Penny

May 09, 2024

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Location:

Sydney,Australia

Member Since:

Oct 24, 2012

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

PRs

10K: 42:07 (NYC Runs Roosevelt Island Hot Chocolate, December 2012)

Half Marathon: 1:30:23 (Philadelphia RnR Half Marathon, Sept 2013)

Marathon: 3:17:13 (New Jersey Marathon, May 5, 2013)

 

Short-Term Running Goals:

1:30 half marathon, Summer 2013

sub-3:30 marathon (my first) Spring 2013

sub 3:15 marathon, Fall 2013

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

Run long. Get fast. Stay injury free.

Personal:

Running blog: www.twolittlerunners.blogspot.com

Travel/Life/Food blog: www.big-spoon-little-spoon.blogspot.com

Favorite Blogs:

Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Mizuno Inspire 8s Lifetime Miles: 377.00
Brooks Pure Cadence Lifetime Miles: 40.00
Mizuno Inspire 9s Lifetime Miles: 398.10
Black Mizuno Inspire 9s Lifetime Miles: 432.20
Yellow Mizuno Wave Rider 15s Lifetime Miles: 490.50
Brooks Pure Cadence 2 Lifetime Miles: 218.82
Red Mizuno Wave Rider Lifetime Miles: 403.00
Blue Mizuno Inspires Lifetime Miles: 405.00
Blue Mizuno Inspires 2 Lifetime Miles: 300.00
Red Mizuno Wave Riders 2 Lifetime Miles: 252.00
Black Brooks Pure Cadence Lifetime Miles: 29.00
Mizuno Inspire 12s Lifetime Miles: 69.00
Mizuno Inspire 12s Coral Lifetime Miles: 32.00
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
6.000.000.000.006.00

Legs not at all sore after the race, but it was hilarious how slow this run was. About a 9:30 average pace (felt like 8:00!)

Very very pleased at my recovery time. It tells me that I didnt run all out (and trash my legs) and I am getting a lot stronger. 

Mizuno Inspire 8s Miles: 6.00
Night Sleep Time: 0.00Nap Time: 0.00Total Sleep Time: 0.00Weight: 0.00
Comments
From Kam on Fri, Mar 15, 2013 at 11:15:03 from 68.66.163.179

Penny,

I saw your race report, then got interested in your training. Wow! You are doing awesome. There's a lot of speed in you. Congrats on your ramp-up, and the 1/2 pr. You've got a lot of headroom, and you are approaching your improvement very wisely.

Be careful on the speed, though. You can get plenty fast without doing a lot of 6 min pace short intervals. I guess since I'm so old, I try to reserve that type of running for races only.

Sorry to leave such a long comment. Once again, congratulations on your great progress.

From Penny on Fri, Mar 15, 2013 at 11:32:47 from 38.121.175.69

Thanks for your comment Kam! Interesting thought on the intervals. I'm following Hansons on the speed stuff, and they start off with short intervals, and move towards longer intervals (1K, 1200m, mile-repeats) at slower paces (mile repeats at HM/LT pace) as you move through the plan. So short intervals are gone for the moment.

However it does raise a question for me; I assumed that I really benefited more from threshold/tempo workouts and developing my basic aerobic fitness. However, I have seen a lot of others completing 800s (or similar) workouts with much greater ease than me, which made me think that perhaps I needed the leg strength that such sessions provide?

From Kam on Fri, Mar 15, 2013 at 12:27:20 from 68.66.163.179

Penny, you raise interesting questions. I can't speak specifically to the increase in leg strength due to short intervals; I'm not an expert by any means.

The reason I commented on the intervals is that I see so many injuries on the blog, especially to the women runners, and the common denominator seems to be fast workouts.

As you run faster, the amount of energy your legs/muscles/bones have to dissipate increases by the square.

Here's an example: At 7mph, a 50kg runner generates 225 units of energy. The same runner generates 400 units of energy running 9 mph. So by going only 25% faster, you DOUBLE the amount of energy your legs have to absorb and get rid of. That's a huge load to put on your legs, and the most common overuse injury (at least on this blog) is a tibial stress fracture.

Instead of running fast to get your 85-95% effort level miles, you may consider doing hills or upping the incline on the treadmill. If you must go fast, do fast workouts on the grass, or some other more forgiving surface.

My experience has been that doing long 1-2 mile intervals, and longer, 4-10 mile tempo runs is much better marathon preparation than 400/800's.

Also, it pays to be careful when increasing speed or distance. You can't do both without multiplying your injury risk. The good news is, as you build your aerobic base and add mileage, even slow, "easy" pace miles, you will naturally become faster, not to mention build your endurance.

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