Tues - 50 mins, 10 k's @ 4:52 mins/km
Wed 70 mins, 14k's @ 4:54 mins/km
Thurs - Injury enforced rest
Fri - 50 mins, 10k's @ 5:10 mins/km
After a couple of days early in the week beating myself up over Sunday's dismal performance, I finally accepted that something wasn't quite right on the day and my best efforts couldn't change that. I was under the pump from the second k which felt harder than it should have and I started to leak time steadily from the 7k. So this one goes into the dustbin. I've also learnt that I might be able to get away with a few hiccups prior to a 5 or 10k race and run well, but not prior to a half Marathon. In future, if this Half Marathon was a goal race such as Noosa, I would pull out, but if it was a key lead up race to a Marathon, I would still do it if I couldn't switch to another half.
More pressing problems arose on Wedneday when I succumbed to pain in the Achilles 70 minutes into a 90 min run. I tried stretching the Achilles about 4 or 5 times and then resumed my run but on each occasion the pain returned so I had to make a forlorn 3k walk back to my car including walking along the road shoulder of the Gateway Arterial as cars whizzed by at 100k's an hour. I texted Bruno when I got home and he was kind enough to take the time to recommend doing 20 min ice on and off followed by 10 minutes application of a heat pack, repeating as much as I can.
I rested on Thursday as I still had discomfort, particularly when walking down steps, but I had recovered sufficiently to do an easy 50 mins on the tready on Friday. Upon visiting Bruno for my regular rub on Friday, Bruno diagnosed the problem as a very tight soleus muscle -http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soleus_muscle - considerably less serious than an achilles problem which was the first good news I had all week. Bruno proceeded to give the offending muscle an almighty bashing in what was one of the most painful rubs I've had in two years, but it did the trick as most of the tightness has since gone away.
Saturday, April 28, 2007
Monday, April 23, 2007
A bitter disappointment
Brisbane Half Marathon 85:52, 29th out of about 650
Without a doubt, Sunday morning was the most disappointing moment of the last three years for me. I promised much and delivered little. The second k felt harder than it should have and I was under the pump at that point and started leaking time from 7k onward.
Right now, I've got the shits with myself and will post a reasoned post mortem once I've calmed down enough for an analytical self-assessment.
Without a doubt, Sunday morning was the most disappointing moment of the last three years for me. I promised much and delivered little. The second k felt harder than it should have and I was under the pump at that point and started leaking time from 7k onward.
Right now, I've got the shits with myself and will post a reasoned post mortem once I've calmed down enough for an analytical self-assessment.
Friday, April 20, 2007
Less than 48 hours to go!
40 mins, 8k's @ 5:10 mins/km
Was a little late getting to bed last night. To relax before going to sleep, I decided to watch 30 minutes of the 1957 classic, 12 Angry Men on DVD, but couldn't turn it off and ended up watching the whole thing. If you haven't seen this insightful look at prejudices in the jury room and the responsibility of those charged with delivering a verdict, then do yourself a favour and watch it!
Did an easy 40 mins on the tready at the gym this morning. Endured a slight headache during the run possibly brought on by the sudden increase in sugar intake coming off the detox. The headache was not helped by the Spin class leader making a bigger racket than Clairie could muster on a good day.
Body is feeling ok and I'm looking forward to the race. Have been mentally preparing myself to take the race out nice and controlled and then really upping the ante with 5 or 6k's to go. I've really gotta hammer it in those last 5-6k's and rocket to the line!! C'mon!!!
Was a little late getting to bed last night. To relax before going to sleep, I decided to watch 30 minutes of the 1957 classic, 12 Angry Men on DVD, but couldn't turn it off and ended up watching the whole thing. If you haven't seen this insightful look at prejudices in the jury room and the responsibility of those charged with delivering a verdict, then do yourself a favour and watch it!
Did an easy 40 mins on the tready at the gym this morning. Endured a slight headache during the run possibly brought on by the sudden increase in sugar intake coming off the detox. The headache was not helped by the Spin class leader making a bigger racket than Clairie could muster on a good day.
Body is feeling ok and I'm looking forward to the race. Have been mentally preparing myself to take the race out nice and controlled and then really upping the ante with 5 or 6k's to go. I've really gotta hammer it in those last 5-6k's and rocket to the line!! C'mon!!!
