Thursday, May 31, 2007

Lethargy prevails

Wed - 50 mins, 10k's @ 5:06 mins/km
Thurs - 15 mins of 30 sec efforts with 30 JR

Have been feeling pretty tired and lethargic the last two days and am trying to rest up. Easy effort yesterday with the adductor taking forever to warm up.

Got some extra sleep this morning and did the session by myself at the Kedron Brook with the adductor again taking its sweet time warming up

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

PCRG - 3KTT - Course PB

3KTT – 9:59 (3:21, 3:20, 3:16)

I arrived at the starting line for the monthly 3K TT with a queasy stomach and in general, felt quite ordinary – in other words, everything was perfectly normal as I usually feel that way before a TT!! What was abnormal however, was a strong sense of fatigue in the legs after having done the last of four Sunday 2hr 50 min runs on the weekend. Still, I’ve never been fitter and there was no reason why I couldn’t run a sub 10 or perhaps a 9:50.

After running exceptionally well in recent speedwork sessions when I did the first 500m at about five seconds per/km slower than goal pace, I ran my first 500m this morning spot on at about 1:42-1:43 and felt terrible. The lungs were clear but gees, the legs didn’t seem to have much in them!! And my usual partners in crime, Glenda, Pete and Mike were almost 20m ahead with Coach Pat, Matt R and Jason leading the way. This is not to mention another 10-15 runners in front of me! I briefly thought to myself ‘I may only have a 10:20 in me today’ but set off after them anyway! From, 500m to the hill behind the boatshed, I rounded up all the runners in front of me barring the leading six and then the hard chase began.

Shortly after going through 1k in a satisfactory 3:21, I shot past Glenda on the footpath and set my sights on Pete. Historically, my second k has been 5-8 seconds slower than my first k so I knew I would have to run the fastest middle k split of my life in order to go sub 10 today. With this in mind, I increased the tempo and moved past Pete just before the 1500m turnaround manned by Gaz. Mike was next on my hit list but he was really motoring and passing was going to be difficult because of the other Group members running towards us on the opposite side of the very narrow footpath. I didn’t want to risk passing Mike on the uneven, cambered and pothole ridden grass to the left of the footpath so decided to surge when a gap opened up on the other side. Fortunately, a 15m gap presented itself just as I caught up to Mike and I didn’t hesitate, flooring it right then and there. The surge felt good and as such, I kept the pedal down and was rewarded when I clocked a 3:20 PB for the middle k.


Now, I had to run at least a
3:17 final k for the sub 10 and having done 3:16 for my fifth and final 1k split last Friday, I was confident I could do it again as the heart and lungs were feeling great and the legs were finally feeling alive. I worked my way past Pat shortly after the 2k marker and then concentrated on running light on my feet as I went past Matt R up the hill behind the boatshed leaving only Jason in front of me with 900m to go. Such was my momentum and confidence at this point, that I really fancied my chances of mowing down the 30m lead he had on me! Alas, with 500m to go, I had made up only a smidgeon of ground on Jason and with the legs now starting to show some real signs of fatigue, I conceded that I didn’t have a Bernborough like finish in me today. Despite being unable to find any more speed in the legs, I was able to maintain my momentum in the run home, sneaking a glance over the shoulder to make sure I had my pursuers covered – Slash remains the only man ever to run me down from behind in the last 500m of a TT and I wasn’t in a mood to afford a second runner the opportunity J. I was stoked to cross the line in 9:59 for a course PB with Jason clocking a low 9:50’s. Pete charged home after rounding the 1500m mark, overtaking quite a few on his way to a bloody sensational 10:02!

I'm very pleased with the effort and will take a lot of confidence in running that well behind Jason who did 2:55 for the Canberra Marathon and 27:50 over 8k’s recently. It would have been nice to run a 9:50 but I know that will come another day on fresher legs so I’m very happy with my course PB – a course that is considerably harder than the one on which I set my 9:55 PB so I know that this is my best 3k run ever. Now, bring on the Doomben 10,000 on Sunday.

5 x 1k photo

Here's a snap from last Friday's session of 1k efforts with yours truly on the far left next to David. You can almost feel the cool Autumn weather in the photo!

