to fit the blog, but you can see full resolution by right-clicking and selecting "view".
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Took a day off to recover from the trail race. I'm more sore from my spill than anything. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.50 |
| AM - easy 4.5 miles on Planet Walk, with some running with the dog. I was pleasantly surprised with how good I felt. I still have a little bit of soreness, but apparently in nothing that I need to run on flat roads. I'm a bit more optimistic about running well at the Sandy Classic this Wednesday. Didn't wear watch. (1120: 16 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.00 |
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Post trail race recovery day / pre-10K taper day. Take your pick. Easy 7 miles around 7:00/mile pace on the canal trail loop. Did 4x100m strides near the end. All in all, I felt pretty good. Most of the effects of the trail race seem to be gone, although only a hard effort (such as a 10K race) will tell for sure. (Adrenaline blue: 210 miles) |
| Race: |
Sandy Classic 10K (6.2 Miles) 00:33:01, Place overall: 3, Place in age division: 2 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.70 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.30 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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This morning was the Sandy Classic 10K. Driving 90 miles each way just to run for half an hour is always a bit risky, but I was optimistic it would pay off for me. I knew that the Sandy Classic field tends not to be very deep, so it was a prime opportunity to grab a fist-full of LDR Circuit points. That, and money went three deep - $200, $150, $100. If I could pull out at least 3rd and/or beat all of the other LDR runners, it would be worth the drive. Got up at 4:20AM, scarfed some oatmeal, and started the drive to Sandy. Arrived at 6:15, an hour before the race. It's a good thing I had extra time, because they had not received my registration and had no record of me. Fortunately, the volunteers worked with me and got me into the race. Found Sasha and did a short warmup. Then put on my racing flats and did some strides. Legs were feeling decent, but I wouldn't really know the impact of the trail marathon I did 4 days ago until Mile 2 or so... During warmup I was able to scope all of the competition. Most people were in the 5K, and only about 100-120 runners in the 10K. 1st place immediately looked very doubtful when I spotted Hobie Call. Also, Nick McCombs (former BYU runner) was in the field. I wasn't sure exactly how fast Nick was, just that he's a good runner, but Sasha seemed to think I could stay with him if I had a good day. I was eager to race against Nick, and even Hobie, to see how I stacked up against some runners I've heard a lot about but haven't really raced. The 5K and 10K are the same loop course. The 10K runners do two loops. They started the 5K, and then the 10K started 10 minutes later (early of all things). Immediately, Hobie took it out hard; he had no intentions of running with anyone and we had no intentions of going out at that pace. I was in 2nd for the first half mile or so, and then Nick caught up to me and we started running together. First mile in 5:00, despite rolling hills and net uphill. That could be trouble later on; I think the Hobie vortex sucked us all out hard. Nick and I stayed together for the second mile. I was feeling okay, but not great. The pace felt very hard, and I wasn't feeling up to running 4 more miles like that. There was some more uphill on Mile 2, and also a good downhill. I was surprised to see 5:03 for my split. 10:03 for 2 miles, no wonder it felt hard! At this point it felt safe to say I had recovered from the trail race.
After 2 miles, Nick separated from me and slowly put on a gap. I didn't have the initiative or inertia to go after him. Mile 3 was very rolling, with a series of short climbs and descents. In addition, we had caught the 5K runners, and not just the walkers and stragglers! We were weaving through and passing hordes of runners. My tangents were terrible, but I didn't want to get cut off by anyone. Nick, on the other hand, was shooting through people and running perfect tangents. Mile split was 5:16. Estimated 5K split was 15:52. My time goal on the course was to break 33:00, and I was on pace for sub-32:00...but I was pretty sure I couldn't duplicate my first half effort.
At the halfway point Nick was maybe 10-15 seconds ahead of me, and Hobie 20 seconds ahead of him. I could see Hobie once in while, but he was usually around the next curve. Based on crowd feedback, there wasn't anyone close behind me. At this point I knew that if I could run a solid second half, I would meet my goals by finishing Top 3 ($$$), and also I would be the top LDR point scorer, as Hobie and Nick are not in the Circuit. Mile 4 was difficult due to the hills, but I worked through them and managed a 5:18. At this point, I was pretty happy to be under 5:20 pace. Mile 5 had the downhill section, and I managed a 5:13. Nick was still slowly pulling away, and I wasn't feeling a miracle finish coming on. At this point, we were passing the slower 10K runners who were still on their first lap. Again, my tangents were nasty bad, and I couldn't seem to focus on running smart. By Mile 6, I was feeling pretty gassed and unmotivated. Still running bad tangents. Mile split was 5:25. I kicked it in a bit to finish strong, then got a little confused about the finish chutes (5K on the right, 10K on the left), which cost me a few second. Averaged 5:03/mile pace for the last little bit, which was 0.35 miles, according to my Garmin. This would mean that I ran about 200m extra. The course was certified, and I think I can account for all of the extra distance due to bad tangents. It just goes to show how all of the corners add up.
My watch time was 33:05, but I think I might have stopped it late, so I'm saying 33:03 until I see official results. (update: official results say 33:01). That comes out to 5:12/mile (using my Garmin distance), which I'm pretty happy with. Hobie won with a time around 31:30 (amazing on that course). Nick was second with something like 32:25. Vance Twitchell (former USU XC/track runner) was 4th, slightly less than a minute behind me. Sasha was 5th, around 35:00. I'm pretty happy with my physical performance today. It wasn't stellar, but was solid. I'd give it a "B+". What cost me, though, was my head. I didn't focus well enough to run good tangents, or to push myself really hard during the last mile. I'll give my head a "C". The awards were informal, just people clustering around a table. The race director handed out hundred-dollar bills on the spot. Salt Lake City Marathon should take notes on this. I enjoyed the course layout. It was challenging, but not overbearing, and you could still find a good rhythm. What I didn't like was fighting against the crowds of 5K runners and lapped 10K runners...but whatever, it was fine. Jogged around a bit for a cooldown, and then drove home. When I got home, I grabbed a brisk 4 miles on the Planet Walk to work the drive out of me and finish off my day. 6:34/mile average pace. (1120: 23 miles) ***** Oh, one more note. It was inspiring talking to Hobie. The guy trains like an animal. He said he was doing 125 miles/week in preparation for Salt Lake City Marathon. The hard work is very evident, not just at Salt Lake, but also today on a course that required strength and speed. He is planning on running Top of Utah as his Olympic Trials Qualifer. Best of luck. It's time for me to get my mileage back up in the 90's and to start doing some hard training myself. I think running this race and getting my butt kicked so bad by a guy who runs almost double the mileage I do was a good motivator for me. I've also been reading "Running with the Buffaloes" a book that chronicles the 1998 CU cross country season. The book is excellent so far, and also very motivational. Those guys gave it their all and trained like maniacs, all for the team. Nick, if you are reading this, you must read this book!
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
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AM - easy 8.5-mile recovery run on Logan Loop. 7:34/mile average pace. Feel okay after race. (Adrenaline blue: 219 miles) PM - easy 5 miles on Planet Walk, with 4x150m barefoot strides in the LHS grass fields. Didn't wear watch. Strides were very easy, and included running through sprinklers. Yeah! So hot out...I can't believe how low the Logan River is right now; I've never seen it like this. (Adrenaline orange: 393 miles) Side note: the Logan Chapter of the FastRunningBlog made the front page of the local sports section today, for a cool-down of all things. The photographer must have been late to the race! Caption: James Barnes, Cody Draper, Logan Fielding, and Jon Allen run the wrong direction and get in everyone's way, ruining the Freedom Run for all. Quote Draper: "Hey, it's the 4th of July, I can do whatever I want! Take that, Britain!" | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.50 |
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Didn't sleep well last night because of the heat. We don't have A/C, but usually sticking a fan in the window is just as good in Logan. Not so lately, as it didn't really cool down at all last night. By the time it was cool enough to sleep, it was time to get up and run. I pulled myself out of bed at 6AM and ran over to the canal trailhead to meet James. From there ran the canal trail to First Dam to the Bonneville Trail to Green Canyon, and then back through USU campus. Pace was crawling, 7:53/mile average. I was glad to run with James today, because I sure didn't feel like getting up and running! (1120: 34 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.50 | 2.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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Met Cody and James at the canal trailhead and ran to the end of the river trail and back (15-miler). Pace on the way up was pretty easy, but we gradually picked up the pace and did some tempo on the way (5:45/mile pace or so). 6:30/mile pace after the tempo back to the start. Felt okay, but not great. Still in race recovery mode, but this was a good way to end my week. (Cascadia: 211 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 |
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Easy run on the Planet Walk, plus a mile with the dog. Didn't wear watch. I felt pretty good this morning, and feel ready to attack a good week of training. I hope to get in the upper 80s this week. (Adrenaline orange: 398 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.50 | 0.00 | 4.00 | 0.50 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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Workout today. Warmed up 5 miles on the Landfill Loop, with 1.5 miles of tinman tempo at 6:00/mile pace. Took a pit stop, then ran out to the LHS track to do an interval session: 6x1000m at CV pace, with 2:00 (200m) rest. Intervals were 3:15, 3:16, 3:16, 3:14, 3:14, 3:14 (~5:12/mile pace). My legs felt decent, but my form felt sloppy and not very sharp. After the intervals I went out to the grass rec fields and did 4x200m barefoot strides through the soggy grass (sprinklers had been on). Cooled down a couple miles afterward. All in all, a good solid workout. (1120: 47 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.50 |
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AM - met James at the Island Market and headed up the Center Street hill, then through River Heights and Providence. Came back along the TOU course. Pace was slow, and my body didn't feel very perky. 7:51/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 229 miles) PM - met Jon at the Rec Center and did the Planet Walk (5 miles). Hot. 7:35/mile average pace. (Adrenaline orange: 403 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
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AM - I really didn't want to run this morning, so I sought out some company to make it easier, and fortunately found Cody and the LHS track. He will finishing up his interval workout, so I paced him in a 400 at 72s, and a 200 in 32s. It's definitely hard to go into a 400m interval with only 2 minutes of warmup (I live next the track), but I felt pretty good after the 200. I figured that took care of my strides for the run. I ran with Cody on his cooldown, and then did the landfill loop after he went home. 7:24/mile average pace for the run (7.5 miles)
(1120: 54 miles) PM - had a dinner run late, so I didn't get to hit the road until 9PM. Did the canal trail route (6 miles). It was getting pretty dark, and I ran past a shadowy figure running the other way at sub-7minute pace. I took a good look back, trying to figure out if it was Jon, Cody, or James, since there's only so many people in Logan that run sub-7 pace. The shadowy figure looked back too, probably thinking the same thing. Turned out to be Jon, so I turned around and ran with him back to his car, and then back home via the Boulevard. Better to run with people than to run alone, IMO. That makes me 2/2 today on bumping into friends while running. 7:07/mile average pace. (Adrenaline orange: 409 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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Long Workout Day. I wanted to do some hills, so I ran from my house up Center Street to Dry Canyon (600 ft climb). Pace up to Dry Canyon was around 7:45/mile or so. Then I hopped on the Bonneville Shoreline/Deerfence Trail, and took it past Providence Canyon to Millville Canyon. The Deerfence is very rolling, and my goal here was to work the uphills and recover/maintain on the downhills. I managed to average a little over 7-minute pace on this 4.5-mile stretch of trail, which I was pretty happy with. At Millville Canyon, I left the trail and hit the road back down to Millville and Providence, maintaining tinman tempo pace. Did a downhill mile 5:47, an uphill mile in 5:55 (the uphill mile on the TOU course through Millville), and then a flat/downhill mile in 5:47 (TOU course into Providence). Finished out the last three miles cooldown averaging 6:40 pace. 14 miles total. 6:56/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 243 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.50 |
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AM - easy run on Logan Loop. 7:18/mile average pace. (1120: 62 miles) PM - ran the River Trail with Cody (6 miles). Felt pretty good. 7:15/mile average pace. (Adrenaline orange: 415 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
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Met Jon and Cody at First Dam and then carpooled up Logan Canyon to Franklin Basin. We parked in the lot near the highway, and then started up Franklin Basin Road, which is a fairly well-maintained dirt forest road. Parking lot elevation is about 6600', and temps were in the low 50s to start the run at 7AM. Perfect! It felt really good for my arms and hands to be a little chilly in the shade. The road climbs at a fairly steady 4% grade (~200ft/mile), and our pace going up was pretty slow -- a lot of miles in the 8:30 to 8:50 range. We turned around at the junction of Gibson Lake Rd, which happened to be exactly 8.0 miles. We took that as a sign not to get greedy and go further. Elevation here was 8100', so we had climbed 1500'. Going down was much faster, and the last three miles turned into a bit of a mini-tempo - 6:44, 6:36, 6:30, 6:46, 6:26, 5:58, 5:44, 5:48. It was already getting warm by the bottom. Also, various campers were cooking bacon as we passed their campsites. I really wanted to stop and say "hello, please give me bacon", but restrained myself. 7:32/mile average pace for the entire 16-mile run. A good Saturday morning. That gives me 90 miles for the week, tying my highest mileage week for the year. If I do Draper Days, I will drop down a little bit next week, but if I don't run it then I'll maintain upper 80s another week before the Des News 10K. After Des News, I'll start my 9-week "marathon program", which pretty much involves doing the same thing I've been doing for the last 6 months. (Cascadia: 227 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.50 |
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Planet Walk, easy, no watch. It was shirtless running weather already at 8AM. I am sick of July.
(Adrenaline orange: 420 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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Did Millville Loop, with 7-mile tinman tempo in the middle. I was feeling a little lethargic to start the run, so I eased into the tempo without giving myself unrealistic expectations. Tempo splits were 6:09 (rolling), 6:11 (uphill), 6:34 (big uphill), 5:55 (rolling), 5:49 (rolling, downhill), 5:51 (downhill), 5:52 (flat). Cooled down with a few 6:55 miles. Decent workout today. I still don't know if I'm running Draper Days, so am playing this week by ear. (1120: 75 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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AM - easy 8-mile run on the Landfill Loop (via Planet Walk) and then a block with the dog. Took bio break near landfill, which I thought was appropriate. Felt much better afterward, and did 4x100m strides to finish up. 6:57/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 251 miles) PM - easy 5 miles on Planet Walk. Got rained halfway through, which was a pleasant treat. Nice lightening too. Didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline orange: 425 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 1.50 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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AM - Did a Daniels-style [R] workout this morning, the first and last one of the year. I use fast interval training very sparingly, and think of it generally as glorified striders. I met James out at the LHS track and did 400-200-400-200-400-200-400-200, with full recovery (400m rest after each 400, 200m rest after each 200). According to my supposed VDOT, my R pace is about 67 seconds per lap, so I aimed to hit that for my 400s, and 33 for my 200s. The purpose of this workout was not to make myself hurt or kill myself, but to work on form and increase running economy. My splits for the alternating 400s and 200s were: 68.2, 32.9, 67.9, 33.4, 67.7, 33.0, 67.2, 30.1 I felt a lot smoother than my last track workout, and all of the reps felt controlled and relatively easy; never really entered the state of anaerobia, which is always a bonus. I opened it up a bit on the last 200m to hit 30, but again, it was controlled. Ran a few more miles with James and then a block with the dog to hit an even 10 miles for the morning. (1120: 82 miles) PM - 5 miles with Cody, up Center Street and down through River Heights. Hot. 7:20/mile average pace.
(Adrenaline orange: 430 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.50 |
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Ran a block with the dog, then biked up to the canal trailhead, where I met James and Cody. We ran easy to near the end of the River Trail single track and back. 7:58/mile average pace. (Cascadia: 237) **Note: surpassed the 2,000 mile-mark today for yearly mileage. I think this is the first time I've done this since my junior-senior year of college (2000). And it's only July!
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 |
| Easy run on Planet Walk. Draper Days 5K tomorrow. (Adrenaline blue: 256 miles)
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| Race: |
Draper Days 5K (3.1 Miles) 00:15:23, Place overall: 3, Place in age division: 3 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.90 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.10 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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Today was the Draper Days 5K. I ran this race in 2003 and 2004, and think it's a great course. Fast, but still legit, as there are several uphills. I have run only three 5K's since that 2004 Draper race (vs. 7 marathons), so I was not sure what I was capable of. But my initial goal time going into today was 15:10. I stayed with Mike last night (thanks again Mike), so got to sleep in until 5:20AM and drive a mere 20 minutes to the start line. This was opposed to getting up at 4AM and driving 100 miles. Already a good start to the day. For the second straight week they didn't have my number at the start line, so I had to run around and get an official to give me a number. After that I warmed up for a couple miles with Sasha, Scott, and Cody. Changed my shoes, did some strides, hit the porta-pot, and was ready to go. At the start line, there was a pretty good field. Nick McCombs, who had beaten me soundly at Sandy, was there, and so was Neal Gassman and then a few fast-looking "unknowns" (unknown in that I didn't know exactly who they were, not that they didn't have credentials). I thought that Top 3 would be a doable finish though, as I didn't see Teren Jamenson or Trevor Ball or anyone like that. The race started on time. The first mile is all downhill at a nice gradient: very fast. The field got out hard and I was boxed for the first quarter mile or so. I stayed relaxed and eventually worked my way through by the half mile. Nick went sprinting by at about a half mile and joined the leaders. By the end of the first mile the field had filtered out. Nick and a runner I didn't know (turned out to be Seth Wold, USU runner and "Ragnar" champion) were running side-by-side in front, I was a few seconds behind them, and Sasha was a few seconds behind me. Went through the first mile in 4:36 according to the Garmin, 4:40 according to the course marking. I missed the next two mile marks, so just used the garmin for splits. I was feeling okay at one mile, but not overly snappy. I tried to catch Seth and Nick but couldn't make up the gap at this point in the race. Mile 2 is a bit more rolling, with a fair bit of uphill for the greater part of it. Seth broke away from Nick around 1.5 miles, and I was still a few seconds behind both. No breathing or signs of anyone behind me, and I tried to focus on catching Nick. Still feeling okay, not great but not bad either. Second mile split was 5:01. So far I was right on pace for low 15-teens, if I could just pull off another mile like that. Mile 3 begins with the "biggest" climb of the course (although still not that bad), but from 2.5 to the finish it is all flat or slightly downhill. So half up and half down. I wasn't doing great on the uphill, but when we turned the corner it flattened out. I tried to pick it up, and finally had some success with reeling Nick in a little. With less than a half mile to go he only had about 2 seconds on me. Seth was several seconds ahead of Nick and apparently cruising for the win. However, I couldn't engage my 5K killer instinct and wasn't able to muster any sort of kick. I was working hard, but I've found that a good kick in a 5K is always there, if and only if you want it bad enough and turn off those inhibitors. Couldn't lower the inhibitors today though. Strangely, Seth pulled up with about a quarter mile left and let Nick catch him. Then he and Nick finished the race together. Technically Nick was the winner and Seth was second. Actually, technically Nick Miller was second, since Seth used his number. I was definitely third though. Nick/Seth finished in 15:16 and I chugged in at 15:23. My third mile split was 5:08. According the Sasha's course tool and my own experience, the third mile should be about as fast as the second, so I definitely slowed up a little. But it wasn't death or anything, just lack of ability to run anaerobically. I wanted 15:10 and got 15:23, slightly disappointing but not really. It's close. Winds were favorable. Temps were a little high (low 80s by 6AM), which could have slowed things a little if you put value in heat charts. Fortunately the sun was low, which minimizes the heat effect IMO. But today was my "Utah PR" for the 5K - my fastest time since moving to Utah in 2001. I'll take that. Also, I feel like I ran a little better relative to my peer group. Nick was only 7 seconds ahead this race, opposed to 28 seconds in the Sandy 10K. So I closed that gap a bit. Also Neal (4th place) was 30 seconds behind me today, which was a much bigger gap than I expected (in fact I initially figured Neal and I were pretty even in a 5K). So that was good. Also, today was my eighth LDR circuit race, so I've got all my races in now. Seth/Nick Miller will drop from the results, so today was good for 2nd in terms of LDR points. The rest of my LDR races will be for just bonus points and perhaps swapping out a finish or two, but I'm mostly finished now with my scoring.
