jmasgat
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2006
- Messages
- 5,205
@DopeyBadger I'd give you mine, but I'm 62 and my trend line will be all downhill! Seriously, age-grading would be an issue, I would think, no?
@DopeyBadger I'd give you mine, but I'm 62 and my trend line will be all downhill! Seriously, age-grading would be an issue, I would think, no?
QOTW: So I was recently playing around with ways to express my race data, and found a method that looked interesting. Converting all my race times into Daniels VDOT values. This way regardless of distance (mile, 5k, 10k, HM, M), they were all expressed using a comparable numerical value. With the understanding that Daniels VDOT is a sort of "race equivalency". Such that a 4:00 marathon, 1:56 HM, 52:25, 10k, 25:15 5k, and 7:29 mile all give the same VDOT value of 37.9. It also "squished" my Dopey results into a downward linear line which didn't disrupt the overall visual appearance. It was an interesting way to express the data for me to view.
So I was wondering if others would be willing to share what their VDOT race progressions look like. I'd suggest only using races in which you were actively racing hard. Having races that weren't for the purpose of extending yourself probably would make the information harder to interpret. Certainly there's going to be some bounce due to the difficulty of the race environment and course as well, but those things will easily wash out in the big zoomed out picture. You simply plot your date of race against the VDOT value of the race using Daniels calculator (link). For those curious what their data looks like, but don't want to go through the process, you can simply send me a PM with race date, distance, and time. I'll do the work for you.
Where my curiosity lies is when you personally saw a plateauing of progress (or haven't yet) and ultimately what was your VDOT % gain from start to peak. Word of mouth data (which I have yet to find a paper verifying) states VO2max can increase by about 5-15%, or 40%, or some other value in untrained runners to their peak condition (link). VO2max and VDOT are not the same, but I do believe they rely on a correlation relationship as VO2max is one predictor of race performance. Additionally, plateauing of endurance performance gains is suggested to occur around 7500-10000 career miles. Although there is some lagging in your ability to be a good converter from shorter distances to longer distances. So I wanted to see what we showed as a group.
ATTQOTW:
This is my graph. It goes from my first run in June 2012 to my peak performance in Jan 2018 to my most recent races.
View attachment 560450
I saw two jumps in performance. During my first time using Hansons in 2015 and when I integrated Daniels methodology in the Spring of 2017. But ever since I hit around 7500 career miles I've seen a steady plateauing of my race VDOT values. In total I went from a VDOT of 24.7 (first run), 29.9 (first race), 52.1 (best VDOT in Jan 2018). So my total % gain was (52.1-24.7)/24.7 = 111% from my first run and 74% from my first race. The span from start to peak was about 5 years. The last 3 years have been roughly at the same level.
View attachment 560456
Date | Distance | Time | Vdot |
8/7/2013 | 5k | 27:35 | 34.1 |
4/13/2014 | 10k | 56:36 | 34.6 |
5/5/2014 | HM | 2:07:16 | 34.0 |
9/14/2014 | HM | 2:12:07 | 32.5 |
10/26/2014 | 10k | 59:27 | 32.6 |
5/16/2015 | HM | 2:20:15 | 30.3 |
9/10/2015* | 5k | 27:05 | 34.8 |
10/25/2015 | 10k | 59:41 | 32.5 |
3/19/2016** | 10 mi | 1:39:45 | 32.3 |
5/21/2016 | HM | 2:16:49 | 31.2 |
9/18/2016 (HOT) | 10 mi | 1:47:07 | 29.6 |
11/5/2016 | HM | 2:12:37 | 32.4 |
3/11/2017 | HM | 2:08:18 | 33.7 |
3/25/2017 | 17.75k | 1:55:25 | 30.7 |
10/22/2017 (HOT) | M | 5:25:04 | 25.9 |
3/10/2018 | HM | 2:10:17 | 33.1 |
5/6/2018 | HM | 2:12:52 | 32.3 |
12/1/2018 | 10k | 57:26 | 34.0 |
3/17/2019 | M | 4:49:29 | 30.0 |
4/7/2019 | 10 mi | 1:43:46 | 30.8 |
5/27/2019 | 5k | 27:08 | 34.8 |
7/14/2019 (HOT) | HM | 2:43:18 | 25.1 |
12/1/2019 (HOT) | M | 5:11:53 | 27.3 |
11/8/2020 (HOT) | M | 5:41:39 | 24.3 |
@DopeyBadger Maybe I'll do the math....but I think this would also need to be normalized over training volume/intensity somehow. I don't race often, and my training/running is interrupted by injury more often than I'd like (not all running related). So to really understand progression, I think you'd have to consider training load.