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Brisbane Half - Target Sub 83
Wed - 50 mins, 10k's @ about 4:50 mins/km
Thurs - 30 secs on/off
Yesterday's midweek taper run with Glenda, Mel, Beth and Azza was marred by a major bonk at the 20 minute mark as we crossed the Story Bridge as nine days of detoxing finally took its toll on my energy levels. I had to slow down to a walk for a few minutes and have some water but I recovered quickly enough and was able to keep up with the others when we met up again.
This morning, we were in the Gardens for a session of 30 on, 30 offs and with the Brissy Half a few days a way and the legs just a little tired, I just took it easy for most of the session running at 70-80% intensity for the surges and jogging easily for the rest of the time. Got the HR up with two surges at top speed in the middle of the session.
Pat has set me an A goal of sub 83 and a B goal of sub 84. I think the A goal is a fair reflection of where I'm at right now. So the plan is to be sensible the first k and then settle into 3:56 pace just in front of Glenda leading her 84 min pace group. I'll churn out these splits to the 16k and if I'm feeling strong at this point, then I'll try and bring home the last 5k's at 3:45 pace to dip under 82 minutes. Can't wait!
Thurs - 30 secs on/off
Yesterday's midweek taper run with Glenda, Mel, Beth and Azza was marred by a major bonk at the 20 minute mark as we crossed the Story Bridge as nine days of detoxing finally took its toll on my energy levels. I had to slow down to a walk for a few minutes and have some water but I recovered quickly enough and was able to keep up with the others when we met up again.
This morning, we were in the Gardens for a session of 30 on, 30 offs and with the Brissy Half a few days a way and the legs just a little tired, I just took it easy for most of the session running at 70-80% intensity for the surges and jogging easily for the rest of the time. Got the HR up with two surges at top speed in the middle of the session.
Pat has set me an A goal of sub 83 and a B goal of sub 84. I think the A goal is a fair reflection of where I'm at right now. So the plan is to be sensible the first k and then settle into 3:56 pace just in front of Glenda leading her 84 min pace group. I'll churn out these splits to the 16k and if I'm feeling strong at this point, then I'll try and bring home the last 5k's at 3:45 pace to dip under 82 minutes. Can't wait!
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
The training picks up.....
Wed - 90 mins - 18k's @ 4:55 mins/km
Thurs - 50 mins - 10k's @ 5:00 mins/km
Fri - 5/4/4 min with 45 SR, 8 hill repeats
Sun - 120 mins, 24k's @ about 5:00 mins/km
Tues 8 x 1min, 30 JR
Its been a pretty solid week of training and the detox has been going well. With the Gold Coast looming, my life is becoming even more discplined and the detox has helped kick start that.
Wednesday was a cruisey 90 min run by myself along Kedron Brook. Nice to slip under 5 min pace again after the ITB and then health issues over the last month. I followed that up with an easy session on the tready on Thursday. Friday's speedwork session was tough. I had hoped to emulate my strong performance from Tuesday, but after leading the group through the first rep, I bonked with a lack of energy and could only battle honestly for the rest of the session without ever reaching top sped. David and Mike R in particular turned in sensational sessions! Sunday's long run dropped back to two hours as I went into taper mode for the Brissy Half. Its funny to be starting a two hour run and thinking to yourself - 'this won't take too long.' I got through the run nicely enough. Bumped into Scotty Brittain towards the end and we ran together for a few k's at about 4:15's and had a chat. Its always an inspiration to run with an athlete who is an Australian rep and see how comfortably they do it.
Today, I was pretty determined going to speedwork and had tried to eat as much as I can yesterday so I would have the energy to sustain myself throughout the session. I started off strongly and led the Group through each of the first three outbound reps on two ocassions being comfortably clear of James, Glenda and Chris. On those three return reps, I tried to catch up to the pack and was rapt to catch up to most of them on each ocassion. That was as good as it gets and represents one of the best training sessions I've done in the last few months. Unfortunately, the fuel light came on after that and I could only battle on with the pack for the last two reps and Pat's surprise(not!) extra rep. A two minute jog at the end of the session enabled me to recover before I charged up Gold Coast Hill twice, really maxing myself out on the second effort and nearly doing a Farne Sang. I was so gutted, my body was like jelly and I could only walk back down the hill and followed that with a slow jog back to the Ship Inn as opposed to my normal brisk warm down. That was a top session and I'm very pleased - there's no doubt in my mind that I could have maintained top speed throughout had I had my usual GU kick beforehand. All in all, a great session - Glenda did not miss a beat after returning from Hobart with three Masters gold medals, James showed his usual turn of foot after returning from a break, Chris was speedy and David and Mike R were also outstanding.