Anyway, overall good race. Cooled down several times with Cody afterwards, and also ate the $3 breakfast at the park. Then I drove to Sugarhouse and collected my free 30-minute massage (Wasatch Back coupon). Then picked up my packet for Des News. Then drove home. PM - easy jog around the block with the dog to shake out the race. (1120: 90 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Scheduled day off. No soreness from Draper Days, and just a little fatigue. I think I will recover well for Des News 10K and look forward to some stiff competition. Should be a fun race. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 |
| Easy 5 miles on Planet Loop and 4x100m barefoot strides in the grass
at LHS. I can still feel the 5K a little bit, but otherwise feeling
pretty good. (Adrenaline orange: 435 miles)
| |
| Race: |
Deseret News 10k (6.2 Miles) 00:30:27, Place overall: 5, Place in age division: 2 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.80 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.20 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
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Deseret News 10K this morning. James and I drove up last night and stayed with Chad (thanks Chad), who is 5 minutes from the start. Sasha joined us later that evening, and we all had a good visit. I slept pretty well. I got up a little before 5AM, downed a Clif Bar, and we drove over to the start, arriving at about 5:20AM. I hit the portapot, then we found Cody and warmed up about a mile. Changed into racing flats, but then I had to use the portapot again. This time the line was too long. Fortunately, I ran into Mike, and he showed me the secret portapots of Red Butte Gardens. We ran over there and got more warmup in. 2.5 miles warmup total. I was feeling decent. The race started a few minutes late, but not too bad. At the dark start line, it was hard to tell who was there, but I just assumed "everyone" was there, and then some. I was hoping for a deep, strong field, and one of my goals was to hook up with a large pack and get dragged to a fast time and competitive finish. I was also expecting there to be quite a few fast high school runners, due to the "high school challenge" or whatever it is. Today, the more bodies out there, the better. I wasn't so much concerned about circuit points or even overall place, but was more interested in sheer competition and working through some the "drive" issues I've had lately in 5K's and 10K's. As expected, the field got out hard at the start. Teren, Trever, and a Kenyan (Richard Kimeli) got off to a blazing start and vanished into the dark within a few seconds. Another Kenyan (Simon Sawe) headed up a chase group. I was content to start the race in 20th or so and pick my way through the crowd during the first mile. By the time we turned onto Foothill, I was in 10th or so, and tailing a large pack about 15 meters ahead of me. Simon Sawe had broken away from the chase pack and was slowly moving up. I made the move to catch the pack and was absorbed. First mile was 4:38. Fast. Now to hang on. The second mile was also a strong net downhill, and pace remained torrid. Our pack (which seemed to consist mostly of high school runners) remained mostly intact. Sawe continued pulling away. I noticed that pace was very quick on downhills, but slowed more than I expected on uphills. Hopefully I could use this later on in the race. Second mile was 4:38. Mile three slowed quite a bit, partially I think to some uphill, but also due to the pack seeming to relax. I just stayed tucked in. One or two people dropped. We now had about 4-5 people. Sawe still way ahead, but also a figure in white (who I thought could be Trevor) had noticeably fallen off the lead pack, and seemed to be coming back. Seeing this, I urged the pack on, saying that we can catch him. Third mile was 4:57. 5K split was very close to my PR. I thought I had it in the bag after two miles, but oh well. During Mile 4 I started hurting quite a bit and was wondering if I could really finish this thing out. But I think the pack was thinking the same thing, and no one made any moves. Again, I stayed tucked in and let other people do the work and drag me along. Inertia. By the end of the 4th mile, our "pack" was down to just 4 of us (two high schoolers and another old guy like me). Trever still coming back, but very slowly. Sawe catches Trever. Teren and Kimeli are way way ahead. Mile split was 4:53. During Mile 5, the course turns south and flattens out a bit, but is still a nice gradual downhill. In some ways, this mile was easier than the steeper miles. My world of hurt is ever-expanding, and by the end of Mile 5, I'm making pre-death wimper noises, typical for late in a race. No one else is wimpering, but no one is breaking away either. Stay tucked in, stay with the pack. Mile splits was 4:57. Last mile. I'm out of gas, but so is everyone else. One strong move would have broken me, but no one makes it. The older guy drops, now it's just me and two high schoolers, one from Oklahoma and one from Utah. The crowd from the parade route are cheering for the Utah guy (Jaren Ward). We make the final turn and head up the hill toward Liberty Park. As expected, it feels like the Matterhorn, even though it's really nothing. Pace slows to what feels like a crawl, and I go with it and relax a little. Save it up for a kick. Despite the slowing, the Oklahoma kid drops. Now it's just me and the Utah kid. My goal for this race was to dig deep, something I have not done lately. Now it is time. But I am also in wimpering pre-death mode, which conflicts with digging deep. The high school kid could have broken me with a strong surge at any time, but instead he suddenly drops the pace with a quarter mile to go. I take advantage, turn the corner and go around him, starting my kick. At the next corner (the final left turn) a guy (a coach?) is yelling at the kid behind me, "Go, go! Only 100 meters left!!" "How much?" the kid yells back. "100 meters!!". The last thing I needed was some fast-twitch young guy smelling the barn and showing me how little speed work I've done, so push myself into overdrive and finally dig into that well of anaerobic sprinting that's been eluding me lately. I finish all-out into the chute, holding off the competition by several seconds. Mile 6 was 5:21 (yuk!). Last 0.22 was 1:03. My final time was 30:27, and I placed 5th overall. Results are HERE. The guy ahead of us was indeed Trever, and I was pleased to come within 16 seconds of him. He was coming back the whole second half, but very very slowly. I was very happy with this effort. I wanted to stay with a pack, and was able to do so, and hang on despite pain. Usually everyone else is hurting too, so if you can just stay with them it can come down to a kick and whoever wants it more. It was gratifying seeing each person fall off the pack one-by-one, and was definitely happy to beat all of the prep and pre-college runners. They added a lot to the field and I was glad the race had them. I initially wanted to break 30:00, but now I realize that goal was based off the course I ran in 2003. This course was a bit different, and I think it was slower. In 2003, there were several people under 28 minutes. This year there was no one even close. Based on my effort and my peer group performance, I think this was my best 5K/10K effort of the year. It is an 18-second PR from my best track time. However, I am not sure how it really equates to a track at sea level, but I'm happy with both the time and the placing. Mostly, though, I was happy with the tactics, not letting the pack go, and making myself hurt when it mattered. Very good race. Now it's time to get serious about marathon training! Cooled down with James, Cody, Chad, and Adam.PM - after work I ran 2 very easy miles to get the blood flowing after an afternoon of sitting. Felt pretty good. (1120: 93 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.50 |
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Decided that sleeping in would be better for my body than running this morning. So I slept in. In the evening I did some jogging with the dog, then drove out to First Dam and ran up to the River Trail. Met Jon at the climbing lot, and then we went a bit past Spring Hollow and back. Pace was easy. My calves were pretty sore from the race, and my quads were a little sore early in the day, but I didn't feel them at all during the run. Calves felt better as the run went on. Very humid today; felt like I was back in Indiana, except there was no one wearing cutoff t-shirts and swearing at me as I ran by. (Cascadia: 247) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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AM - canal trail loop plus a block with the dog. 7 miles. Quads feel fine, but calves are still a little sore. Better than yesterday though. 7:54/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 263 miles) Nice writeup in Dyestat.com about the prep race for Des News: http://dyestat.com/?pg=reg6DeseretNewsJunior10K2007-Deseret-News-10k PM - 2 easy miles with the dog. (Adrenaline blue: 265 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.50 |
| AM - About 4 miles in Seattle with my college buddy and ex-teammate Pete. I hadn't seen Pete in about 4 or 5 years, so it was really nice to run with him again. We ran around Green Lake, and there were about 200 other runners and walkers out there. 70 degrees. Ahhhh. PM - 8.5 miles with Dave. We ran a little bit on a nice trail outside of our campground, and then and out-and-back on Leg 32 of the Northwest Passage Relay course (Smugglers Cove road on Whidbey Island). Very rolling hills, but lots of oxygen for me. We averaged about 10:00/mile on the trail, and 7:00/mile on the roads. 70 degrees. Ahhhh. (1120: 105 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.50 |
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Today was running partners by committee. Dave and I headed out from our campground and started running Leg 34 of the NWP course. Exch 33 was right at the campground turnout. After a couple miles a runner caught us. We asked if he wanted company, and went with him. Dave turned off just a little bit later, but I continued with the runner, who was on the Blister Busters team. We got to talking, and it turned out that we had actually talked on the phone a few months ago, as he was interested in getting a quote for course maps for a race he was thinking about starting. Small world! Our pace was around 6:50/mile for the 6-mile leg, which worked out well for me.
The Blister Busters handed off at Exch 34, and I continued running with their guy. He was a little slower, about 8:00/mile, but we had some nice conversation and we were both happy for the company. The leg was about 4 miles long. Their last runner was a bit faster, and we held 6:50-7:00/mile pace for the final 6.5-mile leg. This guy was a high school geography teacher, so we "talked shop" a little bit, discussing GIS (among other less nerdy things). When we got near the finish line, I backed off and walked it in, so that I wouldn't confuse the volunteers. 16.5 miles for the day, with 4 different running partners. 7:26/mile average pace. Sea level was nice, and the last part of the course is very beautiful. So much oxygen...The course was very rolling though, and fairly challenging. Did I mention it was 70 degrees? Ahhhh. I look forward to doing the whole course next year. (1120: 121)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 |
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Morning run with Dave through the mean streets of Bremerton. Hills, hills, and hills. One could become very fit running in that town, as their are no flat stretches at all. Didn't wear GPS, so no idea of pace. (1120: 127) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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AM - Got in from Washington fairly late, so slept in a bit, then headed out for 7-mile run (canal loop). 7:26/mile pace. My legs are finally feeling recovered from Des News 10K. My left calf in particular had been stiff and sore for several days. I'll try for a good workout tomorrow. (Adrenaline blue: 272) PM - 7 easy miles on the River Trail. 7:23/mile average pace. (Cascadia: 254 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 4.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.50 |
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Workout day. I jogged a block with the dog, and then ran toward the Planet Walk, where I ran into Cody. We headed back to the LHS track, where we met James and Logan. The plan for today was 6-8x1000m at CV pace (~5:10/mile pace), with 200m (1-minute) recovery between intervals. I was hoping to get 8 in, but was feeling tired early on, so decided to play it by ear. It turned out my warmup deceived me, and I was actually feeling pretty good and had an excellent workout. Intervals were: 3:12, 3:12, 3:12, 3:12, 3:11, 3:12, 3:07. This converts to 5:07-5:08/mile pace, except for the last one, which is slightly under 5:00/mile pace. I cut it off after 7 reps, because my calves, particularly my left calf, were starting to get pretty sore. I'm still not completely recovered from Des News. But this was the best CV workout I've had since Ogden, and I believe it to be an indicator of increased fitness. It was also really nice having Logan to run with, and that certainly helped me along. Track workouts are always much easier than other people.
Cooled down with James, Cody, and Logan afterward. Cody went home, and we ran up to Jame's place and back to finish it off. My right calf cramped up on way, which is odd. I need to keep a close eye on these calves of mine and hopefully they will get better. (Burn: 190 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.75 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.75 |
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AM - Easy run with Cody on the Planet Walk, then some with the dog. 7:41/mile average pace. (Adrenaline orange: 441 miles) PM - 10 miles with Jon. We ran out on the canal trail to the river trail and then back. The Bear River Range is burning. Lots of fire trucks, gawkers, and excitement. So it goes. 7:07/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 282 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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Today I woke up and decided that I really didn't want to do a Big Workout. Legs were feeling tired, and all I wanted to do was go back to sleep. But I rolled out of bed and hit the road. I figured I would give myself a couple miles of warmup, and then either start a tempo or defer it until tomorrow, and just do a couple easy runs today. I managed to hit 7-minute pace on my second warmup mile, and figured I was feeling good enough to do the tempo. I completed an 8-mile tinman tempo on the Young Ward - ICON loop. Mile splits were 5:55, 5:52, 5:51, 5:48, 5:51, 5:50, 5:57, 5:53. Woof. Fortunately this loop is pancake-flat. I initially intended to do the Millville Hill Loop, but when I was talking myself out of bagging the workout, this was the compromise. I cooled down for a few miles on the Planet Walk at about 6:45/mile pace, and made a pit stop at the Logan River Golf Course bathroom along the way. This is a great bathroom, because it's actually open at 7AM and there's music playing inside. It should definitely be the centerfold of Jon's "Emergency Toilets of Cache Valley" guidebook. Also did 4x100m strides on the Planet Walk. They felt like bung, like my shoes were bricks with lead shoelaces. Averaged 6:19/mile for the entire 14-mile run. Good workout day, and I'm glad I talked myself into doing it. I'm pretty beat now, and need a few very easy days to recover from the workouts this week. (1120: 141 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
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AM - Providence Loop, 6.25 miles easy. 7:16/mile average pace.
(Adrenaline orange: 447 miles) PM - out-and-back to First Dam via canal trail (7.25 miles). Didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline blue: 290 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 19.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 19.00 |
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Long run with Cody today. We drove up Blacksmith Fork and parked at Hardware Ranch. We then ran up Ant Flat, which is a well-graded gravel road that goes all the way to the road that the Ogden Marathon starts on (SR-31?). But we did not go that far, and turned around at 9.5 miles to get 19 miles total. The first half was uphill (about 1300' total gain), but the upshot was running downhill for the last half. 7:30-8:30/mile on the uphill miles, and 6:30-7:00 on the second half. 7:36/mile average pace. I'm tired and quite glad to have this week in the books.
(Cascadia: 273 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.00 |
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Nice easy 4-miler on the Planet Walk. Felt pretty good, and just relaxed and enjoyed myself. Didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline orange: 451 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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Big Workout this morning. 15 miles total, with 8 miles of Tinman tempo on the Millville Hill Loop and 4x200m barefoot strides in the grass at the LHS rec fields. Warmed up a couple miles, and hit 7:00 on the second mile, which has become the sign that I can start the tempo (ie - my body is finally awake). Miles splits were: Mile | Split
| Notes
| 1 | 6:03
| Uphill
| 2
| 5:56
| Rolling
| 3
| 6:01
| Rolling/Uphill
| 4
| 6:34
| Steep Uphill
| 5 | 5:53
| Rolling
| 6
| 5:48
| 0.75 downhill, 0.25 uphill
| 7
| 5:38
| Downhill
| 8
| 5:38
| Flat
|
I felt pretty good during the tempo, although the big gravel hill on Mile 4 is always a killer. Sub-5:40 pace on the last two miles felt very pleasant, though, conversational even. After the tempo, I held 6:40/mile pace to the LHS fields, were I did 4x200m barefoot strides in 36-38. Just tried to stay nice and relaxed. Finished up by running a few blocks with the dog. 6:18/mile average pace for the entire run. Another workout in the bank. (1120: 156 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.50 |
|
AM - ran the TOU course backward and met Cody near Mile 22. From there I joined him to the TOU finish during his Tinman tempo. He was moving pretty good. My mile splits during the tempo were 6:17, 6:16, 6:22, 6:18. I felt pretty good for having just run a hard workout yesterday. Ran home afterward and finished up with the dog. 6:45/mile average pace for the run (7 miles). (Adrenaline orange: 458 miles) PM - 8.5-mile run with Jon. Did the canal loop with a little out-and-back to the pipeline trail. We had to stop for a short time a First Dam, as a helicopter was filling up with water at the lake for fighting fires. 7:16/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 298 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.50 |
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AM - 9 miles on the Logan Loop. 7:09/mile average pace. (1120: 165 miles) PM - River Trail with Jon. Almost 7.5 miles. 7:53/mile average pace. (Cascadia: 280 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.50 | 0.00 | 4.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
|
Big Workout. Warmed up 2 miles, and hit 6:40 pace during the second mile. Time to go. My general route today was the modified North Logan-USU-Boulevard loop. I started with 1 mile of Tinman tempo at 6:22 (3.7% uphill grade). I intended to do 2 miles of tinman, but got pretty wiped by this hill (going from Main Street up to USU Stadium). Recovered for a couple minutes then started a 6x4-minute CV fartlek (2-minute rest). The route was very rolling, and virtually all intervals had pretty equal amounts of uphill and downhill. I figure St. George has hills and the Oly Trials course in NY has tons of hills, so I better hammer the hills in training!
Rep | Time
| Distance
| Pace
| 1 | 4:01 | 0.79 | 5:04 | 2 | 4:01 | 0.76 | 5:17 | 3 | 4:01 | 0.76 | 5:18 | 4 | 4:00 | 0.80 | 5:02 | 5 | 4:00 | 0.74 | 5:26 | 6 | 4:00 | 0.77 | 5:11 |
Rep #4 was a little fast because it was 3 minutes of downhill and 1 minute of uphill. Rep #5 was slow because...I don't know! It felt terrible though. And then Rep #6 felt great. But since this was a Big Workout, it didn't end there. After the fartlek I ran easy for about a mile and then did a 2-mile tinman tempo. Splits were 5:54, 5:58. After the tempo, I ended up on the LHS rec fields to do 4x200m barefoot strides in the grass. After the first rep, my feet were FREEZING because the wet grass was so cold. It was about 50 degrees this morning in Logan, by the way. My arms and hands were pretty cold most of the run (but I loved it!). It didn't feel as good on my feet though. I ended up putting my shoes back on and doing the last three 200's on the track. The strides were 36, 36, 36, 35. They are mostly for form and not for killing myself. Another workout in the can. 15 miles total; 6:23/mile average pace for the run.
I had a dream last night that I was trying to get to the starting line of the Great Salt Lake Half Marathon. I kept wandering around Clearfield and ended up in someone's house, and I was pretty sure the race didn't start in their house. But I couldn't even find my way out of the house, and I only had 15 minutes until the race started to check in. Hopefully that will not happen to me in real life, but the Great Salt Lake Half is usually a nightmare in itself. Maybe this year I will redeem myself there.
(Burn: 205 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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AM - easy 5 miles on Planet Walk. Bumped into Cody and ran with him for awhile. Legs tired from yesterday, but that's what easy days are for. 8:14/mile average pace. (Adrenaline orange: 463 miles) PM - easy 8 miles to First Dam and back. Didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline blue: 306 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 18.50 | 2.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 20.50 |
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Ran around the block with the dog, and then drove up to Hollow Rd with Logan and Cody. We ran the TOU course in reverse - 10 miles up (just past the park in Blacksmith Fork), and 10 miles down. At first we faced a nasty head wind and were averaging about 7:20/mile on the uphill, which I was actually pretty happy with, all things considered. The canyon wind died down (plus we picked it up), and our next four miles before the turnaround were averaging just under 7:00/mile pace. On the second (downhill) half, things turned into a progression run. We fooled around with 6:30s then 6:15s. Around mile 16 things got even more interesting, as the canyon wind picked up and now gave us a nice tail wind. It's like in the movie Die Hard: "Now I have a tail wind!" er... machine gun, whatever. We did a 6:07 and then a 5:54 as we came out of the canyon. I could tell Logan and I were feeding off each other a bit and simultaneously pushing the pace. We hit 5:51 as we entered Hollow Rd. Then things got crazy for some reason on Hollow Rd. Mile 19 was 5:24. Mile 20 was 5:08. This last mile is pretty much flat, plus the tailwind was gone by then, so I was pretty happy to hit that kind of split at the end of a long run and still feel in control. I wouldn't say that pace was conversational or anything (although Logan and I would grunt something to each other occasionally), but it didn't feel faster than threshold pace either. This is good, as I hope to hit sub-1:09 at Great Salt Lake Half next Saturday. We'll see. 6:38/mile average pace for the entire run. 99.5 miles for the week. I'm not ready for 100 yet. Not for a couple more weeks. (1120: 185 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Scheduled day off. |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
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AM - easy 9 miles. Did the Landfill Loop with Cody, and then some on my own and with the dog. 7:18/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 315 miles) PM - easy 7 miles on the River Trail with Dan, Jon, and Cody. Nice evening. 7:45/mile pace. (Cascadia: 287 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.50 | 0.00 | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.50 |
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Big Workout today. I warmed up about 2 miles to the end of the Planet Walk, and then did a 2-mile tinman tempo to the LHS track. I was a bit sluggish on the tempo, and averaged around 6:10/mile. On the track I did 5x1600m @ LT pace, with 200m rest. Rep | Split | 1 | 5:09 | 2 | 5:10 | 3 | 5:10 | 4 | 5:11 | 5 | 5:07 |
I was pretty happy with these, and they all felt fairly smooth. It's pretty intimidating to think about running an entire half marathon at this pace, but things always seem easier during races. Race-day magic, right? The last time I did this workout was during my Ogden Marathon taper. My splits during that workout were 5:18, 5:18, 5:19, 5:11, 5:11, and recovery intervals were twice as long (400m). Plus I was in the middle of a taper. Taking all that into account, I think I have gained significant fitness since Ogden.
After my intervals, I worked with Cody during his last interval and hit 5:50, which is my tinman tempo pace. Cody and I "cooled down" to his house afterward, at about 6:25/mile pace. After I dropped Cody off, I continued home and resumed tinman pace (5:55-6:00/mile) for the next 1.5 miles or so. Finished out with a mile with the dog. 15.5 miles for the entire workout. I managed to stay ahead of the 6-minute guy. 5:59/mile average pace for the entire run. (Burn: 221)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.25 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.25 |
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AM - easy 8-mile run with Cody. Took the Planet Walk to the end and crossed the highway to Blackhawk, and then into Providence and back to Logan via the TOU course. 7:25/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 323 miles) PM - easy 6-mile run with James and Cody. If I believed there was such a thing as "junk miles", today would certainly qualify. (Adrenaline orange: 469 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.25 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.25 |
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Ran the North Logan-USU Loop with Cody this morning. We kept the pace honest on the rolling hills, and threw in 6x100m strides as well. 6:55/mile average pace. (1120: 196 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 |
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Easy run on landfill loop. 7:18/mile average pace. Tomorrow should be interesting. (Adrenaline orange: 475 miles) | |
| Race: |
Great Salt Lake Half Marathon (13.1 Miles) 01:10:22, Place overall: 3, Place in age division: 1 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.40 | 0.00 | 13.10 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 19.50 |
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Great Salt Lake Half Marathon today. I've been gearing up for this race for a while. Not because I love it, but because I hate the course so much. It is painfully flat and straight, smells bad, and has a tendency to chew me up and spit me out. So I felt like I had something to prove on this course, and I knew any time I put up would be 100% earned. It would also give me a good benchmark for my chance of OTQ at St. George. I figured sub-1:10 is worth an "A" qualifier at St. George. My best time on this course are 1:14:00, from 2004. I drove one hour to the start, picked up my packet, and warmed up 2 miles by myself. I bumped into Sasha before my warmup, and he mentioned that Teren Jameson was here. I decided that if he went out under control, I would try to hang with him. Temperature was about 70 degrees, with overcast skies. Very little wind at the start line. So pretty decent conditions for an August race along the Wasatch Front. I'd prefer 20 degrees cooler, but I'll take it. At start, I spotted plenty of strong competition. If my somewhat risky plan of starting with Teren went haywire, Joe, Dennis, and Sasha would be there to eat me up. The race started close to on time. Teren and another guy who I didn't know got out hard, and after a moment of indecisiveness (do I really want to do this??) I got on their heels. Pace definitely felt harder than what I was used to, but not out of control. During races, I set up my Garmin to just show total time and lap time, and have auto mile splits taken for me, so I only receive pace feedback once per mile (if I kept my usual settings, it would distract me to no end). I would only be using my Garmin for splits, as the GSL mile markers are notoriously bad. First mile split was 4:50. Yikes! I hung in there behind Teren and the other guy (who turned out to be Patrick Smyth, a current Notre Dame runner), and waited to see if they would settle down. Second mile was 5:03. Third mile was 5:07. Doing some mental math, I realized I had just run a 15:35 5K on a pancake-flat course at elevation, just barely slower than my Draper Days time. Stupid. At this point, I knew that: 1) I certainly couldn't hold this pace; 2) Teren and Patrick were NOT slowing down. I let them go after Mile 3 and tried to settle into my race. My goal was to hit 5:15 pace and establish a good rhythm, and hopefully finish with a 1:09 or under. To an extent, I was successful in doing this over the next 5 miles. Mile 4 was 5:16. Mile 5 was 5:11. Mile 6 was 5:20 (approx 10K split of 32:00). Mile 7 was 5:16. Mile 8 was 5:16. So after 8 miles I was still on pace to run a low 1:08. Unfortunately, I still had 5 miles left. Plus, the stench of the Great Salt Lake was starting to get to me. And I was getting very sick of the causeway.
Mile 9 slowed to 5:25. I was okay with this. 5:25's the rest of the way would still yield a killer time. Unfortunately, the causeway started turning southwest, and we picked up a crosswind, that soon turned into a headwind. Fatigue + headwind = slower running. Mile 10 was 5:36. Mile 11 was 5:43. Teren had dropped Patrick some time back and had gapped him. Meanwhile, no one seemed to be approaching me from behind. I figured everyone else was hating the wind as much as me, so I wasn't overly concerned. I found myself actually wanting to get on the island and hit the uphills, just to get some variety and more importantly to get out of the accursed wind! The course finally entered the Antelope Island at the 11.5 mile mark, and I proceeded to climb the first little hill. It actually felt pretty good, helped by the fact that I no longer had a headwind during the climb. Mile 12 was 5:38. There would be no heroics here. Just finish the darn race. The last mile featured a pretty big climb (into the headwind) followed by the a nice decent. The climb just killed and I felt like I had slowed to a crawl. But just over a half mile left! I hit the downhill and worked it well. Mile 13 was 5:39. The course made one final turn, and then the finish chute! Hurrah! I was glad for that one to be over. My final time was 1:10:22. Teren won with an absurd 1:07-something. Patrick was 1:30 ahead of me with 1:08:50-ish. Joe and Dennis were about 3 minutes behind me with 1:13:30-ish. My Garmin measured 13.19 miles. I'm prone to believe this could be GPS error, but if several other people measured long as well, I may be prone to believe the course was a little long. But for now, I'll assume it was legit. Cooled down 4 miles afterward. Despite missing my goal of breaking 1:10, I felt pretty good about the race afterward. I think without the headwind, I would have actually made my goal, despite running stupid the first three miles. But I even felt pretty good about running stupid. I would like to be as fast as Teren someday, and running with him for three miles showed me what that was like, and the amount of work it would take to reach that level. But I see no reason why I can't run at that level someday. Work work work. Keep dreaming, keep striving.
