Sunday, March 22, 2015

Training 3/16-3/22

Good quality running this week for sure.  I got on the track again and it felt good.  I've been working out at the American University Track, which might just be my new favorite track.  My mileage has been a tad less the last few weeks(in the 90s), but one of the things I've worked well on is adapting to higher volume.  So far for the year 2015, the first 3 months I have averaged over 102 miles/week.  So taking it down a notch has felt good, but I was by no means fresh for the Van Metre 5 Miler race on Saturday.

Monday: 4.5 miles + 1600m of 50s @ AU Track; 50m sprint, 50m float, 50m sprint, 50m float etc

Tuesday: AM: 1200m(3:41), 1600m(4:51), 2000m(6:05) w/ 1 lap jog rec @ AU Track, 9.5 miles
PM: 3 miles easy

Wednesday: AM: 10.5 miles
PM: 5.5 miles

Thursday: 8 miles with 3 mile "moderate" tempo in 16:00 @ AU Track
PM: 5 miles

Friday: AM: 4.5 miles
PM: 3.5 miles w/ 4 x 200m strides

Saturday: AM: VAN METRE 5 MILER-This race was unbelievably the most twists and turns I have ever had to deal with.  To my own error, I didn't study the course well.  From the gun I put myself into 1st place, and for most of the race I was asking race officials which direction to turn next.  It was frustrating there wasn't a lead vehicle.  I was also unsure which tangents to run.  There were a few hills, which naturally I felt strong on from all the hill workouts I've done over the winter.  I could feel Greenlaw and Klim not far behind me, and was able to see where they were at each turn.  I eventually gained ground on them, and ran alone the entire race.  The effort felt like a hard tempo, I threw some surges in at the end to finish in 25:27, which seemed a bit slow, but my coach told me to not expect much from this.  However, many have told me that this course is always a tad long for some reason.  Who knows.  The important thing I cared about was that I got the effort in, and the win was nice, as this was my debut in the Saucony singlet.   
PM: 5 miles

Sunday:  20 Miles: I started out moderately on the towpath, coming through the first 10 miles in (67:00) minutes, but I was building my pace and ran quite quickly the 2nd 10 miles(58:00), finishing the total 20 miles in 2:05. The last 5 miles of the run I was running 5:40 pace and I saw Klim at Riley's Lock.  I thought I saw Greenlaw too but he wasn't there according to Jake's blog here: http://jakeklim.blogspot.com/.  I was amazed at how effortless this run felt, even after running the race yesterday.  Once I got back to the lock, as if 20 wasn't enough I decided to tag on a grueling 200m steep uphill run up the road that goes towards River Road.  I grinded up the hill, legs aching, and at the next plateau turned around, and finally said "ok, that's enough."  I jogged back down the hill, longing for food and a nap.  90 Miles for the week.

I think I am super fit but it won't really show in racing until the time is right, which hopefully, I'll be able to give something special at Cherry Blossom in 3 weeks.  My coach and I plan to taper down fully for that race, so I should be fresh and ready to go.  I also KNOW the course all too well now.  I have run this race every year since 2010.  I think sub 50:00 is possible this time around, we'll just have to wait and see.  My all time best for the distance is from last year in 50:57, so bettering that performance itself is a tall task.  This is the Trial of Miles, the Miles of Trials.  Your toughest competitor is yourself.

-Sloane    



Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Welcome to the Saucony Hurricanes


I got word in February that I got selected to the 2015 Saucony Hurricane Team.  This is a wonderful new start for me, as I have been in search for a team for the past several months.  The end of last year was a time where I was a little bit in no-man's land.  I wasn't on a team anymore, I had left =PR=, and I was looking at options on what was the next phase.  On a whim I entered the USA Club XC Championships, buying a pair of Saucony Kilkennys in the process, in not very fit condition.  But I felt it was a good idea to get a race in, and actually did more decently than I thought, finishing near the top 1/3 of the race.  But I needed to get to work.

I worked hard over the winter on my endurance, under Roland's guidance.  The training was unlike anything I have been able to do before, and actually came quite naturally to me.  I ran in the snow.  I ran in the single digits temps.  Heck, that's really not that bad if you think of the tough Minnesota runners and what they have to deal with, or Tyler McCandless training in the mountains of Colorado.  It gave me perspective when I thought of those guys training in those conditions.  If this winter was going to be tough, I welcomed it.  One day during the middle of the week, I ventured off onto snowy trails with my yaktrax on.  I ran for 2 hours.  By the time I was done, I collapsed in my car, exhausted.  Running in the snow was a slow pace, but trudging through it works your whole body.  I only ran on the treadmill a few times this winter, only because it was tempo stuff that couldn't be done on a snow covered track.

"Somewhere in the world someone is training when you are not. When you race him, he will win."
-sign on Tom Fleming's wall while training for the Boston Marathon

This was pretty much a 2 month training phase, which finished in mid-February.  I'll pick up from my last post:

Week 2/9-2/15: 110 Miles(last week of endurance segment)

M-AM: 5.5 miles with drills/PM: 3.5 miles
T-AM: 9 miles/PM: 7.5 miles
W-AM: 4 x 5:00 fartleks, 9.5 miles/PM: 5 miles
Th-AM: 14.5 miles/PM: 6 miles
F-AM: 8 x 200m strides, 6 miles/PM: 6.5 miles
S- AM: 12 miles progression(total 70 min)/PM: 3.5 miles
S- AM: 21 miles in the snow/PM: Strength Training

After Mid-February, we did a 4-week transitional period consisting of tempos and faster paced running.