OK, so my data below with a few notes - I used the calculator that you linked. I don't know what you're going to make of this, but I find it depressing to look at. I think I may retire from running....sigh.
* - I was out for an easy training run and encountered this 5k race about to start and decided to run it. I had not been training for this race, but for the next one on the list. I did put out race effort.
Date Distance Time Vdot 8/7/2013 5k 27:35 34.1 4/13/2014 10k 56:36 34.6 5/5/2014 HM 2:07:16 34.0 9/14/2014 HM 2:12:07 32.5 10/26/2014 10k 59:27 32.6 5/16/2015 HM 2:20:15 30.3 9/10/2015* 5k 27:05 34.8 10/25/2015 10k 59:41 32.5 3/19/2016** 10 mi 1:39:45 32.3 5/21/2016 HM 2:16:49 31.2 9/18/2016 (HOT) 10 mi 1:47:07 29.6 11/5/2016 HM 2:12:37 32.4 3/11/2017 HM 2:08:18 33.7 3/25/2017 17.75k 1:55:25 30.7 10/22/2017 (HOT) M 5:25:04 25.9 3/10/2018 HM 2:10:17 33.1 5/6/2018 HM 2:12:52 32.3 12/1/2018 10k 57:26 34.0 3/17/2019 M 4:49:29 30.0 4/7/2019 10 mi 1:43:46 30.8 5/27/2019 5k 27:08 34.8 7/14/2019 (HOT) HM 2:43:18 25.1 12/1/2019 (HOT) M 5:11:53 27.3 11/8/2020 (HOT) M 5:41:39 24.3
** - I did this 10-mile race because I was on a trip with family and looked for a race nearby. I had not been training for this race, but the next one on the list. I did put out race effort.
HOT - these races had excessively hot and humid conditions, unseasonably so, except for the July 2019 race.
The two big drops that look out of place are calculations from marathons, I just underperform at that distance I guess.
Haha How can I forget my mile trial already?In 6 years, you've seen a (32.4-24.9)/24.9 = 30% increase in VDOT score. Although if we include your recent 8:11 mile time trial on a less than ideal course, that's a VDOT of 34.2 (or 37% increase). So it certainly seems like you're far from plateauing. How many career miles do you have?
Here’s mine. I did try and take some out that were not great efforts, but I left some in that were a little warmer than ideal, but still good efforts even though the time might not have reflected it as well.QOTW: So I was recently playing around with ways to express my race data, and found a method that looked interesting. Converting all my race times into Daniels VDOT values. This way regardless of distance (mile, 5k, 10k, HM, M), they were all expressed using a comparable numerical value. With the understanding that Daniels VDOT is a sort of "race equivalency". Such that a 4:00 marathon, 1:56 HM, 52:25, 10k, 25:15 5k, and 7:29 mile all give the same VDOT value of 37.9. It also "squished" my Dopey results into a downward linear line which didn't disrupt the overall visual appearance. It was an interesting way to express the data for me to view.
So I was wondering if others would be willing to share what their VDOT race progressions look like. I'd suggest only using races in which you were actively racing hard. Having races that weren't for the purpose of extending yourself probably would make the information harder to interpret. Certainly there's going to be some bounce due to the difficulty of the race environment and course as well, but those things will easily wash out in the big zoomed out picture. You simply plot your date of race against the VDOT value of the race using Daniels calculator (link). For those curious what their data looks like, but don't want to go through the process, you can simply send me a PM with race date, distance, and time. I'll do the work for you.
Where my curiosity lies is when you personally saw a plateauing of progress (or haven't yet) and ultimately what was your VDOT % gain from start to peak. Word of mouth data (which I have yet to find a paper verifying) states VO2max can increase by about 5-15%, or 40%, or some other value in untrained runners to their peak condition (link). VO2max and VDOT are not the same, but I do believe they rely on a correlation relationship as VO2max is one predictor of race performance. Additionally, plateauing of endurance performance gains is suggested to occur around 7500-10000 career miles. Although there is some lagging in your ability to be a good converter from shorter distances to longer distances. So I wanted to see what we showed as a group.
ATTQOTW:
This is my graph. It goes from my first run in June 2012 to my peak performance in Jan 2018 to my most recent races.
