Monday, November 30, 2009

Blog Roll - Jason Pyles


70miles on 7 runs in 6 days

M: Off (unplanned, foot needed this day off)
T: 6miles easy testing foot
W: 12miles
T: 10miles with group on a very nice Thanksgiving Day Morning
F: 12miles steady in Monroe County
S: 8miles with SW(11x150 on track)/ 4miles
S: 18miles (Mostly hilly, 15 of it with Zac Noel)

Recap:Good week, started to feel like I was training by the end of the week. The foot is far from a non-issue. It is achey post runs so I will have to stay on top of that, but it was mostly pain free while running this weekend. Really enjoyed running the mostly hilly long run with Zac this weekend. It was great to catch up with him, I have a feeling he is going to have a big outdoor track season this year!!!

Upcoming Training: This week sort of jump started the training and now it time to move forward. These past 6 weeks post marathon went really well and I listened to some good advice to keep things laid back. The next 6 weeks miles will jump up quite a bit(depending on body/injuries of course) and base training will take some structure to it. I work better when I work off a structured plan. So mileage, stride workouts, hill burst, and alternating 4mile steady state runs and 3x2

Blog Roll - Reid Coolsaet

I won’t be racing the AGSI Canadian Cross-Country Nationals tomorrow. I’m still quite sick with what the doctor thinks is H1N1 although I didn’t have a swab to confirm. The last two and a half days have been brutal but I’m starting to come around a little this afternoon. If I continue this path of improvement I hope to able to at least watch the races tomorrow.

This will be the second year in a row that I’ve missed Nationals XC after 10 straight. And once again the Run for Toad trail race in October kept my XC streak alive as I have raced a XC race each fall since I my first in grade 6.

The bright side is that I didn’t catch this virus on the way to Japan. Ever since the Zoo Run things have really started to click and workouts kept getting better and building on each other. I knew I was getting back the 5km-10km fitness that I wanted after my injuries and marathon training but it’s always nice to actually put it into a race. Having run 13:38 on the roads confirmed that I’m on the right path. I didn’t really think too much of the 5km at the time because once the race was over I was already concentrating on Canadian XC. After spending the better part of two days lying in bed I thought about the 13:38 a little more and really appreciated it.

My plan was to take a week off of running after National XC so really the rest just started a little earlier. I’m glad I have the luxury of time because I know I need to fully recover from this before serious training resumes. A week off of running sounds a lot better than the three months I had last year with a broken foot.

Good luck to all those racing tomorrow. GO SPEED RIVER!

Blog Roll - Nate Jenkins


Nate Jenkins: Training November 23 to 29

Monday AM 10+ mostly around a golf course with Ryan Fenton and FSU alum. 1:08:34 tot.10

Noon jogging around course at NCAA D1 XC champs tot. 3

PM travel back to Boston

Tuesday AM 3+ warm up, 23:54, strides, 400m in 74, strides, 5×400m with 100m jog rest, very tired. Planned on 12×400m but between being tired and running the 100m rests too fast (if I had been holding pace on the 400’s I would have been running under 3:00 per K for the workout with rests included. Doable if I was sharper but very very hard right now) 65.5-felt very good, (24.7), 68.6(26.0), 67.6(24.7), 69.4(26.0), 69.7 called it 2400m in 7:22.2(3:04/4:56 pace) 3+ cool down, not in a good mood. tot. 9

PM 9 on roads in 1:02:15 tot.9

XT stretching, 100m walking lunge focus on glutes

Wednesday AM Rattlesnake road 9, 56:48, tot.9

PM 1hr easy on roads, tot. 8

XT stretching, 100m walking lunge focus on glutes, Butts routine (each leg 3×20-prayer hammy, straight leg quad, abductor with opposing leg knee drive, mika butts, adductor with opposing knee raised, 3×20 calf raises with stretch between, 35 straight leg core, 20 back extensions)

-sore throat and light fever in afternoon

Thursday AM 19min warm up, strides, light drills, bunch of jogging around. Race Feaster 5 mile Andover. Race has 5k and they run together for the first mile but I had broke clear of the field by 400m. You could tell there isn’t any money on the line. 1st place, 24:44. splits 5:13(uphill), 10:11(4:57)(bit up and down), 15:09(4:58) very lightly rolling, 19:55(4:46)(down hill and flat), 24:44(4:49)(downhill then up last 200m to finish. Really felt locked in a tempo. Felt easy but couldn’t make myself go not all that surprising with all the work and not much racing. Did have a pretty good side stitch last mile and a half that didn’t feel at all nice. 40min cool down with Melissa-tot. 13