Week 2/16-2/22: 105 Miles

M-AM: 5.5 miles with drills/PM: 5 miles
T-AM: 16 miles
W-AM: Hill Repeats(high knees, bounds, sprints), 9.5 miles/PM: 8 miles
Th-AM: 16 miles on snowy trails/PM: 5.5 miles
F-AM: 4 x 200m strides, 7 miles/PM: 4 miles
S-AM; 3 mile tempo: 15:40, 9 miles/PM: 5 miles
S-AM: 10 miles/PM; 4 miles

Week 2/23-3/1: 96 miles

M-AM: Pool Running 45 minutes+ Drills/PM: 5.5 miles
T-AM: 14 miles/PM: 4 miles
W-AM: 10 miles with 5 x mile on road(@5:08, 4:54, 4:58, 4:52, 5:01)/PM: 4 miles
Th-AM: 8 miles/PM: 7 miles
F-AM: 8 miles with 4 x 200m strides/PM: 5 miles
S-AM; 4 mile tempo on road: 20:15, 9 miles/PM: Strength Training
S-AM: 20 miles

Week 3/2-3/8: 102 Miles

M-AM: 5.5 miles with drills/PM: 3.5 miles
T-AM: 5.5 miles/PM: 10.5 milesf
W-AM: Hill Repeats(high knees, bounds, sprints), 11 miles/PM: 5 miles
Th-AM: 19 miles in snow
F-AM: 4 x 200m strides, 7.5 miles/PM: 4.5 miles
S-AM; 3 mile tempo on treadmill @ 12mph w/ 1.5-2.0 incline: 15:00, 7 miles/PM: 5 miles
S-AM: 18 miles @ 6:20 pace(easy)

Week 3/9-3/15: 92 miles 

M-AM: 5.5 miles with drills/PM: 3 miles
T-AM: 10 miles/PM: 4 miles
W-AM: 10.5 miles with 6 x mile on road(@5:01, 4:53, 4:54, 4:49, 4:55, 4:45)/PM: 2 miles
Th-AM: 9 miles on snowy trails/PM: 5.5 miles
F-AM: 4 x 200m strides, 4.5 miles/PM: 3.5 miles
S-AM: 5 mile progression(5:00-5:10 pace)+1.5 mile cool down/PM: 3.5 miles
S-AM: 19 miles/PM: 3.5 miles

This week started the sharpening period, and I am on the track again.  I've been working out at the AU track, which might be my new favorite track.  I am also racing this weekend, at the Van Metre 5 Miler.  It is merely a tune-up for Cherry Blossom, and I will train through this race, so I will race it not completely fresh.  The idea is to run fast and race while tired.  My target will be my Cherry Blossom Race Pace.

Week 3/16-3/22:

M-Track: 1 mile of 50s(50m sprint, 50m float), 5.5 miles
T-AM: Track: 1200m(3:41), 1600m(4:51), 2000m(6:05), w/ 1 lap jog between, 9.5 miles/PM: 3 miles
W-AM: 10.5 miles/PM:

Thursday will be another 3 mile tempo, and then Saturday is the race.  This should simulate the last 5 miles of Cherry Blossom.


SPRING RACING SCHEDULE:

3/21: VAN METRE 5 MILER
4/12: CHERRY BLOSSOM 10 MILER(Goal: SUB-50:00), current PR is 50:57
4/26; PIKES PEEK 10K(Goal: SUB-30:00), current PR is 30:43
5/11: SWARTHMORE TRACK 5,000M(Goal: TBD)
5/25: LOUDOUN STREET MILE


I am proud to represent Saucony, a company that wants to improve running, to help others find their strong, to believe you can be better.

Innovate.  Believe.  Find Your Strong.


Sunday, February 8, 2015

2/2-2/8: 112 miles/week

2/2-2/8.  Another great week of the endurance segment, with  my highest mileage.  Things will finish up within the next week or two, and then the switch to faster tempos will start on the track.  The idea is that when starting the shorter stuff it won't seem so bad, once the mileage comes down a bit.  This is the best aerobic training I have done, and I feel the strongest I have ever felt.  Racing will start in March.  Now, I just need a new jersey.  To be updated soon.

Monday: AM: 5 miles
PM: 4.5 miles with drills: skipping, high knees, butt kicks, step-step-bounds

Tuesday: AM: 7 miles
PM: 14 miles

Wednesday: AM: 8.5 miles: Hill Workout: 9 x 400m hill w/ high knees, bounds, sprints
PM: 6.5 miles

Thursday: AM: 15 miles
PM: 6 miles

Friday: AM: 5.5 miles with 8 x 200m strides
PM: 6 miles

Saturday: AM: 10 Miles @ Towpath: 57:00(pace 5:40's)
PM: 4 miles

Sunday: AM: 20 Miles in DC(3 Haines Point Loops): 1:54:00(pace 5:40's)
PM: Strength Training

