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Healthy Running and Racing Context, Part 2

April 22, 2016

All regular runners, competitive, recreational or fitness, have a go to running route. The four miles and change that compose my favorite circuit were actually the key ingredient in the training that produced the fastest times of my competitive college running career.

I could and have run this loop along the Mississippi River in downtown Minneapolis in the dark of morning or night. I've run the lollipop style route both forward and backward. I've run it as a segment of a longer run all the way up to 12 miles. It's flat stretches, bridges, light polls and hill segments have served for hours of repeats hitting every imaginable goal for physiological stress and adaptation possible. 

You'll find it known simply as the Hennepin Loop in my logs and journals and by the dozens of athletes that I coach who also attend the same university I did as a college athlete. Hennepin Loop + Nic Island means 5.2 miles. Hennepin Loop + Boom equals 6.5 miles. Hennepin/Stone Arch Fartlek means an RPE based fartlek run measured by light poles on two long bridges over Old Man River.

It seems to me many of us have these home turf areas that are the foundation to our successful running endeavors. But how does this tie into my previous post about creating a healthy context for serious athlete training and connect back to my perceived success at a local 10-mile racing event?

Back in February in the midst of an intense period of sleep depravity, work pressure and general winter doldrums common in Minnesota I needed to get out for a run. It also needed to be as seamless as possible. Shorts. Shirt. Socks. Shoes. Run.

Simple. No watch or GPS. No phone or fitness apps. No uploads, downloads, instagrams or tweets (Of course I'm ruining it by blogging about it now). Just a familiar, favorite route where the mind turns off, the CNS takes over and some unknown time later you are back home again. 

I will never know exactly which physiological systems were taxed or the extent to which they were pushed. The minutes per mile down to hundredths of a mile will remain an unknown in my log. Yet the time spent on my feet that day were just as much a training day as any prescribed workout with umpteen variables dialed in and programed into my Garmin 220.

There is more to say on this but I'm going to keep this post short and extend my thoughts on to another entry later this week. Thanks for staying with me on this topic and I hope to have you back when I wrap up things up next time.

In Personal Thoughts, Coaching Philosophy, Training Theory Tags training, athlete motivation, cross country
What factors go into allowing athletes to stand on the start line mentally and physically empowered to compete?

What factors go into allowing athletes to stand on the start line mentally and physically empowered to compete?

Racing Honestly, Creating Healthy Context on Race Day

April 2, 2016

I'll be honest, my running is no longer training. Not in the purest sense. Certainly not in the sense that relates to what I prescribe as training for the athletes I coach. Assuredly not training compared to past preparations for goal races after my college competitive career wrapped up over a decade ago. And while I'm busy being an open book, I skipped my morning run today because the exhaustion of being a coach, dad and sports information director got the best of me.

During the last few months running has shifted to something I need in a different form than the previous two decades of strapping on my racing gear and pinning on a bib number. For the most part my "training" goal is three days per week, 30-90 minutes a session with some hills and tempo stuff sprinkled in because I believe those things actually serve not just to improve fitness but to also, if applied and completed correctly, keep runners injury free and on the roads. So how does that relate to a blogger who coaches college and post-collegiate runners who are aspiring to race the fastest times of their careers?

As mentioned in my last post, there have been a ton of thoughts tumbling through my mind over the last few months. One is how to best serve the college athlete at the small college level who is serious about being fast on race day but also lives a life much different than pros, higher division scholarship athletes or even what they experienced a few years prior as high school competitors. The age old debate still rages on topics like training volume, the pacing/value of interval training, long run paces, strength work in the gym, stretching/flexibility and on and on. More has been written and published than ever before regarding the benefits of or the proper way to train for distance events.

Yet for all the study of the human body as an aerobic/anaerobic machine, the responses are as diverse as the physiological factors that decide how fast a 19 year old female runs a 6000 meter cross country event. Then suddenly there are moments of unexpected clarity that come from a time of pared down, bare minimum running that translate into  answers for questions that were not yet even asked.

It was a willful decision to trim down my short-term running aspirations. I was less willing to concede scheduling out big mileage, building up to tough workouts and crushing the road race circuit this summer and fall. Yet I shaved nearly five minutes off a result in a local 10-mile race last month compared to a year to date performance. Though, still at least 10 minutes off a career best at that distance, it was strangely satisfying to labor through that event at a pace that was once my slowest long run effort.

I was likely running "harder" last year building up for that event. The difference this time around came in how excited I was simply to be out there in the crowd with no illusions of grandeur, straining at a leash hoping to break free from a self-imposed limit of possible outcomes. It was joyful and satisfying, fascinating and compelling to keep plugging away as the miles became past tense. Do not kid yourself, I had goals and a desired pace but I also realized the value of that day's competition was simply to enjoy the workout and gain the fullest dose of life experience available to me that day.

Because running was placed in it's proper perspective that day it became empowering to test limits on that specific day. My assignment as a coach is how to translate that personal experience into preparing my athletes to do the same on the days they compete, freeing them to unleash the best they have in the right context on each race day. They are obviously far more prepared for their events and have far more invested than I was last month but that should only create more confidence in a possible, positive outcome. 

So how do I create confidence in preparation, freedom to enjoy the opportunity of each race and still produce competitive results and strong minded racers? More thoughts remain for another post and hopefully I'll have logged another run to assist in the process. Thanks for reading, hope to have you back again soon.

In Personal Thoughts, Training Theory Tags running, coaching, training
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