Designed to Run

Endurance produces character, and character produces hope

Designed to Run - Endurance produces character, and character produces hope

Boston Marathon Race Report – 2012

Boston Marathon 2012: Overview

Sufferfest. I can’t get that word out of my head. It’s the only word that keeps coming to mind as I reflect on my experience. My whole approach to the event changed in the starting corral and the first few miles as dealing with the heat became my primary focus. It’s an odd feeling when your legs want you to tear it up but your body won’t let you. Every race gives you an opportunity to learn something new and this one was no different.

Boston Marathon 2012 Finish

Boston Marathon 2012

Pre-Race

I made the drive up to Boston solo this year since my family had commitments this weekend. Both my boys gave up their spring break to serve on mission’s trips with their school and were coming home on Saturday and Sunday so Mom needed to stay home and play catcher. My oldest was working on building homes for Native Americans dealing with extreme poverty out in Arizona while my youngest was working with at-risk kids in our nation’s capital. I’ve been congratulated a lot for finishing Boston this year and I’m proud of my accomplishment, but I’m more proud of the men my sons are becoming. Is it weird to think of your kids as your heroes?

For the marathon I drove up from South Jersey Saturday morning and got to the hotel around 5PM. After checking in I decided to take a walk and snap some photos before heading to the Dailymile meetup. A big thanks to Brian Adkins for organizing the event, it was a lot of fun.

Boston Marathon 2012 Expo

Boston Marathon 2012 Expo

I had monitored the weather for race day and when I woke up on Sunday to head over to the expo to pick up my bib, I checked the weather again and read my email. The BAA had issued a weather warning for Monday. Their last email took on an almost alarmist tone. Some of it read:

- “Only the fittest runners should consider participating.”
- “Do NOT assume that any experience you have in running a cooler marathon will be a reliable guide in making the decision in whether to participate or defer.”
- ” you should adopt the attitude that THIS IS NOT A RACE. It is an experience. ”

As the reality of the conditions for Monday sunk in I had a pretty strong emotional reaction. I had taken some big training risks in the past 16 weeks to get ready for an attempt to get under three hours. I had also spent close to a grand on a hotel, food and gas while being away from my family. Defer? Not race? I put my thoughts down quickly while they were still fresh and raw. I apologize for the length but I didn’t want to leave anything out:

I’m sitting here in my hotel room at about 9:30AM on Sunday morning, getting ready to head out to the expo to pick up my bib and all everyone’s been able to talk about is the weather. Monday’s forecast is currently looking at 87 degrees for the high which would make it one of the hottest Boston Marathons in history. Gun time is 10AM tomorrow so the temps will start in the 70’s and climb from there, getting close to peaking right around the time I’m climbing Heartbreak Hill in Newton.

Since I got here yesterday afternoon I’ve heard talk of runner deferments to the 2013 race, lowering of expectations and huge chunks of time being added to everyone’s goal pace. Last night when asked what I was shooting for, I half kidding responded ‘I WAS looking to sub-3, but…’ and I would leave it at that. After checking the forecast weather this morning and seeing no changes to the heat forecast for Monday, I have just one thought that sums up tomorrow’s weather for me. I don’t care.

I’ve taken nothing but risks the past 5 months to get me to this point. I’ve changed my footwear and form. I’ve run longer and harder than at any point in my life. I’ve sacrificed my time, my money, my energy and time away from my family to be here. I’ve spent too many years letting fear of failure drive my decision-making. It’s not happening this time.

I’m well trained and I know my body well. After years of deployments to the Middle East (along with runs on the Arabian Peninsula) I know the warning signs and how my body responds to heat stress. I’m not about to put my health at risk for a race, but what I am willing to risk is my pride. From here on out any finish time above 3 hours holds no meaning for me. Whether it’s 3:01 or 4:01, it’s all the same. I’d rather drop out and not finish reaching for a 2:59 then play it safe and conservative just to finish. I’ve already got plenty of medals and certificates on my wall.

What I don’t have is knowing where my running is taking me. As I’ve mentioned before someone knows but He’s not talking. I know He won’t until I’ve given everything I have, until I’ve put it all out there. Because during our 21 year relationship I’ve always found Him when I’m empty, poured out, and have nothing left. And that’s all that I want, to find Him.