Total: 112 Miles

Monday, February 2, 2015

The Endurance Segment


As much as I would have liked to do the Houston race, I now can see the benefits of investing into training my endurance the last several weeks.  This is the stuff that I am the best at.  I have been able to run fast track workouts, but deeper within me is an endurance monster.  This type of work is something I have needed to do for a while, and now is the right time to do it.  The focus has been developing my aerobic system, and as you scroll through each week below, you'll see that the runs on the weekends have been my main focus.  The important thing is that the effort has remained consistent, and aerobic, even as my pace improves-the key is the effort has felt the same on all these runs.  During the week, I've been getting in a lot of easy volume but mixed in are drills, 8 x 200m strides which really aren't that fast(they're not sprints), hill repeats, and fartlek runs.  I have alternated the fartlek runs and hills repeats every other week.  I have not hit the track yet.  My recovery on the weekends is surprising me, although I suppose it in fact isn't surprising because I am doing very little anaerobic work.  But also the fact that I've worked up to hitting 110 miles last week while running pretty fast on some of these runs, especially the weekend runs at those paces.  I've never run so well aerobically.  But it also feels so natural to me.  I'll finish this phase in 1-3 weeks from now, depending on how things go.  This past Saturday, I did a hilly 12 miles at 5:40 pace, at Beach Drive.  It's a great workout since there are hills.  On Sunday, I talked to Conrad and Greg Mariano about perhaps synching our runs together somewhat.  They were to do a warm-up run down the CCT before they started their workout.   I was to run steady the whole way for 20.  I started my run some minutes after them, already cruising down the CCT at sub 6:00 pace, and caught up to them right at the end of the CCT when they were about to start their workout.  They were doing a cutdown workout of some sort, 4 miles on 1 mile off or something like that.  I was looking to maintain in the 5:40s for most of the run, while they were looking to progress the  pace each section they were "on", which I certainly wasn't going to do.  I needed to make sure I did my workout.  That's the discipline.  Nevertheless I could use some company at least for the early part of their first tempo, even if it didn't completely work out eventually.  As they started running hard at the end of the CCT it synched well with the pace I was running, but eventually they were moving towards the 5:20s, which I obviously wasn't going to do.  I let them go ahead, and stayed within myself, in the aerobic zone.  I keyed off of them as they pulled ahead more at Haines Point for the next few miles.  Towards the end of Haines, they went into the recovery part of their run, and I came back up on them.  They were doing 2 loops around Haines Point so I decided to do that as part of my route too.  It was actually really nice-no wind surprisingly.  I gave them a nod and pressed ahead to continue my own run, waiting to be chased.  But what I didn't realize is that their route turned on Buckeye Drive for their next loop while I continued up to loop around the longer way (on Basin Drive), and so I ran alone much rest of the way.  I kept my pace strong, without much struggle so it seemed.  After 2 loops, I came back towards Georgetown and ran up the CCT, and was nearing 18 miles in.  As I came back from the CCT, I caught up to Conrad and Mariano again as they were finishing their run(17 for them I believe).  I suddenly realized how fast I had been running since I had run about a mile longer, not to mention I had started my run a few minutes later.  As I got back to Fletchers, I did a quick out and back to add on the Towpath to finish up the 20 miler in 1:55:00(averaging 5:45 pace), feeling relatively comfortable.  Later that evening my coach told me, "Don't get too excited, this is going to become normal for you now."  He's right.  This really isn't that big of a deal, and I am made for this.  I am starting to realize and feeling that 5:40 pace is really not that hard/fast anymore.  When your body adapts, that's the training effect.

"You want to get to a point where you see no more improvements, then we'll switch over to the next phase," my coach said.  The next phase will be a bit more faster and I will get on the track again, but with a bit less mileage.  I do have a spring schedule, which will focus on Cherry Blossom(and also a tune-up race of some sort in March-perhaps the Van Metre 5 Miler), Pikes Peek, and a track 5K in May.  This racing schedule I have done before, and I am super pumped about the season, but the real thing at work here is developing myself into an endurance monster.  I believe it will show when it is meant to.  All this hard work.  The stuff that isn't seen.  The days I get up to run hard when I want to sleep in more.  Running only once in a day is rare for me now.  The extra weight training, cross training, stretching, self massage.  The resistance to stay out late.  To have the guts to go in, dig in, and find out what I have deep inside of me.  It's very hard to screw up when you're ready to run well.  I've experienced that.  The 1:07 half I ran last year was just the tip of the iceberg.  There is something much stronger that I have stored deep inside, and I will unleash it one day, at the right time.  It is only a matter of time now.  

"In the future, the marathon will become your best distance, your body is made for it without question," my coach said.

Training for the last month:   

12/29-1/4:

Monday- AM: 6 miles w/ drills: skipping, high knees, butt kicks, step-step-bounds
+ Strength Training

Tuesday- AM: 10 miles
PM: 5 miles

Wednesday- AM: 12.5 miles with 4 x 5:00 fartleks
PM: 4.5 miles

Thursday- AM: 16 miles
PM: 6 miles

Friday- PM: 10 miles w/ 8 x 200 meter strides

Saturday- AM: 12.5 miles w/ 9 miles faster: 1:20:00

Sunday- AM: 20 miles progression: 2:13:00

Total: 103


1/5-1/11:

Monday- AM: 6 miles w/ drills: skipping, high knees, butt kicks, step-step-bounds
+ Strength Training

Tuesday- AM: 5 miles
PM: 14 miles

Wednesday- AM: Hill Repeats(high knees, bounds, sprints x 4), 9 miles
PM: 4 miles

Thursday- AM: 10 miles
PM: 8.5 miles

Friday- AM: 7.5 miles w/ 8 x 200 meter strides

Saturday- AM: 12 miles: 1:12 @ Beach Drive(hilly)

Sunday- AM: 19.5-20 miles: 1:56, averaged between 5:50-6:00 @ Beach Drive(hilly)

Total: 97


1/12-1/18:

Monday- AM: 6 miles w/ drills: skipping, high knees, butt kicks, step-step-bounds
+ Strength Training

