Monday, February 24, 2014

Race Report: Gift of the Givers Township 10 km

It's felt like an age but this weekend I finally raced in anger over my favourite distance. My last attempt at a race over 10 km was a disaster, the WeRunJozi race, which ended a streak of double figure sub 40:00 races stretching back to November 2012. It also put me out of action for three weeks with a calf strain. The build up thus far has been gradual, and in reality I'm still building up with no serious hard running a faster than race pace in store for a while I allow my weakened body to come to pace with training and racing consistently.

There hasn't been an absence of niggle of course which I guess comes with the territory. In fact this past week of all weeks I suffered what seemed like shin splints. There's a first time for everything but on my first run of the week I had the most of awful pain in the muscles around my tibia and tightness around my thigh and knee. Not again! Other than some soreness in my foot after an off-road run at the end of December 2013 I had an almost flawless build up. I increased mileage gradual from around 40 km/week up to a peak of 78 km/week, a lot of running for me. For 13 weeks I did not miss a single planned run. But curiously as soon as picked up the pace of my running the struggles began. I do think a part of it was overeagerness on my part. While I have developed the discipline now through the assistance of wearing a heart rate monitor for the first 8 weeks of my build up to run at the correct effort of normal training runs, as soon as I increased the intensity of the runs I also started chasing the clock.

To fast, too soon.

At the back of my mind I have a fading but still obvious memory of the run I was in the first half of last year. As I plateaued to a regular 'faster than 37:00' 10 km runner I had hoped to kick on and chase a new high which has yet to materialize. In training I have felt through each stop-start the form disappearing, culminating in that disappointing 40:34 at the WeRunJozi race, a shadow of my former self.

So it is with that memory that the eagerness to get back there consumes me, while forgetting that the journey there was for the most part 24 months of painstaking building of mileage and strength until I could tolerate the kind of training that got me running faster than I ever imagined I could.

So with my body showing signs of cracking, my coach cancelled the rest of the running for the week and it was about injury lock-down. Strength work, stretching, icing, the works. By the end of the week I was able to do a very easy 8 km on Friday morning and a 30 minute shake out run on Saturday morning and felt okay for once.

At this point I must confess that while I am good at running day after day if needs be, strength work is something else entirely. It's difficult and it never gets easier and I generally slack off with it. My issues now were definitely muscle imbalance issues. As the pain subsisded I could feel the tightness in the tibialis anterior muscle, my quads were tight too, my glutes and mild ITB aggravation. This morning for example I can feel definite improvements after a week of diligence. So I have now endeavoured to roster in my maintenance work. Just like I know I'll be a session of 4x2000m at a moderate effort level followed by 15 minutes of 100m strides with full recovery, so I'll pencil in the ITB Rehab routine I do after the run as well as a core workout in the evening. This was a scare that could have derailed my season as it was starting and I will not let it happen again.

With the Gift of the Givers Township race being held in Eldorado Park, it meant a very early start driving through from Pretoria, up at 3:30 am to get ready. We arrived at the venue at 5:30 am, just enough time to go through a warm up. With the niggles it wasn't my ful warm up, just some light stretching, followed by a 3 km jog that included a ramping up of pace and finishing off with a few 30-60 second surges at race pace. The start was delayed a bit so I could have probably fitted a bit more of a warm up in but I was getting edgy and the nerves were building.

At 6:12 am the starters gun finally went off. With the 10 km, half marathon and marathon starting together, it was a frantic getaway and there were almost a few accidents but thankfully no one fell. The early pace was frenetic and I glanced down at my watch and it was indicating a pace of 3:15/km!!! I had to back off but in the crowd it was difficult but I slowed down enough to cross the 1 km mark a 3:36 (1 km was 3:31 on my watch). The was a bit of a pull to 2 km so my pace dropped a little passed got through in around 7:20, so a 3:44 km. Another quick section followed, around a 3:40 km split and then there was very long pull for around 2 km.

At this point my watch and boards had been synchronized about 2 or 3 seconds out so at 3 km my distance was around 3.05 km. But at 4km suddenly the measured distance was 4.2ish then at 5 km it was 5.3ish. I got to 5 km at around 19:15 and then knowing that it was mostly down back to the finish I relaxed. I didn't force the pace, just simply let my legs go with the terrain, my watch was returning 3:38-3:40/km splits and I was happy with that. The last two km levelled off a bit with a slight uphill to 9 km and then a slight uphill to the finish before finishing off on a grass track. I almost got a nit lost heading into the Eldorado Park Stadium turning left instead of right but managed to get in and finish in 38:05. My watch measure 10.29 km, the longest distance I have ever measured for a 10 km  race but rather a long route than a short route! I wasn't sure what time I was going to finish in as some of the km boards were oddly placed. At 7km the distance was 7.3 then at 8 km it was 8.2. Had I known I would be close to a 37:50 odd I would put in a bit of a kick for the 400 m or so! Oh well.

