Team In Training IL

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Several Notes about the Wilson Ave. All Teams

Several Notes about the Wilson Ave. All Team Trainings:
  • You need to pay for parking. Bring you Credit or Debit Card.
  • Wear your Team in Training Gear. It will be easier for other coaches to identify you on the course. We will not be the only running group on the course
  • Start treating your long runs like race day. Lay out your gear the night before and get to training early and calm.
  • Bring a change of clothes for after training.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Team In Training Coach Update Week of July 11 - Longer Distances

"The marathon lifestyle promotes doing rather than watching…by adopting the marathon lifestyle you can confront your own lions, be your own hero, fight your own battles, challenge yourself." 
--Richard Benyo

 

 "Courage is the greatest of all the virtues.  Because if you haven't courage, you may not have the opportunity to use any of the others." 
--Samuel Johnson

 

Hello Team,


You are all doing so great!  This week is a cutback week…enjoy it because next week we are ramping up again!  We have our Training for Longer Distances Clinic after training this week.  Read through the coach's tip below for an introduction to what you will learn in detail on Saturday.

Plan on attending the clinic if you can….the long trainings are the back bone of your successful event day.

 

Good luck to our Fleet Feet 5K and 10K participants.  Their race is on Sunday!  GO TEAM!!! 


Some of you have been complaining of shin splits. Please click here to read up on some stretches and exercises to help you out. 

 

Group Training

 

Midweek Training

Wednesday, July 13, 6:30 PM

Location;  Palatine Track Park District
Click Here For Directions

 

Saturday, July 16

Location:  Half Day Forest Preserve Shelter A
Click Here For Directions

Length of Trainings:

Full Marathons:  6.2 Miles

Half Marathons: 3.1 Miles

Fleet Feet 5K:  3 miles

Fleet Feet 10K:   6 miles

 

 

Coaching Tip of the Week

 

Purpose of the Long Training

For the purposes of this discussion, the distance of a long training is considered to be 10 miles or longer as well as runs/walks that last over 90 minutes.

The long trainings are the most important component of half-marathon or marathon training because they teach the body to both mentally and physically tackle the challenges presented in completing the endurance event. Physiologically, the body must learn to tap into and utilize energy reserves from fat storage sites after the glycogen (fuel stores in the muscles, converted over from carbohydrate food sources) have been depleted. Through long trainings, the capacity to store more glycogen within the muscles increases. An increase in glycogen stores translates into the ability to maintain one's pace during the event and delay the onset of fatigue. Conversely, trouble is on the horizon when you run out of glycogen, as your pace will significantly decrease.
 
One must also be accustomed to running or walking for very long periods of time, and the mental toughness that develops from completing long training pays off handsome dividends during the actual event.
 
The long trainings also provide an excellent opportunity to experiment with a variety of issues and concerns (e.g., shoes, nutrition, pacing, etc.) that should be experimented with so that there are no surprises on race day.

Above all, our half marathon and marathon training schedules are designed so that athletes are adequately rested prior to undertaking their long trainings.

Benefits of the Long Training
  • Provides the necessary endurance to complete the half-marathon or marathon.
  • Strengthens the heart (increases stoke volume) and opens the capillaries, both sending energy to working muscles and flushing waste products from fatigued muscles.
  • Other physiological benefits include the increased number and size of mitochondria and increased myoglobin concentration in muscle fibers.
  • Strengthens the leg muscles and ligaments, thus improving your endurance.
  • Recruits fast-twitch muscle fibers to help with slow-twitch tasks (like running a marathon).
  • Teaches the body to burn fat as fuel.
  • Develops your mental toughness and coping skills, thus increasing/enhancing your confidence level that you can go the full marathon distance on race day.
  • Increases your overall speed, even for shorter races.
  • Allows you to experiment with all of the factors that can affect you on race day. 

Thank you for a being a part of Team in Training!

