Monday, March 23, 2015

9 weeks to go (halfway to Sugarloaf)

9 weeks to go (Down week)
Go-in target range: 40-45 miles
Coach Alan's plan: 45, w/ one off-day
Workouts:
  • Tuesday: 4 mile tempo at 6:50 pace, 4 mins recovery jog, 2 mile at 6:30 (threshold) pace, 3 mins recovery, 1 mile at 6:15 pace w/ warmup & cooldown
  • Sunday: long run of 16 miles at 7:30 pace w 6x2 min pickups to finish.
Actual: 50 miles
Pace for the week: 7:30


The one (physical) bothering me the most: I would say my right glute/upper hamstring, which feels tight when I'm not running.  Close second would be the outside of my left knee, that started feeling weak towards the end of the long run this week.


Weather sort of cooperated this week...well, not really.  Early in the week we had decent weather, and I had a nice Monday recovery hill run up to BC from work.   Tuesday, the wind came, and was a factor most of the rest of the week.  Maartje was recovering from her race early in the week and was on Yasso duty, so Alan came out to NB to run the Tuesday session with me along the Charles.  Wind was racing, 15-20 mph with gusts that definitely seemed stronger than that.  That helped us most of the way out through our warmup and the first few miles of the 4 mile tempo, but after 3 miles it was time to reverse and face the music.  The last mile was a lot of effort to barely move at times, but thanks to the downwind sections, we hit 6:35 for this segment (vs target of 6:50.)  The 2 miles then came all into the wind, and we pushed hard to hit 6:40 pace (vs target of 6:30.)  As Alan put it midway through the run, given the conditions we were running into, this was about effort more than just pace.  By the end of that 2 mile section, Alan was basically asking me if I was OK because I was struggling to keep up with him and the 6:40 pace.  For the final fast mile, we did a bridge to bridge loop that had us half with wind, half against it.  The bridge in the middle was a pace hindrance though...a touch of elevation and people to dodge.  We hit 6:15 for that mile though, which I was happy with.  Alan smartly had us moving close to 6 min pace for the whole downwind section to start it out, and the return trip was like running into a wall.  For the entire 11.7 miles we managed 7:10 pace-happy with that effort!


The wind kept right on blowing the rest of the week, followed by a few inches of snow on Saturday!  I didn't do anything hard in this portion of the week, but I did finish every run with a set of strides, and my paces were fine.  Saturday in the snow, I hoped to find PJP runable, but it really wasn't at all in the far west section (I think it has been drifting up there all winter) and I bailed hard coming down a decline when I couldn't see what was beneath the new snow (it was solid ice.)  I don't know when I'm going to be able to run hard and fast in PJP again, but my guess is not for at least a couple of more weeks.  Disappointing, as that is a comfortable spot for me to run in after kid bedtime on weekday nights and I'm expecting a need to be out there doing work as I enter into the next buildup phase prior to our Europe trip.

Maartje and I were able to connect for the long run this week, thankfully.  Esteban joined us also, so I was fortunate to have strong company.  In an effort to get in some downhill work as practice for the significant downhill I'll be working through at Sugarloaf, we drove one car out to Ashland to run 16 miles back in to BC on the course.  We had a really nice tailwind the whole way, and we were clipping off low 7:20 miles for the majority of our run, at an effort level that felt (to me) more like mid 7:30s, but I do believe I was working harder than I realized, since midway through the 6 2 minute pickups, my legs crumbled on me.  Strong pace for the run (and the week) but not pumped about my finish to the long run.  At 16 miles, I was still about a mile away from the car and I decided to split the runs and treat the surplus mile as cool-down.  I took my sweet time climbing heartbreak (and descending as well.) Here's the link to the longrun.

The conclusion of that week brings me to halfway through the 16 week training program, and I'm happy to say that so far, I feel as though things are on track towards a BQ.  My workouts have gone almost entirely to plan, and both my overall training pace (7:39 average) and long run pace (7:27 average) are in good shape.   I've put in 411 miles, which is over 30% more than the 314 I had run for Philly.   Here are two of my favorite graphs capturing the progress, miles per week and pace per week from the three training period of the last year.







 And here's another good one!



Good trends on those graphs, hoping they continue on moving in the right directions.