PM road 1:04:59- about 8 miles, first 2.5 with Melissa, tot. 8

- sore throat and small fever all day

Friday AM rattlesnake hill road 9, 1:02:02, felt super slow tot.9

PM road 9+, first 4+ with Melissa, 1:15:02 tot. 9+

XT 100m walking lunge focus on glutes, butts routine(see wednesday)

-sore throat and small fever and very sore neck, can’t look left

Saturday AM had workout scheduled but was feeling pretty heavy even though sore throat was less so I decided to push it to Sunday, the 40 to 50mph winds outside helped make this choice easier- Rattlesnake hill road 10-basically the same as the 9 loop with two small add ons, 1:03:24, tot. 10

PM Same rattlesnake hill road 10 mile loop as AM, 1:15:02- felt very sick on this run tot. 10

XT 100m lunge walk focus on glutes, butts routine(see wednesday)

Sunday AM feeling much better bit of sinus pressure but no sore throat and neck much improved, 3+ warm up, strides, 400m in 73, strides, 16×200m at about goal 3k pace with 100m jog rest. the rest is in brackets-( ), 1-31.1(31.8),2-31.2(29.0),3-31.5(31.1),4-31.6(29.9),5-32.1(29.2)6-31.0(30.3),7-31.7(30.4),8-32.0(29.0), 9-32.0(30.3),10-31.8(30.3),11-31.5(32.2),12-31.6(31.2),13-32.1(33.3),14-31.5(31.8),15-31.8(30.8), 16-31.5- 16:05.2 for 4700m of running-3:25 per k, 5:30 per mile pace. 8:26.0 for 3200m of efforts a bit under 3k goal pace (which would be basically anything under 8:00-32.0 (so 3200m at exact goal pace would be 8:31.9) but to be a bit under on this isn’t a surprise after all they are just 200’s. 1:07 jog and put on jacket, then 3+ cool down-21:32 tot. 10

Noon 1+ mile jogging around andover country club watching Melissa race

5PM rattlesnake road 10 mile, 1:01:45 tot.10

XT stretching, 100m lunge walk focus on glutes, butts routine(see wednesday)

Summary 128 miles for week, two workouts, one race. Really not a very good week. Fighting a cold and just damn tired. Screwed the first workout to boot. I was glad to get over the sore throat so quick. I figured given that Melissa had strep I was going to be in for a long fight. I tend to stay sick a while when I do get sick. So a low grade fever and sore throat did not have me too excited for the next week or two. I don’t take antibiotics any more unless it is to keep me out of the hospital. I actually haven’t taken any since college, which is five or six years now. I’m not worried about creating resistant strains of the whatever it’s just that anti biotics make me sick as hell and I hate them. But I seem to have come around very quickly and I feel pretty good. That said I’ve also slept 12 hours 2 or the last 3 nights and 9 hours on the other. Assuming I am over things I’ll get in a interval workout this week- try the 12×400 again, and a long basic aerobic tempo then a mile race.

The sum of things is that I’m not happy with this week, but as far as shitty weeks go it wasn’t that bad. If I have to have shitty weeks I will take them like this.

Quote of the Week “All of us failed to match our dreams of perfection. So I rate us on the basis of our splendid failure to do the impossible.” -William Faulkner

Race records tumble at Nyeri Half Marathon


Peter Njenga for the IAAF

Race records fell in the 13th Safaricom Nyeri Half Marathon today (29) despite the course being tougher than in previous editions.

Thirty-four days since winning the Standard Chartered Nairobi Half Marathon, Ernest Kebenei continued with his winning ways by taking the 13th edition of the Safaricom Nyeri Half Marathon in Nyeri town, 160km north of Nairobi on Sunday (29).

Tesco Prague Grand Prix 10km champion Gladys Kerubo was winner in the women's category in yet another course record.

Kebenei won in style after clocking a new record time of 1:01:31 after trailing early leader Enock Mitei who ran 1:01:45 before shooting into the lead in the closing stages.

“The course was very hilly and I realised I was strong with five kilometres left and that is when I started charging up the field,” said Kebenei who has also won the Little Rock and Garry Bjorklund races in the United States this year.

