Thursday, December 26, 2013

Not my best month: hormone inbalance

So I haven't put anything on here in a while, but it has been an eventful month. I finished off my fall racing cycle with a 5 mile race in West Chester (Brian's Run). First, I'll talk about this race and then I'll talk about the events leading up to my present situation of being unable to do any real training.

Brian's run was another opportunity to race my least favorite distance and make some money. There were two good Kenyans and Griff Graves, fresh off getting 55th (I think) at NCAA XC for Syracuse jumped in. I had not been feeling great and he was running on tired legs, having finished up the NCAA season the weekend before and run the DE XC open at Brandywine the day before. the kenyans broke away early and ran together while Griff and I whined about African dominance for the first two miles. This race was very hilly for a road race, and Griff put me away mid-race on the uphills. I caught him with a strong last mile and ended up being him by a decent amount, getting 3rd overall. After the race I took a week off of running, with plans to take a fairly easy week of getting back into it and then jumping back into serious training.

After taking the week off, I ran about 60 miles and did not feel especially good. I chalked it up to being tired from work, or just wear and tear. However, after having to cut my run short on Sunday (planned 12, struggled through 9), I knew something was not right with my body. I got a blood test done the next day and it showed a high level of thyroid hormone (T4, for those interested). This meant that I was hyperthyroid and my body was effectively overclocked. I got a thyroid scan this week (12/23 - 24) and that showed that my thyroid wasn't taking up any iodine to produce more hormone.

Basically what happened was that some stimulus (likely a virus or bacteria) made my thyroid freak out and dump all of its hormone into my bloodstream relatively quickly. These hormones are responsible for essentially every metabolic function, from body temperature to heart rate to digestive processes. Once the thyroid exhausted its hormone from puking it into my body, it was all dried up, swinging the metaphorical pendulum in the other direction. So I started out with too much hormone, now I have too little, and it will take a couple months for my thyroid to correct itself and return to equilibrium.

Bottom line: there is no cure for this except to wait for my body to figure itself out and get itself back to normal. 2-6 months (broad range, I know) is the typical recovery time, but further complicating that guess is that it's hard to pinpoint when it started. So hopefully I'm all back to normal in two months, but until then I am writing off any hope of racing this winter or spring and am just focusing on getting back to normal health before I start thinking about running goals.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Rothman (and working full time)

So now that I've been working at my new full-time (8-5) job for two weeks and have been training twice a day on top of that, I have a race under my belt and finally got some real feedback from my body and learned how I'm handling it. The answer is apparently not very well. I felt bad in the race and was pretty tired; I didn't sleep exceptionally well going into it but I don't know if it's possible to be well-rested getting up at 5:30 and working all day. 

The race itself was a little rough, as I alluded to. I didn't feel 100% beforehand and warming up but I still thought it would be decent. We went out quite fast, 4:36 at the mile, which put me deep into the red. Compounding the problem was the fact that I was utterly alone after the mile, so I slowed down pretty hard despite my best efforts to hold a good pace. I ended up running 24:13 thinking I was in sub 24 shape. 

In two weeks from today I'll run another 5 miler, Brian's Run up in PA. It has decent money but perhaps better for me is the fact that it's the Sunday after Thanksgiving, which will give me 3 days beforehand of no work and good rest. 

Another change I'm making starting this week to get more rest is running once a day and sleeping in an extra hour or so. Obviously my mileage will drop a bit but since it is the end of this cycle I figure it's a good time to experiment and see how I feel the next two weeks running 80-90 mpw in fewer runs. If it goes well I may continue this schedule indefinitely and see how I can race throughout the next cycle on singles. Since I'll be focusing on 1500-5k distances I shouldn't see performance suffer much if I increase the quality a bit. 

Thursday, October 3, 2013

My first real plunge into road racing (September 2013)

This past month I took my first real introduction to serious road racing. I had been training all summer with the goal of running a fast half marathon on September 15 at Philly RnR, but I wanted to do a few prep races to get back into the swing of things and win some money. I was also pretty curious to see how training strictly for the half marathon would benefit my shorter racing.