Tuesday- AM: 9 miles
PM: 10 miles

Wednesday- AM: 5.5 miles
PM: 9.5 miles with 4 x 5:00 fartleks @ 5:20 pace

Thursday- AM: 14 miles
PM: 7.5 miles

Friday- AM: 4.5 miles
PM: 6.5 miles with 8 x 200 meter strides

Saturday- AM: 12 miles: 1:10 (averaged 5:50's) @ Towpath

Sunday- AM: 20 miles easy

Total: 105


1/19-1/25:

Monday- AM: 6.5 miles w/ drills: skipping, high knees, butt kicks, step-step-bounds

Tuesday- AM: 14.5 miles, 1:42
PM: 6.5 miles

Wednesday- AM: Hill Repeats(high knees, bounds, sprints x 4), 9 miles
+ Strength Training
PM: 6.5 miles

Thursday- AM: 10 miles easy
PM: 7.5 miles

Friday- AM: 5.5 miles
PM: 6 miles with 8 x 200 meter strides

Saturday- AM: 12 miles: 1:09, averaged 5:45 pace @ Beach Drive(hilly course!)

Sunday- AM: 10 miles easy
PM: 11 miles w/ 10 miles in 56:00(worked down to 5:20 pace, averaging in 5:30's) @ Towpath

Total: 105


1/26-2/1:

Monday- AM: 6 miles w/ drills: skipping, high knees, butt kicks, step-step-bounds
PM: 4 miles

Tuesday- AM: 10 miles
PM: 8 miles

Wednesday- AM: 4 miles
+ Strength Training
PM: 12 miles with 4 x 5:00 fartleks

Thursday- AM: 12 miles
PM: 5 miles

Friday- AM: 8 miles with 8 x 200 meter strides
PM: 6 miles

Saturday- AM: 12 miles: 1:08, averaged 5:40 pace @ Beach Drive(hilly course!)
PM: 3 miles

Sunday- AM: 20 miles: 1:55, averaged 5:45 pace

Total: 110

Sunday, January 11, 2015

2014

REVIEW OF THE YEAR 2014


Houston, Texas.  January 19, 2014
US Mens Half Marathon Championships

2014 started off with the best half marathon of my running career.  Coming off of a 1:08:51 from 2013 I had qualified for the USA Half Marathon Championships.  The championship was held in Houston, Texas, 3 weeks into the year 2014.  I decided to go for it, taking a leap of faith and jumping on the bus with top tier athletes to compete on the national level.  Despite many qualifiers in the race being faster than I was, I performed really well under intimidating conditions.  While the great Meb Keflezighi won the race in 1:01:23, I finished in 1:07:29, good for 56th place, at 5:08 per mile, out of a field of 70 finishers(along with others entered who DNF'd).  This race put me on a level I've never been before, and opened my eyes to new possibilities on what I can achieve.  I am 8 years younger than Meb.  What is possible for me if I stick with this sport?  I intend to find out, and know I have a lot, lot more in me.





After Houston, I looked at my spring season and decided to shorten things up.  Once I recovered, I started a second build up to the Cherry Blossom 10 Miler.  The first part of that was doing some speed work on the track.  I thought about racing at a Virginia Tech meet, and contacted Ben Thomas, my college coach about participating in the Virginia Tech Challenge meet in February.  He was happy to enter me in as a VT alumni and I entered in both the 3,000m and 5,000m.  The idea was to get a really great workout in while also racing.  The 3K was Friday night, and the 5K was during the middle of the day Saturday, so I had some recovery, but not a lot between races.  I managed 8:48 and 8th place for the 3K, which was technically a PR.  The 3K is a bit fast for me, but it was good to work that a bit.  The next day, I recovered well and managed 2nd place in the 5K race in a modest 15:13.  I wanted to win, but I was pleased with the effort since the other competitors were fresher from not having raced the day before.  Even though these races were short, I got in good workouts, and it was fun to run on that track again.
    

The next tune-up race for Cherry Blossom was the Shamrock 8K in March.  I took 4th place overall in this race and was the 1st American, finishing in 25:01, and won some prize money in the process.  The next day I paced Christina, one of the top runners I coach, in the half marathon to a 1:28 finish(6:45 pace), a 3 minute PR for her at the time.



Cherry Blossom 10 Miler
The 2014 US Mens 10 Mile Championship

It was pretty awesome Cherry Blossom hosted the US Mens Championship this year.  The competition awards the top 10 US male athletes, aside from the top 10 international competitors.  This race was my highest place in a championship, taking the 20th US mens spot.  I also PR'd with a 50:57 effort, 5:05 per mile.  This race was right up there with my effort at Houston.  In my opinion Cherry Blossom is somewhat fast, but also not the easiest course because of the Arlington bridge and the late hill climb towards the end when you're trying to sprint.  I had to work hard to get in 50:xx territory.