And frankly it was exciting to average 5:00/mile for the first quarter of a half marathon...and still survive to finish decent. If I could run the race all over again, knowing how everyone finished, I probably would have run it the same way. Today was a good learning and physical experience. My time, even with dying off a bit and the headwind, showed me I am still on track for at least a "B" qualifier at St. George. I am about to enter my last training cycle before St. George, and it will feature some 100-mile weeks, and oodles of MP and LT running, all uninterrupted by races. (I will run some more races, but only as workouts, no tapering). Lots of hard work ahead; the taper is still long ways off! (1120: 198 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.50 |
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Easy shake-out run today. Ran around the block with the dog and then did the Planet Walk. Didn't wear watch. I felt little better than I thought I would today, considering the race yesterday. My calves are not very sore, a good indicator for wearing flats at St. George. Both adductors are fairly sore, which I've never had before. But nothing is today bad, and today was an enjoyable, slow run. (1120: 202 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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AM - easy 7 miles on canal trail loop. Groin in still very sore from yard work. 7:48/mile average pace. (Adrenaline orange: 482 miles) I'm heading out to Montrose, CO for meetings later this morning, so will be running from there through Thursday. This time I will have my car, so will probably check out Black Canyon of the Gunnison Natl Park and see if there are any worthwhile trails to run on. PM - stopped at Sasha's house in Provo on my trip south. We ran about 8 miles on the river trail. Today was my first time ever in Provo. I always drive by on I-15, but have never actually entered the town. Rough place.
(1120: 210 miles) I finally arrived in Montrose at 9PM. What a long drive. Early meeting tomorrow, but I should have time for a few miles before, and then a good quality run in the evening. Lots of miles this week. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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AM - easy 4 miles in Montrose. 7:27/mile average pace. Nice, cool morning. (Triax: 4 miles) PM - 11 miles at Black Canyon National Park. I was disappointed when I got there to find that none of the trails are over 2 miles long, so I mostly stayed on the scenic driving route...er...scenic running route. The world looks better from foot anyway. I did diverge on a few short trails though. Definitely a beautiful area. Altitude ranged from 7800 to 8300 ft and the road was very rolling and challenging. I was surprised to hold sub-7's on most of the uphills, despite the altitude. Mostly I relaxed on the downhills. 6:44/mile average pace for the run. Adductors are feeling much better today, almost normal. I would say I'm 95% recovered from the race. I'll try a big workout tomorrow. I've eyeballed a potential route in the National Park that could be a lung-buster. (Cascadia: 298 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.50 |
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I got up early this morning and drove north to Gunnison Gorge National Conservation Area. It took awhile to get to the place I wanted, as nothing seemed to be clearly marked. On the other hand, I didn't see a single other person the entire run, so that was an upshot. I parked my car just off the main road, then started running up Dinosaur Rd, which was a 4x4 jeep trail through badlands. My Forester definitely wouldn't have made it, and my legs had some problems too, as I had to walk a lot of the uphills. Finally I got to the ridge and ran south on the ridgeline trail. Sweet views of the gorge, but the single-track proved to be very tough too, to the point of walking some uphills again. Once I got to a real trailhead, I looked at a more detailed map and realized that I wanted to be a different trail, so then I backtracked north to where I started on the single-track, and then kept going north a couple more miles on the ridge trail until I got to the Ute Trail trailhead. This was where I wanted to be. Once on the Ute trail, I descended from about 6300 ft down to the Gunnison River at 5300 ft over a little less than 4 miles. I finally got the river just as it was time to turn around. It was beautiful and well worth the effort. It was getting pretty warm by this point and I had gone through half my water, so I jumped in the ice-cold river to cool off and get all my clothes good and soaked for the return trip up out of the gorge. I could have stayed there on that beach all day, but I had things to do. Like write this blog. And work.
Running out of the gorge wasn't too bad, and the gradient in most stretches was quite manageable and even fun for running. I managed to average sub-9:00 out of the gorge and got a good workout in doing so. Not much walking here, just a little. Once I was on top of the ridge, I got on Ute Road and descended down about 2.5 miles out of the NCA. Pretty steep downhill here, and I was doing about 7-minute pace. Finally I got to the "main" road and had to run about 1.5 miles south back to my car at Dinosaur Road. Averaged about 6:15/mile pace on this last rolling gravel section. It was a good run, but I'm glad to be done. I'm beat. 9:22/mile average pace for the entire run.
Kind of a quasi Big Workout today. A lot of distance and a fair amount of effort, but not as controlled and formal as my normal workouts. That's probably a good thing, as it provides a mental break. I'm using this week mainly to build mileage, and most of my speed focus is being put on my Big Workout this Saturday. (Cascadia: 314 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.25 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.25 |
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AM - did a nice 12-mile loop on the west side of Montrose. Felt pretty good. I found out last night that my morning meeting is canceled, so I am heading back a little early. That will be nice. 6:56/mile average pace. (Triax: 16 miles) PM - got home from my trip and did the Planet Walk to shake out my legs. I didn't wear a watch, but my legs felt fresh and the pace felt snappy, maybe 6:20-6:30 range. Odd. (Adrenaline orange: 486 miles -- retired) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.75 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.75 |
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AM - Logan Loop, 8 miles easy, plus a block with the dog. It is chilly here this morning, cold enough for long sleeves. 7:13/mile average pace. (1120: 218 miles) PM - River Trail with Jon, to Spring Hollow and back. Easy pace, no watch. (Cascadia: 321 miles) | |
| Race: |
Top of Utah Half Marathon (13.1 Miles) 01:09:33, Place overall: 1, Place in age division: 1 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.50 | 7.00 | 5.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 21.00 |
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Today was an interesting day. I did a Big Workout within the Top of Utah Half Marathon. I've been wanting to run the TOU Half for awhile, but figured I needed a workout more than an all-out race, so I decided to combine the two. The other idea was to add "race day magic" to a workout, which would make the workout a lot more fun and easier to complete. My Big Workout today was: 4 miles @ MP (2 minutes recovery) 3 miles @ MP (2 minutes recovery) 2 miles @ LT (1 minute recovery) 2 miles @ LT (1 minute recovery) 1 mile @ LT The course layout for the TOU Half is a good one. The first 7 miles or
so are a gentle downhill in the canyon. The next 3 miles flatten out a
bit, but are still a gentle (but imperceptible) downhill. There is a
relatively long uphill through Millville from Mile 11 to 12 or so, and
then gentle downhill to the finish in Providence.
Weather was absolutely perfect. I mean perfect. 50 degrees at the start line, with promise of a tail wind coming out of the canyon. If the weather is remotely like this for the TOU Marathon, people will qualify. To warm up, I ran from my house to the busing area (about 1.75 miles). We bused up to the start line up Blacksmith Fork, and I did some more jogging and got my porta-pot stops in. Ready to go. They started the race right on time. My workout/race went as follows: Workout Segment
| Mile
| Split
| Comments
| 4-mile @ MP
| 1 | 5:13 | out a bit fast
| 4-mile @ MP | 2 | 5:16 | settled in
| 4-mile @ MP | 3 | 5:15 |
| 4-mile @ MP | 4 | 5:16 |
| 2-minute recovery
| 0.35 | 5:52/mile pace
| faster than expected
| 3-mile @ MP | 1 | 5:10 | starting to get tailwind
| 3-mile @ MP | 2 | 5:09 | this is fun
| 3-mile @ MP | 3 | 5:10 | tremendous fun
| 2-minute recovery | 0.33 | 6:00/mile pace
|
| 2-mile @ LT
| 1 | 5:05 | Hollow Rd
| 2-mile @ LT | 2 | 5:09 | Hollow Rd/Hwy 165
| 1-minute recovery
| 0.16 | 6:08/mile pace
|
| 2-mile @ LT | 1 | 5:09 | Hwy 165
| 2-mile @ LT | 2 | 5:37
| Millville; uphill; yuk!
| 1-minute recovery
| 0.23 | 6:15/mile pace
| 1:25 rest
| 1-mile @ LT
| 1
| 5:00
| nice downhill
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The first 10 miles of the workout/race was quite a bit of fun, and I felt fantastic. The cool morning and downhill start really made things fast, and then picking up the tailwind on my second MP interval made it feel like some sort of weird video game. 5:10 was effortless in those conditions. I was having a ball, and the MP sets went great. The first LT 2-mile interval went very well, and I held a good pace. The second LT 2-miler was a bit harder, mostly because of the long uphill through Millville. This was the only point during the workout where I felt like I was struggling. By the end of the uphill, I managed to find a good rhythm, and hit 5:25/mile pace, but the first half of that mile was a lot slower. I knew I had a downhill mile to end the workout/race with, and I was looking forward to it. I waited to the race's official 12-mile mark to start my last interval, which gave me a little bit extra rest. I ended up running the last 1.1 at LT to compensate, and was happy to hit 5:00 pace for it. So that was my workout. The race itself was interesting too. I was a bit ahead of Logan during the first 4-mile MP interval, but I could hear him, so I figured he was just 10 meters behind or so. When I eased up for my 2-minute recovery, Logan went by, and looked as though he wasn't working at all. I was inwardly cheering for all my friends to hit big PR's, so I was happy to see him zoom by. Logan pulled away a bit on my recovery, but then when I started my next interval I really didn't close on him at all, so I knew he must be doing 5:10's. I hoped that everyone else was enjoying the tailwind as much as Logan and I. This trend continued for the rest of the race, until Logan's fatal wrong turn: he would pull away on my recoveries, and I would gain nothing on the intervals. In fact, I think he was pulling away on the intervals as well. By Mile 10, I was so far ahead of my own schedule, that I thought breaking 1:10 would be probable, and Logan was a good minute ahead. He clearly had 1:08 in the bag. The left turn into Millville was around Mile 11. Logan was so far ahead of me that I didn't see him miss it, but did see him up around Main St. I was a little confused, as there was no volunteer at the corner, but I was pretty sure the turn was at 100 W (it is for the marathon). Plus the sun was directly in my eyes, so I couldn't see the course markings. I actually slowed down a bit and looked behind me as I entered the intersection, and then saw the marking to turn. Logan was too far away to yell at, plus I was breathing too hard to yell, or talk for that matter. And I sure couldn't catch him. I figured he would turn at Main St., which would give him the same distance, and all would be good. Alas, this was not the case. I finished the race, and started asking everyone where the winner was. I seriously thought he was just that far ahead of me. Everyone looked at me as though I was hallucinating. "You're the winner, you idiot." I was pretty bummed, because Logan had such a sweet PR going. I ended up about 10 seconds off my own PR, which I was quite happy with. Had I tapered, worn flats, and raced all-out, I think sub-1:08 would have been in the works. But that was not the goal today. Jon, Cody, and Walter all got sweet PR's, and I was really stoked for them. Big things coming at TOU and St. George for all those guys.
Cooled down with the guys afterward, sat around for awards (didn't win anything in the prize drawing, and then ran home. 21 miles total for the day, capping off a 104-mile week, my first 100-mile week since 2004, and my most mileage in a week ever. 6 more weeks until St. George. 4 weeks of good, hard, quality training. Every week of training gives further opportunity to grow stronger and get faster. (Burn: 242 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.50 |
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Planet Walk plus a block with the dog, easy. No watch. Legs feel okay after yesterday. No soreness, but they are tired.
(Adrenaline blue: 327 miles) I thought yesterday was an outstanding performance by bloggers in the half marathon. By my count, we had 2 people under 1:10, 10 people under 1:20, 16 people under 1:30, and 19 people under 1:40. Not to mention the PC marathoners. I have probably missed some performances in there. Now can you imagine if we get everyone to run the same half marathon the same day? The race director's head will spin, wondering how their race got so fast!
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
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AM - ran the canal loop (6.5 miles) with Seth Wold and Vance Twitchell. The USU guys took it easy on me. 7:17/mile average pace. Did a mile with the dog afterward. (1120: 226 miles) PM - River Trail (8.5 miles) with Jon, Cody, and Dan. 7:59/mile average pace. (Cascadia: 330 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.50 |
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Big Workout today. Sort of. I did a 9-mile tinman tempo (15.5 miles total for the run) on the Millville Hill Loop, plus 4x200m barefoot strides in the grass at the end. My tempo pace was about 10 seconds slower per mile than usual (or more), mainly due to still being a bit tired from Saturday. I decided to back off and complete the entire tempo at a reduced pace, rather than try to force things and risk blowing up. I have another workout Thursday, so today should help that rather than hurt it. By the time I got to the end of the tempo, I found a good rhythm, and was pretty satisfied with the workout. It was a good endurance-builder. The barefoot strides felt pretty good afterward too. Mile | Split
| Comment
| 1 | 6:11 | uphill | 2 | 6:02 | rolling | 3 | 6:13 | uphill | 4 | 6:44 | big uphill
| 5 | 6:03 | flat/rolling | 6 | 5:55 | little bit uphill, then downhill | 7 | 5:53 | all downhill | 8 | 5:58 | flat | 9 | 5:55 | flat |
200's were pretty mellow. I hit 37-38 for all of them. The grass was nice and soggy, but not too cold. 6:34/mile average pace for the entire run.
(Triax: 32 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.25 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.25 |
|
AM - Logan Loop, plus a mile with the dog. 9 miles total. Easy pace. 7:29/mile average pace. (1120: 235 miles) PM - Out-and-back to First Dam via the canal trail 7.25 miles total. 6:57/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 334 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
| I did a little bit different of a workout today to keep things fresh. I ran from my house to the canal trail to the Bonneville Trail to Green Canyon, and up Green Canyon a couple miles, and then back the same way. The rule today was that I had to surge up every uphill, so sort of a hill fartlek. Obviously this got tough up Green Canyon, since it was all uphill, but it was a bit more fun on the rolling BST. Coming down Green Canyon I hit 6-minute pace. After I got off the BST on the way back, I did about 3 tinman miles at 6-minute pace as well. 7:05/mile average pace for the entire run. (Hardrock: 50 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.25 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.25 |
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AM - landfill loop via planet walk with Cody. Easy pace. 7:39/mile average pace. (1120: 243 miles) PM - went up Center Street to Providence via River Heights, down 100 N to Golf Course Rd, and back to my house on Main. I don't have a name for that loop, hence the long description. Started out slow and sluggish, but hit low-6 pace on the last half and ended up feeling very good. 6:50/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 340 miles) That gives me 431 miles for the month, a new all-time high, and first time over 400. My previous high was around 370, back in 2004. Looking back at my mileage from previous years and comparing to this year, I am doing about twice the volume per week this year on average. And it's much more consistent. More fun facts: of my first 8 marathons from 2002-2005, 6 were over 2:40 (including a 2:47 at TOU), and the other two were both 2:35. My half marathon PR through 2005 was 1:14. Looking at these trends, and then around the Blog at guys like Cody, Logan, Clyde, and others, a pretty obvious fact emerges: you get faster by running more, doing it with quality, and doing it consistently. Inconsistent training yields underperformance, at least in the marathon.
Monthly Mileage for 2003 - 2007 |
|
2003 |
2004 |
2005 |
2006 |
2007 |
Jan |
|
62 |
101 |
149 |
274 |
Feb |
|
114 |
131 |
228 |
268 |
Mar |
|
177 |
140 |
277 |
339 |
Apr |
|
143 |
223 |
187 |
339 |
May |
94 |
220 |
230 |
53 |
258 |
Jun |
191 |
299 |
177 |
39 |
319 |
Jul |
239 |
234 |
188 |
25 |
333 |
Aug |
345 |
373 |
223 |
81 |
431 |
Sep |
154 |
142 |
191 |
87 |
|
Oct |
|
|
27 |
135 |
|
Nov |
|
|
0 |
175 |
|
Dec |
|
|
23 |
251 |
|
Total |
1022 |
1763 |
1652 |
1686 |
2560 |
Month Average |
204 |
196 |
138 |
141 |
320 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Best 5K |
15:38 |
15:52 |
|
17:22 |
15:23 |
Best Half |
1:14:37 |
1:14:10 |
|
1:12:54 |
1:09:27 |
Best Marathon |
2:35:20 |
2:45:09 |
2:26:35 |
|
2:26:24 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Notes: |
|
|
|
|
|
2003:
Didn't start recording mileage until late May |
|
|
2004:
Didn't record mileage from Oct-Dec, but didn't do much either |
2005:
Grand Slam year. Injured from Oct - Dec |
|
|
2006:
Injured from April - September; some mileage represents x-train |
2007:
Year not complete yet! |
|
|
|
|
| |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.75 | 8.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 20.25 |
|
Big Workout today. This morning I ran with Jon's ATK club, which is a great deal because they have caches of water and gatorade every 3 miles, plus bagels and other goodies at the end. James, Dan, and Logan mooched on too. We met at the end of Hollow Road (Mile 17 of the TOU course), and shuttled up Blacksmith Fork Canyon to Mile 3 of the TOU course. From there we ran up to the top of the canyon to the start and Hardware Ranch, took a drink/potty break, and started running down. After a potty break at Hyrum Park (TOU Half and Freedom Run start lines), Logan and I began a marathon-pace tempo back to the cars. I never felt great at any point of the tempo, but did feel strong enough to keep truckin'. I think that is a result of the 100-mile weeks. I don't have a ton of spring in my steps, but my endurance is very high. Toward the bottom we got a slight tailwind, but nowhere near what we experienced last week. It also started to get warmer out. We stopped once during the tempo, about 7 miles into it, to take some water and gatorade, but other than that it was continuous. Average pace for the tempo was 5:17/mile. If I can do that for all of St. George, that would be good. Average pace for the entire run was 6:11/mile, a new PR for a 20-mile training run. My quads got rocked good by the downhill, but that is what I needed. They need to adapt in order to kill it during the last half of St. George. Nice progression run today. Splits are below. Mile | Split
| Comment
| 1 | 7:48 | uphill
| 2 | 7:38
| uphill
| 3 | 7:20
| uphill
| 4 | 6:54
| up and little, then down
| 5 | 6:52 | downhill
| 6 | 6:43
| downhill
| 7 | 6:45
| downhill
| 8 | 6:37
| downhill
| 9 | 6:33 | downhill
| 10 | 6:20
| downhill
| 11 | 6:02 | downhill; started tempo last 0.2
| 12 | 5:18 | tempo; downhill
| 13 | 5:20
| tempo; downhill
| 14 | 5:17
| tempo; downhill
| 15 | 5:17
| tempo; downhill
| 16 | 5:13 | tempo; downhill
| 17 | 5:16
| tempo; downhill
| 18 | 5:19
| tempo; hollow rd; stopped for water
| 19 | 5:12
| tempo; hollow rd
| 20 | 5:51 | tinman tempo; hollow rd
| 20.25 | 5:48/mile pace
| tinman tempo; hollow rd
|
103 miles this week. With two big weeks in a row, next week will be "down" a little bit, probably low to mid-90s. I like to do three-week cycles of two big weeks followed by one moderate week. This usually correlates to my race schedule so that the race is on a moderate week. My favorite race in the Utah, the Alta Peruvian Downhill Dash, is next Saturday. (Triax: 52 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Day off. Today I focused on taking naps, sitting in my hammock, and working my way through The Lore of Running. My legs feel pretty good after yesterday. Noakes makes me paranoid about overtraining and destroying my body, since that seems to be all he writes about, but so far I'm not exhibiting any symptoms.
For anyone who's interested, I've posted a profile graph comparing Ogden, Top of Utah, and St. George Marathons on my personal blog. Click here.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.75 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.75 |
|
I slept in until 7:15 today (hurrah, Labor Day!), then ran the dog around the block, ate my oatmeal (complete with James' awesome peaches), and headed out to the River Trail. From the River Trail parking lot, I did a route I haven't ran in awhile: River Trail to the single track, then took the upper route of the single track ("Bridger Lookout"), which goes to the rock fall above Spring Hollow. Ran/stumbled down the steep rockfall about a third of a mile to the Crimson trailhead, and then ran the entire Crimson Trail. I was particularly happy because I was able to make it up the ascent without walking at all, except for when I bumped into Logan Fielding's wife and mother-in-law and stopped to talk to them for a while. I had the top of the Crimson Trail to myself, and enjoyed the nice, rolling single track before descending back down to River Trail just above Guineva Malibu Campground. I didn't bother going to the campground, but just ran back on the River Trail. On the last bit of single track coming back on the River Trail some mountain bikers came up behind me, which lit a fire under my butt for some reason, and I started cranking to keep ahead of them. Mission accomplished, I made it to the end of the single track ahead, and then let up. It was a nice little spurt, and proved once again that legs are better than wheels. I passed Drew Michener near the end of my run and stopped to talk to him for a little bit. He was just beginning the same route as me, except he was going to go the other way (probably a smart idea). Caught the 9-minute guy during the last mile, and finished the run averaging 8:53/mile. Considering the route contains a lot of rocky, steep single track, and has 1400' of total relief between the trailhead and the summit (with plenty of ups and downs in the middle), I was pretty happy with that, and felt really good today. (Hardrock: 63 miles)
| |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.50 |
|
AM - 9-mile Logan Loop, easy. 7:13/mile average pace. (1120: 252 miles) PM - 6.5 miles on the canal loop. It was pouring buckets a little bit earlier, but then I got a little window of calm to run in. Unfortunately, the window only lasted 30 minutes, and I needed 40! I was thoroughly soaked when I got home, but happy to squeeze the run in despite the weather. I didn't wear a watch or GPS, but pace was "brisk" to say the least, as I did not want to hang around long enough to get struck by lightening. (Adrenaline blue: 340 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.50 | 0.00 | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.50 |
|
Big Workout today. It was raining this morning, so I waited until the afternoon to do it. This is all good, because I always feel better in the afternoon or evening, plus the temperature was quite nice. From my house I warmed up half a mile, and then did a 2-mile tinman tempo, averaging 5:40/mile. I ran easy the rest of the way to the USU track, where I did 8x1000m @ CV pace, with 200m (1:00) rest between intervals. The intervals went quite well, and I felt strong, smooth, and in control the whole way: 3:11, 3:12, 3:10, 3:10, 3:10, 3:10, 3:09, 3:05. I took 400m (2:00) rest after the 4th interval, splitting the session into two sets. There was a slight headwind on the backstretch, and tailwind on the front stretch. There was also a big throwing cage in the middle of the backstretch, so I had to cut into the infield for about 10 meters every lap, which may have cost a little bit of time. I also got to watch the Aggie football practice. I think I saw about 50 dropped passes during the short time I was on the track. They should really consider going D-I AA or maybe D-II.
