Sunday, March 22, 2009

AP – Runners make their way past Zojoji temple in the Tokyo Marathon in Tokyo, Japan, Sunday, March 22, 2009. … Dan Peterson

AP – Runners make their way past Zojoji temple in the Tokyo Marathon in Tokyo, Japan, Sunday, March 22, 2009. …
Dan Peterson                                                                                
LiveScience's Sports Columnist
LiveScience.com dan Peterson
livescience's Sports Columnist
livescience.com – Sun Mar 29, 10:15 am ET
Most regular runners can tell you when they reach that perfect equilibrium of speed and comfort. The legs are loose, the heart is pumping and it feels like you could run at this pace forever.
Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison now have an explanation for this state of running nirvana, and we can thank our ancestors and some evolutionary biology for it.
For years, it has been thought that humans have a constant metabolic energy rate. It was assumed that you would require the same total energy to run one mile, no matter if you ran it in 5 minutes or 10 minutes. Even though your energy burn rate would be higher at faster speeds, you would get there in half the time.

Turns out, however, that each person has an optimal running pace that uses the least amount of oxygen to cover a given distance. The findings, by Karen Steudel, a zoology professor at
Wisconsin, and Cara Wall-Scheffler of Seattle Pacific University, are detailed in latest online edition of the Journal of Human Evolution.
Steudel's team tested both male and female runners at six different speeds on a treadmill while measuring their oxygen intake and carbon dioxide output. As expected, each runner had different levels of fitness and oxygen use but there were ideal speeds for each runner that required the least amount of energy.
Overall, the optimal speeds for the group were about 8.3 mph (about a 7:13 minutes per mile) for males and 6.5 mph (9:08 min/mile) for females.
The most interesting finding: At slower speeds, about 4.5 mph (13 min/mile), the metabolic efficiency was at its lowest. Steudel explains that at this speed, halfway between a walk and a jog, the runner's gait can be awkward and unnatural.

"What that means is that there is an optimal speed that will get you there the cheapest," Steudel says.

So, why is a zoology professor studying running efficiency? Steudel's previous work has tried to build a theory of why our early ancestors evolved from moving on four limbs to two limbs, also known as bipedalism. She has found that human walking is a more efficient method of getting from point A to point B than on all fours. It might also have been an advantage for hunting.
This latest research could offer some more clues of how we moved on to running. Steudel explains, "This is a piece in the question of whether walking or running was more important in the evolution of the body form of the genus Homo."


Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Ramblings, Rambling, and more Ramblings About Some Bad-az Senior Runners

email March 11, 2009)
Hello Bill,

Glad you are feeling better.  Eve is doing fine.  Even though she was a little uncomfortable that night she still did a 2 hour run on Sunday.  The French Broad Dash and Squat seemed to be the worst of it.  I recall a similar experience during a 15k training run many years ago that became a legend of Norwegian folk lore.  In fact this is how the term "brownfield" was coined as the site of an ecological/environmental clean-up in progress.  To say I merely darkened the forest that day is an understatement of obscene proportions.

Yes... I saw that about Charlie.  Isn't that awesome!!!  Charles was at the ATC meeting on Monday night, while you were home playing your flute and drums.  It was not even mentioned during the panel discussion about his honorable mention by Running Times.  Charles was not on the panel, though he should have been.  He did have a chance to answer a couple of questions that were directed his way from Rick Taylor.  What a charming, humble man he is!  Charles is also a vegetarian and he cites his improved health and sharpened mental alertness since making the transition several years ago.  (Warning: Rant about to start), In spite of the meat packing industry funded research recently released by Harvard University, people who have switched to a vegetarian diet, continue to report the same conclusions as Charles.  Our experience has been similar.  The Harvard Diet and Nutrition Center is obviously staffed by a bunch of prostitutes who will get on their knees for anyone with a blank check in hand.  I cannot believe the bullshit they recently published regarding the consumption red meat versus a vegetarian diet.  They even had the testicular fortitude to state that the brains of vegetarians shrink due to dietary causes.  Too bad these dumbasses never heard of Albert Einstein since his vegetarian habits were obviously the reason for his mental malaise.  You have to wonder if some of these researchers keep "do-me high heels" in their lockers, that they slip on when preparing to write their papers.  (Ok, rant done.)

Bottom line: Charles Dotson is an icon for the running community of Asheville, if not the entire state of NC.

As for my standing nationally; I have some bad-az competition.  Doug Goodhue can knock out a 38 min 10k along with his 18 min 5K.  And Doug is in an age-grade ahead of me!!  Doug is awesome, no doubt about that.  In the 60-64 group you have guys doing 17 min 5K's and 36 min 10's.  Of course Ron Wells did his 5K at Carlsbad which always gathers the best runners in the country for the Carlsbad 5000.  Carlsbad is a pancake flat course, but it still has two 180 degree turns, so Ron could probably go 5 - 10 seconds faster under better conditions.  I went head to head with Ron Enos (honorable mention) at the Las Vegas Marathon a few years ago and he finished 3rd, almost 1 minute behind me.  Yeah, the top 3 places at Las Vegas in 60-64 group were within 1 minute of each other!  I passed the second place guy about 2 miles from the finish, heading north towards the finish on Frank Sinatra Drive.  I could tell by the size of his ears that we had to be close to the same age, so when I passed him I was going as fast as I dared to go that late in the race and with still another 14 - 15 minutes of racing left.  I am certain I would gone sub 3 hours that day but the damn 35-40 mph wind shot that down.  Ron ran 2:57 at Boston the following April.