I later found out that Mo Trafeh, who had taken the 3rd American spot in the race(running 47:27), was found guilty this year of using performance banned substances.  Born in Morocco, Trafeh became a U.S. citizen in 2008.  Upon hearing this news I now consider myself finishing as the 19th American in the race.  It's frustrating hearing this, when you train clean and put all of your energy into the sport you love.  What's scary is that Mo Trafeh passed 21 drug tests, in fact he never failed one.  He was caught with the illegal substance EPO, and he would stop taking it 10 days before competitions.  His example shows how easy it can be for athletes to get away cheating in big races.  This is a tough thing for the honest athletes to deal with, because they cannot compete with those taking these substances.  The motive is to have an advantage to win, or perhaps not only to win, but to win money.  Perhaps some cheat because monetarily speaking, running awards only the very few at the top.  For instance, take a look at the New York City Marathon's prize money structure.  It dwindles down pretty quickly from 1st-10th place out of 50,000 some runners($100,000 to the winner, but 10th only gets $2,000-and this is if that athlete runs a certain time, otherwise the money awarded is cut in half).  Even what the world-class/world record runners make yearly are fractions of a fraction of a fraction worth of what your average NFL player makes.  But that is obviously no excuse to use banned substances.  We need to keep running pure, because it is the purest form of competition, a footrace, to see who is faster.  If runners are using PEDs and getting criticized for it, the sport is, if not already in danger of losing its credibility.  Nobody cares about the men in the NFL or MLB who use banned substances.  But when there is an endurance athlete or even cyclist caught blood doping or using a banned substance, why is it so much more hyped up by the media?  I'm not trying to defend those guilty as charged but I believe it is important to recognize these differences of perceptions perhaps the media makes.  David Torrence wrote an excellent piece on how underdeveloped the media is with running/track and field.  You can read it on Tony Reavis' blog here:  http://tonireavis.com/2013/09/27/pro-runner-david-torrence-dont-blame-elite-athletes-for-state-of-the-sport/
Before other non-violent sports such as golf, basketball, etc, perhaps running/track and field has historically been viewed as the most "pure" sport of non-violence.  And as Bill Bowerman said, "competing was an answer to war during the ancient Olympics."  Man vs Man.  We need to keep running/track and field pure, because it is the purest form of competition: to see who is faster; to see who can throw farther; to see who can jump higher, without any advantages.


Me(50:57), Conrad(50:30), and Kieran(50:32) dueling it out.



20th, or 19th, whatever you wanna call it, my highest place in a US Championship.

Pikes Peek 10K:

I think this race was a red line for me.  It was a few weeks after Cherry Blossom, and I was a bit run down.  I placed well(8th), and equaled my current PR of 30:43, but could not make a
 breakthrough.  I started to realize something.  I needed a coach.






















Greenville, South Carolina


In the spring I was invited to make a visit to Greenville, South Carolina.  I had been in contact with Mike Caldwell, the coach of GTC-ELITE: an elite professional training center, near Furman University.  I started searching for a coach because I felt that I needed someone to oversee my long term development as a runner, and help me achieve my ultimate potential.  I was 30 going on 31, and entering my peak years as a runner.  For a while I had self-coached myself and it obviously worked well to help me achieve great things, but I yearned for additional support, guidance, and reassurance.  Mike is an extraordinarily smart guy and I had a wonderful time meeting with him and the team.  I learned a bit about their training methods and whether that type of training would suit me well.  The team is sponsored by Asics, and it is a nice set up.  This was a difficult decision to make for me.  Perhaps one of the most difficult in my life.  It was a big move, 8-9 hours away, and I would have to find a new job, new coaching clients, pretty much start over.  Over the years, I have established numerous relationships throughout the DC area running community.  The connections I have made in DC have been a big part of my running: people I coach, many friends helping to publicize my running, thanks to RunWashington editors Dickson Mercer and Charlie Ban, as well as Jake Klim.  Jake's blog in fact, inspired me to start this one.  I pondered back and forth for weeks, adding up the days I wanted to go to Greenville and the days I didn't.  I sat down, added the numbers up, and in the end my gut gave me the answer.

But I still needed to find a coach.

I had met Roland Rust earlier in the year, and I approached him around the same time that spring about the possibility of coaching me.  I think I just kind of knew, that it was the right thing to do to talk to this man.  He has coached an 11th place finisher at the Olympic Trials, but I was more interested in his knowledge of training specifically for the marathon.  I sat down with him and gave him my background, sent him my past workouts, and learned about his approach to where I am at with my running, and my goal to qualify for the Olympic Trials.  He knows I am good at the half marathon, but in his view, I have not done recent endurance training to support the specific marathon training.  And deep down, I knew he was right.  I have not excelled at that distance either, and much of my training has been catered to the shorter distances(half marathon on down) over the past years.  Some people get confused and think I have been working on the marathon this whole time, but I assure them, it's been precisely the opposite.  The confusion might be that the type of training and racing I have done has helped me become more efficient, which will help me be faster.  I got to work with Roland in May, shooting for the Chicago Marathon as my target.  Because of the timing, we didn't really have time to do the endurance piece though, because we had to go right into a specific marathon cycle soon.  Plus, I had already committed to doing the Gary Bjorklund Half Marathon in June, which Roland tried to persuade me not to do.  Looking back I think I would have benefited doing some of the endurance training during that time, instead of getting ready to race again, which ended up being a slow time for me anyway.  But I think that was a transitional part for me to learn that way, learning to dig into what racing investment really is.              

The Win at The Annapolis 10 Miler


Over the summer I got strong, very strong, hitting 110 mile weeks.  In August, I won the Annapolis 10 Miler in the middle of a lot of heavy training.








































The Navy Half Marathon


Navy was a good tune-up race in September.  I wanted to win, but Pat Fernandez(in red), was too strong.  I ended up placing 4th, and though 1:09 is a slower time for me now in the half marathon, it was during heavy training just like Annapolis.

