2019 and the 9 Years Before It

At the end of the year we are supposed to summarize and reflect on our past year of running. I’ll do a little of that and also sum up the decade.

Although the year did not end well with the injury to my SI joint in October, the first 10 months (and 2 years prior) were quite a ride.

I went into 2019 planning on taking another crack at US 60-64 age group in the 15K road race and maybe the track 10000 meters. I did neither of those, nor was I able help our masters team win the USATF Grand Prix overall title–tell the truth we were never in the game–thwarted every single time we lined up against the Atlanta Track Club. With injuries and other commitments in the way, we never fielded a fully strong team and our opponents always found a way to finish ahead. We can always say maybe next year. But that’s what we did last year. And I did not win the overall title either, leaving that on the streets of Tulsa.

Despite those setbacks, however, the year was fantastic for running and I would not trade those 10 months for anything.

Championship Racing
I ran a total of six championship races and here are the results:
USA Cross Country Championships 8K – 30:22 (2nd)
USA 8K Road Race Championship – 28:19 (1st)
World Masters Cross Country Championship (2nd)
World Masters 1/2 Marathon (1st)
USA 5K Road Race Championship (1st)
USA 15K Road Race Championship (8th)

Finished runner-up for both individual and team category in the USATF Grand Prix Rankings.
Awarded USATF Age Group Long Distance Athlete of the Year

Rankings and Times
Ranked World #1 in 5K road and Half Marathon
1 mile road race – 5:25 (10th USA)
5K road race – 17:28 (#1 World Ranked)
8K road race – 28:19 (1st USA)
10K road race – 37:30 (3rd USA)
Half Marathon – 1:17:49 (#1 World Ranked)

The 5K and half marathon are also in the top 10 all time USA for the age group

Summary
Interestingly I began and ended the decade with an injury (with the shoulder injury in between).
At a time when I am supposed to be slowing down, I have run faster in the last three years of the decade compared to the first three, as well as the years in between.

2010 – 2012
1 mile – 5:04
5K – 17:37
10K – 36:35
Half Marathon – 1:19:50

2017 – 2019
1 mile – 5:15
5K – 17:28
10K – 35:43
1/2 Marathon – 1:17:49

I attribute that to good health (better diet) and lifestyle (moving from Alaska/6 months of winter, to Colorado and altitude, with better access to competitive races).

Special thanks to my family and friends for support over this past decade.

Review of My Favorite Running Podcasts

Like blogs in the early 2000s it seems like half of everyone has a running podcast. I’m only scratching the surface, but here are the ones I have been listening to the past couple of years. Listed alphabetically.

Citius Magazine with Chris Chavez. Chavez is only in his mid-20s, but as a writer for Sports Illustrated he is a pro. Don’t let the haters on Letsrun.com dissuade you from listening to Chavez’s interviews because he hasn’t broken 3 hours in the marathon. With his connections from SI and living in New York City Chavez has a slew of top guests (this fall alone, he had Shalane Flanagan, Scott Fauble, Gold medal shotputter Joe Kovacs, and a panel with Mo Ahmed, Olympic medalist Evan Jager, and Ryan Hill). Chavez asks good questions and gets the inside scoop. His Berlin Takeover series with a couple friends was a bit much, but those were also fun.

Clean Sport Collective
is fairly new, having just started up about a half a year ago. The podcast is hosted by Olympic runner Kara Goucher, Shanna Burnette, and Chris McClung. Kara has led most of the interviews and discussion, and Shanna provides good insight. McClung of Running Rogue (see below), usually just does the introductions. They have put together a string of very compelling interviews this fall, following all the Nike Oregon Project (NOP) revelations and similar stories. They have interviewed Mary Cain, had a fantastic two part interview with Olympic Gold medalist Frank Shorter who helped create the sport drug testing bodies USADA and WADA in the early 2000s, as well as Tyler Hamilton a cyclist who doped for years but has admitted it. These interviews are in the must-listen category, and I’m looking forward to more from Clean Sport.

Inside Running
from Australia with Brady, Brad, and Julian and these guys, accomplished runners all, are a hoot. They are very knowledgeable about running both inside and outside of Australia. They have great guests, mostly Australian elites and sub elites, and they cover a broad range of topics along the way. Their weekly intro runs a little long, with up to an hour of their activities, but that’s some of the best stuff as they bust on each other. And their guests get into it as well!

