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Sunday, April 29, 2012

Six Point Two is Fun!

With my marathon plans on the back burner, I have to divert my running energy to shorter races, namely the Get in Gear 10k and the New Prague Half Marathon in May.  These will provide an outlet for my running needs and provide a perfect bridge from my current marathon no-man's land to the official kick off of fall marathon training in June.

The Get in Gear was yesterday.  The days leading up to this race, including race day morning, were terrible.  I had no motivation and was very close to opting out Saturday morning.  I was extremely tired and irritable, but I had already paid the race fee, so I didn't want that to go to waste.  I drove to Minnehaha Park (in the sleet) parked about a half mile from the start and began my jog to the festivities.  It was cold and wet, but the weather was the least of my worries.  My warm-up jog was horrible;  I felt tired, run down and my foot hurt.  I checked my Garmin and I was laboring to maintain an easy 9:00 pace.  What am I even doing here?  What a waste of time!  I made it to the porta-potty line and jogged back to the van to shed my warm-ups.  My legs had loosened up and I felt a little better, but now I was having some GI issues and by the time I made it back to the start, the bathroom lines were too long and we are only 10 or 12 minutes from go time.  I continued my warm-up with some strides and was feeling much better.  In fact, in my warm-ups I was easily able to ramp up to 6:20 pace.  I heard someone call my name and it was Stan, from my marathon clinic.  I felt much better by then; chatted with Stan a bit, did one more set of strides and got to the starting line.  I thought I was close to the front, but when the gun went off I found myself stuck behind a bunch of slower runners, blocking traffic. (They start the half and the 10k together)  Things loosened up after a half mile and I checked my Garmin; 5:58!  Wow, how did that happen.  I settled in to a comfortable effort and finished mile 1 in 6:05.  I did not push in mile 2, as I knew that going across the Lake Street bridge was going to be a windy, cold challenge.  Mile two was 6:04, all is good and still am not laboring.  Made it over the bridge and the first set of hills without too much damage and mile 3 was 6:12.  Pushed just a tad on the hilly, east side of the river and managed a 6:08.  I ran mile 5 very conservatively and was pleased to see a 6:02 split here.  I spied a couple of people in my age group and passed them about half-way through mile 6.  I felt fresh and brand new crossing the Ford Bridge and mile 6 was 5:58.  Yippee!  This is fun passing people!  I ran the last two tenths at about a 5:30 pace and finished in 37:54, a full 1 minute and 15 seconds faster than last year and only 5 seconds from a PR (which was on a mush flatter and faster course)  Boy, am I glad I decided not to bail!  One thing I did differently in this race was to really focus on my cadence.  I've been reading that good runners have a cadence of 180 and elites up to 190 or more.  Every few minutes I do a quick cadence test, just to make sure I am at 180 and I find my pace quickens and with less effort.  I'm rather tall and gangly, so a quick cadence is kind of a challenge.

So, I'm pleased with my current fitness level and like where I will be at come my new marathon training cycle in June.  As long as I can stay injury free and build on the great foundation that I have created over the past two years, my sub-3 is well within reach.  Des Moines, here I come!

Happy Running!
Rick

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Tune-Up Week

I ran pretty fast this week, a tune-up week of sorts before the Get in Gear next Saturday.  I'm signed up for the 10K and am pretty confident I can crush my time from last year (39:09) but am rather dubious that I can PR; kinda depends on the weather.  If it's cool like today, then we have a chance, but long-range forecast looks a little on the warm side.  It's a fast course, so 38 should be doable.

I ran 17 miles today and was able to crank out half-marathon in under 1:30 out in the trails.  I ran 12 miles consistenly around 6:45 pace, so I am feeling pretty good about my fitness right now.  I felt a little beat up by miles 16, but all signs point toward a pretty good half-marathon perfomance in a few weeks.

Looking ahead to the fall and I have my eye on a few marathons.  Des Moines looks pretty flat, with only a couple substantial hills early.  It will be nice to get the hills out of the way early rather than fighting them at mile 21 or later.  Whistlestop in Wisconsin looks like a good race as well, but the trail is all dirt, so may be a little slower than Des Moines.  Plus Des Moines is so exotic.  Hey, I can visit George the Chili King after the race!

I got schooled by one of my marathon clinic participants this week.  I have been introducing various interval and tempo work-outs every Thursday and this week I decided to pace each of them to see how fast they could run a mile.  Figured it was a good fitness test.  Stan was the last runner, and we agreed upon a sub 7 pace to start and see how much below that we could get.  We hit the lap button and Stan was off like a Hussein Bolt!  Now I can run several sub six miles in a row, but I really suck at going from really slow to really fast that quickly.  We were at a half mile and my Garmin was reading 5:56!  Holy crap Stan, what the hell is this?!  We settled down to a 6:20/6:30 pace and then he fired it up again in the hills and dipped down to 6:00 again.  I finally started to settle into this pace about three-quarters of the way in and we ended up around 6:20.  If you are reading this Stan, nicely done!  I didn't pace Stan, Stan paced me!