After the intervals, I bumped into Taylor Price (USU runner), and talked to him for a few minutes, and then headed back toward my house. I did another 2 miles of tinman tempo, averaging 5:40/mile again. After that, I kept a "brisk" pace for the remainder of the run, which involved doing an out-and-back on the Planet Walk. Pace averaged around 6:30/mile. I ended up with 16.5 miles for the run, with an average pace of 5:54/mile. According to my GPS, I hit the half marathon mark in 1:16:00. I'm glad to have this Big Workout in the bag. It will probably be my last 1000m CV interval workout before St. George. This workout is one of my "keystone" workouts that I can use periodically to gauge my fitness. It's nice to be able to compare it to the same workout throughout the year. It is even nicer to see that I am smashing the workouts I was doing before Ogden. Here is the breakdown:
| 3-19-07 | 4-13-07 | 4-24-07 | 7-9-07 | 7-31-07 | 9-5-07 | 1 | 3:14
| 3:13
| 3:15
| 3:15
| 3:12
| 3:11
| 2 | 3:16
| 3:15
| 3:17
| 3:16
| 3:12
| 3:12
| 3 | 3:16
| 3:13
| 3:17
| 3:16
| 3:12
| 3:10
| 4 | 3:15
| 3:15
| 3:16
| 3:14
| 3:12
| 3:10
| 5 | 3:15
| 3:13
| 3:17
| 3:14
| 3:11
| 3:10
| 6 | 3:16
| 3:08
| 3:17
| 3:14
| 3:12
| 3:10
| 7 | 3:15
|
|
|
| 3:07
| 3:09
| 8 | 3:11
|
|
|
|
| 3:05
| Ave Time
| 3:15
| 3:13
| 3:16
| 3:15
| 3:11
| 3:09
| Pace
| 5:14/mile
| 5:11/mile
| 5:16/mile
| 5:14/mile
| 5:07/mile
| 5:05/mile
|
(Burn: 259 miles)
| |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.75 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.75 |
|
AM - easy 8.5 miles on Providence Hill Loop, with a block with the dog afterward. A bit stiff and a little tired from yesterday. 7:34/mile average pace. (Triax: 61 miles) PM - 7.25 miles easy. Ran most of it with Jon and Cody (and their kids in jogging strollers). Did the Planet Walk a few times. Beautiful day. (1120: 259 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.50 |
|
AM - landfill loop plus a few blocks with the dog for 6 miles total. 7:39/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 346 miles) PM - Planet Walk with 4x150m barefoot strides in the grass at LHS. (Triax: 66 miles) | |
| Race: |
Alta Peruvian Downhill Dash 8K (5 Miles) 00:21:36, Place overall: 1, Place in age division: 1 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 | 0.00 | 19.00 |
|
AM - easy 6 miles on the River Trail. Beautiful, chilly morning in Logan. Hopefully it will be like this for TOU next week. I am running the Alta Peruvian Dash later this afternoon. I love PM races. (Hardrock: 69 miles) PM - Alta Peruvian Downhill Dash 8K. This is a rare afternoon race, but they can pull it off because it is up Little Cottonwood Canyon and starts at just over 8700'. It finishes at 6800' ft. For those of you keeping track, that is an average grade of -7.2%. Weather was beautiful, upper 60s with a very slight headwind. I warmed up a couple miles with Bob, Sasha, and Cody, took my final bathroom break, and then warmed up a little bit more to the start line. This is a small race, about 80 people every year, but it is an LDR Circuit race, so it tends to be top-heavy. I was most worried about Sasha and Bob, but in general liked my chances for a good finish. My unofficial goal was to break 22:00. My course PR is 22:55, from 2003. I also ran 23:30 back in 2005.
Here is the race breakdown: Mile | Split
| Comment
| 1 | 4:30 | honest pace to start; ran with pack
| 2 | 4:19 | hit a bigger downhill and made a surge, and soon found myself alone. Legs already regretting the move.
| 3 | 4:23 | Very painful, but holding pace
| 4 | 4:25 | Horrible pain. Why did I make a move with 4 miles left??
| 5 | 4:08 (4:10/mile pace)
| Make it stop. Feet on fire. Trying to slow down, but it's to steep for brakes.
|
Final time was 21:46 (4:21/mile average pace), so I made my goal, plus won the race. There are great prizes here, such as free night stays at the Peruvian Lodge during ski season, so I'm all about that. I also won some Wasatch Running Center socks in the raffle, to go along with my three other pairs.
This was definitely one of the most painful races I've ran in a while. The downhill is simply unrelenting, but even though my pain level kept increasing, my speed held. It's intimidating seeing that "9% grade" road sign with a mile to go, and your quads and feet are already burning. But I'm pleased with mentally hanging in there, and with the last mile split (a PR - ha ha). Looking at other peoples' performances here over the years, I'm right on track where I need to be.
I would have like to have waited longer to make my surge, but my body just kind of does its own thing during some races. Seemed to work at least. My garmin measured 4.99. Cody and Sasha had 4.99 and 4.98 as well. An 8K is 4.97 miles, so this is a very close, consistent measurement. I ran tangents pretty well, but there's always room for improvement in that area. The mile markers were all way off, but at least the finish was right. It's funny: starting with Mile 2, the miles got shorter and shorter. For instance, my Garmin read 2.86 at the Mile 3 sign, and then 3.82 at the Mile 4 sign. I was sincerely hoping for the finish to come at 4.80! It was disappointing to have to run for almost another quarter mile, but it's probably best that the finish was honest. A good finish for the Wasatch Running Center: 1, 2, 4, 5. I cooled down by running back up to the Lodge. Did about half of it with Bob, and then the rest on my own. Running up hurt almost as bad as running down! (Burn: 272 miles)
| |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.50 |
|
Ran out to my friend's house to feed her dogs, and then did the Planet Walk. Didn't wear watch. My lower quads are sore today, but not nearly as bad as previous years from the Peruvian. Going down stairs is no problem, and running actually felt pretty good. We'll see how tomorrow feels, but I'm quite optimistic for a fast recovery. I don't really need my legs for another 4 weeks, so lots of time. It's difficult to judge how much damage to put your muscles through, but I really need my quads to be strong enough to hit some sub-5's late in the race at St. George. I honestly think the Peruvian was gamble needed to build that adaptation.
The Packers beat the Eagles, so all is well. The Pack's offense is anemic, but their defense was fantastic, a trend for the year, I imagine. (1120: 265 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.50 |
|
AM - canal trail loop plus a block with the dog, 7 miles total. I'm definitely having a good case of DOMS from the race Saturday, as quads are more sore today than yesterday. Needless to say, the pace was easy this morning. 8:31/mile average pace. Cold enough this morning for long sleeves and gloves. I love it. (Triax: 73 miles) PM - easy 4.5 miles. I started on the Planet Walk, but then bumped into Jon and ran with him back to his house, and then along the TOU course back to my house. 300 S is all chewed up from construction, and is closed to through traffic. I wonder how that will affect the race on Saturday... Didn't wear watch. (1120: 264 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.75 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.75 |
|
AM - landfill loop plus some extra with the dog. Legs are getting better, but still have a little ways to go. 7:39/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 353 miles) So the official title of the Alta Peruvian race is "8K Downhill Dash and Barbecue Bash." It has been for years, it's on the website, etc. For those who haven't noticed though, the race t-shirt (cotton of course) says "Downhill Dash and Barbecue Dash". I don't know why, but a blatant typo on a mass-produced race t-shirt just tickles my funny bone and endears the shirt to me. Lisa: "Come to Homer's BBBQ, the extra 'B' is for BYOBB" Bart: What's that extra B for? Homer: That's a typo. PM - 8 miles on the River Trail with Drew. Still sore, but the downhills felt okay. I wore my New Balance 790's for the first time today. They are a lightweight trail shoe, only 7.9 onces. I think they are lighter than my racing flats! It feels like wearing a slipper on the trails. Definitely feel the rocks more. I think I am going to run in these and the Tangents a little bit more over the next few weeks to ensure my calves and feet are ready to handle flats for St. George (I have never worn racing flats for a marathon). 8:13/mile average pace.
(790: 8 miles)
| |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.50 |
|
AM - planet walk plus a mile with the dog. 5 miles total. No watch. Soreness steadily decreasing. (Triax: 78 miles) PM - went to the chiropractor in Hyrum and then had my wife drop me off at the end of Hollow Rd, and I ran back to my house along the TOU course. 6:59/mile average pace. My pelvis was torqued from the Alta race. The chiro fixed it up. (1120: 274 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.50 |
|
AM - planet walk, easy. I bumped into Cody and we ran together for a while. Didn't wear watch. My quads are back to normal, groin is very close. Hamstrings are still a bit tight, and calves are a little tight, but I think the calves are from wearing the trail flats on Tuesday. I think I am on track to feel 100% tomorrow, and hopefully 105% on Saturday. Heh. But in case I don't, my wife will be waiting for me with the car at Mile 20.5 on the TOU course. Always have an exit strategy.
(Adrenaline blue: 358 miles) PM - Little Workout. Did the Young Ward Loop (11 miles) with 4 miles of tinman tempo in the middle. Splits were 5:53, 5:50, 5:56, 5:49. My hammies had loosened up considerably since this morning and I had a bit more bounce in my step, at least for the first half. The last few miles definitely dragged, and I tightened up as well. Bumped into Jon late in the run and ran with him the last mile or so. 6:46/mile average pace. (Triax: 89 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.50 |
|
AM - 7.5 miles on the canal trail. Took it slow and easy. 8:44/mile average pace. Some dude passed me on the canal trail coming back. That felt sort of weird. Will do a few more miles tonight. My probability to finishing TOU has been upgraded from 30% to 33%. (1120: 281 miles) Top of Utah preview newspaper article is HERE. Jon's pace group made the print, heh heh. Now the pressure is really on. The article also mentioned someone else who I did not know was running: Joseph Sitienei. He has run a marathon barely under 2:22 at sea level, and several marathons and halves much slower. He will contend for top 3, but I doubt he can win. Being a sea-level flatlander will not help him either. But it will make an interesting race. PM - ran with the dog, then ran to the TOU expo to get my packet. Chit-chatted with people way too long, and then dashed back to my house to get ready for dinner. Picked up a couple miles total. Dinner was fun. We have a full house, and my wife and I set PR's for most people in the house at once (20), and most children in our house at once (5). I'll post some pictures on the news board tomorrow. By the way, someone left a bib that says "Lil Flirt". If it's unclaimed, I'll made the dog wear it. | |
| Race: |
Top of Utah Marathon (26.2 Miles) 02:39:22, Place overall: 7, Place in age division: 2 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 29.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 29.00 |
|
Top of Utah Marathon. I've been looking forward to this for awhile even though it was not to be an all-out race. I enjoy the local event, and was looking forward to pacing people. Weather was just about perfect. Nice and cool at the start but not uncomfortable. Good tailwind coming out of the canyon. It felt a little warm halfway through, but stayed mild to the finish, especially once I dumped some water on me. Due to the Alta race last Saturday, I was unsure whether I would finish. I knew I had more than enough fitness to meet the task, but it was previous muscle damage I was worried about. My quads had recovered, but my hamstrings were tight all week. I knew if they tightened up too bad, or if the quads reactivated, I would need to call it a day at Mile 20, nothing more than a good long run. But I did want to run all the way through if it won't cause damage. I just needed to listen to my body. Along with pacing goals, I wanted to treat today as a dress rehearsal for St. George - same routine, same clothes, same shoes, same drinking, gu, etc. I needed several questions answered: - Would flats agree with me for the marathon (I've never worn them before).
- Would the Garmin be distracting over that distance (due to autolap)
- Would Gu upset my stomach
As far as the race itself, Jon's entry best summarized it. My garmin ended up getting quite a bit off due to poor tangents (hard run good tangents in a large group), so I will borrow Jon's watch splits. For St. George, I will either turn autolap off, or just use a regular watch. It took me a while to find our pace. By the third mile, though, we were locked in, and I stopped thinking about it, and just checked the garmin every so often to make sure we were not too fast. I had to stop and tinkle twice, which cost 20 seconds apiece, but I was able to catch up within the mile both times. That is strange for me, because I usually don't have to tinkle during races, and twice is certainly excessive. I started out the first few miles feeling good, but my hammies tightened up by Mile 5. This made my finish doubtful. However, they didn't feel any worse at Mile 10, and about the same at Mile 15. I decided at Mile 18 that I would finish, as my stride was still bouncy and my body was hanging in there just fine. The flats felt good, so I will go with them for St. George. I drank lots of gatorade a took a couple GU's, and no problem from that either.
Pacing was fun, and it was rewarding to run for a purpose beyond individual accomplishment. I have always gotten a thrill from seeing other people PR (a great thing about track and field, lots of events to watch teammates!), and was happy to take part in helping people in the race today. Logan and I were on a mission. I'll remember this race because of it.
The first 16 miles were pretty easy for pacing because everyone was feeling good. The only trick was to slow the pack down when it needed it. Once we hit the tailwind, we tried to decrease effort and coast for a while to let people "rest". It's tempting to hammer too hard in those situations. Even with that, those miles were still the fastest. After Mile 16, I could sense Jon laboring a bit more. Steve and Adam broke off, and both were looking great. Logan and I stayed with Jon and went to work with him and on him. I'm not sure if Jon got sick of me yelling at him for 10 miles, but my goal was to encourage him and keep him focused on his goals. We concentrated on milking the downhill through Mile 18, and then had Jon tuck in close behind us for the rather long climb through Millville into Providence. We hit about 6:20 for those uphills miles, which was great. We tried to work the downhill into Providence and mustered 6:10 or so. I knew Jon was grappling with the Wall, but hoped that Logan and I could do as much of the work as possible (there was headwind here and there), and help keep him focused and resolute. Speaking from my own experience, it's easy to stop caring during a race and just "settle" for finishing, but that was not an option today. Jon was an absolute champ and kept his focus, never doing anything slower than 6:40 during the last four miles. I knew one really bad mile could cost him 2:40, but all the miles were solid. Most miles were 6:30 or a little under. That is very good for this late in a marathon while fatigued, especially the TOU course, which is not forgiving. We caught Adam in River Heights, and dropped him a little bit later. We worked the uphills, and had Jon open up on the downhills, where he got some nice surges in and ate up ground. The last quarter mile Jon was able to to smell the barn and kicked it in hard. We got 2:40 with room to spare. Group hugs all around. Adam finished soon afterward, a very nice PR for him as well. I was happy to finish and felt pretty good considering the hard week I had recovering from Alta, but I was most happy for Jon, Adam, Cody, Kory, and the others who ran their butts off and got awesome PR's. The FastRunningBlog took 1-2-3-4-5 in the 24-29 age group: a clean sweep. That was pretty cool. Congrats also to Hobie Call for a performance that lifts him among America's elites. Very few Americans can run that fast. Cool stuff, and inspiring too. Mile
|
Time
|
1
|
5:54
|
2
|
6:05
|
3
|
5:53
|
4
|
5:49
|
5
|
5:59
|
6
|
5:57
|
7
|
5:54
|
8
|
5:50
|
9-10
|
11:46
|
11
|
5:55
|
12
|
5:44
|
13
|
5:44
|
14
|
5:51
|
15
|
5:56
|
16
|
6:01
|
17
|
6:00
|
18
|
6:07
|
19
|
6:18
|
20
|
6:20
|
21
|
6:11
|
22
|
6:26
|
23
|
6:31
|
24
|
6:31
|
25
|
6:41
|
26
|
6:32
|
.2
|
1:15
|
| |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
|
I took today off for recovery. I feel pretty darn good after the marathon, no soreness and little fatigue. Felt even better after a 2.5-hr nap! Hopefully tomorrow will not bring any delayed soreness, but not over the course of today so far, so I don't expect any. Very encouraging, especially after last week. A few interesting TOU Marathon notes: - This year was my second fastest TOU time, just 1.3 seconds faster than 2005 (2:39:22.5 vs. 2:39:23.8)
- My gun time was 0.04 seconds faster than Logan's, but his chip time was 0.07 seconds faster than mine.
- Although we were denied Top 3, Fast Running Bloggers swept every spot from 4th to 12th. Pretty cool.
- Jon Allen captured a front paged title in the Herald Journal this morning. "Allen aided by mantourage."
In more important news, the Pack win again! Now back to watching the Patriots game. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
|
AM - easy 5 miles on Planet Walk and a few blocks with the dog. Feeling splendid. No tightness or soreness. I'm still going to take it relatively easy until Thursday, just to ensure proper recovery. (Adrenaline blue: 363 miles) It looks like the USATF LDR has posted the final standings HERE. 5 bloggers in the Top 10, including a clean sweep of the Top 3. I am not sure if I will go to the Awards Banquet or not. I usually skip stuff like that (especially for $30/plate + 170 miles driving round-trip), but if it exceptionally fun and/or if the food is exceptionally good, I may go this year. Has anyone gone in the past that can fill me in? Anyone else going this year? PM - 8 miles on the canal trail loop. Rained a little bit. 7:08/mile average pace. (1120: 289 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
|
Canal trail to BST to Green Canyon to end of Green Canyon single-track and back. Perfect weather today. Some fall colors are starting to appear up Green Canyon. It's amazing how much better I feel this week than last week. After my first mile today, I thought to myself, "I get to run 14 more miles! Happy Joy!" Not sarcastic, either. So it was a good run, and I enjoyed climbing hills in the 790s. They are a good shoe, although my feet are definitely tired after 15 miles. 6:54/mile average pace.
(790: 23 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
|
AM - planet walk, easy, no watch. (Adrenaline blue: 368 miles) PM - Providence Hill Loop, via Von's Park. Felt great. 6:47/mile average pace. (Triax: 97 miles) I went to the doctor today to have my iron checked. I feel fine and exhibit no symptoms of low iron. However, I just wanted to check and make sure, since I have been doing doing the most mileage of my life, and am eating a semi-vegetarian diet. I weighed in at 130 lbs, fully clothed with birkenstocks on and pockets full of keys, wallet, phone, etc. This is the first I've been weighed in a few months, and it's where I want to be. My test was good. I am the opposite of anemic, on the high end of normal. Now at least I know for sure. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
|
Big Workout today, which turned into Big Disaster. Well, that's exaggerating. More like Moderate Disappointment and Slight Anger. I was planning on doing MP intervals: 5-mile tempo with 2 minutes recovery, 4-mile tempo with 2 minutes recovery, 3-mile tempo with 2 minutes recovery. So 12 miles of tempo total. An ambitious workout, but I did something similar before Ogden and I liked it. Unfortunately, I didn't run until afternoon, and it was about 80 degrees by then, warmer than it had been all week. So that was mistake number one. And then I choose to do the Young Ward-ICON Loop, which can be windy in the afternoon; sure enough I had a headwind for the first 5 miles. Mistake number two. And then I didn't finish eating my lunch until an hour before my run. Mistake number three. So the heat sucker-punched me, the headwind kicked me to the ground, and the upset stomach spat in my face.
The workout started well enough, and I was down to sub-6:30 pace at the end of my 1-mile warmup. I started the first tempo segment and hit a 5:30 and then a 5:28. But I was already struggling by the second mile. I decided to break it up into smaller intervals, so took a two-minute recovery right then, and then started another 2-mile interval. First mile in 5:24, but then I felt pretty bad, and rather than push through it, I called off the dogs and canned the workout after another quarter mile. I hate giving up like that, but at this stage of the game, trying to push through 80-degree heat and a headwind just to hit some splits would have done damage, not good. I underestimated the heat, and pushed too hard during the first 2 miles, and I think it messed up my body for the rest of my workout. But in any case, my stomach was getting upset too. And my shoe was giving me a blister. And the air was stinky. Just not a good day. I completed the loop and tried to just keep a steady pace. I would surge up to tinman tempo pace every so often and hit a few sub-6 splits, but mostly tried to keep it under control. Lessons learned: 1) get the workout done in the morning, or even early afternoon while it is cooler; 2) adjust pace better for heat and headwind. A split is just a number, it is the effort that matters.