Philippians 4:13

I got two things wrong there. The weather started out around 80 degrees and peaked at 89.

Race Day:

I can’t remember the last time an alarm woke me the morning before a marathon. I set my alarm for 5AM but woke around 3:30AM. I just lied there in bed in the vain hope of trying to relax and doze back off. By 4:45 I knew that wasn’t happening so I got up, showered, got suited up and headed out to the buses on Tremont Street. One of the benefits to being up and out early is I was on one of the first buses to arrive at the athlete’s village. I wound up getting some prime real estate under the big tent where it was nice and cool. At around 7AM it was hard to believe it was going to get in the 80′s that day but once 9AM came around and you stepped out into the sun you could feel the intensity.

I got to my corral at about 9:50AM and as I’m standing among the other runners I noticed I was sweating. Standing in place and sweating. Now I consider being under 5’6″ an advantage here because I immediately started looking for a 6 footer in the corral where I could stand close enough to block the sun. The real funny thing was I wasn’t the only guy doing this.

I was in the back left corner of corral 6 near the fence and there was I guy I saw who was a dead ringer for Dean Karnazes. A bunch of guys were talking with him and sure enough bib number 5996 was Dean. The guy looked like he was in incredible shape, 2% body fat tops. I kept an eye on him at the start, curious about how I measured up to the legend.

Race Start

When the gun goes off the ropes for the corrals get removed and you start moving up to the start line in a huge mass. I was watching in disbelief as runners from the corrals behind me were rushing to move up as much as they could as we moved forward. My attitude was just the opposite, I chose to get in the back of the corral to use the crowd to force myself to go out slow, to keep it close to my Game Plan target of 7:00 min/mile splits at the start and then evaluate from there.

Miles 1 thru 4

The start at Boston is a complete traffic jam for the first few miles. You’re basically locked in to whatever pace those around you are running. There is a big downhill drop the first four miles and the key to the rest of the race it to take this easy and focus on good form to conserve energy. My mile one split was 7:16, slower than planned but considering the crowd it was nothing I couldn’t make up if I needed to.

I spotted Dean Karnazes again around mile one and thought about pacing him. As I came up near him though, in what will be a quote that I will be repeating until my dying day:
I had to drop Dean Karnazes after mile one, he was just going out too slow” (I also beat his finish time by 19 minutes, just saying…)

Mile three was my only split of the day below a 7 minute mile (and only two tenths of a second below at that). As I ran the steep downhill, with some shade on the road in places, I noticed I was working a lot harder than I should. My legs were feeling great but I was breathing harder than my pace would dictate. I recognized right away my body was struggling to cool itself. We had about an eight mile per hour tailwind on race day and if you’re running about 8 miles per hour that means you’re running in stagnant air. In fact I only remember two or three times during the race where I felt any breeze at all and then it was only for a few seconds.

Miles 5 thru the scream tunnel (mile 13)

This part of the race was about heat management and trying to measure my level of effort against my pace. I hit every water stop and kept taking my gels to keep up my fluid and electrolyte intake. It was a continual struggle to find a pace where I wasn’t over heating. I continually kept pulling the pace back from 7:10′s to 7:20′s and then 7:30′s as I worked the easy half of the Boston course. Between miles 6 and 8 was when all thoughts of coming in under three hours were officially abandoned. Subconsciously it happened well before that point but I never throw in the towel until the math says so. I hit the halfway mark at 1:35:53 knowing that a negative split wasn’t in the cards given the rising temps. At this point I wanted to finish with my best effort and ran with that as motivation.

Miles 13 thru 16

All thoughts turned to Newton, I dropped my pace further in preparation. Above all else maintaining good form would require the least effort and provide the fastest ascent to the coming hills. The plan: maintain form, maintain effort, manage the heat, hydrate.

Miles 16 thru 21

I don’t mean to be anticlimactic but the heat was way more of a concern at this point in the race than the ascents. The Newton hills are challenging but not apocalyptic. All that form work paid BIG dividends as I was able to keep the splits in the 8:30′s on this section. Cresting Heartbreak was very rewarding but I didn’t bother taking a moment to celebrate as I still had over 5 miles left while working my way through the teeth of the furnace.

