Monday, August 3, 2009

Blog Roll: Reid Coolsaet

It’s how high you are and the time it takes to heal
I just finished my third week of higher mileage and with less than three weeks until race day it’s time to slowly start bringing my volume down. I really started to feel tired after my track session earlier in the week so on Thursday I decided to go lighter than usual in an attempt to get my legs back under me for Friday’s workout.

On Friday morning I was contemplating pushing back my workout to Saturday to feel a little better but in the end I decided to see if I was ready. 30 X 2 minutes hard with 1 minute jog in between was on schedule and I was going to run one 2 minuter and see how I felt. Halfway into the first interval I thought that if I look down at my GPS and see 3:30/km then I’m going to call it. Surprisingly I saw 3:07/km and knew that I was ready for the workout (for those with Garmins I run with ‘lap speed’, never ‘current speed’ as I find the latter unreliable). The rest of the workout went well and I ended up with 60 minutes of running faster than race pace.

I’m learning quite a bit about marathon training each week. This week in particular I learned how crappy I can feel at faster paces on the track and how tired my legs can feel with all this mileage. One easier day allowed me to get my legs feeling better when I started to feel beat down.

I’ve been geeking out looking over results and time splits from the past few World Championships to see different pacing strategies. Seems like a lot of guys go out too hard and fall off pace, often not finishing and saving it for another day. For a top 10 finish you almost always have to go out with the lead group but there are numerous examples of top 20 and 30 finishes with more sensible pacing strategies. There’s obviously an advantage when running with a pack but if that pack is too fast it can have more harmful effects in the end. It will be very interesting to see how the race plays out in Berlin.

Some athletes are already at the training camp outside of Dortmund, Germany. Looks like a nice place (couple pics below), I hope the area has some good running routes and that Trent and Destroyer have plotted them out by the time I get there.

THX REID
 
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