2014 Chicago Marathon: DNF

Chicago was a tough day.  I got sick the night before, and just felt plain terrible.  I had to drop out at mile 16.  If I was ready to run the whole thing, believe me I would have.  It's actually very hard to screw up when you're ready to run well.  That's why it drives me nuts when someone says "Did you start too fast?" The only way I would have been able to run the whole thing is if I jogged a 2:40+.  I wasn't there to do that.  On the contrary, a friend of mine, who went out extremely conservatively in his marathon-almost too slow for him, was running faster later on in the race, but still ended up dropping out.  The reality is his body just wasn't ready that day.  I missed the race by maybe 1 day.  Call it bad luck, whatever.  
I think the sickness symbolized that my body was not quite ready to make the push.  And that's ok, because I made tremendous fitness gains from the training cycle.  But I think the great races I had run earlier in the year had caught up to me too, and I was a bit out of racing gas.  Racing is like investment.  You invest in the ones you focus on.  But you can't be perfect.  You have to make choices.  And what I mean is that as well as Houston went for me last January, it might have taken away from Chicago in October.  I would not redo anything though.  I learn as I go.  And, the training cycle was a huge success.  I wouldn't have changed anything about the training.  I just got stronger from it.  It's all hidden, for now.  But there is another thing related to training that I have not done for a while, and that is as Roland calls it, an endurance segment.






December 13, 2014: 
The USA Club Cross Country Championships
Lehigh, PA

It took a little while for me to recover after Chicago, but not too long since I had only raced 16 of the 26.2 miles.  It was more so to recover from the arduous training cycle.  Nevertheless, I needed to reboot and build up gradually.  I also decided to do the club cross country championships to finish out my year.  I was not in great shape, but "ok" shape enough to run decently.  I placed 236th out of nearly 600 competitors and it was a blast.  I had a lot of fun and it was a good way to end the year.  Cross Country is always a good battle between various types of runners.  It was a good summary of my year and redeemed myself from not finishing a race since September.  








What's for 2015?

Well, I got into the half marathon championship again in Houston.  It's next weekend.
Newsflash: I'm not running it.

It's nice I qualified again, but my goals are shifting, and my body has needed a specific endurance period of training badly.  This calls for improving the aerobic threshold, and starting to adapt to paces that used to be hard for long runs.

The last 7 weeks my mileage has been 90, 94, 85, 97, 97, 102, 97, but it is only the last week or so that my Saturday and Sunday runs have dramatically picked up, and they will continue to.  Though I really wanted to, I am very happy now that I have chosen to not race Houston this year, but get in good true endurance training.

My last 2 weeks training is below:

12/29-1/4:
Monday- 6 miles w/ drills: skipping, high knees, butt kicks, skip-bounds
Tuesday- am: 10 miles, pm: 5 miles
Wednesday- am: 4 x 5:00 fartleks, 12.5 miles, pm: 4.5 miles
Thursday- am: 16 miles, pm: 6 miles
Friday- 8 x 200 meter strides, 10 miles
Saturday- 12 miles
Sunday- 20 miles

Total: 102

1/5-1/11:
Monday- 6 miles w/ drills: skipping, high knees, butt kicks, skip-bounds
Tuesday- am: 5 miles, pm: 14 miles
Wednesday- am: hill repeats(high knees, bounds, sprints x 4), 9 miles, pm: 4 miles
Thursday- am: 10 miles, pm: 8.5 miles
Friday- 8 x 200 meter strides, 7.5 miles
Saturday- 12.5 miles: 1:12, averaged 5:45 pace (@ Beach drive)
Sunday- somewhere between 19.5-20 miles: 1:56, averaged around 5:50's (out and back twice @ Beach drive, hilly!)

Total: 97

Despite not posting for a while, indeed I have been training.

2015, watch out, because here I come.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Self, Spirit, Soul

As I got back home and walked into my room, my eye caught sight of something.  It was the bib number, framed and still standing on the shelf, with the last name printed on it.  "2014 USA Half Marathon Championships." Jesus, had it already been 9 months since that race?  Suddenly I had a flashback of me out-sprinting a competitor to the line.  Man, what a great race, I thought to myself.   There is no greater feeling than giving your all and performing to the top of your ability.  Though the winner of that race, Meb Keflezighi(& the 2014 Boston Marathon Champion), had finished 6+ minutes faster than me, I knew I gave it everything I had.  That satisfying feeling that is so hard to get.  What a great feeling.  It assures you all the hard work you put in pays off.  In running, there is no greater feeling than that.

This feeling is also why I love coaching.  I want others to experience what I have experienced.  The joy of accomplishing more than you have ever dreamed of or thought you could achieve, surpassing your perception of your limits, seeing how far you can push yourself.  It is why I continue to love and feel an even deeper love for this sport.  The ups, the downs, the so so's.  This is what real running is about.  You just never know what is going to happen, and that makes it terrifying and exciting at the same time.  But I believe the journey is more about discovering oneself, and one's true limits.  This discovery is only made when one devotes themselves to the sport, in victory and defeat.  The defeats are JUST as important as the victories.  They may be more.  I learn more about myself when I fall down, or "fail" if you wish to use that word.  This is how we push ourselves.  A great example is Jake Krong, who I roomed with over the weekend in Chicago, went for the much harsher trials standard of 2:18:00(it used to be 2:22:00), going through the first half in a blazing 1:08:47.  He payed for the fast start a bit later, but still finished in a superb 2:21:12.  Had he not gone for it though, he would have never known.  I respected him tremendously for his courage and congratulated him on a great effort.  He aims to repeat the 2nd sub 1:09 next time.

As for my race plan, I was looking to take the race out in about 1:10 for the first half.  My coach and I knew I was in low 2:20's shape.  Unfortunately, it was not to be.  I woke up Sunday in the middle of the night with a terrible sore throat.  Really?  I thought.  Why now??  Nevertheless, you push it back and go for it.  I had flown all the way out here, just like I had flown all the way to Houston back in January.  Gotta go for it.  Push through.  At the start, Jake and I made our way to the American Development tent and did a warm-up jog for 10 minutes.  I could already tell I wasn't feeling good.  My breathing was heavy, and I felt like I was sinking.  As we got to the start, I stood there, with that sinking feeling, suddenly thirsty.  I sipped on water.  I tried to be optimistic.  Just push past it, I thought.  You can do this!  Go for it!