Finished up with 12 miles instead of the scheduled 16, but my body told me to call it a day and not push it. It's time to start tapering. 6:12/mile average pace for the run. (Burn: 284 miles)
| |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
|
AM - easy 5 on the Planet Walk and with the dog. (1120: 294 miles) PM - easy 8 miles on the Logan Loop. 7:08/mile average pace. (Triax: 105 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 18.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 18.00 |
|
Different kind of run today. I met Cody and Leland Barker at First Dam, and we drove up to Beaver Creek to mark the Bear 100 course for next week. We first ran out to near Danish Pass, and then back to car. Then we ran over to where my Aid Station will be next Friday (Fish Haven Canyon). At that point Leland drove back down, and Cody and I continued running down Old Logan Road, marking the course every 300-400 meters or so. It was a nice road and the aspen were peaked in color. We got down to the Beaver Creek campground and met back up with Leland. Cody and I need more miles, so we went on to run all the way out to the highway. With the nice downhill, and without having to stop and flag, we were averaging about 6:40/mile on this part. The pace on the uphills earlier in the run was much slower, but I wasn't really paying attention. I originally wanted a few more miles than this, but maybe I'll grab a mile or two in the afternoon. For now I'll call it good with mileage in the low 80s for the week. This is a bit more taper than I anticipated, but I think I need it, after Alta and TOU. I'll probably hit upper-60s next week. Took a glorious nap in the afternoon, and then ran 1.5 miles with the dog in the rain to clear my head and get blood moving again. (Hardrock: 80 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.00 |
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Easy run on the planet walk, then a block with the dog. No watch. (Adrenaline blue: 372 miles) The Packers defeat the Chargers. 3-0. All is well in Packerland. The Packsquatch is celebrating.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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Moderate Workout today. Fortunately, I had perfect weather this time: overcast, mid-50's with no wind. I put on my racing flats and ran from my house up to the USU track (3.25 miles) at about 6:40/mile pace. Then I did 5x1600m @ LT pace, with 400m (2:00) recovery. Interval | Split
| 1
| 5:09 | 2
| 5:09 | 3 | 5:08 | 4 | 5:08 | 5 | 5:00 |
These all felt good, and I felt relaxed for the whole session. Definitely a confidence-booster after last Thursday. My right SI joint is a little tight, but I have a chiro appointment followed by a two-hour deep massage tomorrow, so that should take care of it. Ran home from the track, a little under 7:00/mile pace. 6:11/mile pace for the entire run. ************************************* Here's a picture of our TOU pace group. To say we were enjoying ourselves immensely was an understatement. The photo needs a good caption.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.00 |
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Ran to the dentist for my 8AM appointment (2.5 miles). Good checkup, no cavities. The dentist looked down my mouth and said, "You're not from Utah, are you?" He is not the first dentist to infer that just from my teeth. I don't know why they don't fluoridate the water out here; every other place I've lived has fluoridated. Oh yeah, I forgot: "Do you realize that fluoridation is the most monstrously conceived and dangerous Communist plot we have ever had to face?" We wouldn't want to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids, now would we? Enough ranting about fluoride, or lack thereof. I ran back home from the dentist (yes, carrying my new toothbrush and floss), dropped off my stuff, and then did a few more miles out to the Planet Walk. 8 miles total, about 7:30/mile average, give or take. It was a beautiful morning, crisp and sunny, with caps of snow on the Wellsvilles. My day of appointments continues this afternoon, with visits to the chiropractor and the massage therapist. Gotta love the taper. (Triax: 113 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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I ran after work again today, and it was absolutely beautiful. Low 60's, sunny, no wind. I did a 9-mile run, down the canal trail to First Dam, and then up Hwy 89 to USU. I had to make a stop at the Merill Library at USU to photocopy a journal for documentation for my professional GIS Certification. Now that I have over 4 years of work experience, I qualify to apply. I could barely recognize the library (or the campus for that matter), since so much has changed over the last 5 years. I used to have to get my own journals from the shelves, but those are long gone. Now you make a request via computer, and some high-tech James Bond-like devices bring the journal to the person behind the counter, and then they give it to you. In any case, I managed to make my photocopies (on new high-tech copiers), and then continued the run home, via 1000W. I was wondering all day if my horses would be neighing. I think I had one horse neighing, but maybe it was wishful thinking. Definitely not two. But that's good, since I have 10 days left. 10 days!! If horses neigh too loudly for too long, they end up losing their voice. 6:46/mile average pace. (1120: 303 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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Moderate Workout today. I wanted a progression run, with a couple honest warmup miles, then to brisk, then to tinman tempo, then to MP, and then a short cooldown. I did the Millville Hill Loop, the old, tough standard. Here's how it went. Mile | Split
| Comment
| 1 | 6:43 | warmup
| 2 | 6:26 | warmup | 3 | 6:14 | "brisk" pace; uphill
| 4 | 5:56 | tinman; rolling
| 5 | 5:48 | tinman; half down, half up
| 6 | 6:20 | MP; all uphill
| 7 | 5:46 | tinman; rolling
| 8 | 5:06 | MP; downhill
| 9 | 5:45 | half MP, half tinman; downhill
| 10 | 5:24 | MP; rolling
| 11 | 6:33 | cooldown | 12 | 6:30 | cooldown |
It was a really good workout, definitely the fastest I've done this loop. One horse neighing, maybe one and a half. 6:20 is the fastest I've done the big hill mile by about 10 seconds, and it felt excellent. This mile has about 280 ft elevation gain (~5% gradient). After the big hill, I recovered for a while on the flat, and then tore into the big downhill. 5:00 pace felt conversational at times. I hit a bio-break after Mile 8 at a park, and then it took me about another half mile to find my rhythm again, but I was hitting 5:20-pace on the last half of that mile. The last mile of the tempo I just held 5:25. 6:02/mile average pace for the run. (Triax: 125 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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Today I skipped out on work and volunteered at an aid station for the Bear 100, our local ultra trail race. I was at the Fish Haven Road aid station, which is near Mile 34. I left Logan at 10AM and started setting up a little after 11AM (it's a long drive). It was just me and two ham radio guys from Bear Lake, who turned out to be pretty cool. Karl Meltzer came roaring through at around 12:15 PM. I've gone through marathon aid stations slower than he went through this one. Probably 3 seconds between check in and check out. He is trying to break the course record. Best of luck to him. He must be around Mile 75 by now (9PM). Running the aid station was a lot of fun, and I learned a lot. It was painfully obvious at times that I was a rookie, but hopefully I will do it again next year with a year under my belt and be more polished and have more of the "little things" right. It was enlightening to be on the "other side" of a race and serve rather than take. I will definitely never get mad a volunteer ever again, that's for sure. What a neat experience, I hope to do more of it. Toward the end of the day, when there were only 4 runners left to go through our checkpoint, I started doing little mini-runs to get my miles in. I ran the course backward on Old Logan Road until I saw the next runner, then I would run back to aid station before they got there. After 3 times of doing that, I had 6 miles in. The last runner had dropped out, so we didn't have to wait any longer, and it was time to pack up, at around 6 PM. After packing the car, I did a little out-and-back down Fish Haver Road, which is a nice dirt road that goes to Bear Lake. I caught some really nice vistas of the lake. The aspen are peaked, and it was a wonderful, glorious day to be outside in God's creation. Definitely lifted my spirits. I love fall. (Hardrock: 89 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
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Ran with Dan and Cody from Dan's house, up to the Deer fence trail, and went from Millville Canyon to Dry Canyon and back. Pace was slow, although those hills are hard no matter how slow you go. Temperature dropped about 10 degrees during the run. 8:33/mile average pace. This afternoon I went out to the finish of the Bear 100 to drop off some stuff. Karl Meltzer did indeed break the course record by over an hour, with a time of 18 hours, 50 minutes. That is an average 11:20/mile for 100 miles. Leland Barker was second, with a PR of a shade under 21 hours (I think, I can't quite remember). (1120: 316 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
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Went for a nice little fall colors hike with my wife, up Dry Canyon. Beautiful day. Pack win again, to move to 4-0. Favre sets all-time TD record. Geb's new record is great, but I still like Favre better.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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AM - easy run on the Planet Walk. No watch. (Adrenaline blue: 377 miles) PM - Little Workout at the USU track. The plan for today was 2x1600m @ 10K pace, with 400m recovery (2:00). I warmed up for a mile on my own, and then another mile with Cody, who would be using me as a pacer on my second interval in an attempt to break 5:00 in the 1600. It was starting to rain and get windy, so we decided to get going before things got worse. For my first 1600, I started with a 71, thought that was too fast, and settled down into 2:25 at 800m and 4:52 for the 1600m. Felt excellent. Cody did his strides in front of me on the front-stretch, which helped him get a feeling for the pace, and also blocked the headwind for me. However, the headwind died during the second half of the interval. For my second interval, Cody tucked in behind me. The plan was to run 73-second laps. The first 200 was 35, then 73 for the 400, thanks to the headwind that re-started. 2:27 at 800m. Cody started fading a little on the 3rd lap, and I hung back to enough to keep him in contact and take the wind on the front-stretch. 3:46 at 1200m. I told Cody he needed a 73. I picked it up a little bit and finished at 5:00. Cody was 5:04. This interval felt very good as well. No anaerobic running, and recovery was fast. I did the exact same workout the week before Ogden, and ran 5:02 and 5:01. This time around,the 4:52 felt like the 5:02 back in May. I had a similar experience with my mile intervals last week vs. the analogous workout back in May. Hopefully this means I can run St. George at an effort 10 seconds faster per mile than Ogden, which would convert to 15-20 seconds/mile faster due to the greater downhill. We'll find out.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
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No running today (yet). I woke up feeling rather run-down and a little achy. I went to work for a couple hours, but then decided to go home and try to nip this thing before it starts. After about 3 hours of napping, I felt a bit better and optimistic about getting a run in, and I went back to work. However, after an hour at work, I started feeling a little nauseated and called it quits for good (no vomiting yet, though). My wife says I feel "warm". Hopefully this is just a little flu bug that will be gone by tomorrow. I figure any running at this point in my taper is mostly psychological anyway, so I don't think a day off will do any harm, whereas forcing a run could cause full-blown sickness. I feel like I'm teetering on the brink, so hopefully rest and a lot of liquids will kill this thing. If I feel "perfect" by this evening, I may jog a few miles, but for now I'm content to do nothing.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 |
| I felt a bit better when I woke up this morning, other than being very hungry. I ran a block with the dog, and it felt okay. I went to work for a little while, but then my tummy started hurting again, so I went home and slept for another 3 hours. Things felt better after that, and I worked from home the rest of the day (self-quarantine). I ran 5.5 miles in the late afternoon at 7:15/mile average pace. The legs felt fine, but my stomach is definitely still a little messed up, and I feel rather weak in general. I need to be carbo-loading right now, but I have no urge to eat. I'll try my best. If I don't feel 100% tomorrow, I'll have to seriously re-evaluate my race strategy.
(Triax: 131 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 |
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I woke up at 4AM this morning, and my body said, "I'm sick of sleeping. That's all you do anymore." I guess 30+ hours of sleep over a span of three days is plenty. I'm feeling quite a bit better today, and hopefully it sticks. The last couple days I've felt decent for the first few hours, then I start feeling sicker during mid-morning. But today will be different. ;-). I ran an easy 5 miles with 4x100m strides at the end. I bumped into Cody after a mile and ran with him for a couple miles, then finished up on my own, and with the dog. Didn't wear watch. We are leaving for St. George at 2PM, which should put us there by 8:30 or so, with a stop at the WRC and dinner along the way. I'm looking forward to seeing everyone this weekend. (Adrenaline blue: 377 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 3.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 |
| Drove up the St. George course with Clyde and ran the first few miles of the course. There was a nasty headwind, but it is supposed to die down this evening and turn into a tailwind or cross wind. Afterward, we drove the rest of the course. (Triax: 134 miles) | |
| Race: |
St. George Marathon (26.2 Miles) 02:18:09, Place overall: 2, Place in age division: 2 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.50 | 26.20 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 26.70 |
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First off, awesome job to everyone who ran the race. And it was great getting to meet so many people before and after the race. I stayed with Clyde and Mik'l both Thursday and Friday night. It helped getting there a day early, so that I could get the stress of driving out of the way and have all of Friday to relax, go to the expo, scope out the course, and finalize race-day strategy. Clyde and I drove the course on Friday, which allowed me to lay down the foundations of what I would do on Saturday. It was helpful to see the Vejo hill, and even more helpful to see the quarter-mile downhill after it, and the three-mile uphill after that. I determined I would try to relax up Vejo as much as I could, and then regain any lost energy on the short downhill before the real test: Dammeron. For Dammeron, I would be content to not push the pace either. In fact, I planned to do as much sitting and as little leading as possible for the first 12 miles, before turning it loose at the half. Hopefully the competition would cooperate! Race-day arrived, and the weather cooperated. And fact, it was utterly perfect. High 30s at the start, with an ever-so-slight breeze that would act as a tailwind for most of the course. At the staging area, I did very little warmup (only about 0.25 miles plus strides), and focused mostly on getting quality porta-pot experiences (4 total, matching Clyde), and keeping my core and my extremities warm by hanging out at the fire pits. So mostly, I hung out and shot the breeze with friends. I do not get nervous for marathons, by the way. 1500's on the track make me very nervous. 5K's make me a little nervous. But the marathon is too long and too dependent on long-term training to make me nervous. The work has been done over the last several months, and now it was simply a matter to execute the training. It's kind of like typing a long document (the training), and then hitting "print" (the race). Or it's like painting a house. All the washing, chipping, scraping, caulking, and other preparation is the hard part. Painting the house is fun. At 6:45AM, it was time to paint the house. It was still very dark when the gun went off. It remained dark for the first 5 or 6 miles, resulting in me missing most of my splits (I was running Garmin-less). This was all fine though, because I could just focus on the pace, the pack, and how I felt. I was hoping that lots of people who were not me would want to take the lead at least through Vejo, preferably through Dammeron. Maybe it's selfish, but I wanted to run as efficiently as possible, and therefore just tuck in and let other people do the work through the hard part of the course. The weather was already cooperating, and so was the competition; several dark shadows of runners stepped up (none who I knew), allowing me to draft guilt-free. The first 5 miles went by very fast. I only got two splits: a 10:48 2-mile, and 16:06 for the next three miles. This is a conservative start for the "A" group, but fast enough for me and exactly what I was hoping for. Due to this conservative start, part of the "B" group caught up, including Mike, Sasha, and Steve. This was great. More bodies, bigger pack. Better banter too. Chit-chatting with others makes the first half of marathons go faster. So far my body was feeling good. I was running in just shorts, singlet, and gloves, but felt okay with the cold temperature. My hands were a little cold, and my knees were freezing and achy for some reason, but other than that, things were good and the pace felt efficient. The sun started to come up, and Vejo was upon us before I knew it. Believe it or not, I was actually looking forward to Vejo, because my cold, achy knees (and lower quads) were already a little sick of the downhill (somewhat alarming), and I predetermined yesterday that I was going to relax up Vejo and expend as little energy as possible, a plan that I further committed to when Sasha informed me we were ahead of the 5:20-guy right before the hill. Indeed, Vejo was enjoyable, definitely a good change of pace. However, our pack completely fragmented here. Dave Danley pushed up the hill and separated himself. Sasha, Steve, and Mike dropped back. At the top of the hill it was just me, Sean Sundwall, and Nick Schuetze. Nick, Sean, and I formed a temporary alliance, and began what was probably the most enjoyable part of the race for me. I drafted off of Nick for about halfway up Dammeron, and just tried to stay relaxed and easy; time did not matter yet. We made comments on the beautiful sunrise and redrock. It was a gorgeous day, and life was good. By the start of Mile 12, Nick started pushing a bit, and chasing Dave Danley. I stuck to my plan of relaxation, let him go, and worked in with Sean. We discussed trading off leads, but with no headwind, and with the hill nearly over, I was content to run side-by-side. I missed a some splits, but was averaging 5:30-5:40 on the Dammeron hill. Sean and I crested the hill at Mile 12. I gave him a high-five, and said "It's time to go." And we did. With the mission accomplished of running a relaxed first 12 miles and mooching off others, it was time to start really working, and time to get under qualifying pace. I knew based on the splits of previous winners (James Lander, Joe Wilson, Mike Kirk), the second half is where the race is won. Mile 13 was a 5:08, and we were rolling again. Nick had gapped Sean and I by a bit, but Danley was starting to come back; I knew that we could reel him in. 1:11:24 at the half. Seeing Snow Canyon was a beautiful site; not just its aesthetic appeal, but also the downhill it represented. I have been mentally (and physically) preparing to hit this section at sub-5 pace for several months, and now it was time to do it. Sean really helped hammer the pace from 15-17. My quads protested a little bit, but remained intact. We passed Danley around 15 miles. At Mile 17, I checked my splits and realized that we had just put together a 15:20 5K, and three consecutive sub-5's. We were definitely back under pace, now I just needed my body to hold up, kind of like a shuttle holding up during re-entry of the earth's atmosphere. Sean and I kept working together and encouraging each other. Fist-bumps, high fives, whatever it took. We knew we were on the verge of doing it. I missed another split, but got 10:18 for a 2-mile during 18-19. Satisfactory. Then a 5:27 for 20 (up the overpass hill?). One of us remarked "10K left". No wall for me get, although my muscles were certainly all protesting from the battery, particularly my left calf. My knees were feeling better though, once it had warmed up. Sean had a pace band and informed me we were on track for 2:19. I needed nothing better than that, and tried to relax a little and just keep my body intact. But kind of like the Alta race, but body was already in auto-pilot, not heeding my mind, and working even harder. The four-mile stretch of 21-24 was 20:04. I gapped Sean a little bit with 4 miles left, but didn't feel confident enough to make the big move, and he caught back up. I felt like I still needed someone to push (or pull) me if things turned sour. I started a mantra in my head, "There will be no Wall." With 5K to go, I gapped Sean again, this time for good. "Okay, just a 5K," I thought to myself, and started doing some mental math to figure out how slow I could run a 5K and still hit the "A" standard. My mental math wasn't doing so hot, and by the time I figured it out, another 5:00-mile had passed, and now I had only two miles. "There will be no Wall."
Now I knew the "A" standard was a virtual certainty. I was hurting, my muscles were screaming at me, but I was not near the Wall. "There will be no Wall." I ran Mile 25 in 5:13 just to prove the point to my doubting mind. Now it was just a mile race. Just a 1600m track interval. "There will be no Wall". And there was no Wall. Last Mile in 5:13. Last 0.2 in 1:07. Last Half in 1:06:45.
Ryan Hall is one of running role models, not just because of how he runs, but how he uses his running as worship, as a way to praise and glorify God. How does it feel to qualify for the Trials? Elation. Absolutely amazing. And I give God the glory and praise for the chance He's given me, the gifts He's given me, the beauty of His creation, and just the feeling of running in itself, fast or slow. I was happy to see both Sean and Dave Danley hit the "A" standard too. And I was absolutely elated to see Logan cross the line in 2:21:45. That was definitely a moment I'll remember for a long time. Lots of other fabulous performances by other bloggers and friends. I'd like to make a list of blogger PR's, but don't have time right now. :-) Today in St. George was certainly a special day. St. George is a special course, fast by its very topographic nature. But in order to have a truly special race, you need three other things beside a fast course: 1) cool/cold weather with no wind or tailwind; 2) thick competition; 3) great training and preparation. Sometimes you get only 2 or 3 of these four things to come together. This will lead to a good race, but not a special race. It is rare when all 4 factors come together on the same day, but today was one of those days. It showed not just in my race (an 8:15 PR), but in the times and PR's of countless others. It was truly a special day in St. George: a cold start, a tailwind, superb competition (and pace groups!), and lots of well-trained individuals.
Mile | Split
| 1-2 | 10:48
| 3-5
| 16:06
| 6
| 4:58
| 7-8
| 11:02
| 9
| 5:43
| 10
| 5:31
| 11-12
| 11:23
| 13
| 5:08
| 14
| 5:12
| 15-16
| 9:49
| 17
| 4:58
| 18-19
| 10:18
| 20
| 5:27
| 21
| 4:53
| 22
| 5:05
| 23
| 5:03
| 24
| 5:03
| 25
| 5:13
| 26
| 5:13
| 0.2
| 1:07
| First Half
| 1:11:24
| Second Half
| 1:06:45
| Total Time
| 2:18:09
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
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No activity today. I feel like I was thrown off a horse, and then the horse repeatedly and purposely stomped on my left calf about 10 times. And then other various barnyard animals came out and trampled my quads, hips, and hamstrings. And then that horse came back out and stomped my left calf a few more times just for spite. The plan is to get a long massage tomorrow, gets lots of sleep, drink lots of fluid, and do some elliptical Tues-Thurs. I'll start running again no sooner than Friday. For those interested, Sean Sundwall (3rd place overall, the guy I ran most of the race with) has posted his race report on his personal blog. If you haven't gotten enough of race reports already, it's a good read. http://twenty6two.blogspot.com/2007/10/olympic-trials-here-i-come.html | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 1.50 | 1.50 |
| I'm still pretty sore today. My left calf is the main problem. I went in this afternoon for a nice, long massage. My massage therapist is a miracle worker. Talk about the laying on of hands and anointing with oil... Afterwards, I went to the gym and did 15 minutes pretty easy on the elliptical. Planet Fitness now has a new building. It is bigger and has more TVs. Weighed in at 131 pounds. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 2.00 |
| Biked to the gym and did 15 minutes on the elliptical. Everything is feeling much better after the massage yesterday, especially the quads. The left calf is still the worst area, but it will be there by Friday. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 2.00 |
| Biked to the gym and did 15 minutes on the treadmill. My quads are ready to run again. My left calf is not quite there today, but should be good to go tomorrow. I'm looking forward to running again, but it's been a nice recovery week. I've needed to extra time to get logistics together for NY. The USATF and NYRR have made this as painless as possible, and I am all set up for flight and hotel. Stacy is coming with me, and we managed to get her on the same flights, and the seat next to me for the most part. Family does not stay free at the host hotel, but we're getting a very good deal for NYC, as these rooms ordinary go for about $500/night. I am really glad I hit the "A", as it allowed us to afford Stacy to come along, which is really important to me. I can't imagine how much people spend to travel out for the New York Marathon. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.00 |
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Today I *gasp* went running! Finally. 7 mile out-and-back to First Dam. I bumped into Vance Twitchell, his wife, and Seth Wold's wife, and shot the breeze for a while with them about the Trials and about D-I Pre-Nats this weekend in Terre Haute. I am very interested in seeing how Seth Wold does down there, as well as our own Nick Miller. Having race results to look forward to will help diminish post-marathon race-result withdraw (PMRRW). Anyway, the run today felt pretty good. My quads, hips, glutes, and hammies are all fully recovered and feeling loose. My right calf feels great, but my left calf is still sore, and inhibited my foot strike and push off a bit. But it is getting better every day, so hopefully it will swing around by Monday or so. 7:33/mile average pace. (Triax: 141 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.00 |
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7 miles on the River Trail with Cody. It was a nice morning, cool with logs of colored leaves on the ground. It started raining at the very end. My left calf felt a little better than yesterday. Went home and took a glorious nap. 7:46/mile average pace. (Hardrock: 96 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 11.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.50 |
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AM - 5 miles on the Planet Walk. Calf is almost 100%, but got a little tight halfway through the run. Didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline blue: 382 miles) PM - 6.5 miles on Landfill Loop, plus a block with the dog. Gorgeous day, nice to be outside. (Triax: 147 miles) In other news, the Pack win an ugly one to move to 5-1. Nasty play by the offense, even nastier play by the refs, and by far the worst play by Washington. A win is a win though.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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AM - Providence Loop, easy. 7:17/mile average pace. (1120: 322 miles) PM - Canal Trail out-and-back, 6.5 miles. 6:54/mile average pace. Culpepper and Hall are shaking in their boots now that I can beat the 7-minute guy again. (Adrenaline blue: 389 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 4.00 | 1.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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semi-Big Workout today. It was "only" 12 miles total, since I am not really recovered from the marathon yet, but was still enough to work me over. The workout was a fartlek: 10x2-minutes @ CV pace (roughly 5:05/mile on flat terrain) with 1-minute recovery jog between intervals. Afterwards, 10x20-second strides @ 3k-5k pace with 40 seconds recovery. Logan and Cody joined me, which was really nice. It's so much better doing hard workouts with other people. Plus, I could draft off Logan. :-). Since the NY course is so hilly, wimpy track workouts are out of the question. Rather, I elected to hit the road and the rolling hills of the North Logan-USU-Boulevard Loop. The first 5 intervals had a lot of uphill, but then the last half of the set flattened out and had some gradual downhill as well. I used my Garmin to record distance and pace for the fartlek intervals, but ran them mostly by feel. Interval | Distance
| Pace
| 1
| 0.40 | 5:04/mile | 2 | 0.39 | 5:11/mile | 3 | 0.39 | 5:10/mile | 4 | 0.38 | 5:20/mile | 5 | 0.39 | 5:06/mile | 6 | 0.41 | 4:59/mile | 7 | 0.40 | 5:05/mile | 8 | 0.39 | 5:11/mile | 9 | 0.39 | 5:06/mile | 10 | 0.41 | 4:57/mile |
In general, the faster intervals had more downhill, and the slower intervals had more uphill. I like this course because it's fairly challenging. Not as hard as my Millville Hill Loop, but still good. I was feeling pretty beat down halfway through, but fortunately had Logan to keep pushing me. Once we got to the top of the course, the terrain got a bit easier, but both calves really tightened up and got a fairly sore. I still have a ways to go on the recovery. The last thing I wanted to do after the fartlek was 10 strides, but the three of us grunted our way through it. Thanks guys for a good workout. 6:37/mile average pace for the whole run. (Triax: 160 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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noon - 5 easy miles to the Planet Walk from work. Didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline blue: 394 miles) PM - 7 miles on the River Trail. Got rained and sleeted on, and hit the snow line at only 5000'. Time to wax up the skis. 7:30/mile average pace. (Hardrock: 103 miles) Kind of funny side story for today: I was listening to a podcast interview by TheFinalSprint.com with Peter Gilmore this afternoon at work, and I was caught a little off-guard when my name got dropped in the middle of the interview. This is not totally random, as I write for the website, and they have been publicizing my OTQ, but still kind of freaky to me. Then Gilmore proceeded to call me a chump and said that he was going to beat me up in the parking lot after Trials. No not really. Actually the context was more like, "One of our staff writers just qualified for Trials with a pretty slow time compared to you. Do you have any tips for him and guys like him on how to stick with it, get sponsors, and become as good as you?" It was interesting. Gilmore is definitely one of those guys that I can try to emulate, along with Brian Sell. He was not blazing fast when he started, but has worked extraordinarily hard and has taken some hard knocks along the way, but things have turned out well for him. Gilmore and Sell are definitely guys I will be rooting for at trials because of that. The podcast is here, by the way.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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noon - easy 5.5 miles on the Landfill Loop. Didn't wear watch. My left calf is finally close to 100%. (1120: 328 miles) PM - easy 6.5 miles on Canal Trail out-and-back. 7:03/mile average pace. (Triax: 166 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.50 |
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noon - easy run from work on the Planet Walk. It was surprisingly warm out today. Kept the pace as slow as I could; didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline blue: 399 miles) PM - easy 7.5-mile run on the Providence Loop. I tried to run as slow as I could today, which turned out to be 7:11/mile average pace. It felt like 9-minute pace. This is a good sign. Everything is feeling very smooth, and I think I'm just about recovered. (1120: 335 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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What a cold, rainy awful day today. For those who need it, here is today's motivational photo:
Now get out there and get your miles in. PM - I ended up lucking out on the weather. We drove to Ogden in the early afternoon, where I met Logan and James. The plan was a 15-mile progression run on rolling hills. Logan picked the perfect course; it was VERY rolling. We started near 7-minute pace and worked our way down to 6-minute pace by the end. This was my longest run since St. George, but it felt okay. Weather was perfect too: cool, not raining, and not windy. 6:28/mile average pace.