Mile 21 to the Finish

The downhill stretch to mile 24 is a welcome respite after heartbreak.  In an overly fatigued state the temptation is to over-stride to use gravity to pull you down the hill. This is always counter productive as the over-striding produces a heel strike with an accompanying braking action and trashing of what’s left of your quads. In contrast to how good my legs felt, the heat was really starting to take its toll on me. I had no clue what my splits were at this point, It felt like 10 mins/mile or higher but looking at my Garmin info I was between 8:15 and 9:10 the rest of the way in. The last two miles are deceivingly difficult as the course flattens but your perception is skewed because you’re coming off 3 miles of downhill.

It was at mile 24 I was getting a noticeable cramp on my right side that I could feel when I inhaled. It had been there since Newton but it was becoming more of an irritant. At mile 25 this cramp spawned another on my left side that was even more uncomfortable. Every time I inhaled I could feel it. At this point I just wanted to be done to finally end the torture. I didn’t even look at my watch when I hit the finish (a first for me) but checking later I had crossed with a time of 3 hours, 28 minutes flat.

Boston Marathon 2012 Finish Line

Boston Marathon 2012 Finish Line

Post Race

After crossing the finish I was feeling a little light-headed and a tad queasy. This wasn’t a first but since I had driven myself to Boston my plan was to drive home after the race. Considering what I had just been through I didn’t think that was a good idea until I got looked at by the Medical Staff. So I checked my pride, grabbed hold of one of the medical volunteers and headed over to the medical tent as a precaution. I got my vitals checked and while my blood pressure was solid my temp was a little high and my heart rate was elevated as my body was still struggling to cool down. The staff handed me a few ice bags and I hung out in the air-conditioned tent for about 15 minutes. I started to feel like myself again and after thanking the Doctors and staff for supporting the runners I headed back to the hotel to get my things and get on the road.

Conclusion

After the crossing the finish my first emotion was disappointment. As runners we so often grade ourselves based on time that we can lose the sense of achievement if we can’t look past the clock. I spoke with about a dozen fellow Boston finishers at the hotel and on the trip back and there was this wonderful feeling of camaraderie above and beyond what you would get at a typical marathon. There was this immediate friendship and closeness you could sense when we discussed the ordeal we all had just been through. By the time I got home I was almost bubbly (never thought I’d use that word) when I spoke to my wife and boys about the race.

I got online this morning to check out my stats because I’m a numbers guy and no matter what the emotions and struggles a race entails, I want to see the math. I finished 2789 overall and 279 in the Male 45-49 age group. That puts me in the top 13% overall and in the top 13% for age group. If you count all the entrants, I’m close to top 10% (let’s go with that). At the Boston Marathon, where many of the best runners in the US and the world are in the field testing their metal, that’s an accomplishment I’ll always treasure. Even if it doesn’t come with a plaque.

Game Plan

Game Plan: Boston 2012

Boston Bib Number

Boston Bib Number

About an hour and half after crossing the finish at the 2011 Philadelphia marathon I started thinking about Boston. I just came in at 3:09:20, an eight minute improvement over my previous PR from earlier that spring, and I starting asking the question ‘is breaking 3 hours possible at Boston?’ With less than 5 months between the two races I knew it would be a big stretch and a lot would have to break the right way for me to get there. Now that I’m 16 days away from pinning on bib number 5751 and lining up in my corral, let’s take a hard look at where I am.

Past Performance is not Indicative of Future Results

…but it’s all we have to work with so let’s get started. For my analysis I’m going to take two of my races from last year, the Hershey Half Marathon and the Philadelphia Marathon, and make some comparisons and correlations to my recent performance at the Caesar Rodney Half Marathon and then attempt to draw some conclusions on how that should predict what I’m capable of at Boston. So our first step is to look at my Hershey and Caesar Rodney performances and try to evaluate how much I improved between those two events. Hershey was 5 weeks before Philly and Caesar Rodney is 3 weeks before Boston so that should make for some good comparisons.

On the surface the improvement is not encouraging since at Hershey my finish time was 1:26:36 while at Caesar Rodney I came in at 1:25:14, only a 1min 22sec improvement. But there are a number of factors that influence race day performance so let’s look at those.

