Archive for April, 2010

Team EN vs IMSG 2010 Roll Call: 15 EN Athletes Racing!

Posted by admin On April - 28 - 2010
24862_331048187283_681652283_3782026_6088174_n.jpg

St. George is now home of the most challenging Ironman event in North America, and is officially the first stop on the 2010 Four Keys Tour by Team Endurance Nation.

Our racing roster shows that at least 15 Endurance Nation athlete will be racing IMSG this coming Saturday and a growing number coming out to be a spectator, volunteer, or signup for next year. If you plan on toeing the line, or are just making the trek, be sure to find Rich and the rest of Team EN at our pre-race talk on Thursday (details and RSVP here).

Best of luck to all the competitors! Here are some additional resources you might want to consider:

Popularity: 17% [?]

Team EN vs Boston Marathon 2010

Posted by admin On April - 21 - 2010

Boston Marathon in Wellesley CenterWe had several “official” Team EN members take on the Boston Marathon this year. This is despite our annual push to get folks not to run a marathon in your training — for some the siren call of Boston is too strong to resist!

The runners had a great day, with perfect temps and perhaps just a bit too much wind — but nothing jaw-droppingly hard. That was reserved for the hills of Newton and the rolling terrain of Beacon Street beyond!

Thanks to all of you: William, Michelle, Chris, Bryan, Matt, Amy, Todd, Bill, Keith & Linda and Mark who made it out to our Team Lunch on Sunday…I hope the food proved to be good fuel!

Here are the numbers for the folks I saw, in alphabetical order. Great job by all on a pretty good / yet tough day. Boston is NOT an easy marathon course and you all did very, very well!!!!

  • Matt Ancona: 2:49:40
  • Todd DesFossess: 3:29:05
  • William Jenks: 3:16:40
  • Bill McKinney: 4:02:16
  • Greg Rhodes: 3:32:48
  • Mark Roberts: 3:54:37

Popularity: 19% [?]

How to Taper with Intent

Posted by admin On April - 20 - 2010

Just let me sleep ten more minutes
Creative Commons License photo credit: rharrison

As the early big races of the season are approaching, it’s time to once again consider perhaps the hardest part of your training: the taper. While  almost every triathlete has heard of tapering, very few actually get it right. This article has two goals: to help you understand your personal needs and cues for tapering based on your event, and to give you active steps you can take to implement your taper.
Before we begin, two caveats:

  1. Those of you looking for number crunching and data-driven analyses will have to go elsewhere. In my experience as a coach, each individual and indeed each specific taper is different — formulas are nothing more than a slightly more specific guideline.
  2. I believe the taper is equal parts physiology and psychology; understanding and incorporating both elements into your pre-race plan is the only way to build the ideal taper for you.

“Not Doing” and the Type A Athlete
The hardest part about executing a proper paper is understanding when doing more actually yields less. There is a distinct point of diminishing returns, and a true taper begins when you actively stop working to create fatigue. By that I mean you are legitimately focused on what we would call recovery and sharpening. The first phase of your taper is recovering, letting the work that you have most recently done — some of your longest bikes, runs, and swims of the entire year — be absorbed.

Once your body is well along the path of absorbing that work, only then can you move to sharpening.  This is where you can begin to add a little bit of intensity back into the equation. Perhaps even including some race pace efforts, as these will help to acclimatize your body to where  you want it to be by the time the race day arrives.

Testing Your Fitness
One of the biggest challenges that endurance athletes face as their key event gets closer is a desire to test their fitness. In many ways a large part of the exercise in preparing for an endurance event involves spending weeks and months building your fitness in preparation for a single day. The nature of the event itself, however, prevents you from actually doing your event in training.

It’s not like a 5K race for example, where you can go out and do a bunch of 5K racing to get ready to do more 5K races. As a result, when your race day approaches, you really have no sense of where you are in terms of how you’re going to be able to put your race together. The temptation then, as the race gets closer, is to go out and do a couple of key workouts.

Perhaps, for example, if you’re doing a Half Ironman, you might be tempted to go out and ride 56 miles (or something close to it) at your goal race pace just to make sure you can really do it.

Or maybe you have a time in mind. You’re going to go out and do whatever it takes to earn that time despite the fact that you’re on a test course in a non-race environment. And you’re not rested. Your body will respond to that call for action. And it will deliverable the goods most of the time. The problem being that now you’ve proven you’ve got the goods means you will now most likely not have the goods by the time you need them to race!

Trust your plan, trust your taper. Take confidence in the fact that you have done tons of training and that you have a very long day — up to 140.6 miles — to demonstrate how well you have prepared.

