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Today’s scheduled called for 50-minutes easy with 6 x 100m stride outs. Between Nathan and Josh, they suggested that we try something new in the neighborhoods around the old, vacant Bellevue Center Mall. I mapped out a 5.5-mile run on MapMyRun last night that started at Bellevue Church of Christ parking lot, included a loop around the mall, and then went into the surrounding neighborhood.
Well, we stayed on the planned route for the first 3-miles before I missed a street, and it all fell apart. We ended up crossing back by the church parking lot and running an additional small loop back in familiar territory to close out the 50-minutes.
We kept the pace very chill throughout, and overall I felt pretty good. However, I did struggle a bit with some tightness in my right hip and quad, which was annoying. It didn’t seem to affect my gate, but I’m definitely gonna keep an eye on it over the next few days. I’ve spent quite a bit of time tonight working on some exercises to try and get it loosened up.
At the end we did our stride outs in the church parking lot. Because of the hip and quad tightness I took these fairly conservative while Josh and Nathan blew past me each time. In total we finished just over 6-miles with an average pace of 8:40 per mile.
Beast Mode…ON!
Today’s scheduled called for 50-minutes easy with 6 x 100m stride outs. Between Nathan and Josh, they suggested that we try something new in the neighborhoods around the old, vacant Bellevue Center Mall. I mapped out a 5.5-mile run on MapMyRun last night that started at Bellevue Church of Christ parking lot, included a loop around the mall, and then went into the surrounding neighborhood.
Well, we stayed on the planned route for the first 3-miles before I missed a street, and it all fell apart. We ended up crossing back by the church parking lot and running an additional small loop back in familiar territory to close out the 50-minutes.
We kept the pace very chill throughout, and overall I felt pretty good. However, I did struggle a bit with some tightness in my right hip and quad, which was annoying. It didn’t seem to affect my gate, but I’m definitely gonna keep an eye on it over the next few days. I’ve spent quite a bit of time tonight working on some exercises to try and get it loosened up.
At the end we did our stride outs in the church parking lot. Because of the hip and quad tightness I took these fairly conservative while Josh and Nathan blew past me each time. In total we finished just over 6-miles with an average pace of 8:40 per mile.
Beast Mode…ON!
Just got the following email from the Harpeth Hills Flying Monkey Marathon…
Well…now I’m officially registered for 3 full marathons and 1 half marathon in a 6-week period this fall, and the last of those races just happens to be one the hardest road marathons in the country. WHAT WAS I THINKING???
I’m really hoping that Nathan also got in, but I probably won’t find out until tomorrow morning. We had an agreement that if one of us got in, and the other didn’t, that the one who didn’t get in would have to pace the one who did through the second half of the race.
Bring It Baby…Beast Mode…ON!
runslikeapenguin replied to your post: RunningAhead.com @arestlessmind @running-uphills
RunningAhead can import from Nike+?? Hmm… maybe I’ll look into the Nike GPS Sportwatches then… was strictly considering Garmins just so I could upload the data to RA 🙂
I honestly thought that was the case, but now I can’t find any information on importing from Nike+ … Maybe I was dreaming.
arestlessmind replied to your post: 1500 Miles and Counting for 2012…
Where are your graphs from? So pretty! And great job on the miles!
running-uphills replied to your post: 1500 Miles and Counting for 2012…
Congratulations! What program are you using in the screen shots?
I track all of my run data on RunningAhead.com – It will integrate with most GPS devices, and is WAY better than Garmin Connect (and anything else I’ve tried out there for that matter). I was introduced to it about 2 years ago by John from our group (now my coach). It is a free site, and I highly recommend checking it out if you’ve never seen it. Here are some of the things I really like about the site:
- Customizable dashboard (mine is pretty intense)
- Customizable categories
- Robust custom reporting and graphs
- Ability to track equipment usage (such as shoe mileage)
- Automatically track race PRs
- Can record LOTS of data for each workout
- Can track non-running workouts
- Ability to setup groups with private message boards, leader boards, etc.
- Ability to export all data
- Import data from Garmin devices, Nike+, text files, etc.
- Etc, Etc
We have about 10 members of our running group that use the site, and it is pretty cool that we can all keep up with each other.
I just realized that with my 10.3-mile run this morning I have now completed over 1,500-miles for 2012…
On the same date last year, I had only completed 995-miles…
This is a difference of almost 514 total miles, and I’m creeping up on my overall totals for 2010 and 2011!
