RJC wrote: » From my experience what you experienced was the the fact that the last 10k are run entirely with mental willpower and not with your legs or heart.
kennyb3 wrote: » how many weeks did you run above 40? also whats your weight and diet like?
dermCu wrote: » 1. Consistency. Just going through another training cycle will make you a lot stronger. Enjoy your well earned rest but don't let your fitness drop down to zero.
Ciaran_D wrote: » Hi, so I finished my first DCM and though I was quite happy with my time, I found that I faded a lot in the final 10km (I had to stop severl a times) - in training, I ran 4x35km LSR and followed Hal Higdon intermediate-I training closely, build to ~80km/week. - I kept to my goal pace of 4hrs but even after 3 gel packs and some jellies along the way, I still had to stop regularly over the last 10km. Maybe I was running above my lactate-threshold at a 4hr pace, I dunno - though I didn't suffer from cramps as such, just unable to keep going. Is this fading at the end just due to lack of LSR/mileage or what other element of training do I need to concentrate on? Thanks!
menoscemo wrote: » Fantastic post Tergat. I was about to start a thread asking for 5-10k plans post marathon. As a complete novice runners i just trained for the marathon and was going for sub 4hrs, but like OP did not have sufficient endurace. I would now like to concentrate on improving 5-10k PBs, before ever contemplating doing another 26.2 miles again. I have never trained for shorter stuff before so are there any specific training programmes for 5-10k that i should use?? What specific speed work should I be doing etc?
menoscemo wrote: » Tergat, Thank you so much for taking so much time to post that reply. It is really appreciated. I am still a bit slow with definitions of the different workouts, so for any noob's like me, I found this definition page to help me:http://speedbyrawle.com/programs.aspx Anyway, I was looking online for a few programes and as ever the Hal Higdon seems trstwothy. Here is his 10k intermediate programme, I trust it is ok?:http://www.halhigdon.com/10ktraining/10kinter.htm I intend running the Jingle bells 5k and/or the aware 10k in early december. Maybe I will start the HH programme in a few weeks and use the december races as a midway point to guage progress, in the meantime I will get back on the road and just do some easy runs as you suggested. Really thanks again so much.
tergat wrote: » Endurance running can be compared to putting money in the bank. Everytime you do some easy running/steady running/long runs you are lodging money in the bank. You want to continue to make your account as sizeable as possible before your key race, while make minor withdrawals along the way (some harder workouts). Then when the time (race) comes you can make a big withdrawal. Also over the months every time you do some hard fast workouts/races you make withdrawals, so you need to keep you bank account (endurance base) topped up with easy running/tempo running/long runs.
Ciaran_D wrote: » I ran probably 6 weeks where the the total distance was 40+ A typical week at the end was something like: Wed: 8km Thr: 14km Fri: 10km Sun: 10km Mon: 32km LSR This training format remained like this through the last 6 months, though I had increased the individual distances by 5%/week from the start. I think my weight is okay at 73kg (11.5st) and 1.79m and I eat pretty well (pastas/rices/chicken mostly) and haven't drank alcohol much the last few years. So for the winter months, do you guys just pick some aspects of your training to concentrate on (like LSRs or LT etc)?
Ciaran_D wrote: » Is this fading at the end just due to lack of LSR/mileage or what other element of training do I need to concentrate on? Thanks!
Woddle wrote: » I know what I'm going to be doing for all my lsrs and thats running the second half faster than the first, I need to train my body for negative splits, all my marathons have been huge positive splits bar 1 and thats because I've run all my lsrs the same way which is run at a pace I like and then die at the end so what do you do in the marathon, the exact same.
tergat wrote: » 2) Vary your training intensity (some easy paced, some moderate, and some faster). A mix of about 75% easy, 15-20% moderate, and about 5-10% faster is about right for the vast majority of people running 5k races or longer. Tergat
bart simpson wrote: » just read this post from misty floyd race report(congrats misty by the way:)) great post from you tergat, i was just wondering about this part of your post, when i put my recent pace times into www.mcmillanrunning.com i got a list of pace zones for various workouts, Would you agree with mc millians pace zones for recovery, easy, tempo, steady etc???? i was planning on running to these zones and as i get a PB just re-enter that result and work from the new zones
tergat wrote: » bart simpson, McMillans pace zones are fine to use as a rough guide but always listen to your body and go by how you feel on any given day, this is very important. Do not get caught up in having to run at a certain pace each day just because a running calculator says so. Overall use common sense and listen to your body and take into account other factors such as weather, recent sleep, hydration status, life stress etc. Tergat