Adventure Run

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Since the end of the school year, I’ve had two priorities: run every day… and I can’t remember the second one.

I wanted to run every day because months of running sporadically, and only when I had time for it, had become a grim and depressing experience. I felt that I needed the psychological benefits of running, but how much benefit was there really in dwelling on how uncomfortable it felt to be out of shape? By the end of the spring, I wanted very much to regain some of that confidence that comes when the machine is capable and in good working order.

I know that routine is important in training, and so once school was over, I tried to establish a routine of running about the same modest distance every day, often on the same route. Little by little, my confidence increased, so that towards the end of last week, I started varying my runs a little bit more, introducing variety to my route choice.

Then on Sunday, I went rogue. Continue reading

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Track and Field thrives with only a few fans

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I always swore that I wouldn’t write a blog post about the sad state of Track and Field, or — even worse — attempt to formulate a prescription for how to revive it. First of all, what do I know? And second, I’m suspicious of the premise. Continue reading

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Watches that Run Slow

Stopwatch2

It was good to be back on the track last night, attempting my first Tuesday night workout in many weeks. The afternoon was warm and pleasant. There was no sign yet of the showers that had been forecast for the evening. The air was calm, and not too humid. I felt good warming up, as I slowly shook out the stiffness and lethargy that always afflict me after a long day of sitting and staring at computer screens. With every step, I felt more like a runner and athlete, and less like a clunky piece of dated office equipment. I felt a familiar eagerness and apprehension for the modest workout ahead. Continue reading

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Thoroughbreds

Adro_2016_200mThe pack in the “Adro” mile, the night’s final event, hitting 200m.

As I was heading out the door this morning on my way to work, my wife stopped me at the threshold with a question that sounded accusatory. “Where were you last night?” Yeah, where *was* I, anyway? I’m usually home by 7:00 or earlier, and if I’m going to be late, I’m pretty good about communicating clearly enough that my spouse remembers my plans. But in the gray early morning light, she searched her memory and couldn’t recall whatever flimsy excuse I had given for rolling in at 9:30 the night before. And it hadn’t helped that I hadn’t checked messages until almost 8:30 pm. So what had I been up to and with whom had I been consorting? Watching the big game with drinking buddies? Romancing a younger woman? Playing the ponies? Attending a secret political meeting? She just wanted to know.

With a guilty glance down at my sneakers, I mumbled that I had been at a track meet. “But not just any track meet,” I said, trying to sound brighter than I felt, “the Adrian Martinez Classic!” Continue reading

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Man with a Plan

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Among the final, and not unpleasant, tasks of the spring track season was having a handful of one-on-one meetings with kids who wanted a plan for running over the summer to prepare them for cross country in the fall. Before anyone gets the wrong idea, I never insist that runners follow any specific plan, nor do I require that they check in with me. I say to them — and I mean it — that the summer months belong to them (and their families), not to me. But I also point out, because it would be irresponsible not to mention it, that there is an inexorable law of distance running: to improve, you have to run. A lot. And the best time to do this running is not during the school year when they’re stressed out and not sleeping enough, but during the summer, when (in theory), they have a lot of time on their hands. Continue reading

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Commencement

Walden_Pond

“That man is rich whose pleasures are the cheapest.”
– Henry David Thoreau

Summer began last Friday.

If you will be pedantic and insist that the solstice is still three weeks away, I won’t argue the celestial facts. But it will not change my opinion that summer began on Friday at approximately 1:30 p.m. when I took off my collared shirt and tie, changed slacks and dress shoes for running shorts and a pair of minimalist New Balance shoes, and set off at a jog towards Walden Pond.