The races I ran were:
Sept 2 - 5k (14:25, 2nd)
Sept 6 - 5k (14:19, 1st)
Sept 15 - half marathon (1:05:40, 15th)
Sept 28 - 5 mile (24:30, 2nd)

I would definitely characterize 4 races in a month, with one being 13.1 miles, as a dense racing schedule. All were good experiences: I won some money, set PR's every time out, beat some good people, and made some new friends. The half marathon was obviously the highlight, with a time that is only 40 seconds away from qualifying for the Olympic Trials.

This month of racing was a good learning experience. I learned that I definitely can't realistically race every week perpetually. It's pretty tiring and tough to stay in good shape while constantly backing off or recovering from races. Maybe every 2 weeks is a sustainable frequency, at least for races in the 5k-10k range.

Another lesson learned is that I can race extremely well off of half marathon training. I knew this in an academic sense, that half marathon/LT training is very beneficial and probably the best training for getting in overall good distance shape (assuming adequate base) but I was surprised to run 14:19 on the roads with no specific 5k work whatsoever. That's my 3rd fastest 5k ever, counting the ones on the track where I was sucked along in a paceline. I ran 14:19 on the roads leading every step of the way, beating Owen and Kyle Dawson, both of who have no business losing to me.

I'll take an easy week this week and hopefully resume good training again soon, I just need to get some goal races to keep me motivated. Besides Rothman/Philly half, I'm sure there are some other ones in November/December to carry me through to indoor track where I want to race the mile/3k and see what all this good distance work translates to.


Saturday, September 7, 2013

Tune up races leading into Philly

Next weekend, 8 days away, is my target race for this season and what I've been focusing my summer training on. A fast, flat half marathon along the river in Philly, hopefully with great weather like it is right now in the area. I've had some great training this summer, and I believe that I'm in my shape ever judging by workouts and races. I've run 3 lower-key tune up/checkpoint 5k races during my build up to Philly:

8/10 Belmar Chase         14:46 5th
9/2 Quarterback Club     14:25 2nd
9/6 Teri's Run                 14:19 1st

With each race, I've gotten faster and more importantly competed better. Prior to this week, I had the fitness I needed to run well over 13.1 miles, and after these races I'm extra confident in that along with my ability to race when it counts. In other words, I've got the physical and mental puzzle pieces in place, and now all that's left is to consolidate fitness over the next week and get a good taper in for the Big Race.

One point that I feel the need to address is that I don't think racing twice two weeks before a big goal race is the ideal way to prepare, I didn't think it would compromise my preparation much at all. The races both had prize money and I ended up winning $450 combined, so it was a good way to get in a good pair of hard speed endurance workouts in the context of a half marathon. I like racing and I like winning, and I don't like putting all my eggs in one basket especially when I don't think it would hurt to race a little bit beforehand.

Another interesting note about the above 5ks is that two were run in summer heat and humidity and one was run in very dry and cool conditions. Most importantly the 14:25 and 14:20 were run in very different weather conditions, which tells me that I am well acclimated and will be able to run well in Philly regardless of the weather. As usual, a cool dry day would be much preferred over a typical late summer haze, but at least it wouldn't be a total wash like if I was not well heat-trained.

As for real time goals for Philly, I can honestly say that I don't know except that I am in measurably better shape than I was when I ran 1:07:32. I have been running much faster on long tempo runs and a few seconds faster for race-pace intervals. I hope that the fitness gains translate into a substantially faster time. I always say never be upset at a PR, and I wouldn't be upset if I ran 1 second faster, but I will say that 1:06:30 is the slowest I can say I will be happy with, based on current fitness and how my training compares with years past.


Saturday, August 10, 2013

Belmar Chase 5k and a new training phase

So I raced up in Belmar, NJ this morning at a really nice 5k that I saw online because it had prize money. I didn't really expect to win any since it had some very good runners last year, and this year was even better. I raced it mainly because I wanted a checkpoint in training to see where I'm at. I ran 14:46, which considering everything like the weather, travel, and lack of a real taper for this race is encouraging.