Joel Maina took third in 1:01:58 ahead of fourth placed former World junior champion Gordon Mugi (1:02:05) in the race that attracted 197 runners. Last year’s winner, Peter Muriuki held the previous course record of 1:01:52.

In the women’s event, another course record performance was staged by Kerubo who breasted the tape in 1:11:44 to fend off recovering Margaret Mukunzi (1:11:47) in a close finish.

Kerubo who had never run the 21km race in her career moved to the front at the 11km mark and at the end, did enough to hold off Mukunzi who grew stronger at the latter stages of the event.

“I’m very pleased with this victory that I was not expecting being my first time to run the half marathon. I’m preparing for road races in Europe next year,” Kerubo who also won the 5km race at Masai Mara Marathon, said.

Mukunzi, a runner-up from Great North Run in the UK last year who was competing in only her third race after almost an entire season in the sidelines due to injury expressed satisfaction with her performance.

“I’m just recovering and though I did not win, I’m happy that my body was in great shape and I look forward to competing well again,” Mukunzi stated.

Event patron and two-time World Marathon champion Catherine Ndereba congratulated the winners for their good performance.

“I pay tribute to the runners who have put their best effort on a difficult course that even though I have never run on it, I know it takes a lot. Something needs to be done next year to ensure we do not have many road races so close together.

“The number of participants fell this year because there was the Nairobi Cross Country (Saturday) and Mara Marathon (a week ago) among others and runners cannot recover in good time for Nyeri,” Ndereba said.

Peter Njenga for the IAAF

Leading RESULTS -
MEN -
1. Ernest Kebenei 1:01:39
2. Dennis Musau 1:01:45
3. Enock Mitei 1:01:51
4. Joel Maina 1:01:58
5. Gordon Mugi 1:02:05
6. Ezekiel Cherop 1:02:28
7. Samson Mungai 1:02:32
8. Geoffrey Ngugi 1:02:42
9. Samson Kibet 1:02:55
10. Joseph Kamau 1:03:04

WOMEN -
1. Gladys Kerubo 1:11:44
2. Magdalene Mukunzi 1:11:47
3. Monica Wangari 1:12:51
4. Ann Wanjiru 1:13:06
5. Jane Nyambura 1:13:29
6. Joscah Obare 1:13:51
7. Lucy Njeri 1:14:03
8. Lydia Njeri 1:14:40
9. Antoninah Ruto 1:14:41
10. Jackline Musyawa 1:14:23

Kebeni wins Nyeri half marathon



Ernest Kebeni is this years Nyeri Half Marathon mens champion as Gladys Otero won the womens race.
But as the winners celebrate the hard fought victory, the founder who is multiple marathon champion Catherine Ndereba, noted in disappointment the low number of participants this year.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Results: TOP 10 MEN - 26th Florence Marathon 2009

1 1 1 8 KIPRUTO CHEBET BEN KEN SM 02:11:21 02:11:21 RTV Video
2 2 2 1 KOSGEI REUEBEN SERONEY KEN SM 02:11:22 02:11:22 RTV Video
3 3 3 7 RETA GIRMA ASSEFA ETH SM 02:12:42 02:12:42 RTV Video
4 4 4 2 GOFFI DANILO CARABINIERI ITA SM 02:12:45 02:12:45 RTV Video
5 5 5 4 CAIMMI DANIELE FIAMME GIALLE ITA SM 02:15:14 02:15:14 RTV Video
6 6 1 48 EL HACHIMI ABDELHADI MAR MM35 02:16:17 02:16:17 RTV Video
7 7 6 78 BONA FRANCESCO AERONAUTICA MILITARE ITA SM 02:17:02 02:17:02 RTV Video
8 8 7 9 SIMIONATO FEDERICO C.S. AERONAUTICA MILITARE ITA SM 02:18:03 02:18:03 RTV Video
9 9 8 52 ABBATESCIANNI DIEGO COVER SPORTIVA MAPEI ITA SM 02:19:17 02:19:17 RTV Video
10 10 1 101 MANNINEN HENRI FIN TM 02:19:28 02:19:28 RTV Video

