Sunday, January 31, 2010

Ludicrous Speed!

Week 16: 1/24/10 - 1/31/10 (2 weeks remain)

So I was somewhat lazy/irresponsible/partially done in by a recent snap of inclement weather this week, but overall, I'm actually feeling pretty good about my race preparedness.

Monday: Off day

Tuesday: 8 miles, recovery.

Wednesday: Didn't run. No (good) excuse :-/. (Although it was only supposed to be 5 today).

Thursday: 12 miles, medium-long. Did a 10 mile loop with Karin from her house (Hyde Park) up to the peak of Mt. Bonnell - the hill workouts I've been doing have been paying off. Tacked on an additional 2 miles with an out-and-back from Karin's house along Red River to the intersection of Dean Keeton. Medium-distance, medium effort day.

Friday: Also didn't run - got back from lab late, and it was 35 degrees and pissing rain when I got home :-/. (Fortunately, today was also only supposed to be 5).

Saturday: 10 miles, general aerobic. 10 miles around Town Lake with Karin. Apparently there's a super nice trail running along the south bank of the river beginning at the Congress Street Bridge that I just now found out about? Put in a 1 mile uptempo just because.

A preamble: It just so happened that as I was stretching out last week at the east end of Town Lake before starting my long run (as is my custom), a pretty fit-looking guy comes running past going the same direction I am. Figuring that 20 miles is a fair distance to cover by oneself (especially after having been running long and solo for 15 weeks previously), I suggested that we run together for a while. It turns out that this guy, Matt, had just started training for the Capital 10k (to be held April 11). So we end up running for a good while around Town Lake, and agreed to meet up the following week, as we seemed to be about the same speed and both of us had gotten pretty tired of doing our long runs alone.

Sunday: 16 miles, long run, with Matt. So today was the last serious long run before race day (the "long run" next week is only 13, and hardly merits the title). Apparently Matt has a sister who's also running the Austin Marathon with the goal of qualifying for Boston, and she had mentioned to him that the first 17 miles or so have quite a few rolling hills, but that the last 9 miles is essentially all flat or downhill. Matt suggested that we do 5 miles out along the river leaving from the parking lot at the east end of Town Lake, do a 7-mile loop of hills along the race route, and then back along the same way we went out.

Ideally, I'd like to run the actual race somewhere in the 2:50 to 3:00 range, which comes out to a per-mile pace of 6:40 to 6:52. As it so happens, we were both feeling pretty good, so we started out a little on the fast side, around 6:15-ish. Around mile 2 or so (after having passed the traffic light at the intersection of I-35 and Riverside) we dropped it down to around 6:00...

and then held that pace within +/- :05 for the next 13 miles, including 5 miles of rolling hills (we managed to get turned around up in the hills and somehow cut off 2 miles of the hill workout, although Matt assures me that there was only actually one hill of any real significance in that particular section). Here is a picture of us taken somewhere on the north side of the river:


After getting back to the parking lot, I threw in an additional mile cooldown to try to stretch my legs out (they were feeling pretty stiff, as it was 35 degrees again).

Total weekly mileage: 46

So in light of Sunday's run, I'm feeling pretty good about my overall race preparedness - I won't have to run nearly so fast, and the fact that I can hold that pace for extended periods of time leads me to believe that I ought to be able to qualify come race day - especially when the downhills kick in at mile 18.

Additionally, although I was certainly winded when we got back to the cars, after returning home, I didn't feel the 1 1/2-hour-nap-inducing death-fatigue that I recall feeling when I began doing my long runs way back in November, and even up to a few weeks ago before I really started ramping up the mileage on the long runs. Certainly, this is at least partially due to having been training at higher mileages for 16 weeks now. However, I also tried experimenting with some Gu today, not having tried this stuff before, and I wonder whether or to what extent my lack of post-running fatigue may have been due to that? (For the record, as per directions, I took one of them about 15 minutes before starting the run, and another about 45 minutes to an hour into it.) However, given a time goal of 2:50 to 3:00, this would require taking three of these things into the race with me. Taking one of them doesn't actually consume that much time (I think I timed the operation at approximately :30 from start to finish), but that seems like a lot of gel/fluid to be ingesting while also trying to run fast. Does anyone else out there have any experience with this stuff in the marathon, or any other words of wisdom on this issue they'd like to share?