This race is conveniently about 5 weeks before my big goal race of the Philly RNR half, which is what I'm focusing training on. That gives me 4 weeks of hard training and a week-long taper. Since I started training seriously, I've done pretty much entirely what I would term base work. That is, no workouts have been strictly timed and everything has been done by effort. Now is the time when I will start incorporating race-specific work, in this case workouts geared towards running my goal pace for 13.1 miles. I want to be able to run 5:05 pace on September 15, and I hope that with the base of mileage and hard efforts I've put in over the past 2 months I'll be able to do some key workouts to indicate that sort of fitness. I want to mimic race conditions as closely as possible, so I'll try and go in the morning (the race goes off at 8:00), wear the flats that I'll race in, and run the workouts on pavement, typically on the bike path in Newark. These workouts include:

Mile repeats: 6-8 a little faster than goal pace (4:55-5:00). To work on running at or just below race pace for a long cumulative distance.

Two-mile repeats: 4-5 at goal pace (10:10). To work on grooving in to race pace over a lot of miles when tired and instilling that pace judgement.

Tempo + reps: longer tempo run at a comfortably hard pace + a few longer repeats just below goal pace (ex: 8 mile tempo in 44:00, jog to track, 4 x 800 @ 2:25-2:30 w/ 4:00 jog). Another approach to working on getting better at running fast when tired.

Double Fischigan: At UD we would do a modified version of the classic Michigan workout that Chris Lear described in his book "Sub 4." This is the workout I would do on a track, because it involves repeats of 400, 800, 1200 and 1600. Conveniently for me, if not the team and general public, UD's track is currently unsurfaced (asphalt). The Fischigan is a descending ladder, but the recovery between all the hard segments is a steady mile and thus does not allow for true recovery. It is a simple workout: 4 laps hard (4 laps steady), 3 laps hard, 2 laps hard, 1 lap hard. The entire workout is 5.5 miles, so I'll do two back to back and get 11 miles. I plan to run the hards just under race pace, 4:50-5:00 and the steadys will be whatever is sustainable, hopefully significantly south of 6:00 pace.

These workouts are just some of the key specific ones that I plan to do over the next few weeks. Coupled with the 100-110 miles per week and another solid workout every week I hope to be in shape to run 5:05s in 5 weeks. I also just heard today that I've been accepted into the elite field for this race. Great news, since it means I don't have to pay the sizeable entry and I'm sure I get some sort of perks at the event.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

What a mature training week looks like

So now that it's mid-July I finally got around to getting a really good week of training under my belt. 2 hard workouts that were really big mileage days, a decent long run but for the heat and humidity and as much easy mileage as I could handle. Most importantly for me, I had the self-discipline to take a mega easy day yesterday between two big days when I was feeling trashed. I've heard it before, but it really is true: the hardest thing to do as a dedicated athlete is hold yourself back when you need it. Too often we get sucked into an obsessive-compulsive mindset and feel like we have to hold to a mileage schedule that we wrote out weeks or months in advance. Always remember, train to race, don't train to train.

Here is what I would call an ideal week at this point:

Monday - Recovery day: 9 + 6 double, core
Tuesday - Workout (hills, long intervals, long fartlek, tempo) + easy run (20 total)
Wednesday - Recovery day: 7 + 7 double, core
Thursday - Recovery day/easy mileage: 9 + 6
Friday - Workout (whatever I didn't do on Tuesday) + easy run (20 total)
Saturday - Recovery run: 8-10 easy jog + core
Sunday - Long run (Ideally around 2 hours, went a little shorter today due to heat/humidity)
Total = 110 +/-

I'm thinking about doing a hard-easy-easy schedule, with long runs and workouts being hard days. This would be a 9 day cycle, which I could do since I don't have a job yet so I don't have any reason to cram all of that into a week. The benefit of keeping a 7 day schedule is that it's what everyone else does so I would have company on the harder days, which always helps.

I'm also looking at some races in the near future, stay tuned.

Monday, July 8, 2013

A transition period, and a trip to Maine to ease it in

At the beginning of this training cycle, I said that I would focus my efforts on Philly Rock and Roll half in mid-September. Counting back from then, I figured that starting workouts in July would give me enough time to get a bit of mileage under me and to get in really good shape by September. Now that it's July, I'm going to stick to it and get some workouts in. I'll probably do two weeks of transition (tempos and hills, nothing strictly timed) and then move into some hardcore half-marathon stuff like I did two summers ago. Two endurance workouts a week and a solid long run is the recipe I want to follow until September.