Fast and flat they said!


Overall though it was a satisfactory season opener. The splits from the GPS were wonderfully consistent and I honestly felt in control. I really could have gone faster in the second half but I wanted to get to the end in complete control. There'll be time time for final lung busting effort when I'm closer to my target of breaking my almost 12 month old PB.


The last time I came off a large block of high mileage training in November 2012, I opened with a slightly impeded 39:16 that was probably worth about about 38:50, though who knows what the effect of a 4:25 vs a 3:50ish opening km would have been on my fatigue levels at the end of the race. My coach was expecting something closer to 39:00 so I'm slightly ahead of where he expected so all in all it was a worthwhile run out even if it looked like it wouldn't happen earlier in the week.

I've received my workouts for the next week so we the first race out of the and a benchmark/platform to build on it's time to knuckle down and train smart. The next main landmark is the Sunnypark Right2Run 10 km on 21 March. The coach might ask me (I hope) to do another low key outing in between but for now that's what I'm focussed on, 4 weeks is a long time in running and I hope to see an improvement that gets me closer to breaking 36:13 by the end of the training cycle.

Monday, February 10, 2014

The long road back: November to January training report

I've been holding writing this post over the ridiculous fear of jinxing myself. The latter half of 2013 was a seriously challenge. What started as a minor flirtation with ITBS on the left side blew up into a serious of stops and starts, ITBS on the right side and a calf strain. The niggles haven't stopped of course, running is a high risk activity when one is reaching for new heights. As I continue to run more I've had sore knees, sore quads, a sore back, what appeared to be a bruised big toe flexor and most recently some soreness in the shin area. So perhaps you can understand my reluctance to blog on about renew fitness and injury free running.

A part of me was afraid that injuries would put the fear of running into me but more than anything the experience has renewed my endeavours to get it right and do as much as I can to stay fit and run consistently. Speaking of consistency, I've come to the conclusion that much of my success was down to exactly that. There's many ways to look at data sets so when I look back through my training logs I see different patterns or lack thereof depending on the question I'm asking. With my running all over the place, one thing that stood out for me was the consistency from February 2012 to February 2013. I was sick a lot during marathon training but other than that there were rarely long periods of inactivity and even then I never took more than five days off. I could point to the mileage increase, the complexity of the sessions I was able to do, especially after the marathon but none of that would have been possible without consistently getting in the run even through the misery of winter and the anguish of the summer.

Late November 2013

But here I am and while keeping my excitement in check, can safely say that I have been thorough the most consistent extended spell of my running journey thus far. Back in November 2013 still with a sore calf but one that thankfully did not reduce me to a limp, my coach started putting me through my paces gently. We agreed to write off anything I had done that led to my minor injury. The key in those early stages was to be honest with myself, keep up maintenance work, icing, strength work etc. It was tough but after two weeks I could feel the pain going away as the muscles got stronger. Those early days, two weeks, involved a series of easy runs, two 12 km run and three 7.5-8 km run.

December 2013

Heading into December, Coach added another day of 7.5-8 km running and the 12 km runs became 13 km running. This was to be held for 3 weeks to allow my body to adapt to adapt to the weekly volume which would go from 46-48 km to 56-58 km. I also started using a heart rate monitor for the first time as I had a tendency to head out fast, aiming for the top end of my effort level for the day. So for most run my heart rate was capped at 150. One run was done at 160 and another at no more than 170, these being short runs, 7.5 km.

The faster runs were interesting. For the first two weeks the paces were consistent and suddenly on the third week, I was running at least 5s/km quicker without having to reach the target HRs. This was something that motivated me that we were on the right track

December/January

For the last full week of December and up to the first weekend of January, things went up another notch. Intermittent running was introduced in the form of 1500m repeats at around 160 bpm with 90s recovery. A 10km progressive tempo was added, 5 km easy, 3 km up-tempo, 2km fast. Two easy runs of 9 and 8 km were done and one long run increased to 13 km. Total mileage now was up to 66-68 km

I had my first niggle during this phase. On the first Sunday run, I did the long run at the Festival of Running 1 hour race in Pretoria at Phobians. It was to be an uptempoish run but a combination of the inclement weather and running in circles on muddy grass made it difficult. In the week that followed I experience soreness in my foot on push off and discovered that it was my big toe flexor that was affected. The decision was made to keep running as it didn't affect my form and to do strengthening work and ice three times a day.