Happy Running!

Sunday, April 15, 2012

One Big Fartlek

Now that I have written off any spring marathon plans, I can be so much more free-wheelin' with my running.  For those of you not familiar with the term "Fartlek," it is a Swedish term meaning speed play.  It's basically unstructured, unplanned interval work-outs.  If you are running down a trail, you eyball a fir tree a half-mile down the road and try to get there in 3 minutes.  Or you may be running in Uptown and decide to run as fast as you can until you pass the pair of hipsters walking ahead of you (just to avoid the cigarette smoke).  You get the idea.  So anyway, that has been my week.  I did lot of easy trail running, but mixed it up with some pretty speedy road work.  Tuesday I ran 11 miles, 5.5 easy and realizing I was running late for work, I raced the 5.5 back in well under MP.  Pretty much did the same thing on Friday and today, I ran 15 miles, my pace ranging as slow as 8:45 and as speedy as 5:45.  Good fun; fartlek; try it sometime.

I mixed it up pretty good on the music front as well.  I still listened to my regular stuff, but just for laughs I dug out INXS' "Kicks" album.  I think I was in my early 20's when this came out.  It really sucks; does not age well at all and I ended up skipping over most of it for more "grown-up" music.  Not that this is grown-up in any way, shape or form, but I want to get a rise out of any of the AC/DC fans who may happen to read this blog.  Blackburner's "Back in Black" Dubsteb.  Awesome!  Pretty hard not to run you 5K pace to this! (Make sure you listen at least until 1:02)  Great with fartlek!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PJQRGi7rDX8

Happy Running!

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Marathon Orphan

Well, I continue to train with pretty high mileage, even though I am not signed up for a marathon, nor do I have any intention of doing so anytime soon.  I've resigned myself to running a fall marathon and focusing my efforts on some of the shorter races of the Grand Prix Series.  I need to make up some points anyway and hopefully my training will pay off with a PR in the 10k coming up in a few weeks. (Get in Gear)  I'll also will run the New Prague Half Marthon in May and again shoot for a PR there as well.  This should be enough to keep me motivated.  I think I'm in good enough shape to run a sub 1:26 half, but we shall see. 

Had a good, but unenventful week of running.  Ran a few good marathon paced miles within my long run, but pretty much took a step back and ran for fun.  Weather continues to be perfect for running.

I hope everyone had a good Easter.  We had a very nice Easter dinner in Hutchinson with my mother-in-law and her boyfriend, Don.  They are a cute couple!

Happy Running!

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Getting My Bearings

Last week was a tough week.  A marathon didn't seem important and really not much else did either.  After reading some of your nice messages (thank you everyone) and having some time to reflect, things seem a lot better today.  I still don't have a goal marathon planned and not because I don't have the time to train. (I'm still doing a lot running)  It's just that for me to run and train well I need to be totally focused and committed.  I certainly have been in no state to focus and looking back at my behavior over the past several weeks and months, I could see there were some "issues."  My diet sucked, I was working too much, not sleeping enough and I felt plain lazy.  These are bad in general and deadly when trying to train for a sub 3-hour marathon.  I was setting myself up for a big crash.  So, I'm giving myself some time to get my bearings and get myself centered again.  It's all good.  Besides, quitting something I find such great satisfaction in, is not going to help my son.  If he does return to us for help, I need to be happy and healthy, not full of bitterness, anger and disappointment.

So, how did my running go, you might ask?  Pretty good, actually.  I continue to have super-fast and quality work-outs on Tuesday night.  Not really sure why Tuesday is the magical night, but I won't question it, just go with it.  Lot's of easy miles during the week and another medium long run on Friday night and good 19-miler on Sunday.  Just for kicks, at the end of my 19-mile run I wanted to see how fast I could tun an 800 meters and came in at 3:03!  Not too shabby!

Micah True, a.k.a. Caballo Blanco died this week.  He was the ultra-marathoner featured in the book "Born to Run."  He ran the Leadville Ultra in the 1990's where he met the Tamahamara (Raramuri) Indians from Copper Canyon, Mexico.  He would spend his winters in a small adobe hut with the Raramuri and simply run.  He went out for a 12-mile run on Wednesday and did not return; his body was found yesterday.  R.I.P.

"If I were to be remembered for anything at all, I would want that to be that I am/was authentic. Run Free!" -Caballo Blanco

 

Happy Running!