Monday, December 20, 2010

Cancelled!

Yesterday I was due to take part in a Mile Race, it was planned as I good bit of speed training, a good test of my fitness before the start of Christmas festivities.

I got up at 7:30am, it was raining fairly heavily at that time, but I got myself ready regardless and by the time I went to get on the bus at 9:15 the rain had slowed to just a spit. I arrived ready for the race at 10:30, plenty of time to pick up my number for the 11:20 start. By this time the rain had stopped completely. However, getting off the tram I noticed there wasn't the numbers of people around you would normally expect when you head to a race. Arriving to where the start was meant to be, all I found was a poster for the race with a small notice saying it had been postponed due to 'rain'. I had to laugh.

Three weeks earlier I was in Benidorm with water above my ankles and the race was on, in San Juan yesterday it wasn't raining and there was just a bit of moisture on the road. What was more surprising was that this was a charity race with participants expected to bring food and toys to donate, there wasn't even anyone there to accept donations. It was a complete waste of time!

That's life I suppose. Hopefully i'll have more luck for my next races.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Cross Training or better put, Multi-Sporting

One of the things I hated most when I was following a strict training plan was having to turn down taking part in other sports in order to be able to stick with the plan. Even those plans that include some kind of cross-training normally only put it in one day a week, frequently a couple days after the week's long slow run. When your cross-training involves swimming, going to the gym or cycling for example, its no problem to fit them straight into your plan but if you want to take part in team sports things are a little more difficult. It's not really plausible to say to the guys I play football with 'my training plan only lets me play other sports on Tuesdays, so we'll play then, yeah,' and expect them to go along with it.

So then what to do? My plan, and i'll only be able to tell you if its a good one when I get to the finish line in Madrid in April, is to keep things flexible and move things around as much as I can to accomodate other activities. What does my multi-sporting involve? At the moment I am playing football once a week, while occasionally I'd like to do some trekking.

Then how do I go about accomodating these other activities? The first thing to recognise is that these other sports do constitute training so shouldn't be just done on top of your running mileage, so I replace a session with a game of football. Given the sharp bursts of running in a game I see it is a good bit of speed training. For trekking its a bit more difficult to see the cross-over benefits for running, from a cardio-vascular point of view it doesn't get close to matching a run. Nevertheless there are other benefits, walking on varied terrains, often rough and uneven, and on gradients of various degrees puts your joints and leg muscles through forces very different to those experienced on a flat run, this undoubtedly leads to stronger ankles and knees. Clearly there is a trade-off here, trekking is itself a risky activity that could lead to an injury, but personally I see it as a risk worth taking. This Saturday I did a trek up a nearby mountain, I didn't replace a session with it, but just reduced the length of my long Sunday run to accomodate the previous day's strenuous activity.

So what's the point of the story? Just to say that I'm going to continue to do the stuff I enjoy whenever I can but adapting my training accordingly so that I don't over do things. At some point in the last month before the marathon I will most likely stop playing football, the risk of picking up a knock that sabotages the previous half-year of training is just too high, but that apart I'll continue to try to keep things varied and interesting by doing different things.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

November endurance, December speed

I started November with a half marathon on the 7th, which came off the back of very little training having been climbing mountains in Tanzania in the first two weeks of October. This led me to focus my training on building up endurance in order to be confident of getting round 21 kilometres rather than concerning myself with how fast I was running. This is reflected in the distance I covered in total over the month, 168 kilometres, over the last calendar year I've only covered more in March, when I was just a month away from the marathon in London.

Now having completed two half marathons in November my focus is switching to speedwork so that by the time my next half comes around in January 2011 hopefully I'll be back to running near to the level I was at in January 2010. With that in mind I have entered two races:
The first of these is a mile race in a beachside town within easy reach of my home, the second is a 10k race in a small town away from the coast, Crevillente, which wikipedia informs me is famous for its rugs.

Throughout December I'll be going to the track regularly to do sprint sessions, with the odd hill session thrown in, but nothing quite matches up to racing to get the heart going, and the 10k in particular should be a good guide to how fast I can go in the subsequent half marathons I have scheduled.

I haven't raced a 10k for a long time, not since I left England over two years ok, and that absence of races has meant a goal going unachieved, to break 40 minutes over the distance. In my last effort I came home in 40:14. I'll be looking to take at least 15 seconds off my PB to end the year on a high.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Medio Maraton de Benidorm

Yesterday was a day to forget! Of the 2,000 or so runners many had travelled from Northern Europe to run hoping to combine a half marathon with a break in the sun, they were to be disappointed! It was probably the wettest day of the year. Within about 2 minutes of the race my socks were already soaked through.

