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Location:

Kingsbury,TX,USA

Member Since:

Jan 10, 2011

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

 

Some day I will not be able to do this...today is not that day!

Started Running (6/1/10) @ 50 Yrs Old

  • 5K:
    • 22:26 (7:14 pace) McAllister Park 8/14/10
    • 22:24 San Marcos (7:13 pace) 10/19/10
    • 21:09 San Marcos (6:49 pace) 11/20/10
    • 20:19 San Marcos-Faith Run (6:33 pace) 5/26/12
    • 20:06 Fentress (6:26 pace) 10/20/12
    • *19:21 Gruene (6:20 pace) 11/22/12 (*Short Course)
    • 19:42 San Marcos-Faith Run (6:21 pace) 5/25/13
    • 19:42 San Marcos-Faith Run (6:21 pace) 5/24/14 (Not a Typo, exactly same time as last year)
    • 21:38 New Braunfels Orange Leaf (6:58 pace) 7/19/14
    • 19:33 Gruene Turkey Trot (6:18 pace) 11/27/14
    • 19:43 Kyle-For the Love of Go (6:27 pace) 2/14/15
  • 5 Miles:

    • 34:03 (6:48 pace) Hillsboro, Ill 7/4/11
  • 10Ks:
    • 43:24 (7:00 pace) Gatesville, Tx 6/4/11
  • Half Marathons:
    • 1:42:16 (7:48 pace) Austin Livestrong  2/20/11
    • 1:36:23 (7:21 pace) Moe's Better Half  3/6/11
    • 1:35:55 (7:19 pace) Chosen Half Marathon for Adoption 10/29/11
    • 1:30:10 (6:53 pace) Austin 3M 1/2/12
    • 1:43:13 (7:54 pace) Orange Leaf  7/14/12
    • 1:33:44 (7:08 pace) Chosen Half Marathon for Adoption 10/27/12
    • 1:32:23 (7:03 pace) Austin 3M 1/13/13
    • 1:35:16 (7:16 pace) Marathon for Adoption 10/26/13 (Ran off-course .3 miles)
    • 1:36:48 (7:23 pace) SA Rock-N-Roll 11/17/13
    • 1:37:06 (7:25 pace) Chosen Half Marathon for Adoption 10/25/14
    • 2:00:28 (9:11 pace) Long Beach Half Marathon (Paced Callie) 10/11/15
    • 1:39:29 (7:35 pace) Marathon for Adoption 11/21/15
    • 1:34:06 (7:11 pace) Marathon for Adoption 11/19/16
    • 1:37:43 (7:37 pace) Marathon for Adoption 11/18/17
    • 1:36:30 (7:22 pace) Marathon for Adoption 11/17/18
    • 1:45:10 (8:01 Paced Callie) Surf City Half Marathon 2/2/20
  • Marathons:
    • 3:38:09 (8:19 pace) Oklahoma City Marathon 5/1/11
    • 3:30:16 (8:01 pace) Ft. Worth Cowtown 2/26/12
    • 3:30:53 (8:03 pace) Oklahoma City Marathon 4/29/12 
    • 0:00:00 (DNF) Ft Worth Cowtown Marathon 2/24/13 (Ran off-course)
    • 3:22:56 (7:44 pace) Temple Army Marathon BQ 4/21/13
    • 3:27:24 (7:55 pace) Boston Marathon BQ  4/21/14 
    • 3:18:40 (7:35 pace) CIM Marathon BQ 12/7/14
    • 3:33:07 (8:08 pace) San Antonio R&R Marathon BQ 12/7/16
    • 3:25:32 (7:51pace) The Woodlands Marathon BQ 3/3/18
    • 3:26:17 (7:52 pace) The Woodlands Marathon BQ 3/2/19
  • Triathlons:
  • (1:12:23) Martindale (Sprint) Tri For Old Glory 7/1/12
  • Ragnar Relay:
  • (28:24:24) SoCal Ragnar 4/6-7/18 

Short-Term Running Goals:

  • Running Boston Marathon with Callie 2020 ...!!!
  • Break 19:00 in the 5K
  • Break 1:28 in Half Marathon
  • Hit 3:16:00 in the Marathon

Upcoming Races: 

  • Boston with Callie...!!! (my daughter)

Long-Term Running Goals:

  • Win 1st in the World Series Team Roping Finals Dec. 2020
  • Run Boston with Callie, My Daughter
  • Run Sub-18:00 5K (Ouch)
  • Run Sub- 3:10 Marathon  Run 3:16 Marathon
  • Compete in a Full Iron Man (Not sure since my two major bike accidents)

Personal:

Married, two kids  Kirby (Baylor University, Married not a a Runner), Callie  (TCU University, Married and Runner).