Results: GREAT AUSTRALIAN RUN 2009 - ELITE TOP 20 - MEN

PlaceBib#First NameSurnameFinish Time5Km Split10Km Split15Km Split
15GuentherWeidlinger00:43:0100:14:2300:14:2200:14:16
23CollisBirmingham00:43:1900:14:2300:14:2700:14:29
315MartinDent00:44:0000:14:3500:14:5000:14:35
41SammyWanjiru00:44:2000:14:2300:14:5800:14:59
513AndrewCarlson00:44:2500:14:3400:14:5300:14:58
614ScottWestcott00:44:3700:14:4000:15:0200:14:55
716MarkTucker00:44:5300:14:3900:15:0300:15:11
84Jose manuelMartinez00:44:5800:14:3500:15:1100:15:12
97JasonHartman00:45:2200:14:3900:15:1300:15:30
1017DuerYoa00:45:4000:15:0000:15:2900:15:11
112StefanoBaldini00:45:4200:15:0000:15:2900:15:13
129GiovanniRuggiero00:45:4800:15:0000:15:2900:15:19
136DanRobinson00:46:2900:15:0000:15:2900:16:00
1412KimHogarth00:46:5800:15:2900:15:5100:15:38
158ErikSjoqvist00:47:4700:15:1500:16:0800:16:24
1621ClintPerrett00:48:3000:15:2900:16:1800:16:43
1752PeterEason00:48:5100:15:5000:16:2600:16:35
1818SimonField00:49:0900:15:4900:16:3400:16:46
1919AlanFailla00:49:4400:15:5600:16:4900:16:59
20109IseyasHailu00:50:0700:16:0100:16:4900:17:17

Results: GREAT AUSTRALIAN RUN 2009 - ELITE TOP 20 - WOMEN

PlaceBib#First NameSurnameFinish Time5Km Split10Km Split15Km Split
1205NikkiChapple00:50:1800:17:0300:16:5600:16:19
2201BenitaWillis00:51:1500:17:0200:17:2400:16:49
3203HelenClitheroe00:51:1700:17:0300:17:1400:17:00
4202FernandaRibeiro00:51:4100:17:0200:17:0200:17:37
5210LisaFlint00:52:0700:17:0400:17:2800:17:35
6232CassandraFien00:52:4700:17:0900:17:4500:17:53
7208HollyEmery00:53:1500:17:2100:17:5700:17:57
8211MarilynArsenault00:53:3900:17:4300:18:0600:17:50
9209TamaraCarvolth00:54:0700:17:2100:18:2800:18:18
10239LaurenShelley00:55:1200:18:1000:18:2800:18:34
11206LilianEvora da silva00:55:2600:17:3400:19:0600:18:46
12245KarenBarlow00:55:4400:17:5200:18:5600:18:56
13236BleakleyMichelle00:56:0000:18:2100:18:5200:18:47
14207KellyPalmer00:56:1300:18:0700:18:5800:19:08
15246NadelleLegge00:56:5200:18:3200:19:1200:19:08
16235RachelJohnson00:57:2800:18:5800:19:1800:19:12
17243EmilyDonker00:57:4500:19:0900:19:2900:19:07
18237KirstenMolloy00:57:5700:18:2600:19:5100:19:40
19242KylieDick00:58:2400:18:5800:19:4300:19:43
20268SophieRyan00:59:2400:19:2500:20:0000:19:59

Results: AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL ROAD RUNNING CHAMPIONSHIPS 2009

MENS TOP 10

PlaceBib#First NameSurnameClubFinish Time
13 CollisBirmingham 00:43:19
215 MartinDent 00:44:00
314 ScottWestcott 00:44:37
416 MarkTucker 00:44:53
517 DuerYoa 00:45:40
621 ClintPerrett 00:48:30
718 SimonField 00:49:09
819 AlanFailla 00:49:44
9109 IseyasHailu HALLAM 00:50:07
10107 SimonO'regan EAST ALBURY 00:50:22

WOMENS TOP 10

PlaceBib#First NameSurnameClubFinish Time
1205 NikkiChapple 00:50:18
2201 BenitaWillis 00:51:15
3210 LisaFlint 00:52:07
4232 CassandraFien EAST SALE 00:52:47
5208 HollyEmery 00:53:15
6209 TamaraCarvolth 00:54:07
7239 LaurenShelley ESPERANCE 00:55:12
8245 KarenBarlow 00:55:44
9236 BleakleyMichelle PARKDALE 00:56:00
10207 KellyPalmer 00:56:13