Thurs - 50 mins - 10k's @ 5:00 mins/km
Fri - 5/4/4 min with 45 SR, 8 hill repeats
Sun - 120 mins, 24k's @ about 5:00 mins/km
Tues 8 x 1min, 30 JR
Its been a pretty solid week of training and the detox has been going well. With the Gold Coast looming, my life is becoming even more discplined and the detox has helped kick start that.
Wednesday was a cruisey 90 min run by myself along Kedron Brook. Nice to slip under 5 min pace again after the ITB and then health issues over the last month. I followed that up with an easy session on the tready on Thursday. Friday's speedwork session was tough. I had hoped to emulate my strong performance from Tuesday, but after leading the group through the first rep, I bonked with a lack of energy and could only battle honestly for the rest of the session without ever reaching top sped. David and Mike R in particular turned in sensational sessions! Sunday's long run dropped back to two hours as I went into taper mode for the Brissy Half. Its funny to be starting a two hour run and thinking to yourself - 'this won't take too long.' I got through the run nicely enough. Bumped into Scotty Brittain towards the end and we ran together for a few k's at about 4:15's and had a chat. Its always an inspiration to run with an athlete who is an Australian rep and see how comfortably they do it.
Today, I was pretty determined going to speedwork and had tried to eat as much as I can yesterday so I would have the energy to sustain myself throughout the session. I started off strongly and led the Group through each of the first three outbound reps on two ocassions being comfortably clear of James, Glenda and Chris. On those three return reps, I tried to catch up to the pack and was rapt to catch up to most of them on each ocassion. That was as good as it gets and represents one of the best training sessions I've done in the last few months. Unfortunately, the fuel light came on after that and I could only battle on with the pack for the last two reps and Pat's surprise(not!) extra rep. A two minute jog at the end of the session enabled me to recover before I charged up Gold Coast Hill twice, really maxing myself out on the second effort and nearly doing a Farne Sang. I was so gutted, my body was like jelly and I could only walk back down the hill and followed that with a slow jog back to the Ship Inn as opposed to my normal brisk warm down. That was a top session and I'm very pleased - there's no doubt in my mind that I could have maintained top speed throughout had I had my usual GU kick beforehand. All in all, a great session - Glenda did not miss a beat after returning from Hobart with three Masters gold medals, James showed his usual turn of foot after returning from a break, Chris was speedy and David and Mike R were also outstanding.
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Detox? What detox?
Tues - 15 mins sprints, 3k WU, 3k WD
Less than 30 hours into my detox, I felt like death warmed up when I awoke this morning. I struggled to get ready, I struggled on the warm up and I struggled on the strides and then listened to Pat detail today's session in the Botanic Gardens where we had to sprint two sides of a square and jog the other two sides. I struggled jogging over the the starting point and then friggin took off like a madman, clearing out to an early lead ahead of a depleted A-Team. I figured that I might as well shock my system with some fast running and try and hold on as long as I could. Five minutes into the session, I was about 10 metres clear of the chase pack and telling myself that most of those chasing me had done a hard 10k race on Friday and I would be soft If I let them catch me. Spurred on by those thoughts, I ran even harder clearing out to a 20-30m lead by the time Pat stopped the session early after 12:30mins. After a 30 second break Pat set us a one minute out and back, half of it across the grass. The loss of momentum cost me and I only plodded with the pack for the last rep. Gees, it was tough at the recovery breakfast as I ignored the Up N Go's, PB drinks, poppers, Chicos and Snakes and tucked into Pineapple, Watermelon, cashews and water. A small consolation came when I one a PCRG backpark barely 20 seconds after telling Tess 'I never win anything!'.