My main sport is Team Roping, I've been doing that all my life. 

I started running in the spring of 2010.

I Just Run               

Favorite Blogs:

Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 2.00 Year: 2.00
Brooks Racer ST 5 (Race Shoes) Lifetime Miles: 146.57
Saucony Kinvara 2 (Race Shoes) Lifetime Miles: 430.23
Swim Time Lifetime Miles: 26.00
Trek (Road Bike) Lifetime Miles: 989.00
Altra-Instinct-Blue Lifetime Miles: 551.67
Altra Instinct Black Lifetime Miles: 520.10
Altra Paradigm Black Second Pair Lifetime Miles: 7.00
Saucony Kinvara 2 Green (Race Shoes) Lifetime Miles: 145.70
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
0.0015.000.000.0015.00

I woke up earlier than planned and couldn't go back to sleep. The weather outside was cool and very windy so I decided to go to the Gym for my run. My plan was to run 13 miles @ 8:00 pace. My legs are starting to feel recovered but I'm still feeling a little tired. The gym was hot as usual but I got there early and was able to pick the treadmill nearest a fan. The first 10 miles felt pretty easy and I felt I still had some spring in my step through that point. I felt the first 10 miles felt more like a recovery run than a training run so at that point I decide to run 15 instead of 13. 14 and 15 were a little harder but felt okay. I always wonder at about this milage how tough another 11+ miles would be. I usually get discouraged at that point :-(  After the run my legs recovered quickly. I have not joint pain whatsoever at this time...Yeah!!

3/5/2013
Mile Time HR HR %  
1 8:00:00 137 70%  
2 8:00:00  
3 8:00:00  
4 8:00:00  
5 8:00:00  
6 8:00:00  
7 8:00:00  
8 8:00:00 164 89%  
9 8:00:00  
10 8:00:00  
11 8:00:00  
12 8:00:00  
13 8:00:00  
14 7:30:00  
15 7:30:00  
Total 119:00:00 144 79%  
Pace 7:56:00   Max HR 164
Where Run - Gym
Cold and very windy outside so I went to the Gym
Target:
Long Run - 15 Miles
I felt pretty good on this run. My legs are about back, just a little tired. I was planning to run only 13 but at 13 it seemed that’s when I started to get tired and needed to push on a little longer.

These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. Deuteronomy 6: 6-7

Saucony Ride 4 (Orange Heel) Miles: 15.00
Comments
From SlowJoe on Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 09:20:50 from 155.219.241.10

Welcome back, looks like you've put in a good bit of work since Cowtown. I guess that's one of the benefits of pulling out early (shorter recovery). Let me know if you end up signing up for OKC (my wife might run the half). Either way, I think you'll still be in excellent shape for the BQ.

From DLTheo on Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 11:26:15 from 76.28.161.119

Glad to have you back on IJR! NOw I have a reason to post something.

looks like a very good run. I can't imagine choosing to do it on a treadmill, unless it was super icy or pouring down rain. Good way to practice even pacing, though.

From JG on Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 14:48:50 from 174.49.78.66

Welcome back Preston ... you have 54 more days to be ready! :) We all know what you are capable of & are pulling for you. Just be smart with your training, those slower paced runs can produce great adaptations when you are sore or tired!

From I Just Run on Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 16:01:02 from 67.79.11.242

Hi Guys!

Joe,

Although I really didn't feel like it (physically or mentally) I pushed myself to go ahead and start running four days after the partial marathon. I really felt pretty bad after the race but I just pushed through it. I hope that soreness is not an indication of poor endurance. I don't know if it was all mental or somewhat physical but between mile 16 and 22 I convinced myself I couldn't have run fast enough anyway. I'm going to try and train really hard for the next few weeks and hopefully be ready for OKC.

DL,

I was supprised I felt very comfortable for the first 10 miles, I started to feel a little tire after 13 but my legs still felt good. It was really windy here this morning and I just didn't want to fight the wind.

JG,

Just like last year I'm just making my training up as I go along now in between Ft Worth and OKC. I feel I need to run some longer miles so I'm not going to do much interval training for a while. I'm just feeling that my endurance is just not strong enough. Hopefully my legs will hold up to the extra miles.

From JG on Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 17:42:33 from 174.49.78.66

I thought I was the only one allowed to make up my training as I go along! lol

I would say it was mostly mental, heck I would have stopped running at 13, you had to be right near the finish line! Kudos to you to have the mental strength to keep pace another 3 ... and then continue another 6!!

