Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Historic Two Mile Race

The video below is from a track meet being held in Hawaii during the summer of 1969. I love that films like this are available to watch. Though there are only four runners in the two mile race on an old cinder track, look at who they are;
Steve Prefontaine- 18yr old, just graduated from high school and in three years will be our star 5k Olympic medal contender.
Frank Shorter - In three years will win the gold medal in the marathon and 1976 follow that up with a silver.
Marty Liquori - A year before, as a high school senior was only the third high school student to run under 4 minutes for the mile. Marty was a 1968 Olympian, finishing 12th in the 1,500m race (with a stress fracture). Eventually ranked #1 in world for 1,500m '69 and '71, 4x American record holder, ran a 13:00 5k, had mile pr of 3:52.
Gerry Lindgren - Ran a 13:44 5k in high school, a record that stood for 40 years. Still holds 2 mile high school record (8:40) for American born student. 9th in 1964 Olympics (just after graduating high school), set 6mile world record in 1965 along with Olympian Billy Mills. A mysterious man, Gerry disappeared from the running scene for a long time.
The clock on the screen is weird, counting up from 35 minutes.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Running Naked!



I ran naked last Sunday. It was a scary, what do I do now, moment, being in the village of Spencerport, ready to run on the canal path and realize what I had done, or in this case didn’t do.

My Garmin was at home, still plugged in to the charger. My Timex sport watch was sitting on top of the refrigerator. Sure, MW, who was going to run nine miles with me, had his Garmin. But it wasn’t the same. I hadn’t run without the Garmin or sport watch for …well…for years? How was I going to keep pace? What if the pace felt fast, or slow, but wasn’t? I couldn’t tell. Basically I would have to run by how fast my body felt like going and not sweat whatever the pace was. Now I couldn’t glance down every two minutes to see my current pace or distance covered. Without a satellite following my progress at every second would the training still count? What would I put in my running log book? I ran today? That seemed bogus. I need to count the time, the miles, and the average pace, maybe mark my best mile. With my logs I can go back 25 years and tell you what the weather was on any given day I ran. Isn’t that important to know? I can point to the day I did a tempo 4.4mile run from my home on Ridge Meadows Drive to the Trimmer road bridge and back in 30 minutes, knowing that then I was getting in good shape. 

This Sunday I wanted to write down in a new logbook that same type of data, except I was naked, without the watch or Garmin. At the end MW gave me the approximate time, since he began running .7miles away, from his home, and the approximate distance. It was strange how many times I looked at my wrist or went to turn the watch off. Maybe someday I will not worry as much about time or distance and run naked more often. But not today, or tomorrow, I hope. I still need to quantify and qualify for the logbook. I am locked into the technology. Last night I ran on the high school track. It was comforting, doing 400m repeat laps which turned into mile repeats, knowing the distance was uniform and my watch was adding up the time. I came home feeling great about the workout and able to calculate the pace and didn't run naked, which is good when you are around a schoolyard!

Friday, September 13, 2013

So You Say It's a 10k?

Absolutely the race that will get me out of my doldrums will be my old standby, the Race with Grace 10k on Thursday, November 28 (Thanksgiving). This is the 23rd time this race will be run, 20x by me. Race director Bob Dyjak does a great job organizing every detail of the event. Is there a better holiday than Thanksgiving? A great race in the morning at my favorite distance, family, food and football!

With ten weeks to go I needed a training plan, but wanted to keep it fairly simple, yet tough. I found what I was looking for in a 2010 Running Times article written by Greg McMillan.  The rationale behind the plan is in the article. It is important to have a reasonable goal pace/finishing time. If you are struggling at week 4 with the pace, adjustments may be necessary.

Combined with weekly 8-10mile workouts with the last 2-3 miles run a bit quicker, I should feel confident come race morning that I can run well. (M=mile, m=meters)

SIMPLE EIGHT-WEEK WORKOUT SEQUENCE FOR A FAST 10K
WeekKey WorkoutNotes
16 x 1M3-minute jog between 1M repeats
210-12 x 400mRun the 400m repeats at 5K race pace; 200m jog between
32M + 4 x 1M5-minute jog between 2M repeats, 3-minute jog between 1M repeats
43M Tempo Run or 5K RaceOne simple prediction method is to double your 5K time and add 1 minute to get your 10K time. Are you on track for your goal 10K time?
52 x 2M + 2 x 1M5-minute jog between 2M repeats, 3-minute jog between 1M repeats
620-24 x 200mRun the 200m repeats at 5K race pace; 200m jog between
73 x 2MRun the 200m repeats at 5K race pace; 200m jog between
8RACE: 10K 
GREG MCMILLAN is an exercise physiologistand USATF-certified coach who helps runners via his website mcmillanrunning.com.

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

RWLTM Club

Today I attended my first meeting of the "Runners Who Lost Their Motivation" (RWLTM) club. True, I was the only person in attendance, but sometimes admitting a problem intrinsically is the first step to finding a "cure".

How did I lose my motivation for really running fast in training or especially in races after 30 years? I'm not entirely sure. For most of this year I believed I was training the right way, at least to succeed in anything from the mile to a 5k. But really my weekly miles were low and biking way less than the previous three years. Weightlifting is going well, though no one but me can tell as I never have and evidently never will get muscles that pop out, even if I am stronger.

Maybe training for months two or more times a day to be able to complete the Tinman Half-Iron distance last summer and then the Marine Corps Marathon took a mental toll. I know last winter was waste as I didn't snowshoe once.

So, what are the steps involved in the RWLTM cure? Unlike the 12 step Alcoholics Anonymous program, there are 10 steps!

10. Admit to others that I have a problem  (done)
9.   Desire to train hard again (work in progress)
8.   A power greater than myself will help in getting me re-motivated (Jan, Mike W., Lou, ...etal)
7.  Learn to run again even on days when I'm tired, thereby building an aerobic base.
6. Embrace quotes such as; "If I'm standing at the end of the race, hit me with a board and knock me down, because that means I didn't run hard enough." --Steve Jones, former marathon world record holder
5.Losing weight, for real. 6'1" and 176 might be light for normal people, but is ten pounds more than I need to be to run fast.
4.Stop using age as an excuse. Forget about my times during my 30's or 40's, I was faster on snowshoes five years ago in a mile race than I am now running on the track.
3.Made an inventory of my training log over the past 10 months and can see where I've failed and need to improve.
2.The need to find a goal race and time to focus on. (Race with Grace 10k - Thanksgiving)
1. Stay injury free (which I have thankfully done well at this year)

That's it, the RWLTM cure. If you are suffering from this mental disorder, don't give up, there is always a chance you, too, can recover.

Vino and the Beast

What could motivate Jan more than the opportunity to run a race with her daughter Amanda than wine and beer tasting at the end? It didn't take much convincing on Amanda's part to get Jan to register for the Vino and the Beast 5k. The race took place among the vineyards and nearby roads around Three Brother's Winery on the east side of Seneca Lake on a beautiful mid-August afternoon.

Runners were placed in groups of about 30 and sent off every five minutes. They had to crawl, climb, swim and jump over ten different obstacles, including a 30 foot wall near the end. YellowJacket racing did time the race, but time seemed to be secondary compared with everything else. Competitors never knew how long they would have to wait at each obstacle for slower individuals to complete the task. Unless you were in the first group or two chances of competing for an overall or age group prize were slim.

All the competitors seemed to have fun and for $40 you got the race, wine glass, free tastings and shirt.