Friday, October 25, 2013

2014 Can't Come Fast Enough

This morning I've been doing a lot of research and planning for my 2014 racing season. Although it has only been 5 days since the marathon, I find putting some events on the calender will help me to re-focus my training once I begin running again on Monday. I never like just running aimlessly with no future goal to train towards - because even though the Scotiabank Marathon was a big thing for the year it is only a stepping stone to bigger and better things in my running career. Also, stuff has to be put on the calender soon for what I'm planning to do in 2014 to help me periodize my training. First off to help me "ease" back in training and get some energy back into my legs I am competing in the Casablanca 8k on Nov 9. Honestly, I wasn't sure if I should do the race or not because a part of me thinks wow it has been such a long season, but another part thinks this will be a great way to kick-start my training. In other words, I am not treating this race as a way to end off my 2013 season, it ended with STWM, but rather it is a way to start my training leading into the 2014 season. In addition, I feel I still have this fire burning inside and wanting to race again sooner rather than later. You might think taking a full week off in light of a race coming up in 2 weeks is a little odd, but honestly after STWM I think I could jog my way to a 3:15-20/km avg for a measly 8k - Okay maybe not jog but you know what I mean.

In terms of the gamplan for next year here is a tentative schedule I've made up for the first few months of the season.

Feb 16/17: Either the Winterman Half Marathon or Grimsby Half Marathon

I think each one has its advantages. For the Winterman it would be fun to go to Ottawa again and see if I could defend my title. Being a repeat-winner just has a Tiger Woods kind of feel - and sounds bad ass. However, the disadvantage of the race would be I know the course and remember it is a looped type which means I have to go around people as I lap them - wasting time, and waste even more time having to go around them when the course narrows to a sidewalk for a couple hundred meters (last year I had to bound over and onto the snowbank to get around some people. So essentially, I think my time in Grimsby might be faster, and not to mention less expensive compared to going all the way to Ottawa. Although that week is reading week, so getting there and back doesn't have to be too rushed.

March 2: Chilly Half Marathon - Burlington

I want to do this one because seeing last year's results there are some wicked fast runners who competed in it. Lionel Sanders won it last year in 1:07 and 5 guys total under 1:12. So I think it would serve as a good indicator for the new seasons' time goals (which I will discuss in a bit).

March 30 - Around the Bay 30k

After last year's incredibly well organized and great race/route setup (love the challenge of starting out pretty flat and fast route then changing to rolling hills followed by the biggest hill on the Ontario Road Racing Circuit at 26k) this one is a definite. Also, this year that race was by far my biggest help to setting my time goals in the marathon. Here is a excel sheet I made up in the week leading to last weekend's marathon.
10 15 20 25 30 35 42.2
0:35:43 0:53:47 1:11:55 1:30:27 1:48:26 2:07:00 2:34:00
0:03:34 0:03:35 0:03:36 0:03:37 0:03:37 0:03:38 0:03:39

The non-bolded text are my splits for the around the bay. In the bold are what I was planning to hit in the Marathon simply continuing from the 30k mark on. I used this on the race to know if I was ahead or behind pace. In the race though I actually got to 30k in 1:46:15 and to 35 in 2:05:32 - this is why I knew I was 1:30 ahead of schedule. 

Apr 20 - Toronto Yonge Street 10k 

Not entirely sure what date this one is, so this one is really tentative, although if not this one I will find another 10k on that weekend. Having said that I would really like to do this one because the downhill course would let me run a really fast time.

May 5 - Mississauga Half Marathon

This will be the fourth time competing in this race - third time in the half. I like the course - mostly because my half PB in 2012 was here, and my half PB in 2013 was here. So historically I perform well here. 

May 25: Ottawa Race Weekend - Marathon

Ya I said Marathon. In the upcoming year I think I am ready to do two major marathons, after doing 2 in my first season, and it chewing my body up and spitting it out. This time around though I got lots of miles built up into my legs and I can survive the two major builds better. Sure a person will never be able to say they are used to running 200k+ a week because it is so physically demanding on the body, but I can say I have experience with it and think I can handle it for two periods in the year. Amazing though how on this week off I can see how demanding that training regime was. For example, during this week if I am running late for class I can just bolt across campus, bounding up stairs to get there. During my build up to STWM I could not bound up stairs or sprint across campus because my legs and feet were just physically exhausted from the day before or the run that morning. 