Well, now that your colon is cleaned out, be sure to get your electro-lytes back up and you should be flying in a couple of weeks.

Are you running Shamrock this Saturday or keeping it a low-key-mend-the-seared-sphincter weekend?

All the best,

Bart

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Personal Note Regarding Our Running

March 3, 2009 (Personal note regarding our running.)

In trying to define how high aerobic running should be performed, we have come with a few key words for the sake of association with the proper level of effort expenditure.

Fast and comfortable; 1-sentence talking pace; stay in the comfort zone; relaxed; find and stay in the zone; let everything “click” and function in harmony (breathing, stride, cadence, rhythm); train don’t strain; should not experience negative thoughts, back off or bail if you do; don’t leave it on the road; breathing good but never hard; think “moderate effort”; invigorate the runner and kill the jogger; never bog the “governor”;


Sunday, March 1, 2009

Piloting a Distance Revolution. Rob Conner's Portland Pilots Get Faster by Running Slower By Chris Lear

Piloting a Distance Revolution
Rob Conner's Portland Pilots Get Faster by Running Slower
By Chris Lear
As featured in the March 2009 issue of Running Times Magazine
Three years ago, David Kinsella and his freshman classmates at the University of Portland began their collegiate careers by running among themselves so they could gingerly adjust to collegiate training. One week in, longtime Portland mentor Rob Conner let 'em loose to run with the varsity.

Their guide for their trial by fire was Michael Kilburg, a man who would explode as a Pilot senior in 2008 after an otherwise undistinguished career to run a school-record 28:20 for 10,000m. Kilburg proceeded to haul ass through the Oregon forest at such a clip that Kinsella and crew remember not how far or fast they went -- Kinsella is fairly certain it was 10 miles in 57 minutes -- only that they had to hang on for dear life.

Welcome to college, fellas. "It was this attitude of just go out and blast it," says Kinsella, who quickly discovered that everyday runs like that were the norm. He knew if he was to make it as a collegiate runner, he would have to survive a training regimen that typically consisted of 60 to 80 miles a week, blazing 6-mile tempo runs and intense sessions of repeat miles, and 60-minute "recovery" day efforts routinely run at a 6-minute-per-mile clip. The Portland training program, as then constituted, resembled what you'll find on many campuses around the nation, and, like many others, its components developed organically from within.

An athlete-led revolution

Since Pete Julian put Portland distance running on the national map back in 1993, Conner's blue-collar Pilots -- with nary a Foot Locker finalist in the bunch -- have perennially ground out West Coast Conference championships, NCAA cross country appearances and even a few All-Americans. And as the mantle of leadership passed through the years from Julian to guys like Uli Steidl and Ryan Grote to Todd Davis and Joe Driscoll, the Pilots progressively trained farther and faster than their predecessors while Conner incorporated pieces of the regimens of the most successful Pilots into his subsequent training plans.

Julian, for example, succeeded with hard 4-mile tempo runs, so that became a staple. Steidl did better on more mileage; recovery days for the group soon evolved from 7- to 10-mile runs. The one constant throughout was that all of that running was done at a very quick clip. Grote, a star on Portland's 10th-place NCAA cross country squad in 1996, remembers hammering 15-mile Sunday runs at 5:20 pace. "We would load up and get after it," recalls Grote. "We were not shy about that."

The regimen helped Grote run 29:35 and earn All-American honors in the 10K. Yet, many others wilted under such a tough regimen, and understandably so. "A guy would totally bonk, and it was like, 'Come on, man, get tough!' There was no sympathy," Conner says. "You think a guy is soft. Well, he's probably soft for a reason. Or you'd hear, 'He got burned out.'" Now, says Conner, "I don't believe in getting 'burned out' anymore."

Conner audibly winces when recalling the yeoman efforts of teams of yore.

"Those poor guys!" Conner laughs. "Every time I talk to an alum, I apologize. I'm like, 'If you were doing what these guys were doing … I'm sorry.' We just weren't training then as we are now."

What they are doing is producing top-shelf distance runners. Consider this: In 2007, three Pilots ran under 29 minutes for 10K, and two more ran under 29:20. Last year, the top two marks were under 28:30. None of the aforementioned athletes was a blue-chip Foot Locker finalist, and all accomplished their marks by employing a training methodology that sprang not from the stars but from the shadows. And last fall, led by Kinsella's fourth-place individual effort, the Pilots finished seventh in NCAA cross country championships, matching the 2001 team for the best in school history.
90 is the new 60

The revolution began three years ago with a book and a gaggle of fringe athletes. First, Conner spied a copy of Jack Daniels' book of training on Pilot women's coach Ian Solof's desk. He asked Solof what Daniels recommended for a 29-flat 10K guy. "And voila," says Conner, "my eyes were opened."