Monday, May 28, 2007

Last 2hr 50min run

170 mins, 35k's @ about 4:50-4:55 mins/km

After volunteering at the Red Run 5k at New Farm which raised money for the Haemophilia Foundation, I started my run by myself at 8am. The adductor was again sore for the first half an hour but moreso from Bruno's bashing on Friday than any tightness. Once I got warmed up, I was moving fine. Once I reached the Gardens, I followed the Brisbane Half Marathon course and did that in 1:43 before returning to New Farm. The last half hour got a bit tough with glute soreness and an aching plantar fasciitis but I got it done, doing a handful of loops of New Farm Park.

Then it was off to Suncorp Stadium to enjoy the Broncos record 71-6 demolition of Newcastle!! I could feel that my body was still dehydrated and as such, resisted the temptation to enjoy a few XXXX's. I'm pretty much on the wagon all the way up to the Gold Coast now.

Was very tired and fatigued at work today - hopefully the body will be right for tomorrow morning's 3k TT. Am also looking forward to the annual leave I've taken for the rest of the week which will help me rest up before the Doomben 10,000.

Friday, May 25, 2007

When the planets are perfectly aligned....

5 x 1k - 3:25, 3:17, 3:21, 3:16, 3:22. Avg 3:20:20 with 60 SR

Celebrated my 32nd (aaaargh shit) birthday last night with dinner at the Breaky Creek Hotel's Spanish Garden with MJ and also enjoyed a relaxing day at home. Am still trying to work out how Tesso and Clairie knew it was my birthday and tipped everyone off. Perhaps Tesso has a secret black book dossier on everyone??

I was hardly bothered by the adductor niggle at all this morning but after Tuesday's disastrous session, I wasn't getting too fired up to shatter myself with a hard session although I had a vague target of going close to 3:20's. For no reason at all, I made a fairly conservative start trailing Jason, Mike and David to the 500m at West End. At that point, I was feeling a million dollars so went past Mike and David and set off after Jason, clocking 3:25 for the first interval. With Jason dropping out to run the rest of the session by himself, David and I worked well together in the second split to clock a slick 3:17, crossing the line together. I led the way back to the boatshed on the third split stopping the clock in 3:21. By the fourth split, I was fair dinkum flying. My lungs were comfortably handling the workload, I was well balanced and my foot strike seemed very light on the bitumen. I went through 500m in 95 secs and started thinking about a magical 3:10 split but faded to a 3:16 finish with a bit of a gap to the competition. Now, I was was sucking in the big ones and I knew the last rep was going to hurt. Mike R gunned it from the start and skippped away to a lead whilst I was content to save myself for a big finish. I dug deep from the 600m and managed to get past Mike and career away to clock 3:22 for a deeply satisfying 3:20:20 average. That average is easily a PB for the course and is clearly better than my all time PB of 3:19:75 for 4 x 1k which was run on a flatter strip.

Of interest is that two of my best sessions recently came after a slightly conservative start in which I covered the first 400-500m at around 3:30 pace. I might try that more often to see if it is a successful long term way for me to work my way into a session.

Its just great going to training at the moment - everyone is training so hard and pushing each other along very well - I couldn't have done it without David and Mike today.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Getting it done

Wed - 90 mins, 19k's @ 4:45 mins/km
Thurs - 50 mins, 10k's @ 5:10 mins/km

90 mins yesterday with Glenda, Beth and Mel went smoothly enough despite the constant reminder niggles from the adductor and the right thigh region in general.
Then I did a pre-lunch run on the tready today - didn't feel like running at all and my body was tired - perhaps it was the late night at Suncorp Stadium for the might Maroons glorious comeback - Queenslander!!!

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Promising start falls flat

8 x 500, with 45 SR, 90,91,98,99,111,112,128,130 secs.