Beast Mode…ON!
Megan Shifrin’s Day: Save Life, Finish Half Marathon
This is a short but awesome story about a runner (Megan Shifrin…pictured above) who stopped in the middle of the 2010 Country Music Half Marathon to save someone’s life. A worthwhile read for every runner.
We actually live fairly close to Megan and her husband David, but did not know them until a happenstance meeting on a train headed to the airport after the 2011 Bank of America Chicago Marathon. Very cool.
inthewright replied to your post: Quest for Boston – The Humidity Strikes Back
I hit 188 on the ol’ heart-o-meter towards the end of that last interval. I felt okay but was about to enter no man’s land. 🙂
I like the phrase “heart-o-meter” – If I had tried to push into 6:35 pace on the last interval like you did I might have just collapsed. Good work my friend!
Since we didn’t do a tempo workout yesterday, the schedule today called for…
- 15-min easy
- 20-min at 6:30 to 6:45 pace
- 10-min easy
- 20-min at 6:30 to 6:45 pace
- 15 to 20-min easy
Nathan and I met at 5am at the Edwin Warner Park Nature Center so that I would be able to get back in time to go with Kate to her first day of second grade. After two consecutive runs with lower than normal humidity, today it was back with a vengeance, and it seemed to just suck the life out of me.
It was weird running our warmup and first tempo interval in the dark after several months of mostly running after sunrise. Neither of us brought a headlamp, so I had to be a little cautious with my footing and there were several times where we had to dodge posts in the middle of the greenway.
We took the 15-minute warmup very easy on the Harpeth River Greenway, and then continued on down the greenway for a 10-minute out-and-back for our first interval. On the way out it was a struggle to keep my pace at 6:45 or under, and by the time we started back it had drifted just above 6:50. Secretly I was hoping it was just my watch having GPS issues again, but Nathan confirmed that we were hovering right around 6:50 on his watch as well.
About 3/4 of the way through the segment I could no longer hang with Nathan and let him go. Over the final five minutes my average pace continued to rise, and I finished with a 6:56 average pace for the first interval. This was obviously quite a ways off from the target pace. The funny thing was that I didn’t feel overly bad, I just didn’t have the extra gears to go fast like I normally do.
We did our 10-minute recovery in the park, and then headed back to the greenway for the second interval. Just before we started I told Nathan to go on without me, because I was going to modify my pace based on how I felt. I was hoping to at least maintain goal marathon pace (7:05), but this also felt fast today. It didn’t take long for Nathan to be completely out of sight, because he was flying.
Again, I didn’t feel awful, but just didn’t have the umpf to maintain a faster pace. At the turnaround point my average was around 7:25 for the segment. Early on during trip back I started feeling a little burst of energy and picked up the pace a bit to finish out the second segment with a 7:13 average. When I saw Nathan at the finish, he said that he had maintained a 6:35 average for the final interval. That is pretty impressive in the nasty humidity.
We finished up with an easy 18-minute cool down back to our cars. In total I completed 10.3-miles with an average pace of 8:12 per mile. After downloading my Garmin I noticed that my heart rate never went above 171 during the 20-minute tempo segments, and my average heart rate for those segments was in the low 160s.
This actually made me feel a lot better, because it helps explain why I didn’t feel really bad even though I didn’t have the extra gears today. I’m glad that my issue was not with controlling my heart rate, but instead just overall leg fatigue mixed in with some tough humidity. Since I just had a great workout on Saturday, I know this was just a normal blip in the midst of tough training. Looking forward to bouncing back with authority over the remainder of the week.
Beast Mode…ON!
Great post from my friend Paul Hunter on the blessing of being able to run. Recommended for all runners.
This morning I finally retired my last pair of the original Kinvara that were in my rotation, and replaced them with a fresh pair of red Kinvara 2s. That means that I now only have a single pair of Kinvara 3s in my unused inventory, and those should enter the rotation within the next two weeks.
Our nice weather from the weekend continued this morning, with temps in the mid 60ºs and relatively low humidity for this time of the year. The schedule deviated a bit from normal in that today was simply a 70 to 75 minute easy run instead of my normal Monday tempo workout.