(Triax: 181 miles)
Afterward, Stacy and I continued down to SLC, where I picked up some shoes and equipment at Wasatch Running, and then we went to the USATF LDR Dinner at the Alta Club. I had not been to any of the USATF dinners before, and was glad I went this time. The people were fun, the food was good, and pretty much everyone won several drawing prizes. I won a SLC 5K tech shirt (which is actually pretty nice), and (yet) another night stay at the Alta Peruvian Lodge. We now have accumulated 3 free nights at the Peruvian. Now all I need is some powder. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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AM - easy 5 miles on Planet Walk and with dog. Didn't wear watch.
(Adrenaline blue: 404 miles) PM - easy 5 miles on River Heights loop and with dog. Beautiful afternoon. I ran as slow as I could. 7:55/mile average pace.
(1120: 344 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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For anyone who is interested, I have posted my own course map and profile for the Olympic Marathon Trials on my personal blog. Click here. noon - easy 5 miles on Planet Walk from work. Didn't wear watch. (Elite: 5 miles) PM - easy 5 miles, some random loop. Felt great, light and bouncy. I think one horse started neighing or at least whimpering a little bit. 6:33/mile average pace. (Triax: 186 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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noon - ran an out-and-back on Canyon Rd. I wanted to run on the canal trail, but it was blocked off and under construction. At the end of the run, I did 8x20-second hill surges up the Boulevard Hill, with 40 seconds recovery on the way back down. They felt pretty good. (Adrenaline blue: 410 miles) PM - 4 miles easy on Planet Walk. No watch. (1120: 348 miles) Yet another 9+ hour day at work today. This has been going on since St. George. I know a lot of Americans work 50 hrs/week, but I'm not into it. In terms of running, I would prefer to work 35 hrs/week or so. My schedule is flexible, but ebbs and flows with clients and workload. When a client needs something, I must perform immediately and efficiently. When a client doesn't need anything, I can go take a nap or go skiing. Unfortunately I am insanely busy right now, so I am working when I should be napping. At least I'm "only" running 80 mpw, rather than 100, and I'm getting a good 8 hrs of sleep at night, so it could be worse. But it could also be better. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
| Big Workout today with Logan. We did 4x200m strides on the track to warm up (35s each), and then did a 4x4-minute fartlek @ CV pace with 2 minutes recovery on the Millville Hill Loop. I told Logan he would probably hate me by the last interval, because those hills at the end are a bear. Interval | Distance
| Pace
| Comment
| 1
| 0.77 mi
| 5:12/mile | gentle uphill
| 2 | 0.78 mi
| 5:07/mile | rolling | 3 | 0.78 mi
| 5:09/mile | half down, half up
| 4 | 0.67 mi
| 5:56/mile | big big uphill
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I felt pretty good and had a good workout. My stomach was churning a little by the end, and I had to find a VPB in the woods in Providence on the way back, but was better after that. It got dark on us, so we had to slow it down quite a bit the last couple miles for the sake of footing (not that I minded slowing down). 6:32/mile average pace for the run. (Elite: 20 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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noon - easy 5 from work on the Planet Walk. Didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline blue: 415 miles) PM - easy 5, some random route. Stopped by the gym and weighed myself (129 lbs). Finished up with a lap on the grass around the LHS fields. 7:04/mile average pace. (1120: 353 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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noon - easy 5 from work on Planet Walk. Did 8x100m strides in the middle. Didn't wear watch. (Triax: 191 miles) PM - went to the chiropractor in Hyrum, and then did an easy run nearby on Hollow Rd. I forgot my watch, so no time. Bummer. I'll just make something up: 6:51/mile. I also forgot to change my shoes, so my rotation got messed up. I feel kind of weird from having to run in the same pair of shoes twice in a row. Hopefully my head will not explode or anything.
(Triax: 196 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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Big Workout today. Cody and I started from my house, ran up Center St. to Dry Canyon, then took the Bonneville Shoreline Trail to Millville Canyon, and back to my house along the Top of Utah Marathon course. The idea was to progress from 7:00 pace for 5 miles, to 6:30 for 5 miles, to 6:00 for 5 miles. The route is very hilly. It starts around 4500' and climbs to about 5100' at the mouth of Dry Canyon. From there to Millville Canyon, there are numerous rolling hills, with a peak at 5250', not to mention poor footing. From Millville Canyon, there is a nice downhill, and then small rolling hills to the end. We had to run by effort and feel to hit our "pace", rather than looking at actual pace, since the hills throw it off so much. Splits were slow, well over 7-minutes, but the effort was there. I had a lot of trouble today with footing on the trail, especially the downhills, but worked the uphills pretty hard. We finally hit pavement again at about the 8-mile mark, and I was actually quite happy about it, even though I usually prefer dirt. From there on in, it was easy to hit the proper pace. We did a couple 6:20 miles on the downhill to finish off the "6:30-effort" segment. Unfortunately, Cody's IT band seemed to be awry, so we separated ways on the last 5 miles. I hit 5:55, 5:50, 5:56, 5:53: 6:04 on this stretch to finish off the run, and everything felt pretty good. It was a beautiful sunny morning, in the upper 30s at the beginning of our run and 50s by the end. Gotta love Utah this time of year! 6:50/mile average pace for the run. (1120: 368 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.50 |
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Took a tremendous afternoon nap, and then did an easy run on the Planet Walk and then some with the dog. Not a bad way to start the week. (Adrenaline blue: 420 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.00 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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AM - 5 miles, easy. No watch. (Triax: 201 miles) PM - last speed workout of the year. It was an easy one, 2x1600m @ CV pace, with 800m rest. I warmed up by running out to the USU track (3.25 miles), and then started the workout. I hit 4:59 for each of the intervals. Both intervals started slow, for some reason, with a 76-77s lap. Not sure what that means. I felt pretty good, but nothing special. Cooled down back to my house, and did 8x100m strides on the way. 6:22/mile average pace for the run. Time to taper! (Tangent) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 1.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 1.50 |
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This makes my trip to Denver that much sweeter: Packers 19, Denver 13 A little YouTube clip for everyone's enjoyment: On to running. I'll try to give a little bit more detail to what I'm doing and thinking over these next several days. This afternoon my boss and I are flying to Denver for a meeting tomorrow. Obviously traveling like this before a big race is not ideal, but Denver is a very easy flight (1-hr), plus I will not have to do any driving, so can just sit back and nap. I am essentially taking today "off". I slept in until almost 8AM, then jogged around the block with the dog this morning, and will jog another mile or so this evening in Denver, just to shake out the flight. Wednesday will be 8-9 miles, Thursday will be 5-6 miles, and Friday will be 3 miles. I get back to SLC from Denver around 6PM tomorrow (unless we catch an earlier flight). Rather than waste time and energy driving home (1.5 hours), and then driving back to SLC in the morning, Stacy is going to pick me up at the airport, and we will be staying with Mike K for the night. This makes our 9AM flight on Thursday very very easy, plus I will be able to get a run in before I leave without having to get up early. I think with proper napping, hydration, and diet, the travel will not take much out of me. I think most of "travel fatigue" may just be related to dehydration and poor eating. I've run well after business trips in the past, so am not too concerned. The hardest part about Trials isn't just the race, but also the logistics. There is sooo much to do: check-in, chiropractic, massage, pick up per diem money, technical meetings, fluid bottle drop-off, course tours, shuttle around to and fro, etc., not to mention getting in my nap! I ended up making an hour-by-hour daily schedule spreadsheet that lays out when and where I need to be places. Doing this made my head stop spinning, and definitely made me feel a lot better and more organized going into this big weekend in a huge, unfamiliar city. I suppose if I could run 6 or 8 minutes faster, I would have an agent doing all this for me, but now it's up to me!
PM - ate dinner, and got into our hotel a little bit before 9PM. I went for an easy 1 mile run in the dark, just to shake the legs out. Felt pretty good. It is a very warm night here in Denver. Shorts and a t-shirt were comfortable.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.00 |
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Got up early before my meeting and did an easy 8 miles in the dark through the mean streets of Westminster, CO. Thank goodness for Garmins during travel. 7:10/mile average pace.
I leave for New York at 9AM tomorrow morning. We'll arrive around 5PM EST. Probably won't have time for much in the evening, but will just settle in and eat dinner after we get there.
(Elite: 29 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.50 |
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AM - ran 5 miles in SLC with Mike K. at 6AM. 7:06/mile pace. I felt really good. PM - a quick half mile on the treadmill at the hotel after my chiro adjustment to shake a little bit of the travel out of me. (Elite: 34 miles) Today was a long travel day. Fortunately, we did not have to get up too early, thanks to Mike's hospitality (and great pancakes too). We made our 8:50AM flight to CIN no problem, no delays, likewise for our 3PM flight to NY. Upon arriving in NY, we were greeted by a NYRR volunteer, who took us to a transport van after we got our luggage. At first it was just Stacy and I, but then we picked up what felt like 20 more runners at another terminal. It was tight, but fortunately we were all very very skinny. Talked to James McGown most of the ride, which consisted of several near crashes. I am sooo glad I do not live in NY, and also very glad I do not have to drive anywhere! Everyone I've met has been very nice, and I've already bumped into several other former D-III runners that I ran against back in the day. I also bumped into Shane Clinger, who is Hobie Call's "agent", but haven't seen Hobie yet. Apparently he is on the same floor as me. I think the Culpeppers are on our floor as well, as I've seen Shayne walking around a bit. Made idle chit-chat with Mbarak Hussein, who is an extremely nice guy, on the elevator. So it's been fun. I'm already really enjoying it, and being in this environment. I feel pretty relaxed, and am getting over the whole "famous runner aura" thing I was talking about the other day. We're all just here to race. I was not able to get my bib and chip tonight, but I think I am Bib #36. Not certain on that though. I was able to pick up my other "goodie stuff". More importantly, I got a killer chiro adjustment that was probably one of the best I've ever had. I guess these guys in NYC are pros! After that, I am feeling quite loose. I am tired from travel, but the legs and core feel good. The only thing left to do tonight is eat. Speaking of which, time to go! | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 3.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.50 |
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Got up at 7AM, ate breakfast with Stacy at the hotel restaurant, and then checked in my uniform (can't have any advertising) and got my bib and chip. My bib number is indeed #36, as I had thought. Afterward, Logan came by, and the two of us walked over to Central Park (about 3/4 mile), and toured the course. We ran the first three miles, and then walked the last two, then jogged back to the hotel for 3.5 total. The course is indeed rolling, but I don't think it will be too bad, especially coming from Utah. I think the hard part will be the repetition, just the same hills over and over and over. It will definitely wear down people over time. The road surface should be quite fast though, and weather at least won't be hot. We had a technical meeting/lunch at noon. We all loaded on buses at 11:15, and it took us 40 minutes to go about 2.5 miles. This is why I will never live in NYC. It is amusing for a weekend, but that's about it for me. Not that I should complain too much, but the host hotel is not close to anything race-related. The start line, finish line, and various banquet sites are all several miles away and take over half an hour to shuttle to, depending on traffic (which is always bad). Oh well. Mind you, I am very happy just to be here, but just wish I could maximize my time better. All the time driving around has basically cheated me out of my nap, which makes me cranky.
The lunch itself was good. Logan and I found Sean, so had our FastRunningBlog seating section, along with about 6 other guys I didn't know (besides Kyle Baker, who I sort of "know" from racing in MI). After an hour of eating (wish it had been only 30 minutes), they did the technical meeting, which also lasted an hour (wish it had been only 30 minutes). So we were back on the bus a little after 2PM, and back to the hotel around 2:50PM. After that I went up and got my per diem money, and then back downstairs to get a final tune-up massage/stretching session. The therapist turned out to be Tom Nohilly, who was an elite steeplechaser and contemporary with my college coach Brian Diemer. He knew Diemer well. Small world. The only other task for today is dropping off my fluid bottles. I am only doing 2 or 3 bottles (we can do 10 max), as I did not feel they really helped me at all during St. George. In fact, it was a bit of a distraction, but I'll do a couple anyway. Interesting notes and observations from the technical meeting: - Brian Sell is now my favorite to win, based on the fact he has a really sweet mustache.
- Peter Gilmore has the same Keen street shoes as me. They are the "Bronx" model, which is appropriate for this weekend.
- There will be a timing mat for every 5K, plus half marathon and other key points. Since it is a multi-lap course, we will go over a mat 52 times. The mats will be spaced anywhere between 400m and 1300m, due just to how the course lays out. The end result will be a stat junkie's dream. Sasha, this is your chance to get the data you've always wanted.
I was 95% sure I am not going to wear a watch, and the mat thing brings this up to 100%. That's right, I'm running "naked". I can see no good reason to wear a watch at this point, seeing as to how time does not matter. And since all my splits are recorded for me, all a watch will do at this point is distract me. I imagine I will miss most of the mile markers anyway. I want to get into a "XC mentality" for this race.
Weather is uncertain at this point, but latest reports showed a 35% chance of rain, and also a possibility of strong gusty winds. Of course I would prefer prefect weather, but since time doesn't matter, I really don't care what the weather brings. In any case, I plan to tuck into the back of the slowest pack for the first bit of the race, move up as needed to stay with "the right pack", and draft off of a big block of bodies. I am not concerned about my placing for the first half of the race, as the last 10 miles should be plenty of time to move up, throw surges, and pick off those who went out too hard or are having bad races. The key is patience and staying within my window, rather than getting pulled into someone else's race. I have to ability to finish marathons strong and hard, and hope to use this to place in the Top 35. I look forward to just being out there and running with so many talented runners.
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| Race: |
Olympic Marathon Trials (26.2 Miles) 02:22:34, Place overall: 53 | Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.30 | 26.20 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 26.50 |
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What a day. I will write a full report tomorrow. I'll just say right now that I am very pleased with my performance, both placing (the important part) and time. Top 35 was my "top tier" goal, but I was quite happy with a hard-fought 53rd. There is no way I could have run faster, and was really happy with my time on a tough course and windy day. It was a thrill to run and compete in this field, and even more thrilling to pick people off the whole second half and run my race to my utmost. The last 15K was difficult, and I slowed a bit, but managed to fight hard and not hit the Wall. I heard rumors of someone having a heart attack during the race when I was at the finish line, but did not learn the full details until a hour after the race. The whole Trials field is reeling from the death of Ryan Shay, and it hits really hard. A lot of people here knew him really well. I can't imagine what his wife and family are going through, but my own feeling of sorrow is large, and I didn't even know the guy. Let's give our prayers for his wife and family. On to the race report... Logan spent the night in our room and we had a slumber party. The slumber party entailed going to bed at 8:45PM (that 6:45PM Utah time) and getting up at 4:55AM. It took me well over an hour to fall completely asleep, and then I started waking up by 3:30AM because I was so geared up. But it was a restful night, as good as any pre-race sleep. I ate a banana in my room and then grabbed a quick bagel downstairs in the hospitality suite. Then we loaded the bus. I didn't really notice anything about the bus ride, just ate my bagel and drank all my water. We got to Rockefeller Plaza at about 6AM, so had an hour and a half to blow off and get ready. We hung out indoors until 7:05AM. I managed to use the bathroom 5 times, which makes it a 5-star race, a good sign of things to come. Everyone seemed pretty calm, and it was interesting to be in the same pre-race room with EVERYONE. I made it a game-time decision whether or not wear my sleeves (the latest running craze), but when we saw Ritz putting his on, Logan and I decided that it was indeed "cool." We finally moved outside to the start line and had half an hour to warm up (strides, etc.). Ironically, there were three portapots for everyone to share. I couldn't believe it. We were treated like kings for three days, and then get three portapots on race day. Oh well. It ended up working out fine, I just kind of expected a personal portapot for every runner. ;-) It was weird; it was still kind of dark out, but the place was so lit with the TV cameras and city lights. A weird sensation. At about 7:20AM I was totally ready to go. Just start the darn race already. There were a lot of spectators there. Someone called my name as I was stretching out. I looked around, and it was my Coach Priebe from high school!! I could not believe it; I had not seen or talked to him in over 10 years! His son, and my former teammate, Scott was there as well. All that definitely put a smile on face. Finally, the race was ready to start. They started counting down: 2-minutes, 1-minute, boom! The gun actually came a little sooner than I expected, but I lined up in the very back, so had no problems getting out efficiently. Watching the TV footage of the start later in the day, I could easily pick myself out bringing up the rear. Right where I wanted to be. I found Logan pretty quickly, and we ran through Times Square together. This is one of the most memorable parts of the race. This was my first time ever in Times Square, and I happened to be running the biggest race of my life. The lights and visuals were amazing, and I enjoyed the effect while running with the pack. Logan and I and a couple other runners traded some jokes back and forth. The race was still early enough to make jokes. Part of the reason it was easy to make jokes was that we got out incredibly slow. I did not see any mile markers until Mile 3. The clock there said "16:40", and I thought it was 5K at first. "Not a bad pace, 5:20/mile", I thought. Then we went through the 5K clock, and it said something like "17:05". That is very slow, more like 5:30/mile. We were all still very bunched up. Apparently the leaders were running tactical, not too surprising, I guess. At 5K I was still near the back, but not quite sure where. The pack was so big and so fluid. I would pass people where it was efficient to do so (to fill gaps), and people were also passing me on the outside lanes. I felt like I was part of a living river of runners, churning and boiling. I could not see packs formed yet, just the river of runners. It was very much like XC nationals. And after 5K, the rapids started. I actually can't remember a lot of precise details of the race. With doing 5 laps in the park, a lot of things blur together, and I can't remember who I was with, when I was with them, or where I did certain things. I general the west side of the course (which I call the "homestretch") was harder than the east side (the "backstretch"). I think there was more uphill on the homestretch, plus the 20+ mph winds were coming out of the north, so we got general headwind on the homestretch and tailwind (plus the "easier" hills) on the backstretch. I did not think the hills were that bad at any point, but definitely preferred the backstretch. No hill was that long or that high, there were just a ton of them, and they were relentless. But that is why I trained on my Millville Hill Loop all summer. Nothing is as bad as that loop. Back to the race. Things heated up after 5K. A pack finally formed (probably the 3rd "chase" pack at this point, although all we were chasing was the 2nd pack), and I stayed in the back of the pack so that I got draft, run efficiently, and hit tangents. There were many twists and turns, so tangents and elbow-space were both very important. As gaps formed, I would move up, but tried to stay in the same general position, close to the runners immediately in front me. Even though the wind speed at the start was 22 mph. I did not feel it at all while running in packs. Plus I think the trees of Central Park helped diffuse it a ton. The wind during the race was nothing even remote close to the winds we faced this year at the Great Salt Lake Half or a couple years ago at the Canyonlands Half Marathon. It surely made an impact to those running solo, but was sporadic rather than steady, and only affect the homestretch, so runners did not have to deal with it non-stop. I keep getting off track. Back to the actual race (again). My pack hit the 10K in 33:25, so the last 5K split was 16:16. Our overall pace had increased from over 5:30/mile to under 5:25/mile. This is more like it. I felt comfortable and stayed put. The crowds were amazing, by the way. The bleacher section was deafening and the jumbo-trons were really cool. I could look up and see the leaders on the jumbo-tron, cool stuff, ha ha. The back stretch had a ton of spectators too, and lots of people were running back and forth for 10+ viewings. I heard lots of "Go Petersen!", thanks to having my name on my singlet. I though it was cool that many of the spectators were cheering for all runners, and it was encouraging to hear my name called by total strangers who were out there enjoying the race and supporting the runners. 15K split was 49:55, so 16:30 for the last 5K. Doing the mental math, I figured this was just under 16:40/5K average, so right around 5:20 average pace now. In some ways this was a little fast for me, but I was with the pack I needed to be with, and was feeling very very comfortable, conversation-pace even, although no one wanted to talk to me. I could definitely feel the loss of elevation in my breathing. This was my first sea level race in over 6 years, so was not sure what to expect in that regard, but so far so good. 20K split in 1:06:25, so another 16:30 5K split. I thought at the time, "20K, now that's kind of a cool distance." Maybe I will find a good 20K to run next year. There is a good one in New Haven, Conn. Soon after the 20K clock, came the Half Marathon. The clock said "1:09:59" when I passed the mat, but my official splits (I had emailed to me) say "1:10:01". Splitting hairs here, but I'll take the sub-1:10! In reality, it took me a few seconds to cross the start line, so I lost a little time there at the beginning of the race. In any case, I was averaging exactly 5:20/mile here, and on pace for a 2:20. This seemed kind of fast, but again, I felt really good and that I could keep sustaining this pace longer. After the Half Marathon, things got to be even more of a blur. The 3rd chase pack I was with had been steadily closing on the 2nd chase pack, and it was cool to see them slowly coming back to us. However, after the Half mark, I dropped a little bit from the rear of our pack, but also both packs appeared to string out and disintegrate. Now it was every man for himself. This also meant that I had to deal with the wind on my own, but like I said above, it was not nearly as bad as it cool have been. At no time during the race did I think negative thoughts about the wind. I'm not going to say it was a non-factor, because it was there...but it was a non-factor. :-) They had timing clocks all over the course, but after the Half, the times became meaningless to me. I don't know what 25K, 30K, etc. means in the context of a marathon, and I did not put forth the effort to do mental math at that point. Fortunately for the sake of this entry, I can refer back to my official
splits, but at the time I did not pay them much attention.Rather, all my focus went into catching people and keeping my own pace strong. Indeed, people were finally starting to fall back, one-by-one. 25K split was 1:22:56, so another 16:30-ish 5K. 30K split was 1:40:20, so 17:24 for 5K. Not sure what happened here. I managed to form some mini-packs with one or two other people, as I had the chance. Often, I would catch someone, hang with them for a minute or two to regroup, and then move up and on. I felt very comfortable at times, but at other times I could feel the fatigue starting in my calves. Breathing was still very easy though, thanks to ample oxygen found at sea level. I wanted to wait until about 18 miles (or 30K) before I started making a strong move, if possible. I knew the alternative was that I would feel bad and just try to hang on for dear life. The reality was somewhere in the middle. I was definitely feeling weaker at that point, but did not think I would hit the wall. I could tell I was slowing, but didn't worry about and kept trying to reel people in. I was moving slower, but there were plenty of people at this point who were moving much slower than me! Ducks in a row... Also, people were starting to drop out. I saw Hobie walking on the backstretch, just after Mile 18. Other people were walking here and there too. I passed a few people with very high bib numbers, practically crawling. Looking at the results later, I think a lot of those people ended up dropping out. There were 26 total DNF's. 35K split was 1:57:37, so 17:17 for the last 5K. Again, I had no perception of this during the race, I am only calculating these splits now, after the fact. All I knew at the time was that I hurt, but had less than 5 miles to go. I knew I had a good race going, place-wise, and even a decent time, which would be icing on the cake. Someone shouted to me and the guy right ahead of me "62 and 63!" This was the first and only report of placing I heard the entire race, and it came well after Mile 20. People were coming back faster and faster over the last 7K, and I probably caught another 6 people the last lap. Mostly at this point I was just thinking about finishing as hard as a could and making myself hurt. In other words, "leave it on the 'track'", to borrow a track and field expression. 40K in 2:15:07, so 17:30 for the last 5K.