I started of this session by running the fastest 500m interval of my life and probably would have run 87-88 secs had it been on a flat strip. I was highly motivated and the adductor was not giving me any problems and gees, I was going to have a great session! That was followed by second fastest interval of all time, although I faded just a tad over the last 100m . Halfway through the third rep as I was running side by side with the very quick Jason, my legs went dead almost instantly as if stunned by a tranquiliser dart! Despite that, I battled on with 3rd and 4th intervals that were keeping me in touch with the pack. Its quite weird breathing easily enough, but the legs are unable to keep up with your body. With absolutely no spring or life whatsoever in the legs, the last straw came when the adductor started to niggle away on the 5th leg. At that point, I quickly decided to put the cue in the rack and just ran comfortably for the rest of the session. The adductor is almost fully healed and it would be stupid to jeopardise its recovery battling away when I'm not even running good times. I can only speculate on what went wrong with three consecutive 170 min runs over the last three weekends perhaps finally taking their toll. The travel to and from Warwick plus the Sunday night recovery run are other possibilities.

Oh well, I was probably due a bad session after a brilliant month's training. Bring on Friday's speedwork session!

Monday, May 21, 2007

Weekend at Warwick

Fri - 50 mins, 10k's @ 5:10 mins/km
Sat - 170 mins, 35k's @ about 4:50 mins/km
Sun - 50 mins, 10k's @ 5:00 mins/km


I took a rest day on Thursday and skipped speedwork with Coach Pat's blessing on Friday, instead running a very easy 50 minutes on the tready. My adductor was much improved after lots of time spent with the heat pack. Then it was off to Warwick on Friday leaving at 4pm, ducking into Intraining to pick up two new pairs of Brooks Glycerin 5's and then just beating the traffic on the Ipswich Motorway to reach the clear running on the Cunningham Highway. With MJ commited to a party and a share trading course, I made the journey alone, unfortunately.
Saturday morning, I was up bright and early and gingerly warmed up - the adductor continues to improve but I still didn't have the full range of motion. I did an easy 40 minutes and then joined the Half Marathon field in time for the start of the race with Warwick serving up its usual chilly early moning conditions coupled with a heavy mist hanging over the town. Already settled in, I relaxed and enjoyed the scenery whenever we could see through the mist! I covered the Half in a tick over 100 mins at 4:45 pace, grabbed a cup of orange juice and a cupcake and then ran straight back the way I had come for my final thirty minutes. At first, I was going to do a loop of Yangan, but then took the tougher option of returning to the course and tackling the rolling hills over the last three k's for a second time - I always feel better about myself if I take the tougher option! It was relief to complete the distance after the dramas of Wedneday morning and with the current rate of improvement, I hope to be right for speedwork on Tuesday.

The rest of the weekend was really enjoyable fulfilling my R4YL reporting duties, enjoying a nice dinner with all the contestants at the Warwick Rec Club on Saturday night and catching up with a mate at his horse agistment farm. I even found time for two core strength sessions in my motel room with the medicine ball and dumb-bells I had taken with me.

Finished off the weekend with an easy 50 min run on Sunday night to make up for the missed run on Thursday. Legs were sore from the 35k but I got it done.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

An angry adductor



Wed - 90 mins, 18k's @ about 5:15 mins/km

The right thigh niggle which I alluded to in earlier posts worsened yesterday. I had bailed out of my group run with Glenda and co because I woke up at 4:30am and was in sheer exhaustion from an 11 hour working day on Tuesday and two consecutive nights of less than eight hours sleep. As I had the day off work, it was an easy decision to go back to sleep for two hours and do a run by myself along the Kedron Brook. However, the right thigh refused to allow me a full range of motion and I shuffled uncomfortably through a 5:37 opening k and it was half an hour of running at 5:25 pace before I warmed up enough to get a fuller range of motion. I was thinking to myself 'Gees, if I've still got this problem come Gold Coast, a half hour warm up might be a tad long!' The second half of the run saw me running a bit closer to normal speed, but I felt incapable of going any faster. Fortunately, a visit to Shane Lemcke had already been scheduled for that day and after a couple of minutes of searching he located the offending tight adductor muscle which can be found to the inside of hamstring. Shane speculated that the injury was a typical overuse/increased intensity injury as I ramp up the mileage and increase the speed (see attached photo from Tuesday!). Shane recommended a couple of easy days, heat packs and some mild stretching would help but physio and massage would provide most of the healing benefits.