Hill Profile and Weather

Looking at the two half marathons you can see that one is a bit more challenging than the other:

Hershey Half Marathon Elevation Profile

Hershey Half Marathon Elevation Profile

Caesar Rodney Half Marathon Elevation Profile

Caesar Rodney Half Marathon Elevation Profile

While the elevation scales vary a bit it is still obvious that Caesar Rodney is a much more challenging course. While Hershey has more rolling hills, those hills rarely get higher than 50ft as opposed to the lactate-producing, quad-busting 250 ft foot accent and decent after mile 6 at Caesar Rodney. Hershey has a 280 ft total gain while Caesar Rodney has 402 ft.

Since I was making a conscious effort to hold back during the flat portion of Caesar Rodney I’m confident I could have maintained an average of a 6:25 pace or better on a Hershey-like course in lieu of the 6:31 average I had on race day. Also consider that the race day weather at Hershey was darn near perfect. The weather at Caesar Rodney temperature-wise was good but the roads were slick due to the rain and the humidity was high. All things considered I would think 1:24 is an equivalent time for Caesar Rodney to compare with Hershey.

Philadelphia vs. Boston

Time to look at the Philly Hill profile and compare it to Boston:

Philadelphia Marathon Elevation Profile

Philadelphia Marathon Elevation Profile

Boston Marathon Elevation Profile

Boston Marathon Elevation Profile

Again the elevation scales are slightly different. Philly is a course with a total gain (and a total loss) of about 500 ft. Boston has a 548 ft total gain (about the same as Philly) but a 994 ft total loss. The two hills between miles 7 and 11 at Philly are about 100 ft high and then you have a lot of steep short hills around mile 20 in Manayunk. The second half of Philly is a very choppy course elevation wise. In Boston you have a total of four hills near Heartbreak that are about 100 ft each over five miles and that’s it. The rest of the course is almost all DOWNHILL! Honestly, if you could choose between the two which would you pick to run a faster time?

Now I can hear the runners screaming at me about how the downhills trash your quads and then Heartbreak finishes them off. Personally, I have to respectfully disagree here. I ran Boston in 2010 and my quads were fine (drained obviously but no more so than after any 26.2). My plan is to maintain good form on the downhill, avoiding heel striking which hurts you double on the downhill due to the breaking action, and monitor my pace closely. As a runner I’ve noticed that I tend to be able to take on hills better than a lot of my competitors and that may have something to do with my physiology. Since I’m not build like a distance runner I attribute that to my Earl-Campbell-like thighs:

Earl Campbell

Earl Campbell

Another consideration when making comparisons is that when I ran Philly I was coming down with a head cold and fever which didn’t fully manifest itself until the evening of race-day. I had battled the head-cold and congestion for a good week or two prior to that.

Conclusion

Here’s what I’m thinking. After making adjustments, in the half marathon I’m a good 10 seconds per mile faster now than last fall. If we project that out to the marathon (not exact I know but close enough) that takes my 7:13 pace from Philly down to about 7:03. For the head-cold I’d take off another 5 seconds and that’s conservative since the first half of Philly I was holding off my pace and looking back I could have taken the first 13 a tad faster. For the extra elevation loss at Boston I’d take off another couple of seconds. So where does that leave us?

Right back to what I was thinking 5 months ago. I think I’m right on the edge. It’s a reach but a 6:52 min/mile avg pace is doable and a lot will have to break my way for it to happen. Health, weather, race day execution..it could go either way so here’s my plan:

  • I’m going to take those first few miles between 6:55 and 7:00 staying closer to 7:00.
  • If I feel comfortable with that pace after mile 4 or so I’ll nudge it down around 6:55 but above 6:52 until the halfway mark. I basically want to dig a hole for myself time-wise and put myself in a position where I have to negative split to hit my time goal. This strategy worked very well for me in Philly so I’m going to approach Boston the same way.
  • At the half way mark I would have a split of 1:31 or higher. At that point I’ll evaluate how I’m doing and make the decision to start dialing the pace below 6:52 or not.
  • If I make the call to push it up I’ll need to average a 6:47 or better over the second half of the course to hit a 2:59:59 and with the Newton Hills on that section, it will be daunting.

