Tuesday, December 31, 2013

2014 Ann Arbor Marathon Registration

The A2 Marathon/half-marathon early registration ends today . . . It is likely a 19 or 20 mile long run weekend for everyone running Boston. The race is on March 30 this year.

I'm signed up for the half that day and will likely run 6 or 7 ahead of the race start if anyone else is interested in doing the same.

Registration link:
https://www.hugheswareregistrationservices.com/register_for_race/2014-ann-arbor-marathon?utm_source=Copy+of+A2+Marathon+2014+Registration+Dec+Rates+Reminder+12%2F23%2F13&utm_campaign=2014+A2+Marathon+Email+12%2F23&utm_medium=email

Happy New Year :-)

Kevin

PS - everyone should think about one of these events this summer as well: http://www.runtrextri.com/
These are seriously the most fun events in our area....and everyone should be cross training, right?

Monday, December 30, 2013

Boston Marathon Athletes Read This Blog!!!! + Happy Birthday to Paul!

Over the course of the last couple days, I've discovered there are a vast numbers of athletes who both are running the 2014 Boston Marathon and enjoy this blog.  This is great news since this blog is about the boston marathon.  

To be clear, this blog is not about Dave Chomet's phone.

These runners include:
Paul Aufdemberge - 2009 US National Masters Runner of the Year!

BTW, Happy Birthday Paul!

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Elevener Today

Beautiful run outside today with the Comet....11 miles out and back on Hines.  Notice no heart rate data on my Garmin....I'm going without a lot these days. 


This was the scene at the end as Dave enjoyed some Starbucks coffee and an untoasted bagel:


Friday, December 27, 2013

Triathlon Post #1

Yes, this is a Boston 2014 blog, but given the latent triathlon interest in our readership, I wanted to take a moment to show what triathlon dedication looks like on December 26 at 6 am. 

The pic below: Ryan walking into the pool as he prepares for Steelhead 70.3 in 2014. #bb

Thursday, December 26, 2013

If true, I'm now fighting this one....

Outside Magazine (@outsidemagazine)
"As people become slaves to the technology, they lose that mind and body connection in the numbers."—Chris McCormack bit.ly/18iorur

Download the official Twitter app here

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Dave Eats

Dave eating his second breakfast after running 10 and promising to eat twice as much in a few weeks after running 16. 

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Boston Marathon Discussion Group To Meet

The Boston Marathon discussion group of the greater Ann Arbor area will meet Friday, December 20 at 1300 S. University Ave. in Ann Arbor starting at 5 PM.

Topics of discussion to include: 
- where the heck are you staying in Boston
- did you get your flight yet
- what do credit card rewards really get you at Boston 2014
- no Chomet
- The possibility of group treadmill runs at PF in A2, Canton, or Northville especially in the case of inclement weather

Join in! 

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Practice Has Begun / Choosing Goal Paces

As we move into the first week of training, let's start with some perspective from Gladwell.... (Via twitter feed of @Running_Junkie): 

"Practice isn't the thing you do once you're good. It's the thing you do that makes you good." ~Malcolm Gladwell 

We all begin practicing this week in preparation for our respective goals.  In talking with several of you, I know there are those with specific goals and others not so much. I wonder if the specificity of the goal is linked to current life demands/circumstances and how much time we have to devote to practicing for the goal.  

This week is also the moment where a plan might become useful-for those who prefer that scaffold. 

My goal is to improve upon my last marathon performance from April at the Lansing Marathon, and I've already mentioned I'm using a Hal Higdon plan.  

Deciding on goal paces for race day and for training should be considered now also. For me this is based on my recent benchmark times and figuring what those times tell me I can reasonably expect to do in a marathon.  My most recent benchmarks are 10K races, so I will use those times to predict what I can do in a marathon (with proper training).  To do this I look at freely available online running prediction calculators like the Jack Daniels one linked at http://www.runsmartproject.com/calculator/.  From there I can get an idea of how fast I might be able to run my next marathon but also of how fast I should run different types of training runs. I've found this type of tool helpful in that it guides me in deciding how fast to train. In other words it reminds me to keep my easy runs easy and my hard runs hard. 

Sharing:
- I enjoyed this article from Outside magazine on nutrition: http://www.outsideonline.com/fitness/nutrition/The-Secret-Food-of-Athletes.html
- from bengreenfield.com: When choosing protein powder, look for an organic protein source, zero soy or artificial sweeteners, and ingredients to help digest protein. Dave, please post a link to the protein powder you use - the one you were thinking about entering into holy matrimony with
- Lots of indoor running this weekend for me.  What about you? Did you get outside?
- Here's my perspective from the treadmill I was on this morning (Jackson Pollack style):

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Tempo Runs

From Competitor.com
Photo: Rihardzz / Shutterstock.com

Internalizing pace is one of the most difficult training components for runners to learn.