After an 11 hour sleep last night and quite a few sessions with the head pack the adductor feels much better but I've decided to do easy 50 min runs tomorrow morning and Sunday night, working around my third consecutive long run of 2hr 50 min on Saturday morning which will take in the Warwick Pentath-Run Half Marathon. I won't be racing, just taking in the event as part of my R4YL reporting commitments. I'm comfortable with the decision to give my second speedwork session a miss as there is only the potential to make small gains in speed but there is the risk of losing a crucial long run on the weekend if the adductor flares up again.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

How to drag an Olympian to victory

Sun - 2hr 53 min, 36k's @ about 4:42 mins/km
Tues - 2/1/2 mins with 30 JR. 30 SR, Repeat, then 4 mins.


My momentum leading into the Gold Coast continues to build nicely. On Sunday, I was at the Ship Inn at 5:40am to commence my run. No sooner had I got out of the car, it began to rain and with the cool air, it was quite chilly. Perfect weather for keeping my competitors in bed!! A heavy cloud hung over the city as as I squinted across the river at the City, I mused that without the neon and lighting of a modern city, Brisbane would have had a distinctly Edwardian feel that morning.

A sluggish 20 minutes of running followed before I ran into Pete, David and Jonesy makine their way east from the Regatta. I joined the boys and we proceeded to do a loop out to Newstead and it wasn't long before I was feeling comfortable. The body was handling the run beautifully and I was shocked when I asked David to check his Polar for our average pace and got a response of "4:37's." It didn't feel that fast at all! After 90 minutes with the boys, I did a loop out to Orleigh Park so I could run on the Mother's Day Classic course and see how the race was unfolding. I managed to get a front row seat of the action running alone on Riverside Drive and glancing back at race leader, Olympic Steeplechaser Peter Nowill whilst he bore down on me at sub 3 min pace!! Naturally, there were a few "c'mon's" being yelled as Nowill tried to catch me (*jokes*) It was pretty cool to get an insight into how hard yet smoothly the elites were running as they whizzed past me. I must have lost concentration at that point as I ended up doing 2k's at 4:20 pace! I was stoked to finish the last 20 minutes of the run cruising at 4:40 pace and felt like I could have broken out into a sprint if I had been approaching the finishing line of the GC Marathon with the clock reading 2:59:40.

There was a little bit of trepidation this morning as my right thigh gave me some grief in the warm up - it feels like there might be a tight nerve or perhaps something caused by a tight groin. I'll be getting Shane Lemcke to have a look at it tomorrow. Anyway, I came good by the time the session started and with Glenda doing a race pace trial for her SMH Half this weekend, I took the lead from the usual suspects, Mike, Pete and David. The first two minutes felt great and I felt like I was effortlessly gliding over the ground and I proceeded to open up a gap of around 25m to a chase pack led by Mike after five minutes of fast running broken up with 30 second jogging recoveries. Alone at the pack of the back as we turned for home, I set myself the challenge of catching all the boys on the run back to the start and managed to reel most of them in to complete a very satisfying effort. Pat set us an extra two minutes out and back and although my speed was gone, I managed to stay the course and put in a reasonable effort.

Gees, I'm really champing at the bit for my next race.

Friday, May 11, 2007

The hunted

Fri – 2 x 4 min, 30 SR, 1 x 8 min, 3k WU, 3k WD

Drove into one of my favourite sessions today and spent the drive plotting a plan of attack to match it with the in form Glenda. Alas, Glenda had already done her session yesterday, prompting Pete to say ‘we’ll be chasing you!’ So, I was going to be the hunted instead of the hunter – no worries!

We set off from our usual 3kTT starting line on Riverside Drive and I eased in behind Pete and David who were running side by side up front and set about finding some rhythm. Approaching the incline next to the boatshed, I put in a surge and rounded the boys to take the lead, continuing to keep the tempo up as we sped down the decline on the other side of the boatshed. I had a five metre break on the boys after four minutes and following a 30 sec SR, I really attacked the next four minute rep telling myself not to conserve anything for the 8 min run home as 30 secs would be sufficient recovery to have me ready for a hard finish. I tried to kick away from David for over two minutes but he hung on grimly and it was not until the hill before Orleigh Park that I was able to drop him. I then proceeded to put 15 metres on the boys before we ran out of time.