Looks like another opportunity to go all in…

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 13

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 13 Wrap Up

Overview

  • This may be my final training update for Boston. From here on out there’s not much excitement. It’s a matter of getting in the mileage, some strides twice a week and letting the body heal. It’s better to under-train by 5% than over-train by 1%, especially for masters runners.
  • 53 miles last week with the Caesar Rodney Half Marathon on Sunday where I PR’d with a 1:25:14 tag time.
  • My biggest concern was how my legs would handle running a half marathon three weeks before Boston. Legs feel good today with little or no DOMS. I have about 55 miles on the schedule this coming week and then two weeks of serious taper.
  • Less than 3 weeks to Boston.

Monday

  • Standard lower body conditioning routine (See week 5).
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 6, Day 1, Level 2, 200 push-ups over 5 sets.

Tuesday

  • 6 miles easy at a 8:35 pace.

Wednesday

  • Aerobic run, 11 miles averaging 8:09 pace.

Thursday

  • Aerobic run, 14 miles averaging 7:59 pace.

Friday

  • 100 Push-up program: Week 6, Day 2 Level 2, 224 push ups over 9 sets.
  • Easy 8 miles, 8:28 pace.

Saturday

  • Standard lower body conditioning routine (See week 5).

Sunday

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 12

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 12 Wrap Up

Overview

  • A little late posting this week but better late than never…
  • With the 5k last week and some tired legs I pulled the mileage back to 53. Starting to enter the ‘Don’t do anything stupid’ phase of my training. Looks like it was a good call as my legs are still tired but holding up. Will probably look at keeping the mileage under 60 this week as well.
  • Less than 4 weeks to Boston.
  • 1st treadmill free week of the year, Woo Hoo!
  • Citizens Bank Caesar Rodney Half Marathon on tap for Sunday.

Monday

  • Standard lower body conditioning routine (See week 5).
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 6, Day 1, Level 2, 200 push-ups over 5 sets.

Tuesday

  • 9 miles with some interval work. 5 x 600m at 5k pace (6:00 min/mi.)

Wednesday

  • Aerobic run, 13 miles averaging 8:13 pace.

Thursday

Friday

  • Easy 5 miles to shake out the legs for the 5k on Saturday, 8:32 pace.

Saturday

Sunday

  • Long Run, 20 miles averaging 8:08 pace.

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 11

But First, Story Time

Before the training wrap up I wanted to share a quick story about the world class customer service I experienced from Patton at the Natural Running Store.

For some time I had agonized about what race shoe to wear for Boston in April. Up to this point all my races for the past 3 years were in the Asics Hyper Speeds. These were great shoes for me at the time but I’ve outgrown them as a runner. I’ve transitioned for the past 9 months to minimalist footwear and the Hyper Speeds with their 6mm heel raise and spongy ground feel just weren’t going to work. I had done some research and narrowed it down to a few selections but none of the shoes I was looking at were available at the local running stores. With so much riding on this, I didn’t want to blow it by making a bad shoe purchase or spend the next month buying and sending back shoes from online retailers.

Natural Running Store logo

Who you gonna call?...

I’ve bought shoes from the Natural Running Store in the past so I got on their site and using their cool instant messaging feature I explained my dilemma to whoever was on the other end. The reply I got back from was Patton himself and for those who don’t know him, he’s the owner. That startled me at first, I mean how many owners are manning the customer service desk?!?!?

We chatted for few minutes and he asked if I preferred my answer via IM or video. I told him whatever was easiest for him and he then asked me to give him a few minutes and he’d be right back. He then sent me a link to a 3 and 1/2 minute video where he addressed my concerns, compared the Altra Instincts with the Inov-8 Bare-X Lite 150 (shoes he personally trained in) and discussed the benefits of each. I’ve dug back through my browser history and found the link so if you want to check it out here it is (for as long as the link lasts): http://ml.vu/xmJu1v

After another 5 minutes or so chatting, I decided on the Bare-X Lite 150 (in Super Hero blue):

Inov-8 Bare X Lite 150

Cape sold separately

I asked about sizing and Patton told me to go a 1/2 size smaller than the size 9 of the Altra Instincts. To be honest this made me a bit nervous because EVERY running shoe I’ve ever owned was a size 9. The Natural Running Store has an outstanding return policy so I went with the 8 1/2 size.

If you look down at my training, my Saturday marathon pace run was my first run in the 150′s. It was a great test to see if they would work for me since I was closely simulating race day conditions. They were light, responsive and with just the right amount of ground feel. And how did they fit?…

Thanks Patton for blowing my mind with great service and great shoes!