Just over a mile to go now, and there are several people in front of me to pass. Passed a sign that said "1 mile to go". Then another sign that said "800m to go". Then another signed that said "400m to go". I passed a guy right in here, and began kicking hard to discourage him from trying to stay with me. "200m to go". I was loving the signs. It was an uphill finish, and I looked ugly on the last 200m (or at least felt ugly), but it did the trick. Final time was 2:22:34. From my glances at the clocks late in the race, I knew that I could get close to the "B" standard, and was happy to run this time on a tough course. So icing on the cake. I like to run negative splits, but this was not to be that kind of race for me today. I put myself in position where I needed to be the first half, got some fatigue the second half, but managed to grind out a solid second half and pass probably 20 people or so, despite not "flying". A guy who did "fly" the second half was James Lander (St. George winner from last year). I passed him before the Half, but then he came roaring past me with about 8K left, and ended up in 40th place. I think he may have negative-splitted. The only other guy to pass me during the last Half of the race was some Hansons runner, a little bit after Lander went by. Other than that, no one, so I was happy with that. I don't like getting passed. I did not find out my place until a hour later, when I talked to Dave Nelson on the phone while I was sitting on the bus. I was happy with 53rd. It is the upper 40th percentile, and gives me a lot of confidence for the future. I know this is once again a very long report, but this blog is as much a journal to help retain my own memories as it is a "public thing". It was definitely a memorable weekend, and a great racing experience. It looks like my next race will be the Houston Half Marathon, on Jan 13. I have the chance to participate in the USATF Developmental Thingy, so will get comps and financial support to go out and run the USATF Half Marathon Championships. This is where Ryan Hall broke the American Record last year, so I know it is a fast course! I don't know a goal yet, maybe 1:06:00 or so? I'm sure Sasha will tell me within 15 seconds what I will run, so I will just do whatever he says. ;-) Oh, regarding the Sasha-science type analysis, I haven't completely thought it over, but I imagine the Trials course is about 3 minutes slower than a Chicago or London or Berlin, especially with the wind factored in. Maybe up to 4 minutes, but 3 sounds reasonable. We had perfect temperatures, and the road surface itself was quite fast, but there is no disputing the hills. Hall had an absolutely amazing performance, and I think he is capable of 2:05-ish on a fast course. Winning by 2 minutes in this field says it all. Looking at my time, I do feel that it exceeds my St. George performance, and is the best marathon I have run.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 1.50 | 1.50 |
| I am recovering better than after St. George, in terms of muscle wear-and-tear and soreness. I think St. George is just harder on the body due to the downhill. I did not run today, but walked with Stacy over to the gym, where I did about 15 minutes on the elliptical easy. I also did a few weights and chin-ups, but nothing strenuous. I will start running again on Thursday, but will just do elliptical until then.
Thanks everyone for the nice comments and links to photos of the race. They have posted 5K splits for all runners here. There is much fun to be had if you copy and paste the whole split table into Excel. Then you can sort by split to see how people moved up and down as the race progressed. Here is how my placing changed during the race: Split | Place
| 5k | 98th | 10k | 98th | 15k | 84th | 20k | 89th | Half Marathon
| 90th | 25k | 87th | 30k | 78th | 35k | 62nd | 40k | 55th | Marathon | 53rd |
Using this I know now that I "passed" 37 people during the second half of the race, although this is inflated a bit due to people dropping out. When I factor out people like Abdi, Culpepper, Gilmore, Hussein, etc., it is more like 20 people, which is close to my original estimate. "Passing" someone who has dropped out is like a walk in baseball; it does not count as an "at bat". So that's fun with spreadsheets for today.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 1.50 | 1.50 |
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Another day at the gym. I spun easy on the elliptical for 15 minutes, and also did some core work and weights. Recovery is going quite well. I have some soreness in the calves, but that's about it. I watched a great Ryan Hall video tonight. What a great testimony. Click here to watch. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Day off. My soreness is gone for the most part, except when I do the TP Massage Ball on my calves. They are quite tender still. It's nice not to run for a few days. I'm a big believer in bracketing large training cycles with time off. The physical component of healing and refreshment is important, but even more important of me is the mental aspect of refreshment and warding off burnout. Perhaps a stronger mind can take it, but I can't. A break in my routine is a good thing, and also makes me hungry to run again after a few days. I probably won't do another marathon until next October, so it's time to get ready for long (hopefully uninterrupted) stretch of training.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.50 |
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Easy 4.5 miles on the Planet Walk and with the dog. I've missed the ol' P.W. It felt good to run again. My left calf isn't quite all the way there, but in general everything is feeling good.
(Triax: 206 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 |
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Who is running Moab? Who needs a place to stay?? David Nelson and I are in the process of reserving some cool cabins, just south of Moab (near the LaSalle Mnts) for the weekend of the race (March 8). Cost will be $40-$75 per person, per night, depending on numbers. Not KOA prices, I know, but these cabins are really nice. Let me know via email or this blog if you want in. We will make reservations by next week. noon- went for an easy 6-miler along the canal trail to First Dam and back. Didn't wear watch. Everything feels good. I'm looking forward to resuming normal training next week.
(Elite: 44 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.50 |
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I can't believe how warm it is. Shorts and t-shirt on Nov. 10; it's that crazy global warming. I went out to the River Trail and ran a little past Spring Hollow and back for an hour total. It came out to about 8.5 miles at 7:11/mile pace. The pace felt good, and I enjoyed the run. (Hardrock: 112 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 |
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Planet Walk easy. (Adrenaline blue: 425 miles) So...here I am sitting at home after church watching the Packers play the Vi-queens. Favre just threw his 2nd touchdown of the day, putting the Pack up 27-0. I am finally getting to the point of being able to relax and enjoy the game. "This could be a decent game after all," I thought to myself. After all, there is nothing better than a good ol' fashioned blowout. Then what? The blasted FOX network pulls the game, and switches over to the Eagle vs. the Redskins. Hello?? 27-0 is the mark of a good Packer game, how dare they? Plus every pass Favre throws is part of living history. Who do the Redskins have? Chris Cooley? I blew off some steam by taking my nap early in protest.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 10.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 10.00 |
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Did the Providence Hill Loop from work. Felt very good, legs were snappy. Average pace 6:29/mile for the run. (1120: 378 miles) More details on the Moab cabins. They are better described as a "historic guest ranch". It is called Pack Creek Ranch, and the website is here. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 5.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.50 |
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Workout today: 20 minutes warmup, 30 minute tinman tempo, 20 minute cooldown, with 10x100m strides. I did the tempo on the North Logan - USU - Boulevard Loop. It was nasty rainy and windy out. I should have ran in the morning when it was nice, but waited until 2PM, which was a mistake. Win some and lose some, I guess.
Mile | Pace
| Comment
| 1 | 5:44 | rolling terrain; headwind | 2 | 5:48 | rolling terrain; headwind
| 3 | 5:38 | rolling terrain; tailwind
| 4 | 5:25 | flat; tailwind
| 5 | 5:36 | flat/downhill
| 5.5
| 5:35
| downhill
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The tempo felt pretty good. I was annoyed with the wind and rain driving in my face and soaking my shirt, but knew I would turn out of it soon enough and get it at my back. Once I turned, the rain didn't feel too bad. With the warmup and cooldown, the average pace for the run was 6:13/mile. (Elite: 56 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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AM - easy 4 miles. Cold out. (Triax: 210 miles) PM - easy 9 miles on Landfill Loop, via Planet Walk. 6:48/mile average pace. (Triax: 219 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
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AM - easy 4.5 miles on Planet Walk in the dark, plus a block with the dog. Didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline blue: 430 miles) PM - easy 9 miles out onto the River Trail via the Canal Trail and back. 7:00/mile average pace. (1120: 387 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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Workout. Ran some with the dog, then went on my real run. The workout today was a 7x3-minute LT fartlek, with 1:30 recovery. I warmed up for a mile and a half and then started the intervals on the Millville out-and-back route, which is fairly rolling.
Interval |
Distance |
Pace |
Comment |
1 |
0.58 |
5:13/mile |
flat |
2 |
0.55 |
5:26/mile |
uphill |
3 |
0.58 |
5:12/mile |
rolling |
4 |
0.58 |
5:10/mile |
mostly downhill |
5 |
0.55 |
5:27/mile |
uphill |
6 |
0.61 |
4:57/mile |
downhill |
7 |
0.57 |
5:18/mile |
uphill |
The workout went okay. The first couple felt a little rusty, but the last half was a bit better. It seems like I can run tempo runs well after a marathon, but faster intervals definitely don't feel as good. But it was good to get the speed in.
6:26/mile average pace.
Flew out to Indiana in the afternoon for the next 8 days. Sea-level running, here I come! Oh, and family too.
(Elite: 68 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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Longish run in Indiana today. In an effort of Blog Diplomacy, the Mountain Chapter of the FRB met with the Midwest Chapter of the FRB at Shades State Park. Only two of us showed up, but Trashcan Annie and I had a very enjoyable run together. We started on the trails of Shades, and wandered aimlessly through the leaf-ridden park 8-to-10 minutes/mile pace until we got sick of leaves, creek crossings, stepping on tree roots, and running so slow. So after 5 miles of trails we hit the roads. We crossed the Sugar Creek bridge (beautiful spot) and then climbed out of the valley and into some fine Hoosier farmland. It made me nostalgic to be there, as it is quite beautiful in its own way. Very few cars were out, which was nice. Once on the roads our pace dropped to the 6:40s, and then 6:30s and 6:20s by the end. Annie kept pushing the pace, but fortunately I was enjoying the ample oxygen and it felt really good. Or maybe she thought I was pushing the pace; it's always so hard to tell. I usually blame Logan for that kind of thing, but he wasn't around to take the heat this time. We ended up with 14 miles and an average pace of 7:14/mile, which was skewed by those 10-minute miles in the park. Beautiful day, and a good run with a good friend.
(Triax: 233 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.50 |
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Slow, easy distance on the roads of Brazil, IN. 7:20-ish/mile.
(Triax: 237 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.00 | 5.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.50 |
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Workout. 3-mile warmup, 5.5-mile tinman tempo, 3-minute cooldown, with 10x100m strides. Ran a nice loop near my parent's house in Brazil, IN. All miles on were small rolling hills.
Mile |
Split |
1 |
5:48 |
2 |
5:40 |
3 |
5:40 |
4 |
5:36 |
5 |
5:36 |
5.5 |
5:39/mile pace |
It was a decent workout. The first couple didn't feel that great, but I eventually warmed up a bit. 6:12/mile average pace for the run.
(Elite: 80 miles)
Later in the morning, we all drove over to watch D-I XC nationals. My parents only live about 10 minutes away from the course, so it seemed wasteful not go. I hadn't been to a XC meet since my own national meet my senior year (7 years ago). I definitely miss the aura and electricity of nationals, and the feeling of running on grass. I bumped into Nate Long, who was there to watch his wife (Weber State). Other than that, didn't see anyone I knew. I cheered for Pat Smyth (Notre Dame, 15th place), since he is a Utah boy, and also cheered for Seth Pilkington (Weber) and the BYU teams. The Liberty kid managed to hold off the Oregon dude for a fairly exciting finish, something like 29:20 or so. It looked like Oregon beat everyone pretty bad, but I never checked the final score. NAU looked strong as well. The women's race was less exciting, as the Texas Tech girl just crushed everyone. BYU had a pretty strong spread, but no one up front. The two Weber girls looked like they did pretty well, perhaps AA. Again, I didn't check the finals, so don't know who won team-wise. Anyway, it made for a more entertaining afternoon than just sitting around my parents' house watching TV.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 17.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 17.00 |
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AM - easy 13 miles, 7:01/mile pace. It is very warm today, shorts and t-shirt weather. Plus, it's quite humid, so I worked up quite a sweat. Tomorrow and thereafter it's supposed to get rainy and cold, so I decided to get some good mileage in while the weather is nice. I will probably do a few more later this afternoon.
I am reviewing the Garmin Forerunner 50, which is a foot pod/HR monitor combo, with a watch interface. The foot pod was pretty accurate without any extra calibration; I was getting readings of 0.99 miles for the 1-mile county blocks, every time. My HR hovered around 140 for the run. It has been a while since I've measured my heart rate.
(Triax: 250 miles)
PM - easy 4 miles around Forest Park in Brazil, IN. By the way, there are also towns in Indiana named Peru, Alexandria, Lebanon, and Santa Claus. It is truly an exotic state, as exhibited by numerous cars up on blocks, and large plastic Christmas yard decor. 7:09/mile pace. Ave HR 139.
(Triax: 254 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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AM - slept awful last night, but I felt ready to run when my alarm went off at 7AM. I went out and had a great 9-mile run, averaging 6:38/mile. Weather here is WARM, upper 60s and very high humidity. I was dripping sweat when I finished, even though it was dark when I started out. Indiana is definitely much different than Utah.
Speaking of which, here is today's entertaining Indiana-themed story. Near where my parents live, there is a BIG yearly festival called the Covered Bridge Festival. It is a big deal, tens of thousands of people go. It is essentially a big flea market. People love it. My parents ran into a woman from China this past year, and got to talking with her. They asked her what brought her to the Covered Bridge Festival, and she replied that she was there to "learn about the American Peasant." Hilarious.
PM - I did my own study of the American Peasant this afternoon, and ran through the inner-city shanty-town known as Brazil, IN. Usually I stick to the county roads outside of town because fewer people hurl curses at me, but I decided to chance it. I think one person did tell me to 'slow the ef down', but other than that the language was clean and locals indifferent to my presence. No one threw cans of snuff at my head either, always a bonus. Pace was a little quicker, about 6:20/mile for the run (harder to get hit that way), but I felt absolutely great. About like 6:45/mile effort in Utah. Gotta love the sea level thing.
Other highlights today include going to my old high school to give a talk about geo-sciences and careers to science students, and then to the track and xc teams about running. I'm sure all the runners thought I was nuts for the mileage I do, but if I knew then what I know now, I would have been All-State rather than some 'also-ran'. Also did some Blog diplomacy, and got to talk briefly to Cassandra. Not enough hours in the day to truly catch up with folks though. It was nice to see the old school again, though, as it had been about 8 years since I had last been back.
(Elite: 94 miles)
Oh, here's an interesting article about another Devine Racing mess:
http://www.thefinalsprint.com/2007/11/nearly-one-year-later-las-vegas-marathon-champions-have-not-been-paid/ | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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Happy Thanksgiving everyone.
The weather front finally crashed in, and temps dropped to the 30s, bringing wind and snow flurries. After a warm week, not the most fun run this morning, but I got it in. Fought a head wind the whole way back. 6:54/mile average pace.
(Triax: 263 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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Easy 9 miles in Indianapolis.7:08/mile pace. Fly home today.
(Triax: 272 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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Workout. I did a fartlek with 5x4-minutes @ LT, with 2 minutes recovery on the Young Ward-ICON Loop. Warmed up for about 4 miles at 6:35/mile pace (good sign), then started the workout at the turnoff to Young Ward. Interval | Distance (miles)
| Pace
| 1 | 0.77 | 5:11/mile | 2 | 0.78
| 5:10/mile | 3 | 0.77 | 5:13/mile | 4 | 0.75 | 5:23/mile | 5 | 0.77 | 5:11/mile |
The first two intervals felt pretty good, but I think all the flying, driving, and holiday festivities of the past week took a bit out of me. I don't know what happened on the 4th interval, but the last interval went well. (Elite: 106 miles) In other news, I got my Houston entry and plane ticket squared away. I'm starting to get pretty excited for that. I'm thinking sub-1:06 should be possible.
Also, for those interested in getting cabins for the Moab Half, David has reserved a cabin for 6, and it is already full (me, Stacy, Dave, Cody, Beth, (kids??), Aaron). However, Dave inquired if there are any more open cabins, and there ARE. If you are interested in reserving a cabin, contact the Pack Creek Ranch. They are very nice cabins/houses in the La Salle Mnts. Rates are reasonable. There is a hot tub. It would be cool to have a cluster of FRB cabins. We can be like a cult or something. We just need more people and guns.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 |
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Easy 5 miles: some with the dog, then over to my friend's house to feed their dogs, then back home, then to the Planet Walk. (1120: 392 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.50 | 5.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.00 |
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Workout. 20 minutes warmup, 30 minutes of tinman tempo, 20 minutes cooldown, with 10x100m strides. Once again, I did the North Logan-USU-Boulevard Loop, only I added a 1-mile out-and-back at the apex of the loop to put on some distance. Mile | Split | Comment | 1 | 5:30 | big downhill, then slight up | 2 | 5:48 | mostly uphill
| 3 | 5:40 | 1/3 downhill; 2/3 uphill
| 4 | 5:38 | 2/3 downhill; 1/3 uphill | 5 | 5:40 | rolling | 5.5 | 5:21/mile pace
| flat; ran with Seth |
The tempo went pretty well. I bumped into Seth Wold on the last half mile, and he joined me for the remainder, which naturally sped things up a bit. Nice day to run today, about 40 degrees and sunny. 6:12/mile average pace for the run.
(Elite: 118 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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noon - 9.5 miles easy on the Providence Hill Loop. It was snowing for most of the run, but stopped near the end. I guess winter is finally here. 6:59/mile average pace. (Triax: 282 miles) PM - 4.5 miles easy, running to the gym, and then 20 minutes of treadmill at the gym. Slippery out. (1120: 396 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
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AM - easy 4.5 miles, just around. Still slippery out, so kept it very slow, no sudden movements. 8:05/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 435 miles) PM - easy 9 miles. Took the canal trail, and then came back on the First Dam Run 10K course. 7:10/mile average pace. (Elite: 127 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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Easy 9 miles from work on the Landfill Loop via Planet Walk. 7:08/mile average pace. (Triax: 291 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.50 | 0.00 | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 11.50 |
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Workout. 10x2-minute LT fartlek with 1 minute recovery. Ran it on the Millville out-and-back route, so rolling hills. Warmed up for 2.5 miles, then started the workout. Interval | Distance (mi)
| Pace (min/mile)
| 1 | 0.39 | 5:09 | 2 | 0.38 | 5:22 | 3 | 0.40 | 5:04 | 4 | 0.38 | 5:21 | 5 | 0.40 | 5:05 | 6 | 0.38 | 5:15 | 7 | 0.39 | 5:08 | 8 | 0.38 | 5:18 | 9 | 0.40 | 5:04 | 10 | 0.39
| 5:10 |
Variance in pace usually corresponded with uphill vs. downhill. This was a pretty good workout, and didn't feel too hard. Harder workouts will resume next week... (Elite: 139 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.50 |
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Ran to the end of the single track of the River Trail and back from my house. I met Jon at the trail head, so got in about 6 of the miles with him, which made it better. There was about 3 inches of snow on the trail, so the going was slower and harder. I felt kind of tired from yesterday, and was glad to be done with the run. It has now been 4 weeks since Trials, and I should be adequately recovered enough to do some harder training again in preparation for Houston. 100-110 miles/week is on order for the month of December. Should be interesting, as I've never tried to train this much over the winter. But I'm willing to do whatever it takes to reach the next level, snow or no snow. (Triax: 306 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.00 |
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Interesting news for 2012 Olympic Trials: the standards just got a lot tougher. Also, no more St. George (or other downhill courses). I've blogged about it HERE, for anyone who cares. Easy 5 miles with dog and on Planet Walk. Didn't wear watch. Roads and sidewalks were very icy. (Adrenaline blue: 440 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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Big Workout. 15 miles with 8 mile MP tempo and 10x100m strides. Nice day, over 40 degrees and some sun. I did the Millville Hill Loop (now wish I didn't). I warmed up for three miles and then started the tempo. Mile | Split
| Comment
| 1 | 5:20 | rolling
| 2 | 5:24 | 3/4 downhill, 1/4 uphill
| 3 | 6:25 | all uphill
| 4 | 6:00 | 1/2 uphill, 1/2 flat
| 5 | 5:37 | 1/4 uphill, 3/4 downhill
| 6 | 5:15 | all downhill
| 7 | 5:16 | 1/2 downhill, 1/2 flat
| 8 | 5:25 | rolling, gradual uphill
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It went well except for the uphills and also had some stomach issues that caused for to stop for short amounts of time at 2 miles and again at 4 miles. Not good. But the last 4 miles I got into a pretty good rhythm and worked through the stomach issues. I will not do this route again for a tempo for a few weeks. I need to get stronger first. The Millville Hill just killed me. But the workout is in the books at least. Only 9 more Big Workouts until Houston. Every one makes me stronger, right? 6:10/mile average pace for the run.