 "One seed can start a garden.  One smile can lift a spirit.  One candle can light a room.  One step can begin a journey."'  --Unknown
Remembering the Reasons,
Your coaches,

Marianne Cantieri   847-912-5981            mkcantieri@yahoo.com

Bobby Dobroski     224-588-7442            bobby.dobroski@gmail.com

Also you can check the status update of training on our Team in Training Hotline 312-651-7356 x 7761 or http://www.runningforacure.info.


----

http://www.runningforacure.info

"Happiness is a choice. You can be happy or miserable. Either way the distance is the same."


Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Team in Training Coach Update: Week of July 4th - Pacing

"The nearest way to glory – a shortcut, as it were –is to strive to be what you wish to be thought to be. 
–quoted in Cicero, 44 BC

 

"If you want to run, run a mile.  If you want to experience another life, run a marathon." 
-Emil Zapotek

 

Hello Team,

We hope you all had a safe and fun holiday weekend!  Did any of you do a local race? 

 

Full marathoners you are getting into double digits this Saturday and half marathoners, you're getting close.  Fleet Feet folks, your event is not far away.  Learning proper pacing is key to having your best possible race.  We have been working on pacing throughout the season.  Read the coaches tip this week for even more information on pacing and race strategy.  

 

Group Training

 

Midweek Training

Wednesday, July 6, 6:30 PM

Location:  Palatine Hills Golf Course

Click Here For Directions

Bobby will not be there so Don't look out for a yellow car.

 

Saturday, July 9

Location:  Busse Woods 0 mile Markers

Click Here For Directions

Length of Trainings:

Full Marathons:  10 miles

Half Marathons:  8 miles

Fleet Feet 5K:  3 miles

Fleet Feet 10K:   6 miles

Bobby will be there so DO look out for a yellow car. 

 

Coaching Tip of the Week

 

Pacing and Race Strategy

Throughout the season you have learned many things to improve your race day performance including form, hydration, injury prevention, stretching, strengthening.  Proper pacing becomes more and more important as you continue to progress in your training and get closer to your race. 

 

When you first set your goal of completing a 5K, 10K, half marathon or marathon you may have had a clear vision of how you wanted to do it, for example to run the entire event or complete it in a certain time.  These are great goals and it is great to work to achieve them, however your current abilities may or may not currently be at the appropriate level. Or, perhaps they are, but because of your current strategy the goal is beyond reach.  For example, perhaps your goal is to run the marathon in 4 hours, but you consistently fall off of your pace in the latter miles of your training runs.  Perhaps if you switched to a run/walk strategy you could maintain a consistent pace for longer mileage and achieve your goals.

 

How do you learn what your pace and race strategy should be?  Begin timing your miles and/or splits on your long trainings. Make sure to wear your watch to training. Time the amount of time it takes you to do the first half of your training.  Then, time yourself on the  second half of your training. 

 

There is a lot you can learn from the information you get from doing this.  For example, is your first half a  lot faster than your last half?  This may mean that you are going out too fast and burning yourself out.  You will need to practice going out slower and being able to maintain your pace throughout.  Or, perhaps you need to adopt a run/walk strategy.  If you are doing a run/walk strategy maybe you need to play with different intervals.  If your second half is a lot faster than your first half  maybe you're holding yourself back!  After timing your pace for each mile ask your coaches for help in interpreting this information to help you plan your future trainings.

 

See the article below for more information about pacing.  The concepts apply to every race distances even though the article references the marathon.

 

Running and Walking Your Perfect Marathon Pace

Adapted from: Marathon: The Ultimate Training Guide, by Hal Higdon

The simplest route to marathon success is to follow the so-called perfect pace that has the runner run or the walker walk at the same speed mile after mile for the full distance. Running or walking the right pace can speed you to the finish line. For instance, to run a 3-hour marathon, you simply run 26 consecutive miles in 6:52. Even pacing seems to work the best overall.