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 11 Wrap Up

Overview

  • Planned for 70 miles this week but clocked 62. Still feeling like I might be pushing close to the injury zone so I cut some mileage again this week.
  • 5 weeks to Boston.
  • Haddonfield Adrenaline 5K coming up on Saturday. Race season has begun!!!

Monday

  • Standard lower body conditioning routine (See week 5).
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 6, Day 1, Level 2, 200 push-ups over 5 sets.

Tuesday

  • Aerobic Run, 10 miles on the treadmill averaging 8:04 pace. Was scheduled for a VO2Max run today but my left leg was telling me that would be a mistake. It’s typically the speed workouts that have caused me injury in the past. I made the call to back off a bit.

Wednesday

  • Aerobic run, 15 miles on the treadmill averaging 7:59 pace.

Thursday

  • Easy run, 5 miles on the treadmill averaging 8:34 pace.
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 6, Day 2 Level 2, 224 push ups over 9 sets.

Friday

  • Aerobic run, 8 miles on the treadmill averaging 8:05 pace.

Saturday

  • Long Run, 18 miles outdoors with 14 miles at marathon pace. MP splits: 6:44, 6:49, 6:45, 6:57, 6:54, 6:51, 6:53, 6:54, 6:59, 6:48, 6:52, 6:48, 6:52, 6:59.

Sunday

  • Easy Run, 6 miles averaging 8:40 pace.

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 10

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 10 Wrap Up

Overview

  • Planned for 70 miles this week but clocked 55. Had some extended fatigue issues in the legs so I dropped a couple of recovery runs but kept the quality workouts.
  • 6 weeks to Boston.

Monday

  • Standard lower body conditioning routine (See week 5).
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 6, Day 1, Level 2. Finally decided to go with Week 6 after about 2 months on Week 5, whatever it takes… 195 over 5 sets with 55 on that final set.

Tuesday

  • Easy Run, 5.5 miles on the treadmill averaging 8:38 pace.

Wednesday

  • Aerobic run, 15 miles on the treadmill averaging 8:06 pace.

Thursday

Friday

  • Off Day

Saturday

  • Aerobic Run, 12 miles outdoors averaging 7:59 pace.
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 6, Day 3 Level 2. 245 push ups over 8 sets.

Sunday

  • Long Run, 22 miles averaging 8:16 pace.

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 9

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 9 Wrap Up

Overview

  • 52 miles total this past week. This past week was a recovery week but I might need to dial it back a bit since I’m a little iffy about making week 10 a 70 mile week.
  • 7 weeks to Boston.

Monday

  • Standard lower body conditioning routine (See week 5).
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 5, Day 1, Level 3. 180 Pushups over 5 sets. Still on week 5 but its working for me.

Tuesday

  • Aerobic Run, 9 miles on the treadmill averaging 8:07 pace. 3 mile cool-down in Vibrams.

Wednesday

  • Intervals, 3x800m at 6:00 pace, 9 miles total on treadmill averaging 8:23 pace. 3 mile cool-down in Vibrams.

Thursday

  • 100 Push-up program: Week 5, Day 2. Level 3. 200 pushups over 8 sets. Last set I got to 60 straight, new record

Friday

  • Aerobic Run, 11 miles total at 8:02 pace, 3 mile cool-down in Vibrams.

Saturday

  • Aerobic Run, 8 miles outdoors averaging 7:53 pace.
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 5, Day 3, Level 3. 210 pushups over 8 sets with 60 on the last set.

Sunday

  • Long Run, 15 miles averaging 8:13 pace.

Next Post: Ending bad relationships

splenda logo

Breaking up is hard to do.

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 8

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 8 Wrap up

 Overview

  • 57 miles total this past week after taking Valentine’s Day off to spend the night with my valentine and our boys. Recovery week is up next but 58 miles are on the schedule with intervals on Tuesday. Not much of a recovery week if you ask me :)
  • After analyzing my gait videos I’ve focused more on walking without putting as much weight on my heels when I make ground contact.  My achilles feel better so I’m going to continue to focus on this.
  • Eight weeks to Boston, halfway there.