View attachment 560450
I saw two jumps in performance. During my first time using Hansons in 2015 and when I integrated Daniels methodology in the Spring of 2017. But ever since I hit around 7500 career miles I've seen a steady plateauing of my race VDOT values. In total I went from a VDOT of 24.7 (first run), 29.9 (first race), 52.1 (best VDOT in Jan 2018). So my total % gain was (52.1-24.7)/24.7 = 111% from my first run and 74% from my first race. The span from start to peak was about 5 years. The last 3 years have been roughly at the same level.
View attachment 560456
QOTW: So I was recently playing around with ways to express my race data, and found a method that looked interesting. Converting all my race times into Daniels VDOT values. This way regardless of distance (mile, 5k, 10k, HM, M), they were all expressed using a comparable numerical value. With the understanding that Daniels VDOT is a sort of "race equivalency". Such that a 4:00 marathon, 1:56 HM, 52:25, 10k, 25:15 5k, and 7:29 mile all give the same VDOT value of 37.9. It also "squished" my Dopey results into a downward linear line which didn't disrupt the overall visual appearance. It was an interesting way to express the data for me to view.
So I was wondering if others would be willing to share what their VDOT race progressions look like. I'd suggest only using races in which you were actively racing hard. Having races that weren't for the purpose of extending yourself probably would make the information harder to interpret. Certainly there's going to be some bounce due to the difficulty of the race environment and course as well, but those things will easily wash out in the big zoomed out picture. You simply plot your date of race against the VDOT value of the race using Daniels calculator (link). For those curious what their data looks like, but don't want to go through the process, you can simply send me a PM with race date, distance, and time. I'll do the work for you.
Where my curiosity lies is when you personally saw a plateauing of progress (or haven't yet) and ultimately what was your VDOT % gain from start to peak. Word of mouth data (which I have yet to find a paper verifying) states VO2max can increase by about 5-15%, or 40%, or some other value in untrained runners to their peak condition (link). VO2max and VDOT are not the same, but I do believe they rely on a correlation relationship as VO2max is one predictor of race performance. Additionally, plateauing of endurance performance gains is suggested to occur around 7500-10000 career miles. Although there is some lagging in your ability to be a good converter from shorter distances to longer distances. So I wanted to see what we showed as a group.
ATTQOTW:
This is my graph. It goes from my first run in June 2012 to my peak performance in Jan 2018 to my most recent races.
View attachment 560450
I saw two jumps in performance. During my first time using Hansons in 2015 and when I integrated Daniels methodology in the Spring of 2017. But ever since I hit around 7500 career miles I've seen a steady plateauing of my race VDOT values. In total I went from a VDOT of 24.7 (first run), 29.9 (first race), 52.1 (best VDOT in Jan 2018). So my total % gain was (52.1-24.7)/24.7 = 111% from my first run and 74% from my first race. The span from start to peak was about 5 years. The last 3 years have been roughly at the same level.
View attachment 560456
I have a Disney question for everyone. Am I the only one that thinks the prices are getting out of control? I have been struggling as of late because I have been in the house for a year with all these kids. My wife told me to go to Disney for the weekend. I have been on 4 solo trips in the past and I love them. I started looking at prices just to see what it would be. For comparison, when i did my ToT race weekend in 2014 I went from Thursday to Monday, stayed at AS Sports, I got a park hopper ticket for all 4 days. My total weekend, including food, was around $1000. Now, i realize prices go up over the years but they have more than doubled in 6 years? I looked last night. If I did Thursday to Monday, with a park hopper and food it would be roughly $2200 (depending on what I got for food). The hotel and tickets would be right at $2000.
Money isn't even the issue. Back in 2014 I was tighter on money as that was when I wan't working because I was still home with the kids, and the divorce was on the horizon. I am working now, the new wife and I have good jobs. I just got had my review yesterday and got a nice bonus. I could spend $2200 for a weekend, I just can't get past the fact that it seems like the value isn't there anymore? Am I the only one thinking this?
You pay a premium now for Friday and Saturday nights. That’s a real kick in the pants to us AP & FL residents who liked to do weekend staycations. I haven’t looked at ticket pricing since they changed their pricing model, but the cost depends on what day of the week and time of year you go. When are you looking to go? Spring Break for a lot of FL K-12 schools is the 3rd week of March, Easter is the first weekend of April and then there is April vacation the 3rd week of April for many of the New England states.