Last Minute Speed
Lastly, there is often a last minute desire to put in some kind of speed work to become a little bit faster.  You’re maybe six to eight weeks out from your race, you’ve done a couple of key workouts, put in a big block of training, and now that you’re starting to taper you’re looking at where you’ve been. You’re looking at what you’ve done. And in looking at where you want to be…there’s a little bit of a gap.

How can I taper suddenly becomes, “Can I please go out and do some work?” “Can I please go out and put in another block of training, do a little bit more intensity, and then reap those results on race day?”  And the quick answer to that is what you already know: absolutely not.  Any extra work you do now during the taper period is only going to interfere with your body’s ability to absorb the work that you’ve already done.

It’s very tempting to allow your brain to take over the taper process.  From your brain’s perspective the only workout that really is still on your mind is the one you did just yesterday or the day before. But your body speaks in a much more holistic and long-term manner.  It’s still dealing with workouts you put in the bank three weeks ago and the residual fatigue from that work.

If your fitness is a lake, each workout then is a giant stone that you drop into the water. The effects of that work are the ripples that spread out across the surface. That’s what happens from each workout, and every additional workout you do is another stone you put in that pond.  More ripples, and ripples upon ripples.  Those add up over time and in some cases, like a miniature butterfly effect, even seemingly unconnected events can have a significant fatigue wave to them.  And if you don’t take the requisite recovery you’re going to be facing a seriously underwhelming race day.

If you are concerned about getting some last minute speed, there are some things you can do to get that speed.

Number one, the easiest thing to do is obviously to rest.  The more rest you can get, the better off you will be.

Number two, body composition.  If you could do anything in the last two to three weeks  to keep the weight down, or perhaps take a little bit of weight off in a sensible way, you will absolutely reap the benefits of that work and you will be fast on race day just by virtue of having to carry less of you around.

Another option for you of course is to check into your equipment.  Is everything dialed in?  Do you need to put a new wheel set on your bike?  Perhaps new tires.  Perhaps you can lube things up, take care of your bike.  If you’re doing another type of adventure race, maybe you can look into new equipment or just cleaning up and tightening the bolts on all the equipment you do have.  The point being that you can be fast on race day simply by having better equipment and using that equipment better during the race situation.

The Only Two Race Morning Goals That Matter
The entire point your taper is to get you 100% physically and mentally ready to race.  That’s it. It’s very tempting to think about the need to gain speed, to look for a miracle workout that’s going to prove that you really are ready, but ultimately the goal of the taper is to make sure you are rested.

After months of training, you now have to focus your attention and energy towards the not doing, towards things that are going to promote your ability to have a full stock of energy when you need it on race day.

Making that switch is very difficult to do; a lot of people really get confused and really suffer because they are unable to manage that execution and to do the work that’s really required to be as fast as you can be on race day.  There’s so much that it comes down to getting yourself ready.

So, you need to sit down and really start thinking about what it is that you need to line up from a mental standpoint, as well as a physical standpoint, to be ready to execute on the day.  You can review your training logs to make sure you’ve done the good work.  You can go ahead and review your equipment and feel confident about what you have.  You can go ahead and outline the race plan to make sure that you know what you’re going to do on the day.  You can make sure that your travel arrangements are all lined up, everything’s printed out, all the itineraries, family friends, everyone else knows what they need to do.

Good luck on race day and remember to smile and have fun!

Popularity: 20% [?]

Team EN Testimonials: March 2010

Posted by admin On April - 6 - 2010

We always hear the coolest things from our athletes, either via the private Team forums or Twitter. Wherever these folks are in their training, they are seeing results and enjoying their well-balanced lives to boot. It just doesn’t get any better than waking up and reading emails like these. Thanks for sharing folks!