I started off cautiously, given the conditions I didn't want to push my luck trying to get through the crowds and end up in a heap on the ground taking a bunch of other runners with me, then after the first kilometre started to pick up the pace abit. I reached the one kilometre mark in 4:59, with the next seven between 4:20 and 4:30min/km pace. However, things started to deteriorate abit from there, my stomach started to scream at me to take a toilet break, I tried to hang on to see if it would pass but eventually decided to take the hit, cue the search for a suitable bar to make the stop.

I lost about 4 minutes for the toilet stop, I don't have the same efficiency as Paula Radcliffe! I started again feeling suitably refreshed and covered the next couple of kilometres at about 4:20min/km but with the rain still falling, the going getting ever more treacherous and having lost the opportunity of improving on San Javier with the stop I opted for caution and went steadily through the last five kilometres, going at about 4:30min/km. My official finish time was 1:40:18, while on my watch I had 1:39:54.

You can see the details of my run by clicking here.

Despite finishing in a worse time than in San Javier on a considerably flatter course I'm not too despondent. I finished feeling good, like there was alot more to give on another day whereas after San Javier I was running on empty. Without the rain, at some points I had water up to my ankles, I'm fairly confident I could have got somewhere close to 1:30 if I could have avoided the need for a toilet break.

Now to close this entry it's time to review the goodie bag. I said after San Javier that the gauntlet had been laid down for Benidorm, and despite a good effort Benidorm didn't quite live up to the challenge. Here you can see their effort:


The cap and gloves came in useful, we got the goodie bags before the race and with the cold and wet weather lots of runners made use of them. I am short of mugs so that will get used while the t-shirt seems good quality, albeit a little too green for my liking. It's all good stuff, but no medal or oversized vegetables means the vote has to go to San Javier. Next up to the face the challenge is Santa Pola, the last two years I've come home with huge tubes of salt, neither of which are close to being finished, hopefully there will be something new this year.

Happy Running

El Maratonero

Sunday, November 21, 2010

6 days to Benidorm!

No, this post isn't a countdown to my holiday in Benidorm, but instead to the Benidorm half marathon. Next Saturday evening I'll be running my second half of the academic year. The race will be a first for me on two fronts, the first time running in Benidorm and the first time racing after the sun has gone down. The second 'first' led to a slight change in my weekend to help with preparation.

Most races take place early on a Sunday, while I also do my longer training runs on a Sunday, so I'm fairly comfortable with going out running on the fuel of the previous evening's dinner. I've only raced once on a Saturday afternoon, and that represents one of my worst running experiences. Running in Monforte del Cid on a Saturday evening in June I got round a half-marathon in a little over 2 hours, to date my slowest time by a distance, after suffering with dehydration from about km 5 onwards. Thankfully in November the energy-sapping heat shouldn't be an issue, but the timing of meals definitely is.

With this in mind this weekend I switched my long-run to Saturday afternoon, and it went well, I ran almost 19km's, and at a faster pace than I was able to do the same route a week out from running in San Javier. You see the run here: http://connect.garmin.com/activity/57419650
It all went well, no lack of energy, still feeling strong at the end. Unfortunately I couldn't go out at exactly the same time as the Benidorm race, my routes are all unlit so I have to aim to be back home before the sun goes down, but with a couple of snacks through the afternoon I should get to 6pm well fuelled.

I'm looking forward to the race, its a flatter course than San Javier since the route stays close to the beach throughout, and running at night will be an interesting experience, fingers crossed everything goes to plan and I go a good couple of minutes quicker than in San Javier.

Happy Running
El Maratonero

Friday, November 12, 2010

The Barefoot Running Experiment

On various running forums and in most of the running magazines I have browsed through in recent months there has been mention of a new fad amongst runners to go barefoot. That's right, they ditch the €15 padded sweat-wicking socks and the €100 trainers designed to protect you from the forces applied to your body by repeated pounding of the concrete. Its obviously an appealing idea in times of economic crisis, but ignoring the cost saving I initially, as most other sane people would, thought it was madness. However, after reading a few articles I've been persuaded that it might be worth a shot.

The main "potential" advantage of barefoot running is that it may be prevent repetitive strain injuries, which are the bane of anyone training for a marathon. The argument runs something like this, when wearing trainers your running gait adjusts so that when your foot hits the ground it is heel-first, you are a heel-striker, and this gives a sharp force that goes straight up your leg risking injury to calves, knees and hamstrings. However, when running barefoot you tend to land on the ball of the foot just behind toes, you land with less force and you make use of all the shock absorption capabilities in the foot to prevent the sharp force going up the leg.

