The
Charlottesville Men's 4-Miler is growing local tradition. This little
brother of the Women's 4-Miler draws a very competitive local field and
features a finish line on the 50-yard line of the University of Virginia
football stadium. If you remember to look up, you can see yourself on
the giant TV screen behind the end zone. It supports prostate cancer research at UVA -- a cause I can get behind, since my father died of prostate cancer at age 59.
I hadn't done a foot race for some time, since I'd missed a couple
of my regular spring races because of illness. Combined with the near
total lack of any training outside of z1 during the last few months, I
was uncertain as to how the race would go. On the plus side, I felt
healthy, was coming off an easy week, and had dropped about 5 pounds and
one inch off my waist line during the last month -- a combination of
better eating choices and lots of endurance work.
One thing for certain -- I knew this was going to hurt. Short races
always do. And my strategy was simple -- hold back just a bit on the
first mile then pick it up and go home hard.
As the gun went off
I struggled to stay with my plan. I hit the first 1/2 mile at 3:10, but
throttled down a little bit to hit mile 1 in 6:28. I was working hard,
but at lest I wasn't in distress. By this time the field had shaken
itself out into the usual arrangement of packs and we jostled around for
position. My aerobic conditioning was in evidence -- I fell behind on
each hill, as I shortened my stride and concentrated on quick turnover,
but I crested stronger than my competitors and made up the gap on the
subsequent flat or downhill.
Mile 2 came in at 6:30, as we finished the uphills of the first half
of the race. That quick first mile was telling now, and I started
trying to to concentrate on a few keys to keep my form together -- "stay
smooth," "arms up," "breath into the belly." Fortunately I was keeping
pace with my pack, who were starting to look a little ragged themselves.
The strain was telling as mile 3 passed in 6:46. I knew there were
some serious downhills coming, so I just had to hang together for
another 6 minutes and change. As we looped around the football stadium I
took advantage of the downhills and started moving up past the pack. As
we entered the depths of the stadium I gave it my final kick down the
tunnel and onto the turf. I sneaked a glance over my shoulder and saw
nobody behind me for at least 20 yards. A quick glance up at the
jumbotron and a two-arms-in-the-air salute to cap off the effort as I
crossed the line.
I knocked the last mile out in 6:36, for a 26:20 -- a PR by nearly
20 seconds. Nice to see all that z1 IM prep paying off in a unexpected
way. The only downer of the day was that I didn't place. I snagged 6 of
44 in my AG, beaten by four 50-year olds and a guy who was 51 -- all of
whom came in under 26 minutes. Man, am I looking forward to 55-59...
Showing posts with label triathlon training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label triathlon training. Show all posts
Monday, June 18, 2012
Friday, January 13, 2012
34 Weeks Update -- Testing and Training
As I mentioned in my last post, the schedule for this week hasn't been too heavy, primarily because there were a few test sessions involved.
I did the first on Thursday morning. A bike test of 20 minutes all out. I did the test on one of my gym's spin cycles, since they have a watt meter and HRM installed on them. I don't train with power on my bike, but at least I can use that as a reference point for future tests. After warming up, I dove in, and felt pretty good about the effort:
Time: 20 minutes
Avg HR: 161, with a max of 171 near the end.
Avg Wattage: 296
RPMs: 96
This morning was a run test. After warmup, 4 miles, with 1-minute rest periods, each at 70% of my Heart Rate Reserve (HRR). The idea is to see if you're able to maintain speed without spiking up the HR. If so, it's time to ramp up the intensity of the runs a bit.
I think the results were good. Speed stayed the same or got faster as I went along, while keeping the AHR below the 70% HRR. I was surprised to find myself running at marathon pace with such a relatively easy effort -- guess the discipline of holding back this winter has been paying off.
1 - 8:24 - 134 AHR
2 - 8:17 - 138 AHR
3 - 8:15 - 140 AHR
4 - 8:20 - 138 AHR
We'll see what Coach Debi has to say about where I stand, but I'm feeling pretty good about that.
The rest of the week is pretty light: an hour easy ride and 4 mile run on Saturday, then an 8 mile run with some speed towards the end on Sunday. I'll post totals and look ahead on Monday.
I did the first on Thursday morning. A bike test of 20 minutes all out. I did the test on one of my gym's spin cycles, since they have a watt meter and HRM installed on them. I don't train with power on my bike, but at least I can use that as a reference point for future tests. After warming up, I dove in, and felt pretty good about the effort:
Time: 20 minutes
Avg HR: 161, with a max of 171 near the end.
Avg Wattage: 296
RPMs: 96
This morning was a run test. After warmup, 4 miles, with 1-minute rest periods, each at 70% of my Heart Rate Reserve (HRR). The idea is to see if you're able to maintain speed without spiking up the HR. If so, it's time to ramp up the intensity of the runs a bit.
I think the results were good. Speed stayed the same or got faster as I went along, while keeping the AHR below the 70% HRR. I was surprised to find myself running at marathon pace with such a relatively easy effort -- guess the discipline of holding back this winter has been paying off.
1 - 8:24 - 134 AHR
2 - 8:17 - 138 AHR
3 - 8:15 - 140 AHR
4 - 8:20 - 138 AHR
We'll see what Coach Debi has to say about where I stand, but I'm feeling pretty good about that.
The rest of the week is pretty light: an hour easy ride and 4 mile run on Saturday, then an 8 mile run with some speed towards the end on Sunday. I'll post totals and look ahead on Monday.
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