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#1 |
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The folks here pushing milage over speed work for beginners are dead on. I'm on track for my 4th week of over 40 miles/week. The most I've done and sustained since I started over a year ago. 9 miles used to almost be a long run for me, now I'm running 9 miles several times midweek. I can definitely feel the difference. I'm just going to keep adding miles, slowly. Keeping doing it is as much a victory as creating some complex plan that I'll never follow. If I get out the door day-day, week-week, and my milage keeps rising and my times falling, that's good enough. So, Oct. 2 is the Cowtown Marathon in Sacramento, then I'll have the California International Marathon in December in Sacramento. Goal is to get under 3:30. |
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#2 |
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>So, Oct. 2 is the Cowtown Marathon in Sacramento, then I'll have the
California International Marathon in December in Sacramento. _____ so you, the self described "beginner"...you've chosen to run 2 marathons spread 62 days apart (CIM is 12/4/05). why wait so long between races?....go to marathonguide.com and i am sure you can find a nearby marathon to race in November. That way you'll have a marathon to race in Oct, Nov. and Dec! |
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#3 |
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lanceandrew@aol.com wrote: >>So, Oct. 2 is the Cowtown Marathon in Sacramento, then I'll have the > > California International Marathon in December in Sacramento. > _____ > > so you, the self described "beginner"...you've chosen to run 2 > marathons spread 62 days apart (CIM is 12/4/05). > > why wait so long between races?....go to marathonguide.com and i am > sure you can find a nearby marathon to race in November. That way > you'll have a marathon to race in Oct, Nov. and Dec! I've run 1 marathon at 3:58 - I'm hardly even remotely close to guys like Donovan. So yeah, I'd say relatively speaking, I'm a "beginner". Or, at least my milage is very low compared to the competitors and the elites, as are my times. Are you saying I shouldn't run 2 so close together? I would think 2 months between would be enough recovery time. |
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#4 |
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Janithor wrote:
> Are you saying I shouldn't run 2 so close together? I would think 2 > months between would be enough recovery time. It depends on your performance goals for the 2 marathons. If you just want to run 2 marathons, then sure, it's enough recovery time. If you want to perform to your potential, then no, it's not enough time. -- Phil M. |
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#5 |
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Phil M. wrote: > Janithor wrote: > > >>Are you saying I shouldn't run 2 so close together? I would think 2 >>months between would be enough recovery time. > > > It depends on your performance goals for the 2 marathons. If you just > want to run 2 marathons, then sure, it's enough recovery time. If you > want to perform to your potential, then no, it's not enough time. Hm, I didn't know that. I looked it up in "The Competitive Runner's Handbook" and he says another marathon shouldn't be considered for another 6 months, experienced runners may be able to run another in 3-4 months. Maybe I should do the 1/2 Marathon in Oct and the full in Dec? |
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#6 |
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On 2005-08-26, Janithor <JanithorSPAMBEGONE@comcast.net> wrote:
> x-no-archive: yes > > Phil M. wrote: >> Janithor wrote: >> >> >>>Are you saying I shouldn't run 2 so close together? I would think 2 >>>months between would be enough recovery time. >> >> >> It depends on your performance goals for the 2 marathons. If you just >> want to run 2 marathons, then sure, it's enough recovery time. If you >> want to perform to your potential, then no, it's not enough time. > > > Hm, I didn't know that. I looked it up in "The Competitive Runner's > Handbook" and he says another marathon shouldn't be considered for > another 6 months, experienced runners may be able to run another in 3-4 > months. > > Maybe I should do the 1/2 Marathon in Oct and the full in Dec? A half marathon 3 weeks before a full marathon is fine. A full marathon 3 weeks before a full marathon is suicide. Cheers, -- Donovan Rebbechi http://pegasus.rutgers.edu/~elflord/ |
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#7 |
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Donovan Rebbechi wrote: > On 2005-08-26, Janithor <JanithorSPAMBEGONE@comcast.net> wrote: > >>x-no-archive: yes >> >>Phil M. wrote: >> >>>Janithor wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>>Are you saying I shouldn't run 2 so close together? I would think 2 >>>>months between would be enough recovery time. >>> >>> >>>It depends on your performance goals for the 2 marathons. If you just >>>want to run 2 marathons, then sure, it's enough recovery time. If you >>>want to perform to your potential, then no, it's not enough time. >> >> >>Hm, I didn't know that. I looked it up in "The Competitive Runner's >>Handbook" and he says another marathon shouldn't be considered for >>another 6 months, experienced runners may be able to run another in 3-4 >>months. >> >>Maybe I should do the 1/2 Marathon in Oct and the full in Dec? > > > A half marathon 3 weeks before a full marathon is fine. > > A full marathon 3 weeks before a full marathon is suicide. > > Cheers, The Cowtown is Oct. 2, the CIM is Dec. 4. Would that be suicide? How do you work shorter races into your training? e.g. If I run the 1/2 marathon at the Cowtown, should I taper my milage before/after, and won't that cut down on my milage for the CIM in Dec? Or do you treat these other races as speed work? If you're going all out in the shorter races, don't you need recovery time, thus getting back to cutting into your milage? The book I have is for first timers, doesn't really address working other races into your training. |
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#8 |
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Other shorter races should not be a problem and good training for your
targeted race. "Janithor" <JanithorSPAMBEGONE@comcast.net> wrote in message news:430FF0D5.80904@comcast.net... > The Cowtown is Oct. 2, the CIM is Dec. 4. Would that be suicide? > > How do you work shorter races into your training? e.g. If I run the 1/2 > marathon at the Cowtown, should I taper my milage before/after, and won't > that cut down on my milage for the CIM in Dec? Or do you treat these > other races as speed work? If you're going all out in the shorter races, > don't you need recovery time, thus getting back to cutting into your > milage? The book I have is for first timers, doesn't really address > working other races into your training. > |
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#9 |
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"Donovan Rebbechi" <abuse@aol.com> wrote in message news:slrndgvqih.4gd.abuse@panix2.panix.com... > > A full marathon 3 weeks before a full marathon is suicide. If the first is used as a long run, i.e. run easy, why isn't it just ones last long run. If run hard it's IS suicide. -DF |
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#10 |
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Doug Freese wrote: > "Donovan Rebbechi" <abuse@aol.com> wrote in message > news:slrndgvqih.4gd.abuse@panix2.panix.com... > >>A full marathon 3 weeks before a full marathon is suicide. > > > If the first is used as a long run, i.e. run easy, why isn't it just > ones last long run. If run hard it's IS suicide. > > -DF What about 2 months apart? I want to register tomorrow, it's the cutoff for the cheaper price. Now I'm not sure if I should register for the full marathon or for the 1/2 marathon, and put my eggs in the one in December instead. I'd like to run both. |
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#11 |
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been in the mountains there. before.