SO WHAT? Austria's Weidlinger wins Great Australian Run

Austrian Guenther Weidlinger upstaged Olympic champions Sammy Wanjiru and Stefano Baldini to take out the Great Australian Run over 15 kilometres (9.3 miles) here on Sunday.
The three-time Olympian kicked clear in the final stages of the mass public run to win in 43 minutes and one second and 17 seconds ahead of Australians Collis Birmingham and Martin Dent.
Kenya's Beijing Olympic marathon champion Wanjiru was fourth in 44:20 and 2004 Athens Olympic marathon gold medallist Baldini finished 11th in 45:42.
Wanjiru, 23, only arrived in Australia late Friday because of the hospitalisation of his daughter and said his tiredness had affected his form.
The man tipped to break Haile Gebrselassie?s world marathon record next year, he wasn?t at his best as he chose to sit in the leading pack rather than aggressively set the tempo out in front.
"Today was not my day," Wanjiru said. "I can come here to try again (next year), maybe to break the course record or world record for 15km."
Weidlinger and Birmingham ran away from Wanjiru at the 6.5km mark and the Austrian found something extra to shake off Birmingham just before the 10km mark and didn?t look back in the final 5km.
"It?s probably one of my biggest victories because I have beaten two Olympic champions with Baldini and Wanjiru and I have beaten the European champion Jose Manuel Martinez (who finished eighth in 44:58)," Weidlinger, 31, said.
"He (Wanjiru) showed from the start that somebody should lead with him and after 1.5km, I thought ?I feel good and I am in the race and in the rhythm? so I tried to push a bit and split up the lead group.
"I realised that Wanjiru was not in his best shape so I tried to push the last 200m uphill and we lost him.
"I was really happy that we lost him, because you never know with a Kenyan behind you what will happen."
Ethiopian great Gebrselassie won last year's race from Kenyan Patrick Makau in 42:40 minutes.
Australian Nikki Chapple won this year's women's race in 50 minutes and 18 seconds ahead of compatriot Benita Willis and British dual Olympian Helen Clitheroe.
Portugal's 1996 Olympic champion Fernanda Ribeiro finished fourth in 51:41.

PICTURE GALLERY

Weidlinger wins, Wanjiru withers at Great Australian Run

In a surprise result, three-time Austrian Olympian Guenther Weidlinger and emerging Australian distance runner Nikki Chapple have taken out the 2009 Great Australian Run.

Braving the wet Melbourne weather amongst 3000 pavement pounders, Weidlinger completed the 15km course in 43 minutes and 1 second, seventeen seconds ahead of Australian 10,000m record holder Collis Birmingham (43:19) and fellow Australian Martin Dent (44:00).


Clearly affected by his late arrival due to the hospitalisation of his daughter in Kenya, 2008 Olympic marathon champion Sammy Wanjiru wasn’t at his sharpest, finishing fourth in 44:20, whilst 2004 Olympic marathon champion Stefano Baldini (ITA) crossed the line in 11th place.

Chapple dominated the women’s event, crossing the Albert Park finish line in a time of 50 minutes and 18 seconds. Multiple Australian record holder Benita Willis recovered from a sluggish start to finish strongly in second position (51:15) and complete the Australian double. Dual Olympian Helen Clitheroe of Great Britain finished third in 51:17.

More than 3000 casual weekend joggers and walkers of all levels enjoyed the unique opportunity to run with the world’s best athletes whilst targeting their own personal goals and in many cases, raising money for their own favourite charity.

A number of sporting stars and celebrities also tested themselves against the world’s best including Olympic gold medalist Cathy Freeman, world championship bronze medallist Craig Mottram, Triple M’s Mieke Buchan, comedian Adam Rozenbachs and V8 supercar drivers Rick Kelly and Paul Dumbrell.

And it wasn't only the adults who got to have all of the fun. Hundreds of kids and families pulled on their runners and were let loose around Albert Park on Saturday for the IGA Great Australian Family and Junior Run.

Olympic 400m champion Cathy Freeman set them off, a sea of painted faces and happy kids enjoying the opportunity to run for fun in the Saturday morning sun.

Australia’s best wheelchair athletes also raced around Albert Park yesterday morning, multiple Paralympic medallist Richard Colman (22.30.6) narrowly defeating four-time Paralympian Richard Nicholson (2.31.80) by just over a second on the 10km course. Beijing silver medallist Madi de Rozario (28.22.5) took out the women’s race.
 
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