So that's what I got planned for the spring. In terms of my time goals I will set those a little later once I've maybe completed my first couple workouts/tempo runs. What I can say is that it will be fast. For example, in the Marathon I got to the halfway just over 1:13, only 40 seconds slower than my half marathon PB, so I think that time is not only going down it will be smashed. I'm thinking in the 1:10 range. For the 30k I know that time of 1:48:26 is going down since I passed the 30k mark in the marathon in 1:46:15. Meaning that one is going down a bunch. In the full marathon, I don't know yet since its obviously too early after I just completed one. So at this moment it is hard to see myself going faster since I gave that race my all. That being said I know I can still improve, and after my first couple half's I will set a time.

Monday, October 21, 2013

Revenge is Sweet

So as you all know yesterday was the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon. I have been waiting for this day for the last 12 months since last year's race. I'm not going to say last year was a failure because I simply started too fast, rather it was doomed to begin with, since I went into the race without much of a gameplan. This year however, was totally different. I started the season buying a Garmin Forerunner 410, which it will sound weird, but literally revolutionized my training regime. To that point I was running with nothing but a stopwatch. I would judge my pace purely by feel, since not only could I not know the current pace but also I would have no clue how far I was into the run. The watch changed my training from going by feel, to becoming systematic and precise. I was able to effectively go on a variety of runs, and complete so many different workouts that I never before could really do accurately and therefore properly. I progressed with my training and looked to sharpen my skills while racing. In high school cross country, and my first few marathons I had no real plan, and not much experience to race competitively. This season I started in the Winterman Half in Ottawa, where I learned how to lead from the front and push the pace myself. I led start to finish dismantling my competition by five and a half minutes. From there, my drive to race only increase and I figured the more I raced the better I would become purely from having different experiences each time I toed the line. I moved quickly on to the 30k in Hamilton, where for the first time I experienced feeding off of another competitor. I ran neck and neck with one competitor for the first 25k of the race and then, building on my previous experience in Ottawa, took control of the pace myself leaving my competitor in the dust up the dreaded hill at 26k. From there I went to London to compete in a smaller half marathon, beat my PB set only 2 months earlier in Ottawa, by learning how to ignore pain, running the race with a bad case of tendonitis. Throughout my training in the lead up to Mississauga I learned many new workouts to gain speed, and it paid off once again smashing my PB set the month before. From there to Barrie, where I once again got to experience the feeling of winning, setting a course record, and learning how to race in any weather with heavy legs. Next, to Dundas where I used pure speed workouts and countless lactate threshold workouts to push my speed limits and challenge a Kenyan for the first time in a race. The feeling a coming so close to winning left me even more determined to improve. On to, St. Catherines where once again I came close to winning, and where I experienced the feeling of running on truly bruised and battered legs. Not only from nagging injuries, but also the sheer volume of mileage.