After a thirty second break, we turned around for the run back to the start and it was my turn to be the hunter as I set myself the challenge of catching up to the boys by the time we got to the boatshed and then going past them on the decline. To my surprise, I bridged the gap in about 500m and went straight past the boys. I was feeling really strong and clear minded, concentrating on keeping my arms balanced and my face relaxed – those long runs are starting to pay off!! I was determined to get back to the starting line with a decent negative split and going past the 1k marker at the boatshed I glanced at my watch and saw that I had to break 3:29 for the last k to record a negative split. I really gunned it that last k and it felt like I was finishing a 3k time trial as the fatigue started to creep up on me. Hardly wavering in the run for home, I clocked 3:19 for the last k and for good measure, ran past the finishing line for 10 seconds to bring up the full 8 minutes – that’s what my program called for after all!!

Am very pleased with yet another quality session. To run a 3:19k after twelve and a half minutes of hard running augurs well for the next time trial and I think I’ve put the writing on the wall for a sub 9:50 – bring it on!!!

Thursday, May 10, 2007

A sense of urgency

Fri - 50 mins, 10k's @ 5:00 mins/km

There is now a sense of urgency to my running, my core strength training, my diet and anything related to my Gold Coast Marathon goal as the clock continues to tick down. I felt really good this morning after the tiredness yesterday but resisted the temptation to increase the tready speed to 4:50's or something, leaving it at my usual 5:00 min pace.

Completed the session well and am feeling fresh and ready to run hard at speedwork tomorrow where 2 x 4 min, 1x 8 min efforts await.

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Carbon copy

Tues - 17 mins hills, 3k WU, 3k WD
Wed - 90 mins, 18k's @ 5:05 mins/km


Took the opportunity to chill out and relax on Monday. MJ and I did a scenic drive around Montville and Maleny and of course, MJ took the opportunity to browse the trinket shops dotting the main street of Montville. Naturally, my favourite shops were the ones that had a seat out the front so I could sit down and read the paper :) We enjoyed a selection of fresh cheeses from Colin James, Maleny for lunch with biscuits and salami. That was washed down with Bundaberg ginger beer whilst we took in the view from a lookout.

Yesterday morning, it was hills in the gardens as we enjoyed cool, overcast conditions and the lightly rain soaked grass. In a carbon copy of last Friday's session, I went through the first rep with Glenda before slowly slipping off the pace as David, Peter and another bloke passed me. With five minutes to go, I felt as strong as I had during the whole session and was able to up the tempo and overtake everyone in front of me bar Glenda. The fitness is definitely improving as the 4:20-4:30 pace jogging recoveries between hills felt like a doddle.

This morning, all the mileage and hard speedwork sessions of the past 10 days caught up with me. Despite nine hours sleep, I was tired and sluggish as I ran by myself at the Kedron Brook. I was also nursing some mild (and rare) calf tightness, presumably related to my recent soleus problems and therefore ambled along at a steady 5:05 pace for the 90 minutes. It always feel a bit extra special to finish a run like that when you are not quite at the top of your game and that what I felt this morning.

Monday, May 07, 2007

Brisbane Half Photos















A couple of Brissy Half photos - the start, then two shots from about the 7k mark and the final shot at the 21k mark as I approached the finishing chute.

Photos courtesy of Sporting Images

Top quality sessions

Fri - 6 x 2min, 30 JR, 3k WU, 3k WD
Sun - 170 mins, 35k @ about 4:50 mins/km

Friday - The first two min effort saw Glenda and I side by side throughout before I started to weaken from a slight lack of energy. I told myself to hang in there and tough it out on the back half of the session. As Glenda strode away from me Matt R and then Pete went past. By the time the fifth rep came around I had a second wind coupled with the desperation not to miss out on a quality session as the Gold Coast Marathon looms larger on the horizon. I caught up to Matt R on the fifth leg, went past him and then caught up to Pete at the start of the final rep and then accelerated past him also. Running like a crazy man, I made up about 30m of the 50m deficit to Glenda before Pat wrapped it up. Very pleasing to finish strong when things weren't quite going my way early on.