OK I made a not-profesional looking chart, I hope it's informative. I excluded any race where I dropped to a crawl from the heat, or got injured and slowed down for that reason during the race. The two big drops that look out of place are calculations from marathons, I just underperform at that distance I guess. I lost about 25 lbs between fall 2015 and summer 2016 and you can see I speeded up (sped up?) over that time. I started training with you in August 2017 in prep for the Jan 2018 marathon. Maybe you can ignore that race a few weeks ago because as I said in a personal communication with you I didn't go all-out really.View attachment 560552
View attachment 560553
It's definitely interesting. This is where @jmasgat's suggestion would be interesting to help explain what we're seeing. There's potentially something missing. Because I'd venture to guess the amount of training you were doing in 2013 wasn't the same as your later years. Yet despite that, you've essentially been at the same fitness level for 7-8 years. So either you're just maintaining fitness despite the increase in volume, or things just haven't quite clicked, or there's some other explanation. Were you a sprinter in your younger days, or do you have a propensity to do really well in short speed interval workouts? How many of these races had a T+D of less than 90 (maybe you're a cold weather performer, but rarely run in cold weather)? There's something potentially missing.
Date | Distance | Time | Vdot | T, D, T+D (F) |
8/7/2013 | 5k | 27:35 | 34.1 | 74 68 142 |
4/13/2014 | 10k | 56:36 | 34.6 | 68 53 121 |
5/5/2014 | HM | 2:07:16 | 34.0 | 60 39 99 |
9/14/2014 | HM | 2:12:07 | 32.5 | 62 48 110 |
10/26/2014 | 10k | 59:27 | 32.6 | 64 34 98 |
5/16/2015 | HM | 2:20:15 | 30.3 | 73 62 135 |
9/19/2015* | 5k | 27:05 | 34.8 | 69 65 134 (pouring rain) |
10/25/2015 | 10k | 59:41 | 32.5 | 59 56 115 |
3/19/2016** | 10 mi | 1:39:45 | 32.3 | 68 61 129 |
5/21/2016 | HM | 2:16:49 | 31.2 | 55 53 108 (pouring rain) |
9/18/2016 (HOT) | 10 mi | 1:47:07 | 29.6 | 76 72 146 |
11/5/2016 | HM | 2:12:37 | 32.4 | 49 39 88 |
3/11/2017 | HM | 2:08:18 | 33.7 | 32 11 43 |
3/25/2017 | 17.75k | 1:55:25 | 30.7 | 59 49 108 |
10/22/2017 (HOT) | M | 5:25:04 | 25.9 | 71 55 126 |
3/10/2018 | HM | 2:10:17 | 33.1 | 42 19 61 |
5/6/2018 | HM | 2:12:52 | 32.3 | 57 55 112 |
12/1/2018 | 10k | 57:26 | 34.0 | 31 30 61 |
3/17/2019 | M | 4:49:29 | 30.0 | 47 33 80 |
4/7/2019 | 10 mi | 1:43:46 | 30.8 | 58 51 109 |
5/27/2019 | 5k | 27:08 | 34.8 | 66 52 118 |
7/14/2019 (HOT) | HM | 2:43:18 | 25.1 | 74 65 139 |
12/1/2019 (HOT) | M | 5:11:53 | 27.3 | 70 64 134 |
11/8/2020 (HOT) | M | 5:41:39 | 24.3 | 73 47 120 |
Yes but I'm only just now getting near where you were at the start!Hey, at least your graph goes up!![]()
Date | Distance | Time | VDOT |
9/3/2005 | 10K | 45:30 | 44.7 |
10/18/2005 | M | 3:30:41 | 44.44 |
12/3/2005 | 5K | 20:16 | 49 |
4/22/2006 | 10 Miles | 1:12:21 | 46.9 |
8/26/2006 | 5K | 19:37 | 50.9 |
9/17/2006 | HM | 1:32:04 | 49.7 |
9/29/2007 | HM | 1:35:17 | 47.7 |
12/1/2007 | 5K | 19:36 | 51 |
4/26/2008 | 10 Miles | 1:08:50 | 49.7 |
9/17/2008 | 5K | 18:33 | 54.4 |
10/19/2008 | HM | 1:30:23 | 50.7 |