Coach Tom Grogon of Cincinnati agrees: "I want my runners to run at relatively even pace. Given this, they should view those who bolt out early as foolish people whom they will catch at the end."

If you really enjoy catching people, you can even try running or walking "negative splits." This means that you run or walk the second half of the race faster than the first half. The advantage of this approach is that at a time when most athletes are slowing down, you will be speeding up. You'll pass others, rather than have others pass you, which can be stimulating mentally.

 In picking any pace strategy, it's a good idea to know what you're doing before approaching the starting line. Here are some tips for finding the right pace: 1.) Choose a realistic goal. 2.) Believe in your pace chart: check each mile, making no changes in the first 20 miles (no matter how "good" you feel). 3.) At 20 miles, if you feel good, go for it; if not, hang in there. 4.) If the course is especially hilly, be prepared to make the necessary adjustments. Weather conditions also can affect your pace times. 5.) Carry your pace chart with you. This allows you to know how close you are to pace at every point in the race. 6.) Meeting intermediate time goals gives the runner or walker confidence and causes the miles to pass faster. You'll find it easier to run or walk using a pre-determined pace.

On race day, always consider that there are many factors that can affect your pace including wind, temperature and other weather condition, your level of health, hydration and nutrition and others.

Be careful about misjudging your own abilities and setting yourself up for failure on race day.  It's much more fun if you can successfully race your plan versus feeling that you have failed when you go slower.

The best pace-setting device inevitably becomes that in your own head. Experienced runners and walkers eventually know when to slow down and when to speed up. Experience thus becomes a major factor in marathon success as well as one of the fascinations of the race. Although ability and training certainly are major factors, the marathon definitely is a thinking man's (and woman's) race.

Running, walking or doing a combination at the correct pace for your ability level is crucial in the marathon, especially for the first time marathoner. It's so easy to start the race by going at too fast pace for which you are prepared. Your pace during the first mile oftentimes feels effortless due to the adrenaline rush and excitement of the event. If you run or walk the first mile or too fast, you'll pay dearly for the mistake in the later miles. A much better plan is to start out slower than what you hope to average and then run the middle miles at your chosen (hopefully realistic) pace. It's a better strategy to pick up the pace during the final miles when you know you can finish rather than starting aggressively. In the world of marathoning, there's no such theory as "putting the fast miles in the bank early in the race" and then holding on in the end. If you go that route, you will most assuredly visit the dreaded "wall" (the point in time when glycogen stores within the muscles have been depleted and as a result, the runner's pace slows considerably, oftentimes to a walk). During the marathon, constantly monitor how you are feeling, and adjust your pace accordingly based on your perceived energy level. Your past long training runs will enable you to do this.

Runner's Web has a wonderful tool, a marathon splits calculator, that enables you to key in a goal marathon time and view split times for shorter distances displayed in both miles and kilometers. Some texts have "race predictor charts" which will provide you with the opportunity to extrapolate from your shorter race times (e.g., 10K, half-marathon, etc.) a projected marathon times. Check out this great web site, MarathonGuide.com, for their "Race Time Predictor Chart". Use charts such as these as a guide in determining what pace you should theoretically be able to maintain for your marathon. The information derived from these charts is less-reliable if you haven't completed some training runs of 20 miles or longer.

 

Remember, your coaches are here to help you determine your best pace and most successful race strategy!

 

Thank you for a being a part of Team in Training!

 

 "The hero is the one who kindles a great light in the world, who sets up blazing torches in the dark streets of life for men to see by."  -Unknown


Remembering the Reasons,
Your coaches,

Marianne Cantieri   847-912-5981            mkcantieri@yahoo.com

Bobby Dobroski     224-588-7442            bobby.dobroski@gmail.com

 

Also you can check the status update of training on our Team in Training Hotline 312-651-7356 x 7761 or http://www.runningforacure.info.

----
http://www.runningforacure.info

"Happiness is a choice. You can be happy or miserable. Either way the distance is the same."