Sunday - Some trepidation going into the second longest run of my life, particularly coming four days after my catch up 27k Long Run on Wednesday. Things were not helped when I discovered that I was out of oats and had to shove down a variety of foods as opposed to my usual pre long run meal of porridge and bananas. Unsurprisingly, I was a little sluggish as I went through the first hour in a little over 5:00min pace. Then I ran into team-mates, Glenda, Pete, Matt R, David and Wayne at Kurilpa Park and joined them and their 4:45 pace. Started to feel better at that point - its always so much easier with company! It wasn't long before some of those doing shorter runs, turned back for the Regatta and Glenda and I continued on, doing a Story Bridge loop. Going down Coro Drive, we strode out briskly recording several sub 4:30k's that felt comfortable - I gotta tell ya, Glenda is in fantastic shape and will give 2:50 a mighty shake on the Gold Coast!! I had my first GU after 130 minutes, shortly after leading Glenda and then finished off with a 40 minute loop into the Gardens. Very satisfied with the run after the sluggish first hour and it was only in the last 20 minutes that I started to wish the run was over.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Always look on the brighter side of life......

Tues - 40 mins, 8k's @ 4:50 mins/km
Wed - 130 mins, 27k's @ about 4:45 mins/km

Well, its been a lousy couple of days for me to continue my run of bad luck since the Brissy Half Marathon but I'm pleased to say that I bounced back this morning. The run of bad luck started on Friday night when I was rushing to place a four game multi bet with my bookmaker before the Broncos game. I meant to bet $10 but accidentally bet $110! I emailed my bookmaker asking for the bet to be amended and then rushed off to the game only to get home and see my email still sitting in the outbox! The bet lost..... On Sunday, I decided to do my long run on Monday morning to allow my soleus muscle extra recovery from Bruno's bashing and also to avoid running in a sleep deprived state after watching the mighty Aussies go three in a row in the World Cup Final - you beauty!! I started to get a sinking feeling on Sunday night when I could feel myself coming down with a cold and you guessed it - I was in no shape to run on Monday morning. I went into the office but was struggling and left after six hours only to return home to a broken refrigerator!! What could I do but shrug my shoulders and be thankful for what I do have. Thank God for the beer fridge in the gym that now houses the contents of the now deceased fridge!! If anyone knows how I can get a really good deal on a new fridge then drop me a line.
Tuesday was spent resting at home and I started to feel better around 3pm so went for an easy 40 minute run which ended up featuring surprisingly comfortable 4:50's.

Now, most of you know that I'm a stickler for sticking to my program, but after missing yesterday's time trial plus Sunday's long run and coupled with wanting to have a good solid run to erase the bitter taste of the Brisbane Half failure, I decided that if I felt good after my scheduled 90 minute run this morning, I would continue on to do 2hr 10 minutes which I feel makes up for missing the time trial, is long enough to be considered a decent long run but not long enough to knock me around too much before my 2hr 50 min run scheduled for Sunday which I may even delay till Monday for more recovery time.

I joined my regular Wed fortnight running companions, Glenda, Mel and Beth at 5:30am - no idea where the boys were. Enjoying the cool conditions and feeling strong, I rolled along comfortably for the first few k's. The pace really picked up once we got to the Regatta and we were doing close to 4:30's at a comfortable talking pace - a pace which was maintained on the way out to UQ, over the Green Bridge, up and down Highgate Hill and then along Riverside Drive before finishing the run, still feeling great. I had a quick pit stop at my car for water and a few soft lollies and then set out for another 40 minutes with a Story Bridge loop. A little bit of fatigue set in over the last 20 minutes but I never felt like needing a GU and am stoked with the run. Its easily my best long run of the campaign so far and I can't believe that I was able to bounce back from a 36 hour cold so quickly! Life's good!!