6/6/2009 | 10K | 39:47 | 52.3 |
9/6/2009 | HM | 1:28:39 | 51.9 |
10/3/2009 | 5K | 18:50 | 53.4 |
6/5/2010 | 10K | 40:21 | 51.4 |
9/12/2010 | HM | 1:27:17 | 52.8 |
10/25/2010 | 5K | 18:37 | 54.1 |
1/9/2011 | M | 3:16:23 | 48.3 |
5/28/2011 | 5 Miles | 32:11 | 51.3 |
6/11/2011 | 5K | 18:59 | 52.9 |
9/24/2011 | HM | 1:29:01 | 51.6 |
4/28/2012 | 10 Miles | 1:02:17 | 55.8 |
5/6/2012 | HM | 1:25:38 | 54 |
6/3/2012 | 5K | 17:40 | 57.5 |
7/6/2013 | 5K | 19:04 | 52.7 |
9/15/2013 | HM | 1:30:33 | 50.6 |
12/7/2013 | 10K | 42:15 | 48.7 |
5/4/2014 | HM | 1:31:15 | 50.2 |
5/10/2014 | 5K | 19:30 | 51.3 |
6/14/2014 | 10K | 41:14 | 50.1 |
8/15/2015 | HM | 1:36:39 | 46.9 |
10/31/2015 | 5K | 20:08 | 49.4 |
5/15/2016 | HM | 1:32:46 | 49.2 |
7/3/2016 | 5K | 20:03 | 49.7 |
9/25/2016 | 10K | 42:23 | 48.6 |
5/13/2017 | 5K | 19:50 | 50.3 |
5/21/2017 | HM | 1:33:58 | 48.5 |
12/2/2017 | 10K | 44:44 | 45.6 |
5/6/2018 | HM | 1:39:05 | 45.6 |
8/12/2018 | 10K | 44:03 | 46.4 |
9/23/2018 | 5K | 20:23 | 48.7 |
4/27/2019 | HM | 1:42:52 | 43.7 |
10/12/2019 | 5K | 20:26 | 48.6 |
12/7/2019 | 10K | 43:20 | 47.3 |
Date run | Race distance | Chip time | Vdot | |
17/6/18 | 10 km | 0h 59m 9s | 32.8 | |
18/2/18 | 10 km | 00:54:51 | 35.9 | |
18/5/26 | 5 km | 00:24:52 | 38.6 | |
18/5/26 | 10 km | 00:56:58 | 34.3 | |
18/8/12 | 15 km | 01:27:22 | 34.5 | |
18/9/23 | 21.1 km | 01:55:48 | 38 | |
19/8/4 | 5 km | 25m 12s | 38 | |
2020-10-03 | 21.1 km | 1h 56m 49s | 37.6 | |
2020-11-01 | 21.1 km | 1h 54m 1s | 38.7 | |
2020-11-29 | 1 mile | 0h 7m 14s | 39.3 | |
2020-12-05 | 5 km | 0h 24m 14s | 39.8 | |
2020-12-23 | 10 km | 0h 49m 57s | 40.1 |
Here be my quick chart:
View attachment 560563
Peak was 47.8 at my PR half in early 2019. The valleys are all fulls....
total miles is just under 15000 in just under 10 years.
Here’s mine. I did try and take some out that were not great efforts, but I left some in that were a little warmer than ideal, but still good efforts even though the time might not have reflected it as well.
View attachment 560575
Date Distance Time Vdot T, D, T+D (F) 8/7/2013 5k 27:35 34.1 74 68 142 4/13/2014 10k 56:36 34.6 68 53 121 5/5/2014 HM 2:07:16 34.0 60 39 99 9/14/2014 HM 2:12:07 32.5 62 48 110 10/26/2014 10k 59:27 32.6 64 34 98 5/16/2015 HM 2:20:15 30.3 73 62 135 9/19/2015* 5k 27:05 34.8 69 65 134 (pouring rain) 10/25/2015 10k 59:41 32.5 59 56 115 3/19/2016** 10 mi 1:39:45 32.3 68 61 129 5/21/2016 HM 2:16:49 31.2 55 53 108 (pouring rain) 9/18/2016 (HOT) 10 mi 1:47:07 29.6 76 72 146 11/5/2016 HM 2:12:37 32.4 49 39 88 3/11/2017 HM 2:08:18 33.7 32 11 43 3/25/2017 17.75k 1:55:25 30.7 59 49 108 10/22/2017 (HOT) M 5:25:04 25.9 71 55 126 3/10/2018 HM 2:10:17 33.1 42 19 61 5/6/2018 HM 2:12:52 32.3 57 55 112 12/1/2018 10k 57:26 34.0 31 30 61 3/17/2019 M 4:49:29 30.0 47 33 80 4/7/2019 10 mi 1:43:46 30.8 58 51 109 5/27/2019 5k 27:08 34.8 66 52 118 7/14/2019 (HOT) HM 2:43:18 25.1 74 65 139 12/1/2019 (HOT) M 5:11:53 27.3 70 64 134 11/8/2020 (HOT) M 5:41:39 24.3 73 47 120
OK, I added temperature, dew point, and T+D, which I looked up from historical data. I tried to choose a time that was in the middle of the race for me. I will be interested to see how you fold in that information.