Tess asked what am I eating during the detox? A typical day will go like this:
Breakfast:
- 2 large bowls of porridge with honey
- piece of fruit or two
Morning Tea
- Rye cruskits with natural salt free peanut butter
- piece of fruit
Lunch
- Leftovers from dinner
Afternoon Tea
- Rye cruskits with natural salt free peanut butter
- 3 raw carrots (sob!)
Dinner
- BBQ grilled chicken breast spiced wtih paprika, oregano, mixed herbs(or BBQ'd rump) along with mashed potato, brocolli, cauliflower.
Desert
- Piece of fruit or two
Less than 30 hours into my detox, I felt like death warmed up when I awoke this morning. I struggled to get ready, I struggled on the warm up and I struggled on the strides and then listened to Pat detail today's session in the Botanic Gardens where we had to sprint two sides of a square and jog the other two sides. I struggled jogging over the the starting point and then friggin took off like a madman, clearing out to an early lead ahead of a depleted A-Team. I figured that I might as well shock my system with some fast running and try and hold on as long as I could. Five minutes into the session, I was about 10 metres clear of the chase pack and telling myself that most of those chasing me had done a hard 10k race on Friday and I would be soft If I let them catch me. Spurred on by those thoughts, I ran even harder clearing out to a 20-30m lead by the time Pat stopped the session early after 12:30mins. After a 30 second break Pat set us a one minute out and back, half of it across the grass. The loss of momentum cost me and I only plodded with the pack for the last rep. Gees, it was tough at the recovery breakfast as I ignored the Up N Go's, PB drinks, poppers, Chicos and Snakes and tucked into Pineapple, Watermelon, cashews and water. A small consolation came when I one a PCRG backpark barely 20 seconds after telling Tess 'I never win anything!'.
Tess asked what am I eating during the detox? A typical day will go like this:
Breakfast:
- 2 large bowls of porridge with honey
- piece of fruit or two
Morning Tea
- Rye cruskits with natural salt free peanut butter
- piece of fruit
Lunch
- Leftovers from dinner
Afternoon Tea
- Rye cruskits with natural salt free peanut butter
- 3 raw carrots (sob!)
Dinner
- BBQ grilled chicken breast spiced wtih paprika, oregano, mixed herbs(or BBQ'd rump) along with mashed potato, brocolli, cauliflower.
Desert
- Piece of fruit or two
Monday, April 09, 2007
Treading water
Fri - sick - rest
Sun - 160 mins, 32k's @ about 5:05 mins/km
Well, as I flagged on Thursday, I ended up pulling out of the Easter Egg 10k Race. I felt terrible on Thursday night and there was little improvement on Friday morning. Either, I still hadn't shaken my cold or more likely, I had picked up another one. Once Pat reiterated to me that a race should be an all or nothing affair, it wasn't a hard decision to pull out. I contemplated a very easy 90 mins to replace missing the race, but decided to rest up for Sunday's long run. I'm already behind on my prep for the Brisbane Half and can ill afford to miss a critical long run.
Sunday dawned and once I had overcome a number of obstacles (a 20 min sleep in, spilt porridge, a flat battery on my Timex Ironman watch, an itchy singlet and taping my left plantar fasciitis too tight) I was on my way. I did a anti-clockwise Green Bridge loop, stopping for a quick chat with Tess at the Regatta. Once that was out of the way, I settled into a fair rhythm, running much faster than my dawdle last week, but still slower than my usual relaxed pace. Stopped at the car after the loop and ate a handful of lollies for energy, before finishing off with a 40 min loop out to the Riverwalk running at a nice pace and hoping like hell that I could get through the run without a GU. Very happy to report that I didn't need a GU and have pulled up well so far. I feel like I've been treading water for the last two weeks without gaining speed or fitness so hopefully I can can put together a decent two weeks leading into the Brisbane Half so I can put in a half decent effort in that race.
MJ and I started a 10 day detox today. Frankly, it'll be a pain in the arse, having to buy more expensive food and to spend more time preparing meals but if last years detox is any indication, my health will benefit for 6-9 months afterward. Its a pretty basic detox - no wheat, dairy, sugar, alcohol, salt and try to avoid preservatives. Wish me luck!!