Monday

  • Standard lower body conditioning routine (See week 5).
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 5, Day 1, Level 3. Reset week 5 at the request of the family. Everyone prefers the Mon/Weds/Fri schedule so ‘Team Savarese’ is now on the same page

Tuesday

  • Off day.

Wednesday

  • Med-Long run, 15 miles on treadmill averaging 8:03 pace.
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 5, Day 2. Level 3. 185 over 8 sets. Felt strong all the way through, even after running 15 on the TM.

Thursday

  • Recovery Run  (MP + 1:20 per mile or slower), 6 miles in Vibrams on the treadmill averaging 8:30 pace.

Friday

  • 13 miles total at 8:02 pace, 3 mile cool-down in Vibrams.

Saturday

  • Recovery Run  (MP + 1:20 per mile or slower), shorts weather in late February (w00t!). 7 miles in Vibrams outdoors averaging 8:13 pace.
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 5, Day 3. Level 3. 202 push-ups over 8 sets.

Sunday

John Cleese behind desk, Monty Python

...and now for something completely different...

photo credit

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 7

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 7 Wrap-up

 Overview

  • 66 miles total this past week and I feel good but a bit spent. Two weeks back to back with mileage at 66 miles or higher and 280 miles total over the past 30 days, both a personal first. Next week we got 67 on tap.
  • Backed off the Vibram mileage again this week. Achilles is improving since I’ve been focusing on walking without landing heel first. Need to continue to focus on form in every area.

Monday

  • Standard lower body conditioning routine (See week 5).

Tuesday

  • Easy 10 miles at a 8:32 pace. Last 3 miles in Vibrams.
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 5 (take 4), Day 1, Level 3; 170 push-ups over 5 sets

Wednesday

  • Med-Long run, 14 miles on treadmill averaging 8:04 pace. Another iFit live trip over the Newton Hills. Heartbreak Hill gets more doable everytime.

Thursday

  • Recovery Run  (MP + 1:20 per mile or slower), 5 miles in Vibrams on the treadmill averaging 8:37 pace. Shot some video for a gait analysis post coming next week, very revealing!
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 5 (take 4), Day 2, Level 3; 185 pushups over 8 sets.

Friday

  • 11 miles total with 5 at Half Marathon pace (6:36), 3 mile cool-down in Vibrams.

Saturday

  • Recovery Run  (MP + 1:20 per mile or slower), easy 6 on the roads at an 8:25 pace.

Sunday

  • Long Run, 20 miles averaging 7:56 pace. Another solid long run this week.
  • Weather is starting to get dicey…Jim Cantore better watch his back…
Jim Cantore

I got my eye on you Cantore...

photo credit

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 6 Wrap-up

Back to Boston: Boston Marathon Training Week 6 Wrap-up (Super Bowl Champion Edition!):

Overview

  • 68 miles total this past week and 66 for the week coming up. Legs and body are sore but in good shape.
  • Backed a little off the Vibram mileage and did about 16 miles total due to the high volume week and a little soreness in my achilles. On Sunday’s long run I made up for it by focusing on form.

Monday

  • Standard lower body conditioning routine (See week 5).

Tuesday

  • Tempo Run, 10 miles total with 5 miles at half marathon pace (6:36 min/mile). Last 3 miles in Vibrams.
  • 100 Push-up program: Week 5 (take 4), Day 3, Level 3; 200 push-ups over 8 sets.

Wednesday

  • Med-Long run, 14 miles on treadmill averaging 8:04 pace. Programmed the last 14 miles of Boston into iFit live so I was able to run the Newton hills on this one. That 6% incline gets your attention.

Thursday

  • Recovery Run  (MP + 1:20 per mile or slower), 5 miles in Vibrams on the treadmill averaging 8:33 pace.

Friday

  • Aerobic Run (MP + ~1 min/mile), 11 miles averaging 8:01 pace, 3 mile cool-down in Vibrams.

Saturday

  • Aerobic Run  (MP ~1 min/mile), 7 miles in Vibrams averaging 7:35 pace. Faster than planned, just happy to be outdoors again.

Sunday

  • Long Run, 21 miles averaging 7:53 pace. Good confidence builder.
  • Giants Win, get a fourth ring. Eli punches his ticket to Canton.
Vince Lombardi Trophy

NY Giants are Champs again!!!!

photo credit