And then, October 20. The day started at 5:45 with some oatmeal, banana, and a coffee of course. Watched some Ryan Hall videos to get the image of his perfect stride in my head to envision during the race, to keep myself in good form when times got tough. Wasn't able to get much of a warmup in because the setup of the corals was kind of crazy. First having to walk all the way around city hall, and then the fact that there were so many people in the Red Coral (the front corral) that I don't think should've been. I think with a race as big as this one they should really have more corrals with more specific times. For example, to be in the Red Coral you had to be either under 1:45 for the half marathon, and 3:30 for the full. Well I'm sorry but someone running 3:30 is in a totally different ballpark then someone like me aiming for 2:34:00. I am aiming to run 3:40/km compared to 5:00/km. Think about that knowing that at 3:40 you cover 100m in 22 seconds and at 5:00 you are covering the same 100m in 30 seconds - comparatively standing still. Basically, I'm going to be tripping over the guy in front of me. Anyways, so I couldn't get a great warmup in but it was enough to atleast wake up my  left hamstring which is all I am ever really concerned about. The gun went and it was off. About 100m into the race, I had kind of a strange feeling looking around at my surroundings and thinking I can't believe the race which I have thought about for the last year is already here. Well, that's enough philosophizing let's race. Started off in one group of guys for the first 500m but this pace was too slow, but between us and the next group up was pretty far. I made the calculated decision to try and split the gap and make it to that group ahead. This was the lead women's group about 10 kenyans/ethiopian women, and me the Thornhillian. We ran together for the first 4k or so, and then I dropped off because this pace was too random, and I got picked up by a group of 12 other runners. In this group was Lanni Marchant and Krista Duchene the two women who would go on to set Canadian records. Also in the group were a couple of there pacers, and the others were doing the half. Learning from my experience at the 10k in Dundas, I sat just about in the back of this peleton, shielding myself from the west wind. I was loving it, feeling comfortable, despite averaging 3:21-3:25 for the next 10k. Also in the group was Lioudmila Kortchaguina another one of the top Canadian women. Because all the top Canadian Women were in this group the CBC mortorcycle was leading ahead of us the whole time - cool feeling being on tv. At 15k Krista and Lanni put down the hammer, and me and Lioudmila were dropped after slowing to 3:29/km. But we cruised along. I was struggling a bit at about 18k to keep the pace, because lots of thoughts started swarming through my head about starting maybe too quick, but then I saw a couple runners drop off Krista and Lanni's group, and me and Lioudmila picked them up and then dropped them off. Seeing the halfway mark and 1:13:37 got me really excited and I then put down a 3:27 and 3:29 to drop Lioudmila. From that point I was on my own for a while. In fact all the way until 34.5km. At about 25k I started getting some cramping in my left calf, but just ignored it like I've learned how to, and kept on going. On Queen St. I fed off the crowd cheering my name and telling me I could catch Sara Kiptoo a Kenyan woman, who was within site at this point. I knew since I average 3:29 for the first half I could afford to average 3:50 on the second half and still run in for my 2:34:00. And at 30k, with the crowd cheering me on and clocking a couple 3:39s thus extending my buffer a little further, I knew my time would be possible. But I told myself not to start calculating yet, as the race doesn't really start until 32km as many people say. I wanted to really focus on each kilometer and stay in the moment. And at this point the goal was to catch Sara, and the other kenyan/ethiopian runner she was with. I powered through, and on the hill going over the DVP caught the male runner with her, and then passed ahead of her. She pass me on the downhill but I caught back up and we ran together for a kilometer or so until she sped up a bit (we are now at 3:50/km at 37km) and I couldn't stay. I thought that was the last I would see of her, but I caught back up within 20m or so at 39km. The crowd continuing to cheer me on, "You can do it Frank, you can catch her, your almost there, etc," I kept on going. The downhills at this point were starting to really test my quads as they were really starting to feel as though they were about to seize up. So I geared down on these hills, and took them cautiously. At 40k I was neck and neck with Sara, and more importantly at 2:25:21. Even though I easily could have let my mind wander and think just 2.2 more km in 8:39 and we have 2:34, I kept keeping my mantra of one kilometer at a time. I ran that 41km in 3:56 and I now knew I could do it. With the crowd cheering me on, and seeing the sign 800m to go I thought about all my yasso 800s that I did and thought just one more. 500m to go the announcer saying my name crowd cheering, I was so close. I gave everything I had with one last effort (according to my garmin 3:10 pace for about 10 seconds) and crossed the line just ahead of Sara and more importantly 2:34:03. That last effort perfectly represented the last 12 months' mottos of, "One more, keep going, almost there, push harder, power through, hammer it, no pain." Even though I knew I had done enough to prepare for this race, and knew that I could do it, it was still difficult to really see myself crossing the line in the time I set out to achieve so long ago. And now that I did I am feeling a whirlwind of emotions. From I'm so thrilled with my time, to can't wait to see what I am capable of next time around. For instance passing the halfway at 1:13:37 makes me think I can smash my half marathon PB of 1:12:22 next year. O my goodness and I almost forgot about the title of the post: revenge is mine. In addition to getting my revenge on the STWM beating my PB by 18 minutes - ya I said 18, I also beat Fred Karanja by 7 minutes - who as you may remember beat me in the last few meters of the 10k in Dundas, and beat Ryan - who beat me in St. Catharines - by 9 minutes. So that's it for now, I will update the blog in a bit after I decide on plan for november if I decide to do some racing then, and next year. But for now going to take a full week off - not off off - just off running, probably do some weights/swimming/indoor cycling maybe even throw in some upper body weight training just to confuse people in the gym. Also once the picture get posted I will update with pics from STWM.