Even though I just said I would start buckling down and getting my twice a week workouts in, I still want to enjoy myself and make some memories this cycle. To that end, I decided somewhat on a whim to go up to Maine this past weekend to visit my friend who is up there for the summer on a pseudo-internship. I went up with another mutual friend and we stayed in his Once-A-Runner-style cabin in the woods. We stayed on a tiny island, which sucked for running (lots of loops, heat wave) but was a nice change and a very fun and relaxed few days. 

Now that I'm back from that little vacation, I really will get down to business, I promise. I'm also still working on getting a job and hopefully will hear back from somewhere soon. I'm actually still optimistic and think that I'll get the job I'm looking for eventually, but it might just take a while. In the meantime I'm looking around for some running-related part time jobs to pay the bills. I'll definitely be assistant coaching somewhere, maybe in two places, so that will be a cool little job on the side. 

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Training to train

So this week was my first full week back into serious running. I say "serious" because, even though I only ran mileage with no structured workouts and the fastest I ran was probably 6:30 pace, I reached full mileage and what I plan to hold for the rest of this training cycle. My weeks will all look very similar to this, with core 2-3x:

Monday - 9/6
Tuesday - 90 minutes (13+)
Wednesday - 9/9
Thursday - 90 minutes (13+)
Friday - 9/6
Saturday - 10
Sunday - 2 hours (ideally 18+)

This was the base mileage schedule for XC last year and I liked it a lot. I thought I was able to balance recovery with good stamina training on the long days instead of just burying myself with mileage like I had in other cycles. Previously I had always loaded my week with doubles every day and tried to max out mileage, which put me in a perpetual overtraining hole. This schedule adds up to 104 miles, which is less than I have done the past two summers, but because the mileage is condensed into only 10 runs instead of 13 or 14 I think that it is actually better conditioning work.

I call this part of the year "pre-base training" or, as I said up top, training to train. The objective of all those relatively easy miles and unstructured work is to be able to handle the next step of training, which for me is long, hard half marathon workouts. A lot of people make the mistake of treating easy mileage as base training. While that might be true for less experienced runners who lack the lifetime base and background to handle the true stamina workouts that will be my bread and butter, it should not be the case for collegiate runners. People think that you can race well off of just easy mileage. I define racing well as racing at a high percentage of your 100% perfectly trained/peaked potential, and I do not think it is possible to race well off of just mileage. You might run well compared to past seasons, you might even PR, but I guarantee that if you spent some time doing long tempo runs and long intervals you would race better than if you ran the same amount of mileage with all of it easy.

Since I don't plan to work out until July, I have a bit of a challenge. How do I keep my training interesting and progressive but at the same time not change my mileage? Well, my answer is to acclimate to it and to push some of the runs when I feel good, especially the long run. My overall fitness goal by September is to be at the level I was at on January 1, 2013. At the end of my winter training at home I was running the same mileage schedule, doing tons of core, running long and hard workouts Tuesday and Friday and running a fast 18-19 miles on Sunday. If I can get back to that, I know I can PR in the half marathon and probably every other race that I contest on the roads.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Getting serious after a longish layoff

Now that it's June, I feel like I need to start taking running serious again. My first Big Race of this cycle will be the Philly half in mid-September. I want to start working out in early to mid-July, so if I can get a solid month of peak mileage in for all of June then I'll be on track to run well in the fall.

After this debacle of a track season, when in hindsight I was probably slightly detraining the whole time from where I was in the winter, I realize I have some work to do. If I can get back to the fitness I had on January 1 I'll be really happy. To that end, I'll try to do the mileage structure I did in the winter, getting over 100 mpw with 10 runs. I would love to get into good enough shape to hammer long runs like I was doing in December, but once the heat and humidity of Delaware summer sets in I doubt I'll be able to replicate those runs.

For the half marathon work, I really liked what I did two years ago to prepare for this race. I'll probably end doing most of the workouts alone, but I actually prefer it that way. When other people who have different goals are involved the workout can get corrupted and people tend to try and race unless there is a really good level of trust and you know the other person. For example I would be fine working out with Feeney, but he's in a different part of his training cycle and is training for a different event (Olympic distance tri) than I am. I could work out with Digennaro, but again I don't know if I want to risk buggering the workouts.