not there now. 42°N 83°W, give a smile and a hay! there a restaurant there(mexican) to die for. and back then we went looking for Linda. were Linda? the secretary said she was off with the governor. a lake were I had to go under for a boat a skier to past. water was clear then. had a great time. watch both past before I surface. was called into shore.... ahhhhhhh to have a job........... now ahhhhhhh to Not..:>) ezekies wife. Lowtuc |
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#12 |
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On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 10:50:07 GMT, Janithor
<JanithorSPAMBEGONE@comcast.net> wrote: >x-no-archive: yes > >Doug Freese wrote: >> "Donovan Rebbechi" <abuse@aol.com> wrote in message >> news:slrndgvqih.4gd.abuse@panix2.panix.com... >> >>>A full marathon 3 weeks before a full marathon is suicide. >> >> >> If the first is used as a long run, i.e. run easy, why isn't it just >> ones last long run. If run hard it's IS suicide. >> >> -DF > > >What about 2 months apart? I want to register tomorrow, it's the cutoff >for the cheaper price. Now I'm not sure if I should register for the >full marathon or for the 1/2 marathon, and put my eggs in the one in >December instead. I'd like to run both. i didn't see your intention posted. maybe i missed it. but the answers have been for you to decide whether you want to just run them and finish or do your best. 2 months apart sounds fine to me. 3 or so weeks to a good recovery, a couple of long runs and then another taper. go for it. ....thehick |
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#13 |
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JanithorSPAMBEGONE@comcast.net wrote:
[...] > Phil M. wrote: >> It depends on your performance goals for the 2 marathons. If you just >> want to run 2 marathons, then sure, it's enough recovery time. If you >> want to perform to your potential, then no, it's not enough time. > > > Hm, I didn't know that. I looked it up in "The Competitive Runner's > Handbook" and he says another marathon shouldn't be considered for > another 6 months, experienced runners may be able to run another in 3-4 > months. > > Maybe I should do the 1/2 Marathon in Oct and the full in Dec? [...] Are you following the marathon training plan outlined in Glover's book? A lot of marathon training plans will have you running a tuneup race 2 to 3 weeks before the goal marathon. This is good training for the marathon. The plan I've followed for 2 marathons and now an upcomming 50k has you running a tuneup race 2, 4, and 6 weeks away from the marathon. However, the distance is only up to 15k, not 21k (half marathon). If I were to plan a half marathon before a marathon, I would want it to be at least 3 weeks before the marathon. If you just want to run the half at Cowtown, have a good time, and don't really care if it's part of marathon training or not, then I don't think it will impact the marathon one way or the other. If anything, it would be a good learning experience. -- Phil M. |
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#14 |
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JanithorSPAMBEGONE@comcast.net wrote:
[...] > How do you work shorter races into your training? e.g. If I run the > 1/2 marathon at the Cowtown, should I taper my milage before/after, > and won't that cut down on my milage for the CIM in Dec? Or do you > treat these other races as speed work? If you're going all out in the > shorter races, don't you need recovery time, thus getting back to > cutting into your milage? The book I have is for first timers, > doesn't really address working other races into your training. The plan I follow suggests doing a mini taper, but not go into full taper mode because that will cut back too much on the overall training for the week. Typically this represents a training block of at least 10 days, consisting of 4 to 6 days of tapering, the race itself, and several days recovery before the next hard training session. Some runners like to train through their tuneup races and treat them as an all-out effort done while fatigued. This is fine as long as it doesn't cause undo stress. Be sure to put your finishing time in context of the situation. -- Phil M. |
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#15 |
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JanithorSPAMBEGONE@comcast.net wrote:
[...] > Now I'm not sure if I should register for the full marathon or for the > 1/2 marathon, and put my eggs in the one in December instead. I'd > like to run both. Like Doug said, you could run the Cowtown at long run pace. My preference would be to register for the full marathon, run the race at your normal long run pace, then drop out at 20 miles. This is assuming you're prepared to run a 20-mile long run. This will be a good training run for your goal marathon in December. It will get you used to the marathoning experience without the marathon pain. Things like what to wear, what and when to drink at the aid stations, what to eat the day before, etc. -- Phil M. |