So, since I'm not dead tired, it's off to some combination of Ehresmann connections and Mass Effect... probably heavy on the Mass Effect :-).

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

It's a long way to the top

Week 15: 1/18/10 - 1/24/10 (3 weeks remain)

Monday: Off day

Tuesday: 8 miles, easy.

Wednesday: 10 miles, general aerobic

Thursday : 15 miles, medium-long. Ran around the Shoal Creek Trail for 12 miles, then finished up with a 3 mile out-and-back to the UT math department.

Friday: 8 miles, general aerobic.

Saturday: 5 miles, recovery.

Sunday: 20 miles, long run. Started out the first two miles at a moderate jog, then settled into comfortable 6:15 - 6:30 miles for the next 15 or so. Pretty tired for the last 3-4 miles, but kept fairly consistent pace. Overall, I was pretty pleased with this run, as it suggests that I'm finally getting into some kind of shape for the actual race itself, especially considering the fact I started the workout with what I felt were pretty dead legs.

Total weekly mileage: 66.

This week was the peak training week for my schedule, so it's all downhill from here - next week I start to ease off a bit as I enter the taper leading up to race day. I'm feeling pretty beat up this week from the higher mileage and longer running I've been doing over the past few weeks, but I'm feeling pretty good about my overall race preparation as a result of Sunday's long run. I'll be interested to see what I can do on the 14th with a pair of fresh legs.

Monday, January 18, 2010

My Irresponsibility Knows No Bounds

Protip: If you're going to start writing a blog, it's helpful not to be such a lazy piece of shit that you never actually update it. Just sayin'.

So although I haven't quite kept up with updating the training log as I had originally planned, I've still been (mostly) keeping up with the running -- the postings just fell by the wayside as I got progressively busier towards the end of last term (along with proper hygiene, nutrition, sleep, and -- at various times -- my sanity). To summarize, the crazy shenanigans I've gotten into over the previous two months when I was busy not updating the blog include:

  • Attended the First National Forum of Young Topologists: Spent a few days hanging out in New Orleans with some other grad student topologists. Met some new guys from other schools, heard some interesting talks, including one by this guy which was a survey of applications of topology to robotics, sensing, and estimation. Given that I am a huge fan of both robotics and topology, this pleased me greatly. Moreover, in addition to being f@$*ing awesome, this also means that the term "applied topology" is no longer oxymoronic.

    Also hit up the French Quarter for Cajun cuisine, excellent live music, gorgeous architecture, and general debauchery. It was pretty epic; witness the following picture:



    So all in all it was pretty awesome, the only exception being that it's now two months past the end of the conference and no one in the department has been reimbursed yet for travel expenses. This lends some additional weight to the hypothesis that the conference organizers may be crypto-Communists.

  • Wrote a bunch of applications: This sucked. 'Nuff said.

  • Then my 1 1/2-year old laptop died while I was at home on the break: It is rather difficult to post running log updates when your only means of communication is a $1500 paperweight. So now the only working computer that I have at my apartment is an aged desktop that I bought when I was a sophomore in high school - this thing has trouble running Firefox in XP. Fortunately, I scavenged one of the mapping computers out of the RoboCup lab after the project shut down; it's pretty slick, but it needs a new video card and a DVD reader/writer before it can be used. Speaking of which, you know what would come in pretty handy for getting these parts? The $450 that Tulane owes me. Again, just sayin'.

  • Went on Lloyd Ski Trip: Good God I'm old. On the plus side though, the fact that I knew less than half the kids who are still in the house meant that it was much easier for Tapes and I to antisocially drink by ourselves while watching Army of Darkness.

  • Went on the occasional run: I actually have been putting in runs whenever possible, in between traveling and nearly losing my sanity at the ridiculousness that was the end of the last academic term. Given that I'm now twice-weekly doing 15 to 20 mile runs, I figure that I'm in much better shape now than I was at this point in my "training" the last time I attempted this.
So that's pretty much been it. I'm going to make a concerted effort to be less worthless in the weeks ahead.