Nathan and I met at the Bellevue United Methodist Church parking lot, and ran through the surrounding neighborhood for a couple of miles before hitting the Harpeth River Greenway and then Edwin Warner Park. After a couple of very, very easy miles we then settled into a nice rhythm with splits for the final seven miles between 7:59 and 8:18.
Overall this run felt pretty good, though I could tell we had run fairly hard on Saturday. My legs were just a touch fatigued, so it was nice to have an easy run instead of the normal tempo workout. It was also nice to be able to talk with Nathan about the Olympic Track and Field events from over the weekend. I’m really gonna miss the Olympics.
In total we finished right at 9-miles with an average pace of 8:23 per mile.
Beast Mode…ON!
What an impressive surge as he crossed the 23-mile marker! I didn’t think he would be able to challenge Kipsang or Kirui from Kenya in the last few miles, but he left them in the dust. Very well run race in hot and humid conditions.
On another note, I’m extremely proud of Meb Keflezighi on his fourth-place finish for the U.S. I didn’t think he had any shot of finishing in the top five, or even the top 10 for that matter. His move from 14th to 4th over the last five miles was awesome. Way to go Meb!
Finally, while I didn’t think the U.S. had any chance to medal, I never imagined both Ryan and Adbi would drop out of this race. With Meb at the end of his career, and Ryan continuing to under-achieve, it looks like the future of U.S. men’s marathoning is very much in disarray. Maybe we can hope that Galen Rupp will eventually decide to move up to the marathon. Would be fun to see what he can do at that distance.
As I’m watching the Men’s Olympic Marathon go through loop after loop this morning I keep thinking about this movie…“Hey kids, look, Big Ben, Parliament.”
My favorite race so far in these Olympic games has been the men’s 10,000m with Mo Farah and Galen Rupp taking Gold and Silver. However, tonight’s men’s 4 x 100m relay was fantastic. As much as I wanted the U.S. to win Gold, I was blown away by Usain Bolt’s final leg. Ryan Bailey had no chance at all to hang with him. He is just amazing to watch, and his stride is absolutely stunning. What a great way to close out the track and field events with a new world record anchored by the fastest man on the planet.
Plan to be up at 5am to catch the action live.
The weather this morning was GLORIOUS, with temps around 64º and a slight break in the humidity. This made a BIG difference today.
My original scheduled called for 16 to 18-miles at easy pace, but yesterday afternoon I got the OK from John to do the marathon workout with our group in Percy Warner Park. The plan was to do 4 x 3-mile repeats around marathon pace. I still wanted to get in 18-miles, so Nathan and I met at the Beech Grove picnic area in Percy Warner around 5:20am for a little extra.
We were able to get in just over 4-miles before beginning the workout with the group. I noticed during the warmup miles that my Garmin 405 was having a lot of trouble keeping up with our pace since we were running under heavy tree cover. My goal for the repeats was to land somewhere between 7:16 (BQ Pace) and 7:05 (Goal Marathon Pace). For repeats 1, 3, and 4 we ran a loop between the 7 & 8-mile markers on the main drive.
This loop starts off with a sharp incline that lasts for about half a mile, so I told Nathan I wanted to start conservative and then pick-up the pace once we crested the hill. The whole way up the hill I had a hard time getting the pace on my watch below 8:00, but it felt like I was killing myself. Once we reached the top, Nathan told me that our average pace for interval was 6:58, and I knew that my watch was going to be worthless today.
From this point forward Nathan kept our pace on his Garmin 305, and we slowed down our pace considerably for the remainder of this interval. We finished the first 3-miles with an average pace of 7:15 per mile, and I felt FANTASTIC. Between each of the repeats we ran easy for just over a quarter mile before beginning the next one.
For interval number two we actually left the park and ran and out-and-back route on Chickering Road. The way out was much easier than coming back due to the inclines, but we still ran a negative split and finished the second 3-miles with an average pace of 7:10 per mile.
We returned to the loop for our third interval, and I told Nathan that I wanted to get a lot closer to 7:05 for this one, but wanted to take the big hill fairly conservative. When we crested the hill our average pace was around 7:35, and over the next 2.5-miles we lowered this average to 7:04. I honestly could not believe how good I felt today. 7:05 pace felt very comfortable, and this was a BIG confidence boost.