The runs themselves went well. Continuing to use the HR monitor I noticed, over and above the subjective feel, that my pace at any given hear rate was getting faster. It was a good sign.

January

January proper started with a much needed recovery, dropping a run and volume down to 7 km runs as well as killing the intensity as well.

Then two big weeks that really worked me. After 8 weeks, Coach really stepped things up, not one run shorter than 10 km. The foundation was still a midweek long run and a weekend long run,  14-15 km. The faster runs were a longer progression run, 13 km with 7 km steady, 3 km hard and 3 km fast, and 1500m repeats now with 30s recovery. The rest of the week was made up of an easy 10 km run and as 12 km at what I call neither here nor there pace, mostly because you won't find it in Jack Daniels running formula!

The total mileage for those two week was to be 76-78 km. I hadn't run anywhere near that much since October 2012 and had never managed back to back weeks of 70+ km. It was tough but I coped. This time round, the HR monitor was ditched and I was instructed to go by feel. The first week was a roaring success, every run nailed, but the follow-up was challenging. Coach replaced the 12 km on Monday with a 5 km hard but controlled run, managing 19:45. The rest of the week proceeded as normal but by the weekend I was feeling it, the 1500m reps really took a lot of effort. During the tempo though I was hitting some good speeds, getting the Garmin down to 3:40-3:50/km!

So that was a good 10 weeks of training covered and I think i'll leave the rest for the February report, should I make it that far! Those 10 weeks were not without challenges of course, but the important thing was that the consistency was back, which meant that in Week 9 and 10 I was able to run 78 km  and 76 km respectively. I had 57 workout days planned for that period and I ran 57 times!

Week
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thur
Fri
Sat
Sun
Total
1 18/11
7.5 km (E)
12 km (L)
7.5 km (E)
Rest
7.5 km (E)
12 km (L)
Rest
46.5
2 25/11
8 km (E)
12 km (M)
7.5 km (M)
12 km (M)
8 km (E)
Rest
Rest
47.5
3 2/12
7.5 km (E)
13 km (E)
7.5 km (M)
7.5 km (Re)
Rest
7.5 km (90%)
13 km (Re)
56
4 9/12
8 km (E)
13 km (E)
8 km (M)
8 km (E)
Rest
8 km (90%)
13 km (Re)
58
5 16/12
8 km (E)
13 km (E)
8 km (M)
8 km (E)
Rest
8 km (90%)
10 km (Re)
55
6 23/12
9 km (E)
14 km (E)
10 km (Progression)
8 km (Re)
Rest
13 km (4x1500 m w/ 90s recovery)
14.5 km (M)
68.5
7 30/12
9 km (E)
14 km (E)
10 km (Progression)
8 km (Re)
Rest
13 km (4x1500 m w/ 90s recovery)
13 km (M)
67
8 6/1
7 km (E)
Rest
7 km (E)
7 km (E)
Rest
7 km (E)
8 km (E)
36
9 13/1
12 km (M)
14 km (E)
13 km (Progression)
10 km (E)
Rest
14 km (5x1500m MP w/ 30s recovery)
15 km (E)
78
10 20/1
10 km with 5 km fast
14 km (E)
13 km (Progression)
10 km (E)
Rest
14 km (5x1500m MP w/ 30s recovery)
15 km (E)
76



Hopefully I'll have more exciting news in February. I have my first race of the year planned on 23 February at the Gift of the Givers Township Races. I did do a race on 25 January, the PWC George Classen 10 km but I incorporated the 5x1500m into the run and was disciplined enough to start slow, get into the workout, stick to my paces and back off at the end, as my finish time of 40:53 indicates. I was just happy to be at a race again.

I have no idea what will happen at Township. Coach has made it clear that I haven't done the work that will allow me to race fast yet, the fine tuning is still to come. Township will be a practice run and his aim is to get me there 90% fit and we will build to a crescendo later in the season. At the moment I'm just excited to be fit again, running more often than not and getting in good mileage. If you had asked me early November where I would be in February this would be furthest from my wildest aspirations.

For now, I'm just going to keep enjoying the ride.