In any case I think the long LT-pace workouts that are necessary for half marathons are really good for general fitness and I believe that I'll get in good shape for any distance using those workouts, so after the half I bet I can jump in to some shorter, less taxing races and run well on the roads.

Friday, May 17, 2013

Training and racing plans for summer and fall 2013

So since the end of my college career, I've had some time to think about what I want to do. I was actually looking forward to this kind of freedom with my training and racing again, after being so regimented at OU, and it's very liberating to be able to do whatever I want. If I didn't want to run, I don't have to, and the lack of external pressure makes it much easier to relax and enjoy my running. It also lets me plan to my leisure and take my time with getting back into shape. That being said, I've started running again, but I don't plan on seriously training for a bit.

This fall I want to concentrate on road races and exploring some relatively new territory. I'm going to focus on pure strength work all summer and fall to prepare for the Philly rock and roll half in September as my first big race. I'm not sure if I'll race at all before then, if there are any races around with enticing prize money that won't compromise preparation for the half marathon I might do one or two. My first foray at the half marathon two years ago went very well and I want to run a good PR. With that in mind, I plan on following a similar training schedule that I did to prepare for that race, with 100-110 mpw and two long aerobic workouts focusing on half-marathon endurance.

After Philly, my next big race will probably be the Rothman 8k. I enjoyed that race two years ago and the course was fast, being flat and having only one turnaround. I almost broke into the money when I ran that race, and with two more years of running under my belt I hope that I can move up from my previous 6th place and 24:20 time.

Besides those two local races, I'll look around the Philly and Baltimore/DC areas for any good road races. I think that I can run well from 5k thru half marathons with the kind of endurance work I'll put in for the half, and since there are (I believe) 9 weeks between those races I can squeeze in at least two or three more races, hopefully ones with some prize money. In the shorter term, I might even race the Kennett Run in a couple weeks just to see what kind of shape I'm in (subpar). That race offers decent money, but I doubt that I would win much without being in peak shape since it attracts some local Africans.

Like I said at the top, I am excited to be back on my own terms for training and racing. I'm definitely taking it easy for a week or two and getting my legs back under me. Then I'll get up to my goal mileage and after a few weeks start incorporating some workouts for the half marathon distance. Having Feeney and Hannagan to run with again is going to be a help and I hope that Feeney and I can work together to benefit each other for our respective events and goals.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Outdoor Track (also: why I didn't enjoy my track season at OU)

After a successful indoor season, it was time to get ready for outdoor track. Keep in mind while reading this that, throughout my time at OU, I had three goals with my running. The first was to train as a group with all of the guys on the team who were/are better than me and get better by osmosis, and keep the daily toil interesting by having people to share it with. The second reason was to go to all of the good meets that the distance team went to in XC and last year's track team, such as both Stanford meets, Mt. SAC and the UW indoor meets. The third reason was to be coached by Martin Smith, a coach who has had many All-Americans and excellent distance runners throughout his career, and learn his secret to training and success.

I ran three races this outdoor season, and none of them went well. Throughout indoor and outdoor, I never felt like I was training hard and progressing from last year, but because I ran well indoors I thought that maybe going hard in training was overrated and that I was actually going to improve from last year. I also was gradually phased out from doing the grass track/Coach Smith workouts to Jeremy's "rhythm" track workouts, which mainly consisted of easy 500s. Again, I was doing some of this during indoors, but because I ran well I tried not to question it. There was always doubt that the training was going to yield good results. By the time outdoor was in full swing, I was doing most of my workouts either solo or with guys that weren't the A team, who usually did longer endurance-based work that I have used to great effect in the past.

The first race at Arkansas, I ran a 3:53 1500. OK, not a great result, but I hadn't backed off in training and I was probably just tired. The race went out in 2:08 and closed hard so I wasn't too upset with it since it wasn't a great race anyway. The next race was the opposite: I felt really good going into it, and went out hard but ended up fading off of a 2:01 first half to another 3:53 clocking. This was pretty discouraging, but OK, maybe I just can't handle that fast of a pace. The week after this race Kyle and I were scheduled to go to Princeton for the Larry Ellis 5k, and I was super excited for this race and certain that I would run well. At the last minute, Coach pulled us because of anticipated bad weather. This was, in hindsight, the beginning of the end for my motivation and this event, coupled with my lack of enthusiasm with my training and not going to good meets, sowed the seeds for just wanting to leave OU and start training on my own terms. Keep in mind the three goals that I had at the beginning of this post, and you can understand my frustration with getting pulled from the only scheduled fast 5k.