I have a theory, we used to be more that way here in the States (think the 90s with Seinfeld), but now everyone is so polite, you don’t hear as much banter in the American podcasts. I think our bitter political divisions over the past 25 or 30 years, plus happenings on the world and domestic scene have tempered the good-natured ribbing. But the Aussies still have it! I love this show as I get versed in the Australian running scene.

Running Rogue. Even though I’m going alphabetic on this review, I’m going a slight bit out of line here with Running Rogue and Running on Purpose, because the former co-hosts Chris McClung and Steve Sisson used to work together on Rogue. At the beginning of 2019 they went their separate ways. I really liked them together, as they played well of each other, with Chris being an articulate steady and methodical everyman while Steve, a former elite runner and coach, who also speaks very well, was mercurical, passionate, and somewhat of a visionary.

Nevertheless, Chris has carried the torch quite well in 2019, and has had a string of really good guests from some of his local friends and colleagues in the Austin area as well as some national level stars and pundits. Chris covers elite-level running and my favorite Rogue podcasts are when he teams up with Johanna (Jojo) Gretschel to discuss elite performance at the US and world level. Running Rogue still covers current events and insights it now appeals most to the recreational road and trail runner. However, if you haven’t listened in yet, go back to the first 100 episodes and you’ll pick up a lot of great training podcasts with Steve and Chris.

Running On Purpose After Steve left Rogue he started up with a few podcasts on Telos Running and then came back this fall with Running on Purpose, a podcast dedicated to delving into the body, mind, and soul. Although the output has not been consistent with fewer than a dozen shows out, Sisson and his co-host Kirsten are working well together, peeling the layers of what makes us tick as runners and getting into things that really make you think. Check out the episode on Unreasonable Expectations for how to deal with setbacks and goal setting. The frequency of shows has been sporadic but I look forward to hearing a lot more from Running on Purpose.

The 1609 Podcast is co-hosted by running friends Evan and Alex. And while they are not a couple, the podcast is like a visit to a mom and pop shop, where the talk is about running. Sometimes food. The co-hosts are friendly and knowledgeable and they cover a lot of ground every week, from their weekly training to elite discussion and anything that’s in the news. Evan an Olympic Trials marathon qualifier is lifetime runner from a running family, and Alex is an adult onset runner preparing for her first marathon. They speak well and have had a good list of guest over the past couple of years from elites like Luke Puskedra and Neely Spence, to an array of friends who have done some amazing ultras, qualified for the Olympic Trials, or just qualified for their first Boston Marathon. Their weekly updates on the news carries the bulk of the program and they do a good job of summarizing what’s happening, including rants from old timers, Lord Fucking Coe and all.

I know there are a ton more out there including House of Run, Letsrun, or Magnus and Marcus coaching, or the Science of Running. I’ve only dabbled into bits of these.

The other ones I reviewed above all have their strengths and are worth a listen.

Results from Reinvented Training

Here is a summary of my best times using different training systems.

Before (age 20-25)

Running 50-60 mpw for track in college (lots of intense intervals), 70-90 mpw for cross country and up to 110 in the off season. Post college 70s to 80s mpw for road racing, mostly single sessions (usually just one interval session a week, sometime a second fartlek or some hill work)

800  m – 2:05.4
1500 m/mile – 4:17/4:31
3K – 9:03
5K – 15:28
8K – 25:45
10K – 31:45
15K – 50:35
1/2 marathon – 1:11:05

After changing training (age 26-35)

Training as described in previous post (45-55 miles a week, periodized with two or three quality days a week)

800 – 2:03.9
1500/mile – 4:05/4:26
3K – 8:54
5K – 25:35
10K – 32:11
15K – 49:41
Half Marathon – 1:13:18

Post script

The training system I used worked very well for 8 or 9 years. I only had two injuries in that time, each taking about six weeks to heal. One was from doing a set of 200s (like 6X) too soon after XC ski season, followed by a road race a few days later, and I ended up with Achilles tendinitis. Second time was an ill-fated attempt at the steeplechase at age 32, 10 years after not racing the event post-college. I did PR by 10 seconds, but ended up with plantar fasciitis from landing in the water pit.