For the final interval we were joined by Tyler who was visiting our group. We started on our normal loop, and crested the hill with a 7:19 average pace. I had told Nathan that I wanted to shoot for 7:00 pace on this one, and by the time we reached the end of the first mile we were almost there. Instead of looping back to the cars we turned out of the park again and finished up on Chickering Road with an average pace of 6:58 per mile.
We ran just under a mile back to the cars, as a cool-down, to finish up our 18-miles. I feel like Nathan and I CRUSHED the workout today. I don’t think I’ve felt this good since the Rock n’ Roll New Orleans Marathon in March. This was WAY easier than the 18-miles I ran last Saturday, and our average pace was almost 45-seconds per mile faster today.
In total we finished exactly 18-miles with an average pace of 7:45 per mile with warmup and cool down. Our average pace for the 12-miles of tempo intervals was 7:07 per mile, and our pace progressed almost exactly the way I would want for a marathon. We got a big boost from the weather conditions today, but this was not an easy course with over 1,500’ of cumulative elevation gain.
In addition to getting a big confidence boost out of today’s run, I’m also extremely proud of Nathan. He is killing it this summer, and I’m convinced he is gonna obliterate his marathon PR at the Chickamauga Battlefield Marathon this November. Our average pace today with warmup and cool down is 15-seconds per mile faster than his PR. I’m excited to see what he is capable of.
Beast Mode…ON!
What a great race by Mo Farah from Great Britain to win Gold in the Olympic 5000m. I LOVED the look on his face as he was crossing the finish line. Was really hoping Lagat or Rupp would have a big kick at the end to make the podium, but it didn’t happen.
After missing last week’s JSRC track workout because of my business trip to NYC, it was good to be back with the group tonight. We continued to have a slight break in the weather with temperatures around 86º at the start. However, even with the cooler temps the humidity was still pretty intense.
All through the warmup and strides I had a little twinge that ran all the way down my right leg and into my foot. It didn’t feel like a muscle strain or anything like that, but more like a nerve twinge caused by a tight hamstring. Whatever the case, it didn’t affect my stride, but just felt strange. Thankfully, once we got into the meat of the workout I didn’t notice it at all.
Here’s the rundown…
- 2.8-mile warmup
- 6 x 100m stride outs
- 4 x 200m f (100m recovery / 400m recovery)
- 4 x 250m fgfg (150m recovery / 400m recovery)
- 5 x 200m gfgfg (100m revoery / 400m recovery)
- 4 x 250m f (150m recovery)
- .78-mile cool down
All short intervals tonight, but I felt fantastic throughout the repeats. I ended up running the entire workout with Sue Anne, and it was really nice to have someone to run with tonight. Our consistency was a little wobbly during the first two sets, but we got dialed in during the third and fourth. In total with warmup and cool down I finished just over 8-miles with an average pace of 7:59 per mile.
One neat thing tonight was that Olivia, Kate, and Sara came out to meet me near the end of the workout. I got to run one cool down lap with Sara and another with Kate. Pretty Cool!
Beast Mode…ON!
The biggest shock this morning was seeing temps below 70º for the first time in quite a while. The humidity was still really high, but it was nice to get a break in the temperature.
My schedule called for 50-minutes at easy pace with 6 x 100m stride outs at the end. For the first time in a few weeks, Nathan and I decided to run trails, and met at the Deep Well Trailhead in Percy Warner Park…
We spent most of our 50-minutes on the red trail (Mossy Ridge Trail) and kept a very chill, but steady pace throughout. My legs were pretty tight on the steep hill at the start, but started to loosen up fairly quickly. By the end of the first mile I was feeling fairly strong on the steep climbs. Even though this trail is only 4.5-miles, there is over 1,500’ of cumulative elevation gain…
The weird thing today was that I felt pretty timid on the downhills. Being able to run fast on trails like this requires letting go, picking your spots, and trusting your footing. Well today my mind was just a little more hesitant than usual. I’m guessing this has to do with the fact that I fell twice during my last trail run, and that the Milwaukee Marathon is just a little over 8-weeks away.
All-in-all it was a tough, but enjoyable run on the trails with Nathan. The beauty of the park is amazing, and trails are definitely the best way to experience it. After finishing up our 50-minutes, we did the 6 x 100m stride outs on a section of the main drive by the trailhead. We both started off the strides fairly conservative, but picked up the pace considerably with each repeat. In total we finished just under 5.2-miles with an average pace of 10:42 per mile.
Beast Mode…ON!