Sunday, March 22, 2015

11 & 10 Weeks to Sugarloaf

11 weeks to go
Go-in target range: 62-65 miles
Coach Alan's plan: 52
Workouts:

  • Tuesday: 8 mile progression run @ 7:10-7:20 pace
  • Thursday: 3200@12:20 (6:10 pace, 46.2 per lap), 5 min jog rest, 6x600 in 2:18 with 15 seconds standing rest. With warmup and cooldown
  • Sunday long run of 17 miles at 7:30-7:40 pace
Actual: 53 miles
Pace for the week: 7:34

10 weeks to go
Go-in target range: 68-70 miles
Coach Alan's plan 61-63 miles
Workouts:
  • Wednesday: 3 mile tempo at 6:40 pace, 4 mins recovery jog, 3x1 mile in 6:15 with 3 mins recovery with warmup up and cooldown
  • Friday: 8 miles with 6x2:00 on/off in the last 3 miles on a hilly route if possible.
  • Long run: 18 long run, overall 7:30-7:40 pace average

Actual: 65 miles, a new single-week high for me!
Pace for the week: 7:38
Returning from Arizona I found slightly warmer weather, but in the first of these two weeks I was still on the treadmill for a couple of days, but since then, no treadmill!  Last year during my Boston training, the two marathons I ran (mid-1:30 range) went well but left me with little energy for 7-10 days afterwards.  This time around, I returned from Phx ready to get back to work the following week.   My weekly average now has settled nicely into the mid-to-high 7:30 range for this training cycle, which seems appropriate for an attempt at a ~7:10 effort marathon.

11 weeks-to-go highlights: I did that progression run on a treadmill and for some reason I was shooting for a sub 7:30, not 7:10-7:20...oopsies.  For the Thursday workout at Reggie, I was so grateful to have company from Alan and Marc.   This is a workout that Alan explained to us he's done in the past to really kick off lactic acid from the muscles.  It's a solid tempo effort followed by short bursts with very little (15 seconds) of rest.  It went well!  With Alan pacing us the entire way, we moved through the tempo session just a touch under the target pace, and I was feeling just a bit strained at the end, but nothing that a few minutes of recovery couldn't take care of.  Then began the 6x600s...3 laps of the 200m track.  The target was 2:18, our results were 2:16, 2:15, 2:12, 2:12, 2:09, 2:04.  On that final lap(s) of the final 600, instead of pacing me, Alan let me just move out on my own before coming back up on my right towards the finish...I was definitely running out of steam by the last 600, but this was a great workout.  I don't know what I would have been able to do on my own though, it would have been a struggle without someone helping me control my pace.

Not too much to say about the long run.  It started with me locking my keys in my car by accident, but I realized it before the run started, so the whole run I knew I had a fun AAA wait to look forward to (not helping the fact that our kids were their cousins house for this run, and my phone was in the car so I couldn't let their parents know I would be late.)  We (Maartje & Michael) did three 5 mile loops through JP.   I think on this run, I probably pushed a little too hard for the first two laps as I tried to keep up with the other two runners, and during the second loop, I let them know they didn't need to wait for me at all, that I would meet them at JP Licks after.  The last few miles that you can't see below did start to drift a bit, but everything mostly stayed in the 7:40 range, except the big hill mile on Warren st, but even that I was able to hold under 8 min miles, and kept the whole run at 7:32 pace.  I'm happy with this! 



The follow week was a big week for me!  I knew I had a off week coming the following week, and it was fairly quiet at work and home, so I figured it was a good week to put in as much work as I felt I could reasonably handle at this stage.  I stretched out a few 5 mile runs into 6-7 mile runs, I had a GREAT tempo workout (outside!) with Maartje on a muddy/puddly esplanade.  The target was 3 miles at 6:40 pace followed by 3x1mile at 6:15 pace.  We hit 6:30, 6:35, 6:38 for the consecutive 3 mile tempo.  For the 3x1mile we managed 6:15, 6:12 and 6:18.  The whole thing ended up being around 13 miles and I felt great afterwards.  (The cooldown didn't feel great though.)

Friday's hill workout was done in Milton on a nice, sunny afternoon.  I felt good, but my quads felt pretty beat up, especially after the downhill pickups.    Saturday's long run was done in some cold, rainy march weather, and I was by myself, which never seems to go well.  It really didn't go great...I managed 7:47 pace for 18, with the first 12 on flat ground towards Southie and back, and then a little bit of hills in the normal 6 mile Milton loop.

After that run ended, I realized that due to the previous weeks Sunday long run, and the following week's Saturday run, that I had put in 78 miles in a 7 day span.  And honestly, I felt pretty good about it!  And the 78 miles came in at an average pace of 7:36.  That's really good for me!