DopeyBadger
Imagathoner
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2015
- Messages
- 10,350
My October, finally figured out how to get totals from garmin.
Mileage - 160.38 miles
Time - 21:51 hrs
Avg Pace - 8:10 min/mile
Although that is on treadmill and likely getting 5% over estimate from my garmin, so more accurate distance and pace would be 150 miles, 8:36 pace.
I'm currently at the halfway point of the training plan, but I started it 2 weeks too early and so I will have to add a couple of weeks before, or during, the taper period to get me lined up with the Dopey.
I'm also having to revise my goals from a sub 3:45 (my training plan) to sub 4:15 because the plan is now starting to get hard. I can meet all of the fast pace midweek runs but the long runs are not going so well...I'm actually doing them wrong, or I was. I've been running them at near goal pace and end up walking a lot...like 20 minutes of a 14 mile run, for example. This week is an 18 miler and I'll try the slower pace (9:30 min/mile) but I expect to have to walk even some of that. Sigh...I suck at this right now.
Agree with @LSUlakes and @opusone , doing some long runs with a fast finish is good (maybe once every 3 weeks) but the majority of the running should stay away from goal marathon pace and be much slower. According to the Hansons pacing chart, a goal 3:45 marathon has a Long Run pace of 9:14 min/mile, and a goal of 4:15 marathon has a Long Run pace of 10:29 min/mile. Personally, I do most of my goal marathon pace runs on Thursdays (building from 6 miles up to 10 miles during the schedule with 3 total miles of WU/CD on each) per the Hansons plan.
Interestingly enough, during my last improvement of 42 min off my PR (from 4:20 down to 3:38) the most I ran the actual marathon pace (8:21) during training was 3 miles consecutively. I was training for a 8:35 min/mile so most of my GMP training was around there. The second half of my marathon was at 8:04 min/mile and the most I had run that was for 1 mile consecutively during training. I strongly believe there is something to be said for doing most of your running at much siower than goal marathon pace. Currently, reading this article about 80/20 running (which Hansons also seems to be in line with) http://www.sportsci.org/2009/ss.htm.