 Captions:
Top left: This is what I meant be on my own for a while,.

Top Right: Here is the last hard effort to the line (3:10/km for 10sec). Look at that forefoot strike still 2:34 min later.

Bottom left: I put this was I as a joke to look at my absolutely bulging biceps lol. But more importantly looks like I am not coming out and out of my stride which is good. You can see the left leg is still flex as the right leg is pulling through.

Bottom Right: This is at half point I think - just about to say goodbye to Lioudmila.

Friday, October 18, 2013

48 Hours and Counting

After another good night sleep and now carbohydrate rich breakfast I'm feeling eager to hammer out 42.195km, and smash my PB. The only problem during the week was at one point (tues) I seemed to  lose some confidence in my purple adios 2.0. On one of my runs this week I wore them to just get used to their feel since my training shoes have a 4mm offset heel-to-toe and the adios have a 9mm. I went out for a short 39:30 min 10k recovery run with the goal to just chill and enjoy the final few runs. I felt really weird stopping after 10k since my heart rate was barely up and wasn't really sweating. But more importantly I was concerned that my shoes felt a little clanky. If you ever wore a stiff pair of racing flats you know what I mean, if not its a kind of hard sound/feeling to explain. I spent the next morning wondering if I should buy the highly acclaimed NB 1400v2 which Reid Coolsaet, Rob Watson, Eric Gillis, etc are wearing for their fall marathons and races like the Zoo Run.

But then came Wednesday's track session. Instead of doing the pyramid workout I intended which has a total of about 5k faster than race pace, I changed to doing 6 x 1 k at half marathon pace (15k overall) mostly because I got to the York Track at around 11:20 am and my athletic injury class was at 12:30. So I had less than an hour and about 10 min to change before the run, warmup, hammer out 15k, cooldown, stretch, and change. I figured the pyramid wouldn't give me enough time to do that, and don't worry I made it to class on time with time to spare (sure I was a little sweaty, but luckily it wasn't a full class so I could space myself out put my legs up and learn all about the knee - I think God must have designed it on the Monday of that week so he wasn't really thinking clearly). But anyways throughout the workout I didn't even think about my shoes. And afterwards I realized something, I never thought about them in St. Catharines, or during last year's marathon, why because they are only meant to go fast. So it will serve as further motivation for myself knowing if I drop to a slow pace like 3:50 on Sunday the shoes will feel stiff and clanky, faster you go the better they feel. More on the shoes, you may think isn't that strange for a racing shoe to have a 9mm offset. Well actually the majority of marathon flats have comparable offsets. The reason, I have researched this quite a bit, and there is no real answer. But it is something most people misunderstand since most think the name racing "flat" means there is a zero mm offset. And that is not true. What I think they mean with the name, it that the shoes are similar in style and design to a track racing spikes but without the spikes on the sole and hence a "flat" sole. In term's of why I think the racers have 9-10mm offset is a marathon specific feature. If you look most 3-10k shoes like the Hagio, wave universe, RC5000, LunarSpider R3, Piranha, etc they have anywhere from a 2-5mm offset. Why? Well during a 10k glycogen depletion and hence quick sand feet are not an issue. So although lactate levels are high your form isn't breaking down much so you are most likely still running at the end of the race with a smooth midfoot transition and therefore not needing much of a heel. Conversely, in a marathon at around 38 km most people will experience something I call quick sand feet. Basically, it is the strangest thing I have ever felt in my life. You feel like your running in quick sand. You continue to tell your legs to continue forwards but it is as if the message is not reaching them. It is an out of body experience where time slows down (literally you look at the your watch and it has only been like 3 sec since you checked it last), the miles seem longer, and your legs aren't really moving with any authority. I don't know what it feels like to go under general anesthetic but I imagine this is what it would feel like. Anyways, at this point your form isn't great. The nice smooth transition you keep for the last 38 km is gone. At this point to survive the last few kilometers I think it is critical to have some heel cushioning hence the 9-10mm drop. Now even though I don't think that will happen to me on Sunday because I have gone on 6 40+ km runs and one 42.2 kilometer one during that epic 230km week, I now what to expect of my legs near the end, here's a look at some of the best available marathon racing shoes. Sure you may not want to buy a brand new pair before the Oct 20 marathon but if you are racing in the  Niagara Falls International Marathon on the 27th or the Hamilton Road to Hope Marathon on Nov 3 here are some options and comparison between what is out there:

The Nike Flynit Racer has a 10mm drop. It features an incredibly lightweight upper (when I picked it up in the store it was essentially a sock-like material on the upper). Now it is on the narrow side of the spectrum especially at the arch. So if you have wider feet the medial side of your foot may get a little irritated. Size 9 in men's is a crazy light 6.2 ounces. It has full-ground contact on the sole, and the foam is definitely softer than the adios. Whether you want that or not is up to personal racing preference. For me I like the propulsion the adios give because of there stiffness.

The Asics DS Racer 9 is very similar to the speedstar which I raced my first marathon in. It also has a 10mm drop. The only real difference btw the speedstar and racer is the medial post in the Racer. It definitely is a racing shoe with the low profile and 7.9 ounce weight, but for those who need a little support to correct overpronation. It fits slightly large in heel, so I would try it on before buying.




Now here are the awesome ones. The brand new NB 1400v2 in sulphur yellow. The other color options are pretty awesome too. These are 0.8 ounces lighter than the original 1400 at 6.3 ounces. How are they so damn light. The Revlite midsole is 30% lighter than other foams featured in racing flats.  A 9mm drop and a sweet outsole pattern that has some blown rubber meaning it will give some nice grip on the road. The seamless upper is extremely light, although some runners who ran in the orignial 1400 have said this upper doesn't give them the same lock-down and close-to-foot fit. Still looks awesome, I will definitely be buying a pair for races next year or maybe for racing in november (if I decide to continue to race season after Sunday but we'll talk about that later).

So there it is. Obviously there are alot more options like the saucony fastwitch, wave ronin, lunaracer, ST5 etc, but don't have the time or information to review them all. So 48 hours left packing in the carbohydrates, and 1 and a half more sleeps to go (If you know what I mean) and it's game time.




Sunday, October 13, 2013

7 Days Left

Around this time (8:45) 7 days from now the STWM will begin. Already I feel some nerves and definitely the incidence of nighttime dreams about the marathon have increased. I already had one really weird dream where I started with my favorite bright-green adidas adios, which I have worn for 5 races this year (4 half marathons and one 30k), and countless tempo runs/ intervals on the track - only God knows how many miles are on those shoes because I stopped counting after the first few 4 months. It was destiny that we met, hidden underneath a table in the clearance section, only one left and it happened to be a size 8.5. And despite the fact that the outsole near the toes is completely worn down (my toes are practically touching the ground), I love everything about these shoes. In fact, that tempo run I had planned on Friday night with my Dad (who may have to start charging me for all the pace work, and hydration delivery he has done during my build) was done in my green shoes. We kept marathon pace - 3:38-3:39 for 14k and it felt pretty comfortable even though it was night at night and I always run a little slower at night. Anyways so in the dream, I ran the first half in my green shoes probably because I thought they could only last the the halfway, and then met my Dad who quickly gave me the new purple adios 2.0. Unfortunately, for some reason I was having a hard time putting the shoes on and tying the laces, and with people beginning to pass me as I was frantically trying to get the shoes tied, I was getting extremely frustrated. Can't entirely remember what happened after that, and I'm not a psychologist or anything, even though I have taken a bunch of sports psychology courses, but maybe it is a sign that I should do everything in my power to search the depths of the world wide web for some store somewhere that carries the original adios (and yes I even have looked on japanese websites - used the google translate function to try and find these iconic shoes).