Here are a few links that I found useful:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7jrnj-7YKZE
http://www.runnersworld.com/article/0,7120,s6-240-319--6728-0,00.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2010/feb/07/the-challenge-barefoot-running
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barefoot_running

One of the more philosophical arguments is that by wearing shoes to run we are going against thousands of years of evolution, since man learned to run barefoot. However, this argument conveniently ignores the fact that despite this evolution somewhere along the line someone decided there was a reason to create a running shoe, i.e. when people ran barefoot they got injured so somebody had the eureka moment and created the trainer.

If you watch the youtube video above there are what seems very convincing graphs measuring the forces resulting from running barefoot and in shoes, with two peaks for the shod runner and a smooth hump for the barefoot runner. I have one fairly major question mark over what they are doing, you can see in the video that they put the sensors on the shoe rather than on the foot of the shod runner, so they are measuring the forces applied to the shoe rather than the foot. If the trainer is effective at absorbing the force of the heel strike then the two peaks of forces shouldn't be so much of a problem.

I hope you can see from the last two paragraphs that I am questioning the argument in favour of barefoot running, but I thought it was worth a go anyway. The main point for me is that running without shoes you will run differently so different muscles in your feet and legs will get exercised, leaving your feet and legs stronger.

This morning I headed out for the first time leaving my trainers and socks at home. I had read that I should ease in to it, precisely because you are using muscles you don't normally use you need to be gentle to start with, so just went out for a little over a kilometre. So how was it?

The first thing that occurred to me was that it wasn't as cold as i'd imagined, the initial step outside gave a little bit of a chill, but within thirty seconds I was already accustomed. I had read about the joys of feeling the ground beneath your feet, I was running on concrete and I definitely couldn't describe it as a joy, I guess on grass or on sand I might have a better experience but on those surfaces it is more difficult to see what you are treading on. I did find I was shortening my stride quite alot which almost inevitably led to a slower pace than normal, I averaged 5:18 min/km, in the past year and a half of using a GPS I don't think I've ever run slower than 5min/km. The most notable thing from the run was the reaction of people, while pedestrians I passed seemed oblivious to the fact I was without shoes, three or four people felt the need to shout at me from their cars to point out that I didn't have trainers, people are so helpful!

Will I try it again? Yes. Will I completely abandon my trainers in the near future? Definitely no! I think it is worth adding to my training as a different kind of session, just to keep things interesting, but the restrictions placed on where you can go and when make barefoot running quite limiting, I wouldn't run in the dark both because of the cold and fear of where I might be treading. I think it might add something to my training, i'll build-up the distance I am doing barefoot and let you know how it goes.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Media Maratón de San Javier

Today I completed my first half marathon since the end of February, which was also the longest run of any kind I had done since struggling around the London marathon in April.

All-in-all it went well, somebody asked me before the start what time I thought I could do, I said that given my lack of training 1:35 would be a good time, and I got round in 1:35:31. I felt good all the way round, despite running at a considerably quicker pace than I had been doing my long runs in. I don't have official timings yet, but here are my 5k splits for the race from my GPS:

5k   22:22
10k 22:35 44:57
15k 22:23 1:07:21
20k 23:09 1:30:30
21.07k 5:00 1:35:31

The first and third 5k were both downhill, while the second and fourth were uphill, which explains a bit of the difference in pace. I felt good during the fourth 5k so it surprises me that it was so much slower than the earlier splits, but given that I'm out of practice with running 20kms+ it was almost inevitable that I would slow towards the end.

The route and plenty of other info on my run are on this link:
http://connect.garmin.com/activity/55862059

Now we get to the best part of the day, the goodie bag! I knew before I arrived that on finishing I would get a long sleeved, and some, lower leg warmers, they probably have a proper more technical name but until I find out what it is i'll stick with lower leg warmers. That in itself is quite generous, but added to those there was a pair of running socks which is fairly normal compared to the last items, a four pack of lemons and two of the largest courgettes I have ever seen! Here is the photographic evidence:


I can't think what led them to think of putting courgettes in a runner's goodie bag, but it will get eaten. Benidorm, a marker has been laid down, beat that bag!

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Countdown to San Javier and waist fluctuations

On Sunday I will take part in my first half-marathon in more than nine months.