Conner explained his new approach to training to his guys in layman's terms. "How many of you guys played soccer?" he asked. Everyone's hand shot up. "How long is soccer practice?" he asked. "About two hours," they responded. "Exactly," he said. "An hour's worth of practice doesn't do anything for anybody."

There was, he says, a collective epiphany. So 60-minute 10-mile "recovery" runs quickly evolved into gentle 90-minute runs. And Wednesday and Sunday long runs became relaxed efforts at 6:30 to 6:45 mile pace instead of the hammerfests of yore.

The transition to this more deliberate training was facilitated by a mix of athletes who decided to make 13- to 14-mile runs routine in an effort to make the jump to varsity.

"And at first," says Kinsella, "I wasn't part of this movement. These were like the three crazy guys. We were always pissed off after workouts because we had to wait in the van while they were out doing their thing." Yet eventually, says Kinsella, "It forced everyone to re-examine what they were doing."
A seed had been planted and the idea of training longer and slower began to spread among the team as the trailblazers matured and the accumulation of miles manifested itself into giant PRs. In turn, the Portland program shifted from a program, says Kinsella, "where 8-10 miles was the norm, it felt cutthroat, and egos came out a lot on runs," to a program where the collective attitude became, "let's just get the miles in and be nice to each other five days a week and put in a good long workout the other two days.

"I think that idea has been perfected over the past two years," says Kinsella, who finished eighth at the NCAA cross country meet in 2007. "There's a very conscious understanding of what we're doing, and why we're doing it, and the guys are aware that if they do it, results will come."

Now, for every athlete like Kinsella or Kilburg who makes headlines, there is a lesser light like Colin Harris making massive strides and fanning the flames of the movement. Harris, a sophomore from Colorado, finished his 2008 freshman track campaign with modest 16:02 5K credentials. He returned this fall having completed a summer of monstrous 130-mile weeks, promptly ran 24:51 for 8K at the Willamette Invitational under muddy conditions and placed eighth in the West Coast Conference meet before finishing the fall campaign as the alternate on the NCAA squad.

"The breakthroughs we've made," Conner says unequivocally, "have been based on slowing down." Tempo runs are 10 miles and 90 percent of their workouts are 10 miles in duration. "It used to be we'd run [four to six] 4:50 to 4:30 mile repeats with a 400 jog," he says. "Now we're at 10 x 1 mile in 4:50 with a minute rest. And now we got Kilburg dropping 40 seconds [in the 10K] as a fifth-year senior."

No doubt, Conner's emphasis on mileage and aerobic development to the near exclusion of all else is taking Daniels' thinking to the extreme. Conner's extremist bent doesn't stop there. You just may see Kinsella piloting a Portland charge in the Boston or London marathon this spring. Such a race would be a litmus test for Kinsella to determine whether he wants to run professionally or hang 'em up while he goes to law school. And with so many JV guys running 100-plus miles a week, why not have 'em give it a go? Says Conner, "Galen [Rupp] and Alberto [Salazar] are thinking wild and crazy, why aren't we?"

Portland's David Kinsella, the fourth-place finisher at last fall's NCAA Division I cross country championships, offers his take on three of the staples that have piloted the Portland program to the upper echelon of the collegiate distance running ranks. Take heed on how to do them correctly.

10 x 1 mile with one minute rest


Kinsella: I love that workout. You should just be "breathing"; it should never be hard. They're run at a moderate threshold effort. To run this right you should never leave anything out there, or run so fast as to impinge on your form or anything like that.

You are doing it wrong if:
you are getting worried at No. 5 that you can't finish; at no point should it cross your mind you can't do all 10.

. . .

10-mile tempo runs

Kinsella: This run distinguishes itself by not allowing the rest you get with the cruise miles, though the biggest distinction is a mental one: A lot of improvement is born out of the mental toughness that you acquire, that you can put that kind of work in for that long, when you become used to putting out effort like that. That carries over a lot to a 10K; there is almost something consoling about toeing the line for a 10K knowing, "I've done work way longer than that."

You're doing it wrong if:
you're running with someone and you can't maintain a conversation; not an extended conversation but you should be able to talk without feeling like you're jeopardizing anything.

. . .

90 is the new 60

In recent years the Pilots have significantly upped their collective mileage by habitually running at least 90 minutes on the five days a week they don't run hard workouts, instead of the hour they ran in years past. The key here, says Kinsella, is to run these days, including a Wednesday moderate distance day and Sunday long run, "gently." It's not unusual for Kinsella to run his Wednesday 15-milers in a pedestrian 1:45. "I'm not being self-deprecating when I say that," he says. "It's a very conscious decision. When we started training this way, it took some getting used to running 7-minute pace. But now we realize: Why do anything else to beat yourself up before Friday?"

You're doing it wrong if: you're running too fast. There's a group consciousness here now. Everyone is aware of the system and what needs to get done, so everyone holds each other accountable. It's rare for runs to go beyond the 6:30 to 6:40 range because everyone keeps each other honest.