Sun - 160 mins, 32k's @ about 5:05 mins/km
Well, as I flagged on Thursday, I ended up pulling out of the Easter Egg 10k Race. I felt terrible on Thursday night and there was little improvement on Friday morning. Either, I still hadn't shaken my cold or more likely, I had picked up another one. Once Pat reiterated to me that a race should be an all or nothing affair, it wasn't a hard decision to pull out. I contemplated a very easy 90 mins to replace missing the race, but decided to rest up for Sunday's long run. I'm already behind on my prep for the Brisbane Half and can ill afford to miss a critical long run.
Sunday dawned and once I had overcome a number of obstacles (a 20 min sleep in, spilt porridge, a flat battery on my Timex Ironman watch, an itchy singlet and taping my left plantar fasciitis too tight) I was on my way. I did a anti-clockwise Green Bridge loop, stopping for a quick chat with Tess at the Regatta. Once that was out of the way, I settled into a fair rhythm, running much faster than my dawdle last week, but still slower than my usual relaxed pace. Stopped at the car after the loop and ate a handful of lollies for energy, before finishing off with a 40 min loop out to the Riverwalk running at a nice pace and hoping like hell that I could get through the run without a GU. Very happy to report that I didn't need a GU and have pulled up well so far. I feel like I've been treading water for the last two weeks without gaining speed or fitness so hopefully I can can put together a decent two weeks leading into the Brisbane Half so I can put in a half decent effort in that race.
MJ and I started a 10 day detox today. Frankly, it'll be a pain in the arse, having to buy more expensive food and to spend more time preparing meals but if last years detox is any indication, my health will benefit for 6-9 months afterward. Its a pretty basic detox - no wheat, dairy, sugar, alcohol, salt and try to avoid preservatives. Wish me luck!!
Thursday, April 05, 2007
Doubtful starter for Easter Egg 10k
Wed - 50 mins, 10k's @ about 4:50 mins/km
Thurs - 40 mins, 8k's @ 5:05 mins/km
I'm still having trouble completely shaking off the remnants of my flu last week and now seemed to have picked up a runny nose and watery eyes. The DOMS from Tuesday's time trial still hasn't gone away confirming that my body is currently less than 100% - lets call it about 80%. I got through my last two training sessions well enough and my legs can handle the slower staff just fine at the moment, but I don't yet have the strength for fast running and barring a massive improvement over the next 15 hours, I'm resigned to being a late scratching for the Easter Egg 10k tomorrow morning.
I emailed Pat this morning and he reiterated that the race should be an all or nothing affair for me and quite frankly I agree. I don't really see the point in fronting up at less than 100% and running a gutsy 38 or 39 minutes necessitating a couple of days recovery when I could do an easy 90 minute run instead and continue get over the cold and improve my endurance leading up to the Coast.It helps that I know I already have the 10k speed and the pain threshold to run a Sub-3 Marathon and I don't need to run the Easter 10k to prove that to myself. Its endurance I need and I'm sure I'll get that in the next 13 weeks.
Should be an intersting morning tomorrow assessing my condition when I get up.
Thurs - 40 mins, 8k's @ 5:05 mins/km
I'm still having trouble completely shaking off the remnants of my flu last week and now seemed to have picked up a runny nose and watery eyes. The DOMS from Tuesday's time trial still hasn't gone away confirming that my body is currently less than 100% - lets call it about 80%. I got through my last two training sessions well enough and my legs can handle the slower staff just fine at the moment, but I don't yet have the strength for fast running and barring a massive improvement over the next 15 hours, I'm resigned to being a late scratching for the Easter Egg 10k tomorrow morning.
I emailed Pat this morning and he reiterated that the race should be an all or nothing affair for me and quite frankly I agree. I don't really see the point in fronting up at less than 100% and running a gutsy 38 or 39 minutes necessitating a couple of days recovery when I could do an easy 90 minute run instead and continue get over the cold and improve my endurance leading up to the Coast.It helps that I know I already have the 10k speed and the pain threshold to run a Sub-3 Marathon and I don't need to run the Easter 10k to prove that to myself. Its endurance I need and I'm sure I'll get that in the next 13 weeks.
Should be an intersting morning tomorrow assessing my condition when I get up.