I think it is wise to increase mileage to help prepare you for that last 10k ... but like I said, slow miles are great for that. If you push mileage with running too many fast, that is when you will be most susceptible to injury. All predictors point to you having the speed to easily BQ ... building slow miles will help get you to the finish.

Here is what Hansen says for last 8 weeks before running a 3:25 marathon (7:49 pace):

Something along the lines of ...

* 3 days easy running, 8:49 to 9:28 pace)

* 1 day 8-10 miles at MGP, 7:49

* 1 day repeats of (6 x 1 mile, 4 x 1.5, 3x2, 2x3, 3x2, 4x 1.5, 6x1 ... all run at MGP minus 10 seconds) 7:39 pace * Long runs every other week @ MP plus 40 seconds ... 8:29 pace ... these should all be 16 miles, but only 10 2 weeks before race.

* On alternating Long run weeks, you run 10 miles @ 8:29, but you run 8-10 the day before in the Easy pace range.

Ok ... here is the explanation, but if you read the book, it makes lots of sense. This is completely different than Run Less, Run Faster ... where you are used to running balles to the walls 3 days a week & cross training in between. By running more days, you get the effect of cumulative mileage training ... but you can not run the same paces because if you increase mileage & don't slow down, you WILL get injured. The slow miles provide the necessary adaptations to your body that will allow you to keep going strong at the 20 mile mark on race day ... but running high mileage with too much at race pace leaves one over-trained & susceptible to injury.

I would highly recommend getting the book to help guide you over the next 8 weeks ... you obviously have the base & training to jump right into the advanced program for the last 8 weeks.

I pretty much outlined it for you above, but the book will really help you understand how to put it all together & why running at a 9:00 pace range on your easy days is what you need to be doing.

Cheers :)

Feel free to disagree with my advice Joe & offer another perspective, I just think he needs to rethink the paces he was utilizing from RLRF ... it is a completely different philosophy. I think RLRF helped increase your speed & keep you clear of some of the injury issues you were having when you started it ... just realize you need to adjust your workouts if you are increasing mileage ... let the principles in RLRF collect dust for a little while! :)

Sorry for the book ... I am just spewing Hansons philosophy ... not mine! lol

'Hansons Marathon Method'

From derhammer on Wed, Mar 06, 2013 at 14:32:52 from 64.245.52.2

I think you deserve a BQ for being able to run 15 miles on a treadmill!

As for the what JG said, I think there is no replacement for mileage up to a certain point. That point is where you get the most bang for the buck. It is different for everyone. But let's say at 60 miles a week you get 90% benefit - anything over that will be incremental - running 20 more miles a week might get you a 5% improvement, but at the same time the risk for injury goes up substantially. The best explanation of this is in Jack Daniel's book - Daniel's Running Formula. So getting to the right mileage level for each individual runner takes a lot of trial and error. It is the right combination of speed, threshold, and endurance mileage that results in a successful marathon, IMO. Can one run a good marathon on 40 miles a week? - maybe, but it won't be the best and the last 4 miles are going to hurt. So in that regard I must agree with JG. At the same time, I am not sure I would make significant changes with 8 weeks to go. One option is to continue to follow the RLRF program but instead of cross training run a 45-60 min recovery run. I even remember reading the authors saying this was acceptable. I think the additional mileage will pay dividends. This is scientifically proven. A lot of my recovery and double day mileage is 8:00 - 9:00 pace. Funny, I just came across this which pretty much reiterates what I just said above, he even quotes the same book. LOL. http://pfitzinger.com/labreports/increaseornot.shtml

Read this one too:

http://pfitzinger.com/labreports/safeincreasing.shtml

From JG on Wed, Mar 06, 2013 at 15:22:18 from 174.49.78.66

Yep, pretty much what I said ... increase your mileage but eliminate the speed work & reduce your pace(intensity) on most of your runs. Fyi, Hansen does speedwork in the first 8 weeks of the program, but they transition to the strength sessions outlined above. I would stay far away from the RLRF workouts if you are increasing mileage ...

My point was not to try to tell you what to do ... but it was for you to dial into establishing an 8 week plan. Running based solely on what you feel like while trying increase mileage is a dangerous recipe ... been there, done that!

I could easily run a 100 miles a week without injury if I was willing to run all 9 minute miles ... I would prove it next week by running 100 miles, but I don't have 900 minutes to devote to running ... not counting all the prep time, showers & doing laundry that would come with it!

Formulate a plan that works for you, 4 different authors will tell you 4 different ways ... but really they all have the same foundation of knowledge & physiological principles ... but don't follow the workouts in a plan that has you running 3 hard workouts a week if you want to increase mileage.