The EN Leadership Team

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Hey, I just want to say ‘work WORKS’! I just returned from the Mardi Gras 1/2 marathon and set a PR by 6 minutes. Thanks RnP for a tough Out Season plan that actually works. I’ve never been emotional crossing a finish at any race but I was emotional this past Sunday. I was in a very serious bike accident last summer that required both knee and face surgery and the Mardi Gras 1/2 was my first race since the accident. When I started the October OS, I was basically starting from scratch, not having trained since before June. Imagine my shock to beat my pre-accident best by 6 minutes! I couldn’t believe it. As for the race itself, great weather (50ish at start), great city, and great on-course support. And not a bad way to cap off 20 weeks of OS hell. The only negatives were that the roads were not in the best of shape (you could feel every rut) and no pace groups. But if you have your own pacing device, no worries. I went conservative at the begining and then turned it up after mile 3. By mile 9, I was passing a lot of folks. Patience and discipline really are the key.” — Amy B.
As you know I am very new to EN and I have never found so much support (in one place). Because we have this woman’s thread we can go to it any time of day or night, any day of the week. We often have “issues” (as do men) that we need answers to right away and this is the place. There is no judgement, there are no dumb questions and people come out of the woodwork to reach and and give multiple solutions or suggestions for the initial “thread”. I have found that I have been able to share and ask questions that I wouldn’t have the nerve to do in retail stores and other TRI environment. There is ALWAYS an answer to your question here. Women being vulnerable with one another allows other women who may have been “holding onto something”to go ahead and put it out there. If this forum doesn’t know the answer or the women think it is better asked in another forum they will be told “where to go” in a very respectful manner. These women genuinely care about each other, it becomes a family, and you begin to feel as if you have sisters, mothers, or whatever… that you never had in your “real life”. Again, it is not JUST about training, the EN family help each other with their psychological, mental, physical and even spiritual issues. It has been a godsend for me.
My sincere thanks go out to RnP!  EN ROCKS! I did a very shortened OS last year, so didn’t see a ton of improvement.  I couldn’t believe how great I felt this past Saturday at the “Johnny’s”! I used this 5 miler as my end of the OS vdot, although a week early, I wanted to get it in with a race.  It was cold and windy and pretty strong headwinds on the way back.  This is the 1st race I’ve worn my garmin for and I’ve only been training with it since christmas.  What a difference training and racing with pace!

I started off and, of course, everyone took off…I kept watching the garmin and kept telling myself…slow down now, and kept hearing RnP in my head “pace yourself when you start!”  Felt fabulous the first 2 miles.  This is when I noticed I was starting to pass people.

So, mile 3, I start passing A LOT of people, still holding my pace.  The last mile I kicked it in and didn’t let it drop below 9:00/mi pace.  I came in at 46:10, 5 minutes faster than last year!  Woo hoo!  My vdot only went up one, but I was so pumped!  Literally!!!  I felt great the whole time!“  — Dana Sharp

I didn’t follow the 3/7/3 to the letter, but it made me negative split.  Ridiculously packed the first 5 miles, which really slowed things down.  Therefore, I had to crank it the last five miles.  Last mile was a 7:29.  I think this is a PR for me at this distance.  Haven’t run 13 miles since September.  Speed work works.” — Clint Fletcher

You may want to look into Endurance Nation. In addition to people using their plans, there is a online team off about 400 members that complete ironman distance races with low volume training plans. The plans focus on return on investment and how to best use the limited amount of time many age groups have to train. The team and forums are there to support each other and help tailor the plan to your life.

I have a full-time job, am married and have have a baby daughter, and set a two hour ironman PR last year after putting in less training volume than I did for my previous PR (2 years before on the same course). To be fair this was a combination of learing to use a power meter, more effective training, better race execution and losing some weight…all four of which EN helped with.” — Matt Ancona, 1st AG Ironman Wisconsin 2009

10K PR…42:47…that would be a 2:13 improvement over my previous best and a 3:00 improvement over my time in the Thanksgiving race! I guess I can go on spring break now!” — Bill McKinney

Popularity: 15% [?]

Let’s talk about going faster with less effort…but first…a disclaimer:

The topic of running efficiency is a currently a hot one. Google “Pose Method, “Chi Running,” “barefoot running,” “Born to Run,” “Newton shoes,” etc and you’ll be led to books, articles, links and studies espousing this, that and the other theory about how to run more efficiently. Here’s the deal — you’ve been running, however it is that you run, your entire life. Your body has adapted to how YOU run. For this reason any changes that you make to your running form, regardless of the system you decide to follow, must be implemented slowly and with caution!

If you go diving into any of these systems without a well thought out plan for giving your body time to adapt to a new style of running, you are very likely to become injured. In our experience, a good plan to change your running form would include significantly dropping the volume, intensity, and perhaps even the frequency of your running. In short, you would need to temporarily suspend your fitness, get-faster training goals and instead focus on improving your technique, listening to your body and giving it lots of time to adapt to your new form.

Having said that, today is April 5, 2010. You are likely deep into training for your season and probably can’t afford, from a race day performance standpoint, to take significant fitness steps backwards to advance your  running form and technique. Now is just probably not the right time to make a significant technique overall, unless your A race is many, many months away.