But purple shoes or barefoot I am ready for STWM. I have never been this excited for a race before. In the past, I have laid my head down at night in the week leading up to the race and thought, "Have I done everything that I need to do to be successful." This time around I feel not only have I done what I needed, but I have done more. My body is absorbing the training really well this time around as well. My philosophy this year was basically to push my body to the brink of destruction and then pull myself back, recover, and race hard. The workouts now are so exhilarating because of the slight cutback in mileage. Sure after today's run, which I'm going on in a few minutes, it will be 150km on the week which it still alot, but considering I was running more than 200 for 2 months straight with a 230kilometer in there, it is a big cutback. You see during the majority of the build, you are physically and mentally exhausted. It is now, during your final few workouts that you can really see all the hard work paying off. So I'm ready, one more week to go, probably one workout left to do on wednesday (a pyramid to deplete my liver/muscle glycogen), and another 100k or so (maybe 100 including the marathon, I will finalize my plan today for the weekly quota). Good luck in your final week to all, fuel right (carb load properly - it is a 7 day process not a 24 hour), and stay hydrated.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

10 Day Countdown

With school work heating up, and midterms and presentations on the agenda, I haven't had much time to sit down and update my blog in a while. To sum up how the last couple weeks went, Sunday Sep 22 I raced as in St. Catharines. I was unsure how my inflamed/swollen and weakened achilles would survive and unsure about what time/pace I would run. The race got off quickly, I wasn't actually even ready for the starting gun - no countdown, nothing. I spoke to one other competitors before the race Ryan Tice - a cross country/track runner from McMaster. He told me that he would be aiming to roll out 3:30s the whole way, sounded like a good plan to me. He just became my pacer as I would be content holding that pace since even though it wouldn't be as fast as Mississauga it would still serve as a good workout to get ready for scotiabank. At STWM I will be looking to average 3:39/km for my 2:34 time. So we were off, I thought the plan was 3:30s but I guess not - first km 3:12 - but after that quick surge seperated me and Ryan from the rest of the pack, we settled into a really smooth pace - knocking 3:24, 21, 25, 26, 24, 24, 21, etc. for the next 20k. Now by no means were we taking in easy on each other, and just enjoying the scenery. Throughout the race, since neither one of us were entirely aware of the others' capabilities we were constantly testing each other out. One of us would surge ahead then the other, back and fourth. At about the 15k mark I thought I broke him. As the forecast predicted there was one hell of a North wind, and at 14.5k we turned N right into it. I could tell Ryan was starting to struggle a little, and I tried to loose him. I made a decent (probably 15m) gap between us by averaging 3:13 for 50 seconds (based on my garmin data). But at 18k Ryan was back up with me, and again we were neck and neck. At 19.5k there was one monster hill (according to my strava data a 8% gradient at one point) and Ryan put on heck of a surge on. I tried to stay but could not switch into the right gear to power myself up that hill and stay with him. Ryan ended up winning with 1:12:40 and I finished second in 1:12:58 (I managed to finish strong still with a 3:19km to finish with Ryan only about 80m ahead). I was very happy with my time and result, and more than that I was happy with my effort and mental focus throughout the race. I really took each kilometer one at a time, and thankfully my achilles held up. Sure afterwards the bursae one my right was the size of a quail egg (yea I said quail egg - classy).