The horn sounded and the crowds were roaring.  I went out 5:28 for the first mile, perfect pacing and right where I wanted to start.  My goal was to start 5:30's and gradually work into the 5:20's.  But by mile 3, I could tell I was already not feeling good.  My energy was zapped, the power I normally feel before a race was not there.  It will pass, that's how the marathon is.  I went through 10K in 33:55 or so, still not feeling good.  Mile 8, 9, 10.  I went through 10 in 55:00-barely 5:30 pace.  Feeling awful, but still trying to block it out.  I felt like I was running in sand.  I noticed I was starting to slow down, hitting halfway in 1:12, certainly off my target of 1:10 for the first half but I told myself to just settle for a 2:25.  My breathing was labored.  By 25K, I was done.  My body was in complete shut down mode.  It was not happening.  I took gels and they didn't do a thing.  There was nothing I could do.  I had no choice but to drop out at mile 16, with an hour and 29 minutes on my watch.  I luckily found a station right where I had to stop and they drove me back to the finish.  I was cold, weakened, and shivering.  A woman put a blanket around me.  But all the while I was being driven back and feeling defeated, the back of my brain knew I had made an incredibly smart decision.  Perhaps one of the smartest I have ever made in my running career.

"Keep going, son, keep training, keep the dream alive. Don't listen to anyone who tells you you can't. You've gained lots of fitness and are completely healthy and injury free. Look how far you've come since running in high school and college.  The ones who keep getting back up are the ones who achieve their dreams." -Dad



Despite the marathon not going according to plan, the training cycle I did this summer and fall has helped me achieve amazing new levels of fitness.  I have a great amount of aerobic strength stored in my system right now.  More often than not the previous training cycle's gains do not show until the following season(s).  It is the body's way of adapting.  I took yesterday off, and have been resting up to recover from the cold I have, but my legs feel ok.  I'm glad I pulled out of the race when I did because I will probably recover pretty quickly.  My future racing plans will most likely be the Richmond Half Marathon.  I do not feel it is necessary to jump in another marathon until perhaps next spring.  I also feel like with the tremendous aerobic strength I have developed, I could really crush a fast half right now.  To be developed more soon.

Sunday, October 5, 2014

The Training Cycle

"Where you're weak, you will be strong."

This is what my coach told me in a phone conversation on August 31 where I told him how brutal my 26 mile run on a hot and nearly 100% humid day in DC was, and how the run was quite a struggle.   The last 7 miles was a brutal climb up the CCT.  I got through it, somehow.  I was also supposed to double that day.  I thought to myself, several hours after this run, am I even going to be able to run this afternoon?  Later that evening, to my amazement I was running another 6 miles at a sub 7 min pace while it down poured rain to cool things off.  32 miles for the day.

The Long Run puts the Tiger in the Cat.

5 weeks later with another race under my belt I feel strong and ready to go.  For the past 5 months I have averaged close to 95 miles/week.  I have never been able to average this much for so long.  I could not have done this without the help of my coach, Roland.  I am the fittest I have ever been for a marathon, and when I compare to my previous marathon training cycles, this is by far the most successful one I've had.  Particularly, because I have been able to recover better and handle more mileage than I ever have: the combination of averaging high mileage and workouts.  Regardless of how I do in Chicago, I know I am fit as hell.  I will be ready to take my best shot next week.

Below is my training cycle for the past 15 weeks.  I am happy to share this and remember everyone's training is different.  The cycles constantly are changing for each individual.  Thanks to everyone for supporting and reading this blog-I intend to keep it pure.

6/23: 9 miles
6/24: 15 miles + Strength Training
6/25: AM: 4 miles, PM: 5 miles
6/26: AM: 12 miles, PM: 6 miles
6/27: 6.5 miles
6/28: 20 miles
6/29: 12 miles + Strength Training

Total: 90 miles

6/30: 15 miles
7/1: AM: 3 miles, PM: 5 miles
7/2: AM: 5 miles / drills, PM: 6 miles w/ 2 x 5:00 fartleks @ 5:20 pace
7/3: AM: Med-Long Run 17.5 miles, PM: 5 miles
7/4: 8 miles + Strength Training
7/5: 20 miles
7/6: AM: 12 miles, PM: 3 miles

Total: 100 miles

7/7: 15 miles (1:40)
7/8: 6 miles easy + Strength Training
7/9 AM: 4 miles easy, PM: 10 miles total: warm up run, drills, then 3 x 5:00 fartleks: 5:00 @ 5:20 pace, 5:00 easy run, 5:00 @ 5:18 pace, 5:00 easy run, 5:00 @ 5:15 pace, cool down
7/10 8 miles easy + Strength Training
7/11 AM: 4 miles easy, PM: 10 miles easy
7/12: 20 miles (2:16)
7/13: AM: 12.5 miles easy, PM: 4 miles easy

Total: 94 miles

7/14: 8.5 miles easy + Strength Training
7/15: AM: 18 miles (2:06), PM: 4 miles
7/16: 10 miles total: warm up run, drills, then 4 x 5:00 fartleks: 5:00 @ 5:20 pace, 5:00 easy run, 5:00 @ 5:18 pace, 5:00 easy run, 5:00 @ 5:15 pace, 5:00 easy run, 5:00 @ 5:10 pace, cool down
7/17: 15 miles
7/18: 11 miles easy + Strength Training
7/19: AM: 12 miles easy, PM: 4.5 miles easy
7/20: 22 miles (2:25)