(Elite: 154 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
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AM - got up and stumbled/ran to the gym in the dark, and then did treadmill for about 40 minutes at just under 7:00/pace. HR was pegged at around 150, probably because it is very warm in the gym. Stumbled home, and then around the block with the dog. 7 miles total for the morning. Took a righteous nap afterward for 1:15:00, which is a good time for me. Heh heh. As my mileage gets back over 90 and 100, I need to be disciplined enough to take lots of naps. That means good time management. (1120: 403 miles) noon - easy 9 miles on the Landfill Loop. (Triax: 315 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 8.00 |
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Easy 8 miles this morning, just around town. Slow. I wish the weather would stay like this all winter! (Adrenaline blue: 448 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 8.00 | 0.00 | 6.25 | 0.75 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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Big Workout today.10x1000m @ CV pace, plus 6x200m strides @ 3k pace. 200m rest between intervals (~1 minute). Warmed up for a couple miles, then stopped at home to change into my flats, and continued over to the LHS track (which was gleefully empty, one good thing about December). Interval | Split
| 1 | 3:05 | 2 | 3:07 | 3 | 3:09 | 4 | 3:09 | 5 | 3:08 | 6 | 3:08 | 7 | 3:08 | 8 | 3:09 | 9 | 3:07 | 10 | 3:06 |
The first four 200's were 34 seconds, the last two were high 33's. This workout rocked me pretty hard, but I was glad to complete it and get it under my belt. My goal pace was actually 3:03/K, but since I didn't come close on any interval, perhaps my CV pace should be re-assessed. Maybe at sea level I could have done it. On the positive, this is the most 1K intervals I've ever done, and probably the fastest too. It just seemed like a poor workout at first because the bar was set a bit high, but I'm happy with it now. Sure hurt though. My calves started getting sore after the 6th interval, and are still sore now. I think it's just growing pains to getting back into harder workouts and wearing flats again. Also, my form felt sloppy, and I'm still carrying about 3 extra pounds from post-Trials slacking and Thanksgiving/vacation eating. My body will reach its "high-mileage equilibrium" in a couple weeks, and I think that will help. Cooled down afterward, then stopped back at home, showered, and got in 00:40:00 of napping. Time to get back to work! (Elite: 160 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
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AM - 0.5 miles with the dog, then 0.5 miles to the gym, 5.5 on the treadmill, and 0.5 home. A little misty, but not raining at the time. On tv, it looked like the Wasatch Mnts were getting hammered. Calves are still a little sore from yesterday.
(Adrenaline blue: 455 miles) Napped for 01:04:00 after my morning run. PM - easy 9 miles on the Landfill Loop. Snowing, but not sticking (yet). 7:10/mile pace. Ave HR 141. (1120: 412 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 15.00 | 3.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 18.00 |
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Long run. Ran the TOU course backward to the Hollow Rd./Blacksmith Fork intersection and back. Did the first 12 miles easy, then 3 miles of tinman tempo, then 3 miles of cooldown with 10x100 strides. Tempo miles were 5:45, 5:48, 5:39. The first mile was largely the stretch along Hwy 165, the second mile included the long uphill through Millville, and the third mile finished off the uphill and started the downhill into Providence. Weather was nice for first half, but then I hit a nasty, cold canyon wind near Blacksmith Fork (I forgot about those), and was very grateful to turn around at halfway to get a tailwind and the slight downhill. By Providence it started snowing pretty good. I felt tired the whole run, and was quite glad to be done. 6:47/mile average pace for the run. 93 miles total for the week, 101 scheduled for next week.
I am reviewing the Nike Sport Kit + Nano thingy, so today I was techno-runner. I wore an iPod and a Garmin, plus had the food pod thingy in my shoe. I wish I could keep the Nano; it's pretty darn cool. It's amazing how many songs you can listen to during a 2-hour run. I got through most of Smashing Pumpkins Siamese Dream (good running album), U2 Pop, Glen Phillips Mr. Lemons, and part of the Wailin' Jennys Firecracker. Definitely beat running by myself in the cold, wind, and snow. (Triax: 333 miles)
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 7.00 |
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Easy 7 miles on Planet Walk and USU track (was calibrating Nike Sport Kit). Slippery out today. Didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline blue: 460 miles) (Triax: 335 miles) ****************** Packers win the NFC Norse. Lions do us no favors. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.00 | 8.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
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Big Workout. 8 mile MP tempo, with 10x100m strides at the end. 15 miles total. Today I tried a new loop: the Hyde Park Hill Loop. It starts out on my Logan Loop, then I cross Main by Iggy's, then turn left on 800 N, and take that road to Hyde Park. Then a right onto the main road there, up the hill (a mile long), and then back south on 1600 N, at which point the route merges with my North Logan -USU-Boulevard Loop. So perhaps a better name for this new loop would be the "Logan-Hyde Park Hill-North Logan-USU-Boulevard Loop. But I'll stick with "Hyde Park Hill Loop", because it has a really stinkin' big hill in Hyde Park. Or maybe "Loop of Pain". I thought this route might be easier than my Millville Hill Loop, but it was in fact harder. Warmed up for 4 miles, then started the tempo. Mile | Split | Terrain
| 1 | 5:39 | rolling
| 2 | 5:44 | rolling; more uphill than down
| 3 | 6:54 | um...BIG uphill.
| 4 | 5:18 | blissful downhill
| 5 | 5:47 | rolling; last bit of uphill
| 6 | 5:28 | net dowhill
| 7 | 5:36 | flat
| 8 | 5:41 | mostly down; traffic stops
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It was an okay workout, but not my best. The Hyde Park Hill makes Millville Hill look like a loser. I've ran down this hill many times, back when we would do long runs from Ben's house in North Logan, but never up. I'd rather go down. The last half of the tempo felt pretty good. The last mile was going through USU campus, so I had to slow down through the traffic light on 800 N, and then took the steep paved trail down from campus, which slowed things down too, because it was too steep. But another workout is in the bank. Took a 00:45:00 power nap afterwards. (Elite: 175 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
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AM - morning treadmill routine. 7 miles total. I just got my FRB/St. G Running Center Team gear (thanks Steve and Sasha), so I wore one of the shirts over to the gym, and then made sure there were people in the row of treadmill behind me who could see the shirt, and therefore join the blog. I'm pretty sure that's how it works. Napped for 01:10:00 before going to work. (Adrenaline blue: 467 miles) PM - 9 mile out-and-back to the River Trail from work. Cold, but tolerable. I did further testing of the Nike+iPod thingy while listening to a "This American Life" podcast. Now that the foot pod is calibrated, it was within 0.01 mile of my Garmin's measurement. Not bad for a $30 gadget. I felt really good during the run, and was fueled by injustices exposed by Ira Glass and cohorts. Averaged 6:44/mile for the run. (Triax: 344 miles) ********************* Alright, all this talk about pink shorts for the racing team got me all worked up. So I decided that we needed a simulation to see how it would look in action.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 14.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 14.00 |
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AM - easy 6 miles in the dark. Very cold this morning. 7:40/mile average pace. The highlight of this run was wearing brand spankin' new Adrenalines with brand spankin' new Powerstep inserts. And not just any Powersteps, but the Powerstep Pinnacles. It's the orthotic used by kings and other nobility. Oh yeah, I'm living large! (Adrenaline: 6 miles) PM - easy 8 miles on Landfill Loop. A bit warmer out now, and I had a good run. Listened to a This American Life podcast about summer camp, which was entertaining. 6:39/mile average pace. (Axiom: 8 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 15.00 |
| Big Workout. 6x1-mile on the road @ LT pace, 1/4 mile recovery between intervals. I did the workout on the Young Ward-ICON Loop, which is as close to flat as we get around here. It started snowing before my run, and the roads were pretty wet. Cold and snowy is not my ideal running environment, but does it matter? I guess not. Warmed up for two miles and then started the intervals. Interval | Split
| 1 | 5:07 | 2 | 5:13 | 3 | 5:10 | 4 | 5:14 | 5 | 5:10 | 6 | 5:14 |
Considering the weather and road conditions, I'm pretty happy with this workout. I hit a slight headwind on intervals 3 and 4, but then had nice conditions for 5 and 6, except on the 6th interval, my route turned onto a gravel road that was snow-covered and slick...and gravel. I think that last interval was worth a 5:10, but the effort was there, which is was matters. My calves, especially the left one, got really sore after the 4th interval, probably due to wearing flats for a long period of time. The same thing happened last week, so hopefully my body will start adjusting. Maybe I should wear flats twice per week for more exposure. My cooldown was kind of pathetic, since I was so sore. But another quality day is in the books.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
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Big zero for today. Around 7PM last night I was just sitting there, feeling perfectly fine, and then within an hour I was sick with the beginnings of a cold. Today I have a sore throat, congestion, and general lethargy. I have definitely felt worse, just a garden-variety cold, but I put myself in self-quarantine and stayed home today. In a small office like ours, there no need to risk getting everyone else sick, especially when I can remote-desktop to anywhere on our network and get work done if the need arises (I had to do this for a couple hours today). It's been a good day of rest, and also got a lot of work done on the FRB running resumes.
I thought about going for a run earlier on, but then emailed Coach Tinman, who told me just to rest until I am healthy again. Loss of fitness at the muscle level and of blood volume doesn't start for several days, he says. Therefore, I am better off just resting and getting healthy faster, and not risking prolonging the illness. On that note, it's so good to have a coach in my corner now so that I don't have to make these decisions myself. Before, I would probably be out running right now, out of obsessive-compulsive guilt, and doing my body more harm than good. But now I have someone I can trust just telling me what to do, and it takes a lot of weight off my shoulders so that I can focus on the actual running, and on other things. So no 100-mile week for me this week, but it's just a number, right?
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| No run again, still sick. I feel about the same as yesterday, but I imagine things will turn around by tomorrow. I got 12 hours of sleep last night, and will probably catch a nap or two today. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
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Still get today, but starting to feel better. I decided to take one more day off, and will resume normal activity tomorrow. Since I have all sorts of free time, being bored and all, I finally got around to posting some of my more recent thoughts and arguments regarding the new Trials standards on my blog.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 4.00 |
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Feeling a bit better today, but still have congestion and am developing a slight cough. Toward the end of today at work I was feeling a bit worn down too, but couldn't go home because a client was in town from Colorado to work with me. Will probably take some more time off work tomorrow.
Coach Tinman gave me an adjusted schedule for this week to slowly get back into running. 4 miles today, just did the out-and-back on the Planet Walk. 7:15/mile pace. (Triax: 348 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 6.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.50 |
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Easy run on the canal trail. Still coughing; congestion is getting better. I am taking part of the day off work, and will be working from my home office the rest of the time, so hopefully that will give me extra rest. Time for a nap. My Wordpress blog has apparently caught the same virus I have. Something to do with the MySQL database. It worked one day, didn't work the next. I touched nothing. Beh. Hopefully tech support will sort it out. If it's down forever, I don't feel like rebuilding it again. (Adrenaline blue: 473 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 9.00 |
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I had a dental appointment, but my wife had the car, so I ran 2.5 miles to the dentist, then 2.5 miles back home, and then another 4 miles on the Planet Walk. Average pace was 7:21/mile. I'm feeling quite a bit better than yesterday, but still have some coughing and hacking. Congestion is quite a bit better. (Elite: 184 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 12.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.50 |
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AM - ran to gym and did treadmill. 6.5 miles total. Health is much improved, but still coughing and hacking stuff up occasionally. If my energy level is still high this afternoon, I'll do another easy run. (Adrenaline blue: 480 miles) PM - got the urge to run again while walking home from work in the dark and snow. Called up Jon and met him at the Planet Walk; we ran the Planet Walk and then a loop on the golf course. Pretty good snow run. Distance is unknown, but I'm estimating it at 6 miles. (Triax: 354 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.00 |
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AM - 6.5 miles, Treadmill routine. Roads are very snowy. (Elite: 190 miles) PM - easy 6.5 miles; Planet Walk and misc. running around town. Colder today, but not too bad. 7:11/mile average pace. (Adrenaline blue: 486 miles) |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 13.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
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AM - easy 8 miles, on Providence Hill Loop. Listened to another This American Life podcast, about roadtrips. Very cold, and my beard completely froze over, which is appropriate for the first full day of winter. 7:12/mile average pace. (Triax: 362 miles) PM - easy 5.5 miles. Planet Walk, plus some distance with the dog. Didn't wear watch, but did break in my new Saucony Tangents. (Tangent: 5 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 7.00 |
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Good news, I got my personal blog working again. Had to take an old MySQL backup and configure it to work with the new server. I lost a couple comments, but other than that it's all there. I also finally lost the horrible big toenail on my right foot, after over a year of trying, so that's even better news. Fresh starts all around. To make myself feel better about the Packer loss, I posted some more inspiring quotes on my blog, this time all are by Vince Lombardi. Click here if you care. ************************** AM - Easy 5 miles on a fresh new layer of snow. Didn't wear watch. (Adrenaline blue: 491 miles) PM - having seen enough of the Packers humiliating themselves (and their fans) in front of the Bears, I bailed on the game drove up to Green Canyon and did some XC skiing. Lots of people up there; nice to see the ski community out and about. For fun, I took my Garmin to see how fast I was skiing. First two uphill miles were 15:04 and 15:53. Then I turned around and went downhill. I'm not very good down hills on skinny skis and leather boots, but I managed to do some snow plowing and not bite it at all, which is important when there's a lot of other people out there. 8:01 and 8:11 on the downhill miles. 47:06 for the whole 4-mile trek. Green Canyon was really beautiful, with huge amounts of snow hanging from the trees. I may try the golf course by the Planet Walk later this week if we get some more snow.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 9.50 | 4.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 13.50 |
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Workout today, of medium proportions, since I'm just returning from sickness. I did a hill fartlek on the Hyde Park Hill Loop. The idea was to hit 5K pace on shorter hills (<800m), LT pace on medium hills (800m-1600m) and MP on hills longer than a mile. Well, most hills out here are longer than a mile, so I was MP for most of the surges, but I got the other paces in a one point or another as well. 6 hills total. I just ran by feel and didn't pay attention to pace, since it's pretty meaningless to me going uphill anyway. Kind of a fun run, and weather was nice. My quads and hip flexors are sore from XC skiing yesterday, but I managed to cope. (Elite: 203 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 7.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 1.00 | 8.50 |
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Merry Christmas! I ran a little bit with the dog, and then Logan came by and we ran around Providence. We got about 8" of snow last night, so roads were not in good shape, and it was absolutely FREEZING. The bank by the Providence Stadium 8 said that is was 3 degrees. That digital sign always runs a bit on the low side, so it was probably more like 10 degrees out. Either way, my hands hurt by the end, and I had the full Frostillicus beard going. 7:45/mile average pace. (Triax: 369 miles) PM - Stacy and I went out in the afternoon and XC skied the Logan River Golf Course. Finally, a good use for golf courses. Snow coverage was good, and it was actually kind of run, skiing up and down the hummocky terrain. Skied the front 9 and crossed the bridge over the Planet Walk and tackled the back 9. Probably a couple miles total.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 16.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 16.00 |
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AM - easy 8.5 miles. Roads are still very snowy, and traction is difficult. I ran around town for a while, then did the Planet Walk, which hasn't been plowed yet, but has been packed down a little. 8:19/mile average pace. (Adrenaline: 14 miles) PM - I was sick of being cold every run and was craving a good sweat, so for the PM run I went to the gym and hit the treadmill. 7.5 total, with the run to and from the gym. (Adrenaline blue: 499 miles) | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 5.00 | 0.00 | 3.50 | 0.00 | 1.50 | 10.00 |
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Bad day today. I had been experiencing some irritation since Tuesday in the vicinity of the ischium, but it was tolerable, not impacting my stride, and not getting any worse. Today it got worse, much worse. I ran from work to the gym, warmed up a mile on the treadmill, and then started my 8x1000m workout. I chose the treadmill over the roads after a lot of internal debate. The basic reason was that the roads are so slick and snow-covered that trying to run a threshold-paced workout on it would have been futile, or even dangerous. I don't like the treadmill for hard workouts, but the mill is flat (uncrowned), snow-free, plus I rationalized I needed to get used to heat for the Houston race. I cranked the puppy up to 12 mph for the interval portions, and ran that pace for 3:07...roughly a 1000m. Recovery intervals were just over a minute. Incline was set at 1% to help negate the lack of wind resistance. The first 4 intervals went pretty well. The 5th one had a little bit more pain, but nothing to worry about. But after the 6th one, I knew something was really wrong. I got off the treadmill, walked around a little bit, and got a drink of water. I then jumped back on the treadmill and tried to jog slowly. Not happening. I went from being able to hold 5-minute pace pretty easily to not even being able to jog at 9-minute pace, all within a few minutes. I finished up the last two intervals on the elliptical, just tried to work hard for 3-minute durations. After that I changed and went back outside, tried to start jogging back to work. Still not going to happen. So I ended up walking the mile back to work (fortunately Logan is a small town, and I both work and live centrally). For the rest of the afternoon, it just went from bad to worse. The pain had spread up my sartorius muscle (which attaches to the ischium, I'm told). It felt a little like the groin strain I had last year, but also a lot different. I was afraid I had a pelvic stress fracture, or something like that. It hurt to stand on my right leg when unsupported. It also hurt to raise my right knee while sitting or standing. An activity like putting on pants hurts a lot. Walking the half mile home from work also hurt a lot. My lifestyle relies on me being healthy and mobile, so something like this trickles down to my "commute" home as well. I wanted to get this thing diagnosed, or at least a referral, just for peace of mind. I'm a bit obsessive that way. Plus, if I couldn't run Houston, I wanted to let the USATF people know asap, so they could give my spot and my funding to someone else. After dinner Stacy and I went to the IHC Instacare, which is open until 9PM. I don't really like my family doctor, so this is as good as any place for me. Waited half and hour (which what I have to wait when I make an appt for my family doctor), and then got to see the doctor. I totally lucked out here. It turned out the doctor had a background in sports medicine, and she was pretty good. She thought that since the pain varied by what position I put my leg in, and since it came on quickly, it was probably not a stress fracture, and didn't recommend x-rays or anything fancy like that. She thought that it was more likely that the muscles in the area are messed up (my wording) and spasming (her wording), which was causing pain, inflammation, and weakness. Treatment: prescription-sized doses of OTC NSAIDS (which I have plenty at home), heat, and ice. I asked about deep massage, and she thought that could help as well, so I'll probably schedule an appointment soon with my LMT. Apparently inflammation is the big problem here, so the key will be to kill it. It probably wouldn't hurt to see my DC next week either.
If I can get rid of the pain enough to where I do a few short runs/day, I think I can maintain fitness and still run Houston. Elliptical can help too, but I need the pain to subside a little even for that. My only theories on how this could have happened: - Responding poorly to activities I do not frequently do
- XC skiing - went for the first time in two years on Sunday, then again on Tuesday. Perhaps something got pinched or torqued from the motions that my body is very much not used to. Pretty good timing correlation for this theory.
- Running in the snow and ice. Probably a little less likely, but people do get injured more when running on slick surfaces. It throws the stride off, which can lead to all sorts of things. I first really noticed some irritation on Tuesday afternoon, and I had done my first run on snowy roads in a while on Tuesday morning.
- Treadmill. Kind of the opposite of the snow/ice thing. Footing is good, but it does affect the stride and biomechanics. Injuries are known to happen from treadmill running. However, I've been doing treadmill running for a couple months now without any hint of discomfort, so I'm not too sold on this idea.
Anyway, hopefully the treatments plus relative rest will take of this. If it's NOT showing real improvement in a week, it will be time to see a specialist, and probably throw in the towel for a couple months.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
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Not much progress since yesterday. Still hurts to walk. Still hurts to dress myself (don't worry, I gritted through the pain and am wearing pants). At this pain level, I don't believe even cross training to be an option. I'm sticking with the short course of ibuprofen (800mg, 3x day) and applying both heat and ice. I have a massage session scheduled for tomorrow morning. Hopefully my LMT can work her usual magic. She almost single-handedly cured my plantar fasciitis, and also increased the rate of healing on my groin strain last year, so I have reason to be optimistic.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Since I can't register any miles today, at least I can enter sleep time! Yesterday afternoon and evening, my groin got progressively better. I did a few heat/ice cycles at home, and that seemed to help quite a bit, and the meds were probably kicking in too. Wasn't really limping much by bedtime. This morning, I heated the area in bed for about 20 minutes, then got up. It didn't feel as good as it did yesterday evening, but better than it did yesterday morning, making me think that it really is totally muscle-related and how it feels is a function of how warmed up it is. I managed to walk the dog and do errands without too much problem. At 11:30 I had my 2-hr full-body massage. As usual, it was really good. My LMT couldn't quite pinpoint the exact problem, but in any case it got the circulation going and when I got off the table (hard to do after 2 hours), it felt a fair bit better. And the rest of me feels wonderful. I'll continue with the ibuprofen, heat, and ice over the course of the day. We'll see how the progress goes. It's pretty simple: when the pain goes away I can run again; if it's still around I won't run. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
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Groin only a little better today. Outlook is doubtful for New Years Run tomorrow. But I am pre-registered, so you better believe I'll still show up and wear the t-shirt with pride! And I can take on the support role and cheer Stacy on in her first 5K. And I can still consume lots of food. Like I said to Stacy the other day, there's too many other good things going on in my life to get down about running. I think I'm healthy enough for elliptical, so can at least stay fit on that until I work through this muscle strain. Nothing like elliptical two-a-days (whatever it takes).
One good thing that happened today is the Packers getting back on track and making roadkill out of the Lions. | |
| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 6.00 | 6.00 |
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AM - Stacy dropped me off at the gym, and I did 30 minutes on the elliptical. It felt okay; a bit of tightness but not much pain. I will see how my body reacts, and if I'm feeling good I'll do another session during the noon hour. The walk home felt fine, probably because the muscle was warmed up. noon - my body seemed to be agreeing with the morning workout, so I went back to the gym during the noon hour and did another 30 minutes on the elliptical. Everything felt a little bit looser the second time around (to be expected). This time, I did 15 minutes easy, and then the last 15 minutes at the elliptical version of "marathon pace." After the gym, I went to see my chiropractor. As Josse suggested, my sacrum was very much torqued and twisted. The DC thought that was causing a bit of tendinitis in a hamstring muscle where it attaches at the ischium. Being a chiro, he thought the whole problem was 100% mechanical in nature. If that is correct, then the solution should be purely mechanical as well, and a good adjustment should fix everything. I'll know more tomorrow, but my body moved like butter during the adjustment, and immediately afterward everything felt much better, especially at that muscle insertion point. I'm walking pretty good right now. I jogged across my office a little bit later in street shoes, and didn't feel any pain, also good. Obviously, the muscles themselves still have some residual inflammation and tightness, but perhaps the root of the problem has been fixed? I guess I'll have to wait and see how I feel tomorrow morning. It can be kind of deceiving, since I tend to feel better over the course of a day anyway from my muscles getting warm. So I may be having trouble filtering the effects of the adjustment from my normal daily pattern.
In any case, today has been good on all counts. Running might be an option tomorrow. I'll see the chiro again Wednesday.
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| Easy Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Threshold Miles | VO2 Max Miles | Crosstraining miles | Total Miles | 3303.80 | 204.70 | 172.55 | 44.55 | 39.50 | 3765.10 |
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