avondale
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2017
- Messages
- 2,286
I would actually disagree with this, based on my experience and lots of reading into running/training research.If you would normally be doing 12-14 miles on the day of your 10 miler, then I'd say you would be good going for a 10-miler PR, given that the marathon is 2 weeks later.
My thinking is that the 10 miles is a slightly shorter distance, but with higher effort to achieve the PR, so largely a wash.
If you assume 2-3 days to recover from the 10-miler (depending on how all-out you do it for the PR), resume the taper with whatever mileage you would have been at on that day in the training plan, or even a mile less or at a slightly easier pace than you would've for that day.
As Bob likes to say, by that point most of the hay is in the barn, so I personally don't think a few recovery days will hurt your marathon time.
YMMV
Putting in PR-level effort for 10 miles only two weeks before a PR-level effort for a marathon doesn't seem like it would give enough recovery to go for that second PR-level effort in the marathon.
Usually the rule of thumb for recovering from a race-level effort is that you should take 1 day easy per mile raced. So for your 10-miler, that's 10 days easy. Then after those days of easy effort, you're ready to start training again....I would be concerned that you wouldn't be ready for a PR-level effort again so soon.
Your 12 - 14 miles that you have in your training plan for two weeks before the marathon are presumably at easy or maybe "long run" pace, which is going to be a much easier effort level than you'll be putting out for a 10-mile PR.
There are obviously a lot of variables in there. Are you young and recover pretty quickly? Maybe your previous PRs weren't all that great (no judgment, just saying), so a PR-level effort won't be that huge?
But if you're pushing the envelope on both of them for real, I wouldn't count on being able to make that level of effort for both. I know that there's no way I would be able to do that, and I've got quite a bit of long race experience. A real PR effort wipes me out for quite awhile.
I would suggest you pick one that you really want to PR and run the other race appropriately for that. It's not like there aren't more races in the future, so you can work toward the PR of the other one down the road.