Total: 105 miles

7/21: 6 miles + Strength Training
7/22: AM: Track: Drills + 1200m(3:50), 1600m(5:07), 2000m(6:25) w/ 1 lap jog recoveries
PM: 6 miles
7/23: AM: 12 miles, PM: 5 miles
7/24: AM: 17 miles, PM: 5 miles
7/25: AM:  7 miles + Strength Training, PM: 6 miles
7/26: AM: 16 miles quick: 1:32:00, PM: 5 miles
7/27: AM: 12 miles, PM: 5 miles

Total: 108 miles

7/28: AM: 10 miles, PM: 4 miles
7/29: AM: 4 miles, PM: 9 miles
7/30: AM: Track: warm up + Drills + 800m: 2:27, 1200m: 3:41, 1600m: 4:56, 1200m: 3:41, all w/ 1 lap jog recoveries, + cool down, 8 miles total, PM: 6 miles
7:31: AM: 16 miles, PM: 5 miles
8/01: AM: 5.5 miles, PM: 4.5 miles
8/02: AM: 24.5 miles (2:38)
8/03: AM: 11.5 miles, PM: 3.5 miles

Total: 112 Miles

8/4: AM: 7 miles + Strength Training, PM: 4 miles
8/5: Track: 2 x 600, 6 x 400, 6 x 200, all at 4:37 pace, with 1 lap jog recoveries, 11.5 miles total
8/6: AM: 3 miles, PM: 9.5 miles
8/7: AM: 12 miles, PM: 5 miles
8/8: AM: 5 miles + Strength Training, PM: 8 miles
8/9: AM: 10 miles, PM: 6 miles
8/10: AM: 18 miles quick: 1:41:00, 19.5 total, PM: 5 miles

Total: 106 Miles

8/11: PM: 6 miles + Strength Training
8/12: AM: 10 miles, PM: 5.5 miles
8/13: AM: 6 miles
PM: Track: warm up, drills, 2 x 2400m: 7:40, 7:38 (5:06 pace) w/ 1 lap jog between
8/14: PM: 17 miles
8/15: AM: 6 miles + Strength Training, PM: 10 miles
8/16: AM: 12.5 miles, PM: 5 miles
8/17: AM: 20 miles, PM: 3 miles

Total: 110 miles

8/18: 4 miles + drills, Strength Training
8/19: 10.5 miles
8/20: 3 x 5:00 fartleks @ 5:10 pace, 10 miles total
8/21: 9 miles
8/22: 8.5 miles + Strength Training
8/23: 7 miles
8/24: ANNAPOLIS 10 MILER: 1ST PLACE, 53:38(5:21 pace), 20 miles total, 
PM: 5 miles

Total: 75 miles

8/25: 12 miles + Strength Training
8/26: 10.5 miles
8/27: AM: 6.5 miles, PM: 15 miles
8/28: 8.5 miles + Strength Training
8/29: AM: Track: 4 x 1200m @ 3:39 each(4:52 pace),
PM: 5.5 miles
8/30: 10 miles
8/31: AM: 26 miles(2:47:00), PM: 6 miles

Total: 110 miles

9/01: 5.5 miles + Strength Training
9/02: AM: Track: 2400m(7:34), 1600m(5:02), 800m(2:29), 10 miles total,
PM: 6.5 miles
9/03: AM: 15 miles + PM: 5 miles
9/04: AM: 9.5 miles + PM: 4 miles
9/05: AM: 7 miles + Strength Training + PM: 5 miles
9/06: AM: 20 miles(2:08) + PM: 5 miles
9/07: AM: 11 miles + PM: 4 miles

Total: 108 miles

9/8: AM: 8.5 miles, PM: 5.5 miles
9/9: 5 miles + Strength Training
9/10: AM: 6.5 miles, PM: 3 Mile tempo on track(15:30) 5:10 pace
9/11: 9 miles
9/12: 7 miles + Strength Training
9/13: 4.5 miles
9/14: NAVY HALF MARATHON: 1:09:08(5:16 pace), 4TH PLACE, 20+ miles total

Total: 74 miles

9/15: AM: 3 miles, PM: 3.5 miles
9/16: AM: 8.5 miles, PM; 3.5 miles
9/17: AM: 8 miles, PM: 4 miles
9/18: 10 miles + Strength Training
9/19: 6.5 miles
9/20: 20 miles quick: 1:51:00, PM: 3.5 miles
9/21: AM: 10 miles + Strength Training, PM: 5 miles

Total: 86 miles

9/22: AM: 9.5 miles, PM: 5 miles
9/23: 16 miles + Strength Training
9/24; AM: 5 miles, PM: 6.5 miles
9/25: AM: 10 miles, PM: 5 miles
9/26: Track: 4 x mile w/ 1 lap jog recoveries: 5:04, 5:04, 5:01, 5:03
9/27: AM: 6 miles, PM; 5 miles + Strength Training
9/28: 20 miles easy, PM: 5.5 miles

Total: 103 miles

9/29: Rest/Strength Training
9/30: AM: 7 mile Tempo: 37:30, PM: 6.5 miles
10/1: 7.5 miles
10/2: 5.5 miles
10/3: 6.5 miles w/ 2.5 miles progressing to MP
10/4: 12 miles, + Strength Training
10/5: AM: 9 miles, PM: 6.5

Total: 61 miles