Now that we’ve given you our disclaimer, let’s talk about good running form. These are our elements for you:

  • Footstrike directly under the body.
  • Foot lands with a “neutral” strike: neither on the heels or on the forefoot.
    • Heel strike: the only way to land on my heel is to extend my foot, and the contact point of my foot and the ground, in front of my body. If I throw this heel out in front of my body and then slam it on the ground, I’m going to brake some of my forward momentum with my heel, slowing me down. In addition, I’m now asking my heel, not designed to absorb a lot of force, to do just that. Try this exercise: stand up, take your shoes off, and walk over to a hard surface (wood floor, sidewalk, road, etc). Now, jump up and down. What are you landing on? The balls of your feet. Now, jump up and down but land on your heels. How does that feel? Not so good! It’s pretty obvious that we are engineered to land on the midfoot, or balls of our feet, but…
    • Midfoot strike: in our experience, if we tell you “land with a midfoot strike,” you will interpret that as “land on the balls of my feet” or even on the toes. This is significantly different from how you have been running for…forever. You will injure yourself if you jump right into it.
    • For this reason (we don’t want you to heel strike but we don’t want you running on your toes either) we say “neutral foot strike,” with your foot landing almost flat, directly under your body.
  • “Lean forward from the ankles:” imagine we draw a line from the contact point of your foot and the ground, through your ankle and to your head. This line should be leaning slightly forward.
  • Everything above the waist is relaxed and loose. Arm swing should be front to back, with very little side to side movement.

Cadence: Your Secret to Running Better
How do you safely develop proper running form? In our experience, it’s all about cadence. Count the number of times your left foot strikes the ground for 1 minute, or for 30 seconds (then multiply by 2). We’d like to see you running at 90-93rpm’s. Why? In our experience, as you increase cadence many of the form elements above just happen. Most notably, foot strike moves from heel, in front of your body to neutral/midfoot, directly under your body.

Strides
The tool you are going to use to gradually improve your running form is called Strides:

  • Warmup with 5-10 minutes of easy running, ideally ending at a grassy, level field or other soft surface.
  • Stride: run quickly, with good form, counting your cadence. Rich likes to run for 47 left footstrikes. This generally takes about 30 seconds = 92rpms. Walk in a circle and recover for about 45 seconds. Repeat for a total of 10-20 Strides.
  • Your head should now be tuned into many, many form cues and has been dialed into the coordination of “good running” Now simply finish your run focusing on form and working to implement these cues into your “normal” running.
  • Notes:
    • We did not say “sprint” for 30 seconds. Run quickly is just that: run quickly, but only as fast as your ability to maintain good form for the length of the Stride. This is a technique, not a fitness, exercise.
    • Recover as long as you need to in order to repeat the same excellent form for the next Stride.
    • If your form starts to go, either slow down your Stride, take more rest…or just stop.

In our experience with Strides, when you force your body to run quickly under controlled, safe circumstances like this, it learns the coordination of good, efficient, smooth running. This coordination then begins bleed over into all of your runs. We’ve found that 1-2 Strides sessions per week can be easily implemented into your run training and will do wonders to improve your form, without the need to take the significant training stand down warranted by a more dramatic running form overhaul.

In short, now is not the time of year, and this is not the training article, for showing you how to do a major makeover of your running form. Strides, and a focus on cadence, are an excellent and simple compromise.

How Will Running More Efficiently Help My Ironman Marathon?
In our experience, it will help you two ways:

  • Training: we’ve found that by improving their form, our athletes are less likely to become injured and therefore can rack up more weeks of consistent, quality training. Strides, in particular, are a very low risk, high rate of return method for increasing run frequency from 3-4 runs per week to 5-6 per week. The key is to keep Strides sessions just that: Strides. Warm up, 10-20 Strides, cool down, done. Form only, no volume, intensity, or fitness goals.
  • Racing: first, in our experience, the Ironman run for 98% of us at some point turns into a bit of a slugfest. In the end, running fitness, durability, and proper bike pacing (setting up the run) are likely more important. However, improving your running form will give you form cues that you can focus on during the race, to keep you running as efficiently as you can for as long as you can. The net is that while their competition is in a world of pain and tunnel vision at mile 19, only focused on continuing to put one foot in front of the other, our athletes are still using through their running form checklist, counting cadence, monitoring footstrike, etc. Doing the best, most efficient job they can for as long as they can.

Running a Faster Ironman Marathon, Part IV: Race Execution
We have decided to make this a members-only resource, posting it to our internal Team wiki rather than to this blog. Please go here to join our waiting list. Members of the waiting list receive a 15% discount on any training plan, and an invitation to join TeamEN as space becomes available.

Popularity: 21% [?]