So now the countdown begins. This week has been crazy busy with an 1.5 hour long presentation to prepare for for my sport nutritional aids class, and a midterm on the same day in my Molecular Basis of Cancer course. As the professor said as he was handing out the exam, "don't worry about showing me your IDs, cause I doubt that you have any friends you would be willing to write this exam for you," - Just fills you with confidence doesn't it. But anyways I rocked both, and was able to fit my training in perfectly. On Sunday, I did my last long run - a 37 and a bit kilometers with the last half hour at or close to race pace. On Monday hill repeats (found a new hill about 5k from house - just awesome); Tuesday a 15k Cutdown where the goal is to beat your last split for 15 consecutive 1km splits. This was such a great workout: started nice and easy at 4min/km pace then cutdown to 3:55, 3:53, 3:49, all the way to finishing at 3:27 for the 15 splits. Even though you might say well for me 3:27 is slighty slower than half marathon pace the workout is harder then it sounds. Personally, I find it easier to just go out on a tempo run and hammer 3:25 for 14k or whatever because you get locked into that pace and the body becomes accustomed to it. It is what Jack Daniels (the marathon coach not the No.7 whiskey) calls you T zone - or a cruise interval. Basically you are working "comfortably hard" which equates to an elite runners half marathon pace. Basically you are running at a pace that you could keep for 60 minutes. So for your untrained runner a 60 minute effort may equate to 10k pace (6min pace). The reason I find the cutdown workout a little harder is because you have no time to really get use to the specific pace (since the whole workout is accelerating) and after running at a "slower" pace it makes it a little more difficult to kick it up when needed- basically what I'm saying is that those last few splits feel really fast because compared to the first few they are around 30 seconds faster. As you could imagine this workout has alot of benefits first and foremost being to teach your mind and body to get fast as the race progresses (run a negative split). I should mention in order to do this workout you should invest in a good GPS watch - preferably Garmin since it is designed for hardcore workouts and because it gives you a number of features necessary for completing workouts like these like giving you what the avg lap pace in addition to current pace whereas watches like the Nike GPS only give current. For this workout you need the avg pace for that split. Also just to go off on the Garmin tangent a little more, on the garmin you can design advanced workouts like warmup followed by however many intervals based on distance or time, what rest to have in between each and cooldown. Here's an example (at the bottom of post) of one workout that I've done probably 5 or 6 times throughout the last 5 months. As you're running the watch will countdown to each telling you when to start/stop, how many left, paces, heart rate, etc.

 So that was Tues, Wednesday did hour and a half in the morning. Today hammered out 8 mile repeats at 10k pace 3:10/km (5:08/mile). Basically, the goal of these workout isn't to gain fitness or increase VO2 max, lactate threshold, etc. Quite frankly, in the last couple weeks you aren't going to improve your fitness at all. The hope is that during the however many months training for the marathon you have got in all of the key marathon specific workout you need to be ready for the race. This would include your long tempo runs 12-13 mile range, your T zone intervals: workout like 4 by 3 miles at half marathon pace, your long runs, pure speed workouts like 400 repeats or 200s, your golden Yasso 800s for lactate threshold and clearance training, and the list goes on and on. Essentially the last two weeks is just about maintaining that high level of fitness (a perfect mix between speed and endurance) that you have worked so hard to achieve. You may ask, "Well if your not going to gain any fitness why do the mile repeats or the cutdown or the tempo run (tomorrow night with my Dad on the bike pacing me, after a steady run in morning)." The answer is that is has to do with muscle memory and arriving to the start line with some pop in the legs. If you were to just chill during the last two weeks cutting your mileage and various workouts out of the mix, just running easy, your going to a: get to the start line feeling sluggish, b: that race pace that you dreamed about holding is going to feel damn hard from the start. You have to keep the intensity up, in fact in the last couple weeks you actually want to do higher intensity workouts more frequently. The idea is that you learn to really feel that pace and maintain the fast leg turnover - you are programming your legs to lock into that marathon pace.

  1. Warm Up 2 km                                None
  2. Repeat 10 Times
    1. Interval 0.4 km None
    2. Rest 0:35 min:sec None
  3. Recovery 2 km None
  4. Repeat 10 Times
    1. Interval 0.4 km None
    2. Rest 0:35 min:sec None
  5. Recovery 2 km None
  6. Repeat 5 Times
    1. Interval 0.4 km None
    2. Rest 0:35 min:sec None
  7. Recovery 1 km None
  8. Cool Down 2 km                                None