However, from age 35-39 things really fell apart and I could not keep up with the training intensity for long without getting injured. I was injured at least half the time those years and couldn’t even put together a decent training block.

If I could do it all again, I would have done a couple marathon/half marathon cycles in my late 20s or early 30s. I was just concerned of getting injured. Other than that regret, I enjoyed the moderated training and feel that I got the most out if it I could.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

How I Reinvented My Training – Nuts and Bolts

So 1984 had been a wash. I had taken a step backwards from the previous two years. I started up that summer with no base and only had built up for about two months, from 0 to 45 miles. I started in (too early) with some interval workouts that did not suit my goals, and my races were sub par.

I focused on XC skiing for almost three months over the winter into 1985. Skiing a few days a week and running on the off days. Over the next eight or nine years I followed a similar pattern. I developed a training program that kept me in active in the sport, but it was moderated to keep injury free and gainfully engaged with my graduate studies and career.

The Salad Years 1985 – 1992

These were great years and being in my late 20s to early 30s, my physical prime. If I could do it again, though, I would have done a few more half marathons and marathons. To mix up the training and to test what I could do. Nevertheless, I enjoyed the running over those years.

Goals and Objectives

Rather than the marathon and half marathon, I decided to refocus on 5K and 10K road races, and some track racing in the summer. On average I ran just 1 hour to 1:10 a day.

Macrocycles

I had two primary cycles a year depending on how it all worked out. A winter XC ski cycle, and summer-fall running.  Most years the XC skiing would go from December-March and summer racing from late May/June into September or October. I usually had a small reset in late summer, where I’d take an easy week or go on a trip for a few days, and then have a month or so of build up or easy miles before hitting it hard again for fall races.

XC ski phase. This is where I got aerobic volume. I usually started the season later than my Nordic peers, and did a minimum amount of dryland training (rollerskiing on roads, ski bounding or ski walking, plyometrics and upper body conditioning). But by mid- or late December I’d be focused on getting on the snow as much as possible. I used the same principles of training as with running, base phase, long repetitions, and long races. For many years I did not incorporate threshold effort in the typical sense, but would do moderate effort over hills, so would get the somewhat of the same benefit, using a fartlek approach and something like doing cruise intervals (3-5 minutes climbing at moderate-sustainable effort, and then the downhill would be a short recovery).

Nordic skiers like to race a lot. Typically we’d do four or five races a month of 5K to 30K, and in the late season (February or March) one to a few Loppets (long races/marathons–mostly in 40K to 65K range). You recover much more quickly with ski racing. Over winter I would build to a volume of 9-15 hours a week for about two months (sort of equivalent of 70-110 mile a week of running), which is actually lower end for Nordic racers. And race 10-15 times a season, with the last month cut back on volume to maybe 6 or 7 hours but a more intensity.

Running phase. Following ski season I would take a short break and start building up miles and within a month I would be up to 40-45 miles a week of mostly easy running.

I referred to some training guides over those years (e.g., Self Coached Runner) but mostly developed a system through trial and error. Trying new things and seeing what worked. By the late 1980s it was not much different from Jack Daniels training (although he would not publish his first book for another decade). He did visit our club in 1989 or 1990, and while I had been doing tempo runs by feel for several years, I did incorporate his pacing formula for threshold type workouts.

I’d start out with a threshold effort every week to 10 days, and hill reps of 1-3 minutes also about every week to 10 days. The tempo runs were by feel, and would be at 5K to10K effort, with recovery about 2/3 of the repetition. This phase was usually about 4-5 weeks. And I might throw in a road race or two (5K to 10 mile) to test fitness and for some motivation.

Mileage was fairly moderate, 40-55 miles a week, sometimes up to 60 but not very often.  Longer runs would be from about 80 minutes to 2 hours (11-16 miles), but usually in the 13-15 mile range.

A typical week in the build up phase would be:

Monday – rest
Tuesday – hill reps, something like 6X 2 to 3 minutes with 1:30 jog recovery with 2-3 mile warm up and cool down.
Wednesday – easy run 6 to 10 miles
Thursday – moderate or hilly run of 7 to 10 miles
Friday – easy 5 or 6 miles
Saturday – tempo run of 18-25minutes at 15K to 20K race effort
Sunday – long run of 13-15 miles

Race phase. By late May or June most years I’d be set to race. I’d cut back the longer runs to every other week, and keep them under 1:50. I also cut back some on tempo runs to every other week.