Back in February I ran in Torrevieja and set a PB for the fourth race in a row. Seven weeks out from the marathon in London I was buzzing, I was really looking forward to seeing what I could do, both in the marathon and in the further half-marathons I had planned. Three weeks later injury struck, my participation in the marathon was in doubt and I had to pull out of the remaining half's I had planned.

My PB in Torrevieja was 1:27:41, I don't think there is any chance of getting near that on Sunday, I just have not been on the road enough. I have only had three weeks of training towards the race and I haven't run more than 20km since the marathon in April. I feel confident of being able to finish, I did an 18km training run yesterday and finished feeling good, but the speedwork is still to come. I kept myself ticking over through the summer, running two or three times a week, but never more than 12km in a session, with the heat here in August any more is suicidal, and just as the temperature started to fall I was away for two weeks.

I was in Africa for two weeks to climb Kilimanjaro, so spent most of the time at altitude. While spending time at altitude is generally a good idea for distance runners, as you acclimatize your body begins to carry more oxygen in the blood stream so that when you descend again you have to work harder to become breathless, there were a few reasons why the trip was a hinderance rather than a help to my running. Firstly, I wasn't running, I was doing strenuous activity, ascending up to 1,500m in a day, but since trekking involves different muscle groups to running inevitably there will be wastage of some the muscle mass built up from running. This brings me to my second issue, in two weeks I lost almost 10% of my body weight.

I was suffering with diarrhea for a few days, which makes it very difficult to replace the calories burned in climbing the mountains so the inevitable consequence is losing weight. Most running magazines suggest weight loss as a means to improving your PB, but there is a key reason why this simply won't work for most runners, it assumes you are carrying too much weight to start with, in my case this is most definitely not true. Added to that losing such a large amount of body mass in such a short space of time cannot be good.

In the past three weeks I have started to put some weight back on, but it is a slow process, and it is an even slower process to get the weight turned into muscle. However, in the meantime I can just enjoy the extra bowls of ice-cream!

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Race Schedule

I have the calendar of half-marathons that I will run in with my University half-marathon team in the current academic year. The dates look pretty good for preparing for Madrid. Here is the list:

Of the seven I've run four of them before, in San Javier, Benidorm and Elche i'll be making my debut. From what I could make out from the websites San Javier and Benidorm are both pancake flat beachside courses so would be good courses for making personal bests, unfortunately they are coming a bit too early in the year for me, I hope to be challenging for PB's in the two February races.

There is a bit of a hole in the schedule during December, hopefully I'll be able to find a race nearer the time, a 10k would be perfect. The only other problem with the schedule is proximity of Elda and Elche, they are just one week apart and Elche is just two weeks before the Madrid marathon so on one of the two weekends I would hope to be doing my last long run of 20miles/35km, I think I'll ending up doing just one of the two but i'll leave the decision as late as possible.

The four that I've run before are all good courses and they are well organized so I'm looking forward to going back, but Santa Pola is the highlight. It is one of the most popular races in Spain and the two times I've been there was a really good atmosphere with lots going on to distract you from your tiredness. I'm not so excited by the prospect of going to Benidorm, but who knows, the place might surprise me, i'll let you know!

El Maratonero

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Why I don't use a Training Plan

A google search for "marathon training plan" shows that there are thousands of websites out there offering a plan of exactly what training you should be doing everyday of the plan, but on each of the websites there will a multitude of options.....a 10 week plan, a 12 week plan, a 15 week plan, a 20 week plan, and plans for beginner, intermediate and advanced runners.

When I ran my first half marathon I followed a 12-week plan almost religiously, if the plan said I should be running up hills I was running up hills, if it said I should run for two hours I was running for two hours. The plan served me well, I had the objective of finishing in 1:45 and ended up running a chipped time of 1:37.

I was sold on the idea that I needed a plan for my running, but the problem I had was that while there were endless plans for building you up for a particular race distance, there was nothing out there telling me what I should be doing to maintain my form once the race had been done. I wanted to do another half-marathon six weeks after my first, there are six-week training plans out there but they assume you are starting from a low base and need to build up.

As soon as I had a place in the London Marathon 2009 I set about finding the plan to get me there. After trawling the internet I found a sixteen week plan that seemed perfect, so as I had done with my first half marathon, I set about following the plan religiously to get me around my first full marathon. However, this was when my faith in the plan approach deserted me.

