Black Friday. Lots of people get up early in the morning to go shopping, but eight people in Iowa City. We got together at rW-downtown at 4:30 - 5:00 AM. Ran 1.5 miles to the track in City-High and lined up to run 1 mile. I had to guess what my time would be. My 1-mile PR is 6:06. But, I had no idea how fast I could run this morning. I just said 7:00 to say something. Got ready and went. Four laps. Finished in 6:36. I was happy with the time. Fastest runner finished in about 5:00 min.
I wonder. How other runners my age, or older, can run a lot faster. It all means, there is a lot of room for improvement. I will keep running intervals once a week and try to do better.
My experience as a runner in the fifties. How I train, eat, rest, and exercise. How running is part of my daily life.
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"Only those who will risk going too far can possibly find out how far one can go"
T. S. Eliot
T. S. Eliot
Friday, November 29, 2013
Monday, November 4, 2013
Negative Splits
The importance of negative splits. The website for the ING NYC Marathon is allowing to select a runner and see how he ran the marathon, mile per mile. I checked the winner of the ING NYC Marathon Geoffrey Mutai. He also won this marathon and the Boston marathon in 2011. Mutai runs negative splits. Meaning he tries to run each mile either at the same pace or faster than the previous one. Here's his mile splits:
Distance
|
Time
of Day
|
Elapsed
Time
|
Est.
Finish
|
Pace/Mile
|
5K
|
09:58:53
AM
|
0:15:42
|
11:55:24
AM
|
05:03
|
10K
|
10:14:06
AM
|
0:30:54
|
11:53:33
AM
|
04:59
|
Mile 8
|
10:22:56
AM
|
0:39:44
|
11:53:19
AM
|
04:58
|
Mile 9
|
10:27:46
AM
|
0:44:35
|
11:52:57
AM
|
04:58
|
15K
|
10:29:17
AM
|
0:46:06
|
11:52:45
AM
|
04:57
|
Mile 10
|
10:32:37
AM
|
0:49:25
|
11:52:40
AM
|
04:57
|
Mile 11
|
10:37:53
AM
|
0:54:42
|
11:53:28
AM
|
04:59
|
Mile 12
|
10:42:46
AM
|
0:59:34
|
11:53:14
AM
|
04:58
|
20K
|
10:44:57
AM
|
1:01:46
|
11:53:22
AM
|
04:59
|
Mile 13
|
10:47:44
AM
|
1:04:33
|
11:53:16
AM
|
04:58
|
Half
|
10:48:17
AM
|
1:05:06
|
11:53:23
AM
|
04:59
|
Mile 14
|
10:52:30
AM
|
1:09:19
|
11:52:54
AM
|
04:58
|
Mile 15
|
10:57:25
AM
|
1:14:13
|
11:52:50
AM
|
04:57
|
25K
|
11:00:14
AM
|
1:17:03
|
11:53:10
AM
|
04:58
|
Mile 16
|
11:02:26
AM
|
1:19:15
|
11:52:57
AM
|
04:58
|
Mile 17
|
11:07:05
AM
|
1:23:54
|
11:52:29
AM
|
04:57
|
Mile 18
|
11:11:48
AM
|
1:28:37
|
11:52:10
AM
|
04:56
|
30K
|
11:14:52
AM
|
1:31:41
|
11:52:03
AM
|
04:56
|
Mile 19
|
11:16:33
AM
|
1:33:21
|
11:51:55
AM
|
04:55
|
Mile 20
|
11:21:37
AM
|
1:38:26
|
11:52:08
AM
|
04:56
|
Mile 21
|
11:26:23
AM
|
1:43:12
|
11:51:56
AM
|
04:55
|
35K
|
11:29:55
AM
|
1:46:44
|
11:51:45
AM
|
04:55
|
Mile 22
|
11:31:03
AM
|
1:47:52
|
11:51:38
AM
|
04:55
|
Mile 23
|
11:35:42
AM
|
1:52:31
|
11:51:22
AM
|
04:54
|
Mile 24
|
11:40:38
AM
|
1:57:26
|
11:51:24
AM
|
04:54
|
40K
|
11:44:43
AM
|
2:01:32
|
11:51:19
AM
|
04:54
|
Mile 25
|
11:45:26
AM
|
2:02:15
|
11:51:18
AM
|
04:54
|
Mile 26
|
11:50:29
AM
|
2:07:18
|
11:51:28
AM
|
04:54
|
Finish
|
11:51:35
AM
|
2:08:24
|
11:51:35
AM
|
04:55
|
I guess running like this requires excellent training and mental control. He definitely was running his race. I would like to do my long runs like this. Interestingly, our Sunday run was pretty much negative splits. Trying to keep the pace or running each mile faster. This kind of training will definitely build endurance. There is only one second differences between certain miles. One second... This guy is a running machine!
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