I would do one day of longer reps on the track (or athletic field), and another day of shorter speedwork (often barefoot on soccer fields), that was usually fartlek. Although sometimes (not that often). I would switch it up and do the long reps on the fields and short fast workouts on the track. Overall, I would keep track workouts to once a week.

The longer reps were at 3K to 10k pace and I would focus on pacing. I’d run not much beyond the distance I’d be racing at that particular pace (so a 3K workout would be something 4X800 or 3X 1200 at race pace), 5K was 5X 1000m  or 3X 1600, with a couple of fast 200s-400s to close out. A 10K workout would be 4-5X 1 mile. I still see runners doing very hard workouts like 5K of reps at 3K pace, or 8-10Ks of reps at 5K pace, and think that’s too much intensity and counterproductive.

The purpose of these workouts is to prepare you to be ready for the event, not to Prove to yourself or anyone that you can do the work. Let your races do the proving.

Speed work was more by feel and usually a progression effort, starting with a rep or two of about 2 minutes at 3K pace, and then working down to mile and 800 pace with shorter reps but longer recovery. I would do no more than 10-12 minutes of faster running in these workouts, and often just 8 minutes or so.

For recovery days I would do 35 to 70 minutes easy. Easy days were easy. My 5K pace was +/- 5 minutes a mile and I had no problem running 7:30 to 8:00 pace.  At the time I didn’t do much ancillary speed work (strides) other than before/after a scheduled workout or race.

So a typical week during the race phase might be:

Monday – rest
Tuesday – long reps at 3K, 5K, or 10K pace (described above)
Wednesday – easy 35 to 60 minutes
Thursday – speedwork on the turf
Friday – easy 40 minutes
Saturday – race or tempo run (alternating every other week)
Sunday – semi long run of 10-13 miles

If I was tired I’d skip either the tempo run or fast speed work.

I would race through most of the summer, but usually got tired/a little burned out by August so would take a very easy week of 30 or so miles to recover and then do a 3 or 4 week build up without any speedwork, but maybe a tempo run and some pick ups every week or 10 days. And then would extend racing into mid-late fall (by November I’d be pretty cooked! But might enter a race or two).

After the last race I’d take a few days off, and start thinking about skiing!

How I Reinvented My Training – background

A Short-Lived Marathon Career

Actually I have changed my training approach a few times over 40+ years of running and I’ll write more on other transitions or phases as we go.

Last month I described the background and build-up for my first marathon, way back in 1983. It was a success, with a 2:35 debut in Denver, but with just one more serious attempt at the distance, I did not carry it much further.

With great hopes, my plan was to run the relatively new Twin Cities Marathon in October 1983 with a goal of about 2:28, which seemed pretty reasonable for sea level.

At the end of a good summer of marathon training while spending months living and working in the mountains at an elevation of 9,000 feet, I contracted a nasty case of giardia. It took two rounds of antibiotics and then some to knock it back. I lost about 10 or 15 days of crucial training and decided that I would not recover in time for Twin Cities, so I deferred running a marathon for couple weeks and signed up for Rawhide Marathon in Fort Collins. At the time it was the best marathon in Colorado.

However, as we rolled into October I was down to about 132 lbs about 4-5 lbs light, and not at full strength. I was buoyed by PRs in 5K and 10K (32:51 at 6000 feet elevation) on consecutive weekends. Missing some long runs, I still felt confident and set out for a 2:32.

I ran a decent race there, holding 2:32 pace through 21 miles, but slowed over the last few miles and ended up with 2:34. So it was a PR by about a minute and a half, but I walked away disappointed.

With my seasonal job in the mountains wrapping up, I planned to go back to CSU to get ready for graduate school. I even contacted the women’s coach there to see if he’d be willing to coach me in 1984. We said, let’s talk in a few months. In my head I planned to up my training to +/-90 miles a week (up from 80) to prepare for the Boston Marathon the following spring.