The last race was definitely the fitting end to a disappointing season. I ran a 14:43 5k at the big 12 meet and placed something like 14th. I went in hoping and assuming to sneak in for a scoring spot in the top 8, but once the race went off I just never felt fit. Running 70s was race effort, and was very disheartening. This race was one of the very few track races in which I seriously thought about dropping out. It was also probably the worst race of my collegiate, and maybe entire, career.

In hindsight I believe that I was just never in shape all of track season. I never felt like I was training hard and never felt fit, and it showed in each race. I believe I ran well indoors off of my cross country base and the hard training I got in in Delaware between Thanksgiving and New Years. I have thought about this for some time, and I conclude that the reason that Coach Smith is successful with so many guys is that, first of all, he is a master recruiter and brings in the best talent, and gets guys fit but keeps the training conservative to minimize injury. In this way, he gets guys in good shape and lets their talent do the rest. For guys like Kyle and I, who worked very hard undergrad to maximize our talent, coming to OU actually made both of us worse because we were undertrained. That brings me to point number 2: transfers like Kyle and I don't work with Smith because so much of his system is faith based. Kids coming out of high school to train under him don't know any other collegiate training system, and so they have complete trust in his training. Trust and belief is a big component of success with any training, and because we had been exposed to other training that we had had success from, we never put complete faith in Smith's approach. Quite apart from that, I just wasn't trained by Smith. I was trained by a 23 year old wet-behind-the-ears assistant who knew less about training than I did, and I was his guinea pig. That is what most annoyed me about my spring season; I was considered to be a less important member and my results suffered.

Even though I gripe about it now, I am glad I went to OU for my last year. If I hadn't gone, I would have always wondered what could have been. I also had a good XC experience and came away with PRs indoors. I met some great guys and had some fun and learned some about running. But now I'm back for good, and I'm looking forward to training myself and exploring the new frontier of road races and seeing if I can contend for any prize money. It promises to be an interesting new "career" ahead, juggling a real job with  training, but I am excited to see if I can hack it.

Indoor Track

Once I got back to Oklahoma, training and workouts with the team were back in full swing. After a few different racing plans were bounced around, I opened up my season with Kyle King at the OU home meet in the mile. It was very tactical and I won in a fairly easy 4:17 on a tight track. After that, we went to Arkansas for the Razorback invitational.
I ran the mile and ran a respectable 4:08. The race went out a little slow for me and I got beat in the last half by guys that closed in 58 to my 60. I was happy with my race, but it was even better watching the return of Pat Casey to the track with his win in the fast heat of the mile. 
After Razorback it was back to training and my next race was the Tyson invitational at Arkansas. I ran the mile again, this time with Brandon Doughty and Ryan Poland. The race played out well for all of us and Ryan won in a 4:03, I ran a PR in 4:06 and Doughty ran 4:06 behind me, a very good time for a sophomore. Ryan ran a great race too, having come off a 8:01 3k at Razorback and having been a 10k guy before this season.  
After this race, it was time to get ready for the indoor conference meet. Coach had me run a tune-up 1000 at the home meet the week before, which I felt great in and won easily, albeit in a slow time. At big 12, Coach considered me for the lead off of the DMR to save Frezer for his individual events. I ended up not doing it and just ran the 3k on the last day of the meet, in the slow heat. I ran well and moved up through the field to run 8:12 and tried to chase down the leaders, but ran out of steam in the last 300. 
Overall, a good season with two good PRs and three good races overall. 

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Back to Work

After a long and relaxing winter break with friends and family, it's back to Norman with the guys to get the indoor season started in earnest. One thing I have to admit I missed about Oklahoma is the great weather most of the time. No clouds and the winter climate is perfect for running here. Being back with the guys is great to. Here's to a PR-filled indoor season for everybody!