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
Recovery continues
FRI - 2 x 1500m @ 6:25, 6:28, 1 x 2k @ 8:48, 3k WU, 3k WD
SAT - 50 mins, 10k's @ about 5:10 pace
SUN - 160 mins, 31k's @ about 5:10 pace
TUES - 3k TT - 10:49
FRIDAY - Went along to speedwork and carefully eased my weak legs and body through the session at 4:10-4:20 pace. It was funny to be doing it easy cardio wise with the legs unable to do what I would have liked them to do.
SATURDAY - Normally a rest day, I did an easy recovery run to make up for my missed runs on Tuesday and Wednesday.
SUNDAY - There was a little trepidation lining up for the second longest run of my life with my legs still weak from the cold. As such, I started off from the Ship Inn with a clockwise Green Bridge loop to avoid Langy and Glenda running elsewhere in the city. I didn't want to be tempted into joining them or have Glenda say 'you need to toughen up, Matt' when I wouldn't be able to run at their pace. My decision proved to be a wise one as I gingerly covered the loop in 97 minutes, well over the 86 minutes we normally do on our Wednesday group run - in fact after 20 minutes, I wondered whether I would be able to complete the run. I then refueled at the car with some jelly beans to go with the GU I had taken at the 45 min mark and then did a loop out to Orleigh Park and back. Surprisingly, I started to feel stronger and was able to finish off the last hour in the vincity of 5:00 min pace. Very satisfying to get it done on minimal(for me!!) fuel and finish with a growling stomach.
TUESDAY - For the second month in a row, the time trial came a week after I had experienced a hiccup in my program. Last month, I was bothered by the ITB, which incidentally is no longer a concern and today, it was a question of how much have my legs improved in the last 48 hours? I had an ambitious(bloody hopeful) plan to ease into the TT with an easy 3:25 opening k before coming home with 3:17's for a 9:59. The opening k went to plan with a 3:26. I then hit the gas and raced past 10 blokes in the next 200m but at the 1400m mark, my legs turned to jelly and it was soon apparent that there was not going to be a sub 10 today. I finished it off with a honest but controlled second half taking care not to flog myself and set back my recovery ahead of Friday's race.
SAT - 50 mins, 10k's @ about 5:10 pace
SUN - 160 mins, 31k's @ about 5:10 pace
TUES - 3k TT - 10:49
FRIDAY - Went along to speedwork and carefully eased my weak legs and body through the session at 4:10-4:20 pace. It was funny to be doing it easy cardio wise with the legs unable to do what I would have liked them to do.
SATURDAY - Normally a rest day, I did an easy recovery run to make up for my missed runs on Tuesday and Wednesday.
SUNDAY - There was a little trepidation lining up for the second longest run of my life with my legs still weak from the cold. As such, I started off from the Ship Inn with a clockwise Green Bridge loop to avoid Langy and Glenda running elsewhere in the city. I didn't want to be tempted into joining them or have Glenda say 'you need to toughen up, Matt' when I wouldn't be able to run at their pace. My decision proved to be a wise one as I gingerly covered the loop in 97 minutes, well over the 86 minutes we normally do on our Wednesday group run - in fact after 20 minutes, I wondered whether I would be able to complete the run. I then refueled at the car with some jelly beans to go with the GU I had taken at the 45 min mark and then did a loop out to Orleigh Park and back. Surprisingly, I started to feel stronger and was able to finish off the last hour in the vincity of 5:00 min pace. Very satisfying to get it done on minimal(for me!!) fuel and finish with a growling stomach.
TUESDAY - For the second month in a row, the time trial came a week after I had experienced a hiccup in my program. Last month, I was bothered by the ITB, which incidentally is no longer a concern and today, it was a question of how much have my legs improved in the last 48 hours? I had an ambitious(bloody hopeful) plan to ease into the TT with an easy 3:25 opening k before coming home with 3:17's for a 9:59. The opening k went to plan with a 3:26. I then hit the gas and raced past 10 blokes in the next 200m but at the 1400m mark, my legs turned to jelly and it was soon apparent that there was not going to be a sub 10 today. I finished it off with a honest but controlled second half taking care not to flog myself and set back my recovery ahead of Friday's race.
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