However, on Christmas day of 1983, I did a 10 mile run in brutal 0 degree temps, windchill -15 on icy roads, and ended up with a persistent case of bursitis in my hip. This bothered me off and on since the week before the marathon and never really went away.

From Runner to Nordic Skier

So I skied and joined the CSU Nordic team. This year I purchased some good racing gear, a racing suit, and competed my first full season with a series of races in Colorado and Utah usually 15K on Friday, 5K relay leg on Saturday.

At the end of the season in March I tried to run again but couldn’t even get around the block. Physical therapy and a couple cortisone shots later it still hurt. Eventually, I found a new doctor and physical therapist, and they loaded me up with anti inflammatory meds.  It wasn’t until July that I was able to run again.

False Start

My comeback was short and unpleasant. After some 9 months of battling the bursitis and several months of not training much at all I was starting from practically the beginning. By summer I was in grad school and for the first time getting paid to be a student. I didn’t want to blow that great opportunity and figured I’d only train about an hour a day. By September I had built up to 40-50 miles a week and had a couple test runs at 2 and 2.5 miles, in which I was only able to muster the previous year’s 10K pace.

Over Labor Day I tried a 5K in Fort Collins, the old Colorado Run (precursor to the Fortitude), and was disappointed to run 16:23. Considering the altitude this was a good 20 seconds faster than I had done in college. But it was nearly a half minute behind what I had done the previous September. I joined up with a group of triathletes for their Wednesday intervals. And that was always a set of 6-8X half mile on the schools vastly outdated cinder track. They were very regimented and aimed to do their sets in 2:40. I was aiming to get back under 16, so would do a progression with the first two or so at their pace before working into 2:34-2:35. That created some friction with the triathletes and they scolded me for running too fast. This arrangement lasted only four or five sessions.

And I ended the season early with a very disappointing 34:06 10K at the Governor’s Cup in Denver. This was a fast point-to-point race, starting at the Museum of Natural History and finishing in downtown Denver. I expected to run in the 32s and could not even hold pace for 33!

One of the triathletes, Greg the most outspoken, called me up the following week and asked what had happened in Denver. I didn’t really have an answer other than I could not hold a 5:20 pace on a course with a net downhill of 200 feet. “You ran your intervals too fast.” was his final word.

I shut the season down and just ran easy 40-60 minutes a day for the next couple of months until ski season rolled around and was able to get up to the high country a couple times a week.

Injury – Rehab Update

Six weeks ago I came down with pain in the SI joint that crept in from nowhere. Everything was fine on Tuesday as I did a final tune up for the Tulsa 15K, but on Wednesday with just an easy run on the treadmill planned, what started as just a little tightness in my upper pelvis/lower back in a matter of a few minutes resulted in cutting the run short followed by a lot of pain. And that got real bad just three days later when I attempted to run the race to defend the championship age group title for both the race and the masters Grand Prix series.

IMG_0123I was severely hobbled for the next several days, until I got into a clinic where an osteopath did some 30 minutes of manipulations. It was still mighty sore for the next week but mobility improved and I could tell the healing was beginning. A week after Tulsa I started some light cross training on the elliptical trainer and stationary recumbent bike. I tried an easy run about 10 days before Thanksgiving but it tightened up 5 minutes in. So went in for another session with the osteo, but was able to increase the cross training workouts, from 3 to 4 to 5 and 6 hours, going 6 days a week. And two weeks ago I started to do some threshold level work once a week and a bit of fartlek at 10K effort. It’s hard to get your heart rate up on the elliptical, while at the same time not going so hard as to strain any muscles or joints, particularly that SI joint.

Finally, last week I jogged 2 minutes and felt pretty good, but the hip joint felt sore and week. Two days later I tried 3 minutes same thing. On Wednesday just under 6 minutes dodging some snow and ice, but it actually felt better. And Friday (yesterday) it was 1.2 miles in 11 minutes (at a blazing 9 minutes per mile) and I felt no pain before during or after. Plan is for 15 minutes tomorrow and some 20 minute jogs next week. If all is well, it will have been 7 weeks and any bone or ligament damage should be mostly healed up, and I’m hoping to up the frequency and distance of the runs and being winter and all, mix in some cross country skiing.

Going to take some time and no big races planned until spring time, but hope to tune up with some local events.