I definitely prefer it to be COLD for racing, and in my last two marathons, I've really been foiled by unseasonably warm temperatures.
I did not start running until 2013. In K-12 and college, I never did any sports. I started walking a lot and hiking in ~2000 and started playing tennis (from scratch) in ~2005. I have played tennis continuously from then to now and my volume of that has increased (until the pandemic).
Also, my first training plan with you was for the March 2018 race. When you have 100-, 150-, 200-m intervals in training (R pace), I do very well at those.
If you can find some magic key, I am all for it!
Here are my numbers and chart:
Date Distance Time VDOT 9/3/200510K 45:30 44.7 10/18/2005M 3:30:41 44.44 12/3/20055K 20:16 49 4/22/200610 Miles 1:12:21 46.9 8/26/20065K 19:37 50.9 9/17/2006HM 1:32:04 49.7 9/29/2007HM 1:35:17 47.7 12/1/20075K 19:36 51 4/26/200810 Miles 1:08:50 49.7 9/17/20085K 18:33 54.4 10/19/2008HM 1:30:23 50.7 6/6/200910K 39:47 52.3 9/6/2009HM 1:28:39 51.9 10/3/20095K 18:50 53.4 6/5/201010K 40:21 51.4 9/12/2010HM 1:27:17 52.8 10/25/20105K 18:37 54.1 1/9/2011M 3:16:23 48.3 5/28/20115 Miles 32:11 51.3 6/11/20115K 18:59 52.9 9/24/2011HM 1:29:01 51.6 4/28/201210 Miles 1:02:17 55.8 5/6/2012HM 1:25:38 54 6/3/20125K 17:40 57.5 7/6/20135K 19:04 52.7 9/15/2013HM 1:30:33 50.6 12/7/201310K 42:15 48.7 5/4/2014HM 1:31:15 50.2 5/10/20145K 19:30 51.3 6/14/201410K 41:14 50.1 8/15/2015HM 1:36:39 46.9 10/31/20155K 20:08 49.4 5/15/2016HM 1:32:46 49.2 7/3/20165K 20:03 49.7 9/25/201610K 42:23 48.6 5/13/20175K 19:50 50.3 5/21/2017HM 1:33:58 48.5 12/2/201710K 44:44 45.6 5/6/2018HM 1:39:05 45.6 8/12/201810K 44:03 46.4 9/23/20185K 20:23 48.7 4/27/2019HM 1:42:52 43.7 10/12/20195K 20:26 48.6 12/7/201910K 43:20 47.3
View attachment 560730
A couple notes. I just took the fastest times for the year in an effort to grab my peak fitness and used a few different distances. I didn't count courses that were extremely fast (like the Great Race) or that I recall were short. I also didn't count anything in 2020 since all my actual races were trails or cross country or virtual.
That peak is my 5K PR on an accurate course. I knew 2012 was my best running year, this chart helps me know exactly how much.
Here are my values. I have removed races that I was not targeting time as objective but have included time trials and even a race I did with DD.
Date run Race distance Chip time Vdot 17/6/18 10 km 0h 59m 9s 32.8 18/2/18 10 km 00:54:51 35.9 18/5/26 5 km 00:24:52 38.6 18/5/26 10 km 00:56:58 34.3 18/8/12 15 km 01:27:22 34.5 18/9/23 21.1 km 01:55:48 38 19/8/4 5 km 25m 12s 38 2020-10-03 21.1 km 1h 56m 49s 37.6 2020-11-01 21.1 km 1h 54m 1s 38.7 2020-11-29 1 mile 0h 7m 14s 39.3 2020-12-05 5 km 0h 24m 14s 39.8 2020-12-23 10 km 0h 49m 57s 40.1
Thanks for sharing. A 31% increase from start to peak.
-What changed in Fall 2017?
-How many career miles did you have in Fall 2018 at your peak?
-What do you think was the biggest difference between Fall 2018 to 2019?