The problem I faced was that for whatever plan you are following, there are never any guidelines for when, for whatever reason, you cannot stick exactly to the plan. When I did my first half marathon I had no other races to think about, my focus was just on one race so I could follow the plan completely but when preparing for the marathon I had other objectives, half-marathons I wanted to take part in, games of football to play in, but no space in the training plan for them. I tried to just drop the half-marathons straight into my training plan to replace the weekly long-run, but perhaps unsurprisingly this led to injury, which leads to another problem with following a training plan, when you do recover from injury there is never any guidelines on how quickly you should get back on to your training programme, should you go back to the stage you were before you were injured, go back further and build up again or just go straight back on to the plan doing the high mileage weeks?

I tried to get back on to my training plan as soon as possible, mainly due to the fear that if I didn't I wouldn't be able to do the long runs you need to build yourself up to a marathon, and again I got injured. I missed out on the marathon and I put that mainly down to my obsession with the plan. When I look back at what I was doing it amazes me just how stupid I was, I missed a week of training with a groin injury, but within five days of returning to training I was doing a 17 mile training run, with a 10 mile run the following day.

I learnt the hard way that a strict training plan wasn't for me, since I recovered from the injury that ruled me out of the marathon I have continued to train and I use many of principals that are encompassed in the many training plans, but without the strict planning involved, I don't know that in ten weeks time I will be doing a fifteen mile run. Here are the principals I try to follow:

  1. Listen to your body, if you feel unwell or the slightest hint of an injury don't train, or if you really feel that you have to train try a different sport that is unlikely to aggravate the injury, for me this is normally swimming or cycling.
  2. Do one long run a week, you are going to run a marathon, you need to know what its like to spend hours out on the road.
  3. Gradually build up your mileage, adding alot of miles quickly is only going to lead to injury, and if you do get injured start again from a low base of mileage otherwise you are risking a rapid recurrence of your injury.
  4. Keep your training sessions varied, hill running, sprints, races, other sports, anything to keep things interesting while at the same time improving your fitness.
  5. Be prepared for the worst, training for a marathon will put a huge strain on your body you should be prepared for it to breakdown, but find a good physio so when you do have problems you can make a swift recovery.
  6. Be flexible, point number one is key, be ready to adapt your sessions to how you are feeling, if you are feeling lethargic a 15 mile long run is not likely to make things better, but a short sharp session of sprints might.
  7. And last but not least, enjoy it! Take pleasures in all the landmarks you reach on the way to your goal, a PB on your training lap, your first time running for an hour without a break, taking over the runner in the park that used to make you feel you were as fast as a snail, you should take pride in all these achievements so you can get a real joy from running.
As my blog continues hopefully you'll be able to see me applying these principals, and with a bit of luck they might lead me to success in Madrid next April.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

My marathon history

I am about to embark on the long road of training for my second marathon, but before I start on that story I should give you a brief summary of my history in running, to let you know where I've been to give a context to where I want to go.

Back in 2007 I decided to head to the Andes to climb a couple of volcanoes. At the time I kept myself fit only through cycling to work and the occasional game of football, but I decided that to improve my chances of success in the mountains I should make more effort to get fit, so I started to run.

Initially I was just going out for an occasional mile, but I found I was enjoying it so decided to up the stakes and give myself a new challenge....I entered my local half-marathon race. Cue three months of fairly intense training as I built up from struggling to run around the block to completing my first 10k race and finally completing my first half-marathon in a respectable 1:41:52.

I had achieved my goal, but then the running bug set in, not content with what I'd achieved, I wanted to know the limits of what I could achieve so I continued to train and entered a succession of half marathons to see how quick I could go. To date I have run eleven half marathons and have lowered my PB to 1:27:41, but I think there is still room for improvement.

After my success in getting through my first half marathon the logical next challenge was to step up to the marathon so I entered the ballot for a place in the London Marathon 2009 and I was lucky enough to win a place. Training seemed to be going well six weeks before the race when I ran a half marathon PB but just two days later, heartbreak, I broke down with an injury that would rule me out of the marathon. Thankfully London allows you to carry over your place in the event of injury so I had a guaranteed entry for 2010.

I had a full year to get myself fit and ready to complete my first marathon, and then were alot of highs on the way, including four successive half-marathon PBs, but also some lows. Again about six weeks shy of the big day I suffered with injury, this time I missed three weeks of training, thankfully I recovered enough to be able to run in London but I went into the race scared of a recurrence of my injury and also without the miles in my legs to get all the way round running. I finished the race relieved to have got round but disappointed that I failed to do myself justice.

This brings us to the present, just this last week I have entered the Madrid Marathon 2011, so this blog will follow my journey to redemption following my London disappointment. I will detail all the highs and lows of training for my second marathon and I hope this will make interesting reading for anyone else out there with a zest for running and pushing themselves to the limit.

Happy reading and running!

El Maratonero