From Carl on Wed, Mar 06, 2013 at 18:59:19 from 24.19.78.45

IJR, I am a fan of high mileage like JG and derhammer. (Not that I do it... work and family life don't allow it)

If you are racing another marathon in 8 weeks, remember that most of the training that will improve your race performance has already been done. I recommend focusing on full recovery and running consistently (as long as you are rested).

Don't focus too much on building mileage. Endurance is something you develop slowly over many training cycles through many years.

From JG on Thu, Mar 07, 2013 at 10:15:34 from 174.49.78.66

Very good points Carl ... & I would agree Preston is already 85-90% ready for a successful marathon ... with 6 weeks of fine tuning, he will be ready to roll. I actually am not personally a fan of high mileage, although I don't think anyone would argue that gradually increasing mileage over time will lead to a faster marathon as long as it is done wisely & one stays injury free.

My best marathon definitely came after 12 months of increased mileage, as most peoples does. Since I don't particularly enjoy running 50, 60+ mileage weeks repetitively, I have accepted I have probably run my fastest marathon time & steered away from attempting to train to run one faster.

I am the one that steered Preston towards RLRF (a program most people do not endorse or like or recommend for a marathon) ... but Preston was battling injury issues with higher mileage & enjoys biking ... so I think it made sense for him. It definitely has helped his speed, but the question remains if he is adequately prepared to the last 6 miles the way he needs to.

I would still not be so quick to dismiss that program, because I don't think RLRF was necessarily the culprit with the last 6 miles of the two marathons he ran using the program ... although I do think some increased easy miles will help.

If you look at Cowtown '12, the issue was he went out the first 5 miles at a 7:12 pace & then ran the next 10 at a 7:30 pace ... really no surprise that he had a hard time continuing to run after 20 miles. No big deal, he had aspirations of running 3:15, but shooting for a 23 minute PR is risky business. I am pretty sure that on his RLRF training he could have BQ'd easily if he set out at a 7:50 pace instead of 7:15.

Next attempt was OKC, 2 months later (including 4 weeks of diminished training due to a strained hip)... odds were against him before he started ... racing 2 marathons 2 months apart is also risky business, especially when not 100% healthy. His pacing was great through 20 ... but he clearly not recovered from racing Cowtown & let's not forget it was 68 degrees, 90% humidity, windy & rainy! Again, I would argue that RLRF was not the culprit here.

Last attempt we will never know, because he was in such a determined zone to nail it, he forgot to follow the course. :) Oh well, these things happen.

Carl, while I agree he should not focus too much on 'building mileage' over this period, I don't think there is much danger if he keeps the paces slower & it will produce some adaptations in his body that will help carry him to a successful last 6 miles. Really, if you look at the weekly graph, with the exception of 2 50+ weeks, the training cycle for Cowtown was weeks in the 30's. Increasing to 45-60 is not a big jump if done wisely, especially since he was following a program where he was running mostly 3-4 days a week. Slowing the pace & running 6 days a week is not that dangerous ... he is just adding a couple Easy days of running instead of cross training.

Last point I will make & then I will shutup :) is that you have done plenty of 20+ milers in the last 8 weeks ... and there really is no benefit to go longer than 16-18 before OKC ... 20 milers simply place too much stress on the body ... save it for race day where you can rest for a week after. Most training plans, RLRF excluded, state that your long run should not represent more than 25-30% of your weekly mileage. Giving your weekly mileage the benefit of rounding up to 40 Preston, 30% equals 12 miles. While we would all agree a 12 mile long run would be foolish ... a 20 miler does not necessarily make sense either.

By adding a couple easy days of running, you can stay in the 30% range with a 16 mile run ... and if you do this at the conclusion of having already run 40 miles that week & 10 easy miles the day before ... that 16 miles simulates the last 16 of the marathon, not the first 16. On your mileage, that type of cumulative training will pay much higher dividends than running 20 miles.

While Hanson says you should not run longer than 16 miles to prepare for a marathon, I would not state that is true for everyone. For someone like DH or Joe who is consistently running 70 mile weeks, a 20 mile run is less than 30% of their weekly mileage ... & there body has adapted to that type of training regimen.

Just run with confidence Preston, your training is right on track!

From SlowJoe on Thu, Mar 07, 2013 at 10:42:33 from 155.219.241.10

Preston is going to hide his blog again if you guys keep it up!

From I Just Run on Thu, Mar 07, 2013 at 10:46:10 from 67.79.11.242

Thanks guys, it's going to take a while to process all of this information. I haven't had a chance to read the articles DH sent me or order the book JG recommended.

