shotgunmcos wrote: » Half way through the Hansons Plan Just 3 "Long" Runs registered, 14, 14 and 15 miles. However the paces were 7:36, 7:10 and 7:10 respectively. Just 3x 16 mile LRs left in the second half. I've rarely gone to 20+ milers in marathon training but I like to hit 2hrs to 2:10. 16 miles at the Hansons pace wont even hit 2hrs! I'm a little ahead of the prescribed mileage but that's just mainly bits of miles at the end of most runs or a slightly longer warm up for sessions. So far the speed and tempo work has been tough but manageable. Tomorrow is the last speed session 3x1,600m and there is no LR this weekend. The legs are tired so I'll approach the speed session with caution. I've often felt like that the day before the speed intervals session but this week the legs feel more like DOMs than just fatigue. How did folk find the cumulative fatigue element? How was the transition from speed to strength?Did anyone stick religiously to "just" 3x 16 LRs? How are the other current sub3 hopefuls getting on? Bryangiggsy?
Murph_D wrote: » I know several runners who followed Hanson and stuck to the 16 miler LRs - wouldn't all it 'religiously' as there is plenty of justification in the book that puts the LR philosophy in the realms of science rather than blind faith! Is there a good reason to go longer, beyond the reasoning that other plans are different?
Murph_D wrote: » That is true, and there is also discussion about the pace side of the equation, and of 2 hours as the time to 50% glycogen depletion, another indicator of ideal LR length. 16 is arrived at as ideal for hitting both the 25% of weekly mileage ‘rule’ and (for most runners on the Advanced version of the plan), coming in around 2 hours at the LR pace(s) prescribed. But point taken - for faster and/or higher mileage marathoners, there’s scope for longer runs. For those trying to break 3 hours though (assuming they are not going to break it by much), there wouldn’t seem to be a strong case for exceeding the 16 miles by much, if anything, given that 16 miles at prescribed pace would be a little over 2 hours. 16 is thus arrived at as meeting both requirements - percent of weekly, and around 2 hours.
El CabaIIo wrote: » .....The key factor when looking at these plans and interpreting them is not to look at the mileage as it gets in the way of seeing inner workings of training which are all time based. These cookie cutter distance plans are never going to be flawless as they are designed for the masses so I think it's important to look for the message and general guidelines but make changes to suit your own level and adapt the plan to fit you. The plans in the back of the books are only examples, the meat of the actual philosophies is in the 100 pages of writing that came before.
browne_rob5 wrote: » Hi All, I'm in a block of training for Rotterdam and I am racing the Bohermeen half this coming Sunday. Just wondering what kind of taper I should do for the half? I did a 40 minute Fartlek session lastnight and I am running around 100 to 110k a week at the moment. Any advice greatly appreciated. Thanks
AuldManKing wrote: » All depends on what you want from the HM and if you are willing to sacrifice the Mileage. If you want to PB, I'd cut back a midweek session, possibly take a rest day on Friday and run 3-4m on Sat with strides. I wouldn't take more than 1 day off. If you want to run well and not sacrifice mileage - cut back the intensity of the midweek session but keep the mileage - maybe slow down the easy runs.
browne_rob5 wrote: » Great thanks AMK. Yes I'm looking for a PB and feel comfortable sacrificing the mileage for 1 week so I'll go with the first option.
Murph_D wrote: » Just saying what’s in the book, which the Hansons credit to Noakes, Daniels, Vigil, Costill and other coaches and scientists. Not my own opinion or thoughts! I don’t see much reason to deviate to break three hours.
FBOT01 wrote: » The problem here is that while all plans/training method are but a guide I for one wouldn't see myself as equipped to interpret them until I tried them. And if you try to interpret them before trying them you may not get the full benefit or understanding of what they are trying to achieve. A lot of average runners do what works for them and pick and choose what they like rather than actually interpret the plan and then dismiss it when it doesn't work for them. I would argue strongly that the core reason why any average runner ups the 16milers is not because of a full scientific review of his/her glycogen level, etc but it is out of fear that they haven't ran far enough in their long run. I would reiterate the view that if you are a first time Hanson runner just buy into it and roll with it. Once you have done it you can then "interpret" if you must based on actual knowledge. A lot of work went into the batter before the cookie cutter came out and I'd say they also spent a lot of time experimenting with shapes before they agreed on which cookie cutter did the best job.
yaboya1 wrote: » If you don't do exactly what is prescribed in the plan, then you're not following the plan. Therefore you can't really comment whether the plan worked or not, because you never followed it in the first place.
yaboya1 wrote: If you don't do exactly what is prescribed in the plan, then you're not following the plan. Therefore you can't really comment whether the plan worked or not, because you never followed it in the first place.
El CabaIIo wrote: » P, what I'm saying is the plan is only an example of the philosophy. When Luke Humpries modifies plans for his elite athletes in the Hansons/brooks project, is he not following hansons type training anymore?
Murph_D wrote: » But Humphries is a professional coach, former sub 2:15 marathoner, with postgrad qualifications in exercise science. He’s working with a wide range of athletes, including elites as you say. Of course a professional coach may design a bespoke version of a general training philosophy/plan to suit the intimately known strengths or weaknesses of a known athlete - it would be odd if he didn’t. That’s not really comparable to people on an internet forum sharing experience and throwing ideas around in search of a sub-3, or sub-4 or sub-anything performance. [Edit - crossed with yaboya’s post.]
El CabaIIo wrote: » No author can know know you're body better than you and it's something Steve Magness has said as well is that his books aren't about the plans, they are about showing people a methodology he believes in and how it works. The juice is in all the writing and shows you how to develop a plan.
Murph_D wrote: » Of course people should debate - isn’t that why we are here after all? There is already quite a bit of flexibility already built into these ‘cookie cutter’ plans. Most of the ones I’ve used - Pfitzinger / Hanson / Daniels - talk a out hiw to safely add mileage/time and of course they all ask you to choose appropriate paces based on previous performance. Plenty of people already screw up just on that last bit alone, and there is much debate here about that kind of thing. Also supplementary S&C (Hanson e.g. has recommendations on that front that I have ignored, and therefore was off-plan). Then there’s stuff about nutrition, tune up races, illness, racing strategy.... no one could possibly do it all to the letter. A lot of runners don’t follow plans well. But don’t do self-coaching well either, and also give each other bad advice. The advice on boards, properly applied, is as good as you’ll get anywhere, and better than most. But many (most?) still choose to ignore it!
El CabaIIo wrote: » I just want to ask one question and then I'll shut up, Is there any common ground between what ye are saying and what I'm saying or are we polar opposites?
skyblue46 wrote: From the outside I would say that ye have common ground alright but are only discussing the area where ye might have different opinions. One way or the other it is a very interesting discussion which provokes thought, the type of thread which is great to read and I wish there were more of them on here.
Swashbuckler wrote: » This x 100000000 Dont take it as a negative ElC. This debate is great and is too rare nowadays