Tempo runs have long been a staple of all good endurance training plans, so the majority of experienced runners have encountered them before. Tempo runs have been defined in numerous ways, but in the Hansons Marathon Method, they are marathon pace runs. Over the course of training, your tempo runs will span a number of months, requiring you to maintain race pace through an assortment of challenges and circumstances.

Internalizing pace is one of the most difficult training components for runners to learn. If you feel great at the start line and go out 30 seconds per mile faster than you planned, you'll likely hit the halfway point ready to throw in the towel. No significant marathon records have ever been set via a positive split (running the second half slower than the first half). If you want to have a successful marathon performance, you are better off maintaining a steady pace throughout the entire race rather than following the "fly and die" method. Tempo runs teach you an important skill: control. Even when the pace feels easy, these runs train you to hold back and maintain. Additionally, tempo runs provide a great staging ground for experimenting with different fluids, gels, and other nutritionals. Since you are running at marathon pace, you get a good idea of what your body can and cannot handle. The same goes for your gear. Use the tempo runs as dress rehearsals to try various shoes and outfits to determine what is most comfortable. Regardless of training, these things can make or break your race; tempo runs provide perfect opportunities to fine-tune your race day plans.

Tempo Workout Guidelines

In the Hansons Marathon Method, the tempo run is completed at goal marathon pace. For many other coaches, a tempo run is much shorter, at paces closer to strength pace, but for our purposes, tempo and marathon pace are interchangeable. Your pace should remain at goal pace, even early on when it may feel easy. It will take a good number of tempo workouts before you fully internalize the pace and can regulate your runs based on feel. What does change throughout training is the distance of these workouts. Tempo runs are progressive in length, adjusting every few weeks, increasing from 5 miles for a beginner and 6 miles for an advanced runner to 10 miles over the last few weeks of training. As an advanced runner begins to reach the heaviest mileage, the total volume of a tempo run, with a warm-up and cooldown, can reach 12–14 miles and approach 90 minutes in length.

Tempo Workout

For this workout, let's assume you're training for your first or second marathon and you're in week 7 of training (the base period).

1-3 mile warmup

5 miles at marathon goal pace

  • Goal marathon finish time of 5 hours = Tempo run pace of 11:27
  • Goal marathon finish time of 4 hours = Tempo run pace of 9:09
  • Goal marathon finish time of 3 hours = Tempo run pace of 6:52

(Hansons Marathon Method includes paces for a wide range of 5K finish times.)

1-3 mile cooldown


Planning and Day 1 Training

I'm about to get out of bed, strap on my running shoes and get started with the training for Boston 2014!  I'm excited to say the least. 

As some of you know, I like a plan when I prepare for a goal race, something that says what my workout regimen should be on a daily basis as I prepare for my race. I'm using Hal Higdon's Advanced 1 plan for Boston which is the same plan I used to prepare for the Lansing Marathon last spring where I ran my Boston qualifying (BQ) time. I don't always do exactly what the plan says, but I stay pretty close to it. I considered a couple other plans this time around (Hansons included) but decided to stay with the same plan to see how it worked a second time around while changing the goal marathon pace (MP) to being faster than what I used to prepare for Lansing. 

The question of why I use a plan is something I've recently been told was found to be  humorous by "friends" Mark and Dave Who?  What's to marathon training than running almost every day, one long run each week, and one or two days of speed each week, right?  Well boys.....when it comes to my preparing for important middle-life goals, I like more definition. Perhaps if I had run 20+ marathons including a 2:25:00 marathon previously, I wouldn't care too much about a plan.  

Now that I've got that out, please note the text of the email below where Dave Who? is asking for a copy of my Boston plan....probably going to give it to Mark Who?

On Dec 14, 2013, at 4:44 AM, dwchomet@....wrote:

Where is the email with the Boston plan?   What kind of friend are you??????   

Today I'm doing five miles at MP however, I'm still debating what that pace will be. I will start today at 7 minute pace but may back off that after more analysis of my most recent races.  More on that later. 

Out of bed...

Thursday, December 12, 2013

For Josh...

New Blog - Boston 2014 Training / Racing / Fun

The fun starts now.

Boston training notes, stories, sharing, info, etc for us and everyone who will be running at Boston on April 21, 2014 - or for those who might be interested but are not running.

Dave's Phone
Official training starts this weekend for many of us, me included.

#goingtobeepic

Feel free to check here often...better yet, sign up for email updates.  You aren't going to want to miss a thing.

I'm thinking of a twitter and Instagram integration . . . will figure that out this weekend. Of course, if you are a Chomet, you are using a rotary dial phone and have no idea what those are.

Comments are open.