My plan right now is to try and run about 60 miles a week...something like this:

Mon - rest

Tues - 10 @ 9:00 pace

Wed - 15 @ MP

Thurs - rest

Fri - 5-6 Tempo, 2-3 @ 9:00 pace

Sat - 10 @ 9:00 pace

Sun - 20 @ MP+30

This adds up to 65 miles so I may cut Wed & Sun a little shorter depending on how I feel that day.

Next week is going to be really hard as our kids have spring break and we are traveling a lot, I also have a roping competition this weekend and two days next weekend.

Wow...I'm busy!

Thanks again for all of the good suggestions!

From JG on Thu, Mar 07, 2013 at 11:27:18 from 174.49.78.66

Yeah ... I hear ya Joe ... no more opinions from me! Other than ...

Preston, if you jump from your current mileage to what you just outlined, be sure to let me know what visiting hours are at the hospital! You are much much closer to being ready than you realize, would hate to see you sabotage it with over-training

SIGNING OUT!!!

From I Just Run on Thu, Mar 07, 2013 at 12:48:24 from 67.79.11.242

This is why I like a specific schedule. It's like overeating...my eyes are always bigger than my stomach.

How about this:

Mon - rest

Tues - 8 @ 9:00 pace

Wed - 13 @ MP

Thurs - rest

Fri - 5 Tempo, 3 @ 9:00 pace

Sat - 8 @ 9:00 pace

Sun - 16 @ MP+30

That's 52 miles

I averaged 48 miles over the last 7 weeks. Do you than this is more reasonable?

Don't quit talking to me :-(

From derhammer on Thu, Mar 07, 2013 at 13:10:06 from 64.245.52.2

This looks better - then after 2-3 weeks if you are feeling good add another 5 mile recovery run in there. That will take you close to 60 miles which should be good for this cycle. Or you break that 8 mile run on Saturday up and make it 5, then add 4-5 recovery miles on Thursday. You are adding extra mileage but it might actually be easier on your body. Just a thought. Oh, grass, crushed granite, packed dirt, and other soft surfaces are your friends for the slower miles. It will help your body recovery faster and absorb the extra miles.

From JG on Thu, Mar 07, 2013 at 13:58:21 from 174.49.78.66

Agreed, much better ... even though it is 53, not 52! :)

Couple minor tweaks:

* Keep Wed mileage same, but add 1.5 mile warmup & cooldown & do 10 @ MP

* Long runs are better every other week, so Week 2 you could add a 5 mile recovery run to Thursday & reduce Sunday to 13 miles & you would still be increasing mileage from 53 to 55.

* Week 3, keep the 5 mile recovery run & bump Sunday back to 16 or 17, & you are now at 58-59

* Keep Sat at 8, good to have miles on legs day before long run ... if you wanted to bump to 60 in Week 4, you could make Saturday 10 easy ... so you are getting good cumulative weekend mileage! Of course, Week 4 you are going to want to drop your Sunday long run down again ... so drop it to 13 & make Thursday 8 easy ... you still hit 60. :)

I would say that is pretty aggressive mileage ramping, but if you keep the Easy runs truly Easy, you should be fine ... just back off if the body tells you to! Hitting 60 would be great, but honestly, if you put together 6 weeks of 50-55 you will be as ready as you ever have been ... most imp't thing is stay injury free!

From Carl on Thu, Mar 07, 2013 at 14:34:42 from 24.19.78.45

IJR, I think you are trying too hard.

The miles look good, but drop the MP and just run easy. Keep the weekly tempo run. And do the long run at easy pace; maybe do the last few miles around MP every other week.

From Carl on Thu, Mar 07, 2013 at 15:11:05 from 24.19.78.45

JG, I trained with RLRF's predecessor, "FIRST to the Finish," several years ago. It got me to the start line and I finished without bonking. I think it's a good program for cross trainers and those who run low mileage. I can see how it was a good fit for Preston.

For most people, if their goal is to race their fastest marathon, I think high mileage (60+ per week) is the best training strategy. If that is Preston's goal, then maybe his next training cycle should lean a little more on quantity.

What concerns me (and all of you other "I Just Run" commenters) about Preston is he is keeping too much intensity from his RLRF training plan and increasing the mileage. And he is doing this after a failed marathon race. This is a recipe for injury or overtraining syndrome.

From JG on Thu, Mar 07, 2013 at 16:00:26 from 174.49.78.66

Carl, I agree with all your last comments 100% & my concern was the same. RLRF is great for people who cross train, but yes, it is geared to get you a BQ, not run your fastest marathon!

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