Continue reading

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In the Shadow of Greatness

 

I wonder if as he went through the familiar pre-race motions in Lane 1, Dentarus Locke felt an incongruous shiver in the warm Caribbean night. I wonder if he reflected at all on the journey that had brought him to this moment — the career that encompassed two high school national championships, a collegiate All-American, and in 2013, a sixth-place finish at the U.S. Outdoor Championships that earned him a spot in the relay pool for the World Championships. In the end, he didn’t compete in Moscow, and so missed out on the opportunity to represent his country at the highest level, but his performances that summer were good enough to get him into a Diamond League meet, where he ran his personal best 100m time of 9.96.

Now he was one of seven sprinters whose names were lost in the excitement surrounding the name of the runner settling into the blocks in Lane 4, the greatest sprinter of all time and the most famous track and field athlete in the world, Usain Bolt. Continue reading

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Tilting at the Two-Hour Windmill

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“In some ways, a goal of two hours is as arbitrary as the distance of the marathon itself: 26 miles 385 yards, established at the 1908 London Olympics, in part to accommodate viewing by the British royal family. But round numbers lend clarity to accomplishment. To run under two hours without the use of banned drugs would be to set a record that would stand with the four-minute mile as an ultimate test of human stamina.” – Jeré Longman (Man vs Marathon)

Continue reading

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From the Archives: The Rundown on Warmups

warm-ups

[At least once every season, our track team gets caught in traffic on the way to some meet and we arrive with little time to warm up before competition begins. Although I still preach the importance of a thorough warm-up, I now also add my thoughts about the mental toughness needed to be ready when you don’t have time to be ready. The following piece was originally posted May 17, 2010.] 

It was a coach’s nightmare. A transportation snafu had delayed several of my athletes on their way to the NEPSTA championship meet last Saturday, and they were still on the road as the running events started. I was on my cell phone, telling my 1500m runner to get ready; there might still be time for him to make it for his heat, which would be run in about twelve minutes. I had already checked him in, picked up his hip number, and was pacing in the parking lot, scanning the road for any sign of the school van. Still on the phone, I told him to get his sweats off, his spikes on, and his head in the game.

I heard the gun go off for the heat before his. That meant he had about five minutes, tops, and he would still need to get to the start, about 300 meters from where I stood. Two minutes later, as the runners in the earlier heat came around to start their third lap, the van pulled up, my runner jumped out, grabbed his hip number, and jogged awkwardly across the pavement in his spikes, heading for the track. My last words of advice were to take it easy, start slow, and use the first lap to warm up.


What makes a good warm up? Every coach and athlete will tell you that the warm-up is important, if not critical, in having a good performance. But, as an article by Gina Kolata in today’s New York Times says, there is little agreement about what constitutes an optimal warm-up, and the scientific research is scant on how and why they work.

The article points out that elite runners at the Boston marathon do little more than shuffle around for 10-15 minutes prior to blasting down the hill out of Hopkinton at 4:40 mile pace. Athletes in shorter distances do very different amounts of warm-up, with or without fast-paced running. At any cross-country meet, you can see runners doing stride after stride up to the beginning of the race. It seems as though warm-ups are a matter of folklore as much as science.

As a coach, I teach my kids a warm-up routine, as well, but I also encourage them to experiment early in the season, and observe how different warm-ups make them feel. I tell them that one important function of a warm-up is to bring them to an emotional state where their minds and bodies are eager to run, and ready for the inevitable discomfort of the race. Having said that, I hasten to add that sometimes you feel really crappy in a warm-up; but that doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll have a bad race.


My 1500 runner is only a freshman, but he has the mental toughness and race savvy of a much older runner. He made it to the line in time for the start of his race, and when the gun went off, he went right to the back of the pack, using the early part of the race to get into the flow of the race. He began to move up in the second lap, steadily gaining on the runners ahead. The second lap was slightly faster than the first, and at 800m he started reeling in the lead pack. At 1200, he was in fourth, and he kicked that last 300, catching two more runners to finish 2nd in his heat in a personal best.

I’m not sure what the lesson of that experience was. I wouldn’t conclude that warm-ups are superfluous. I was lucky it was a distance race, and my runner knew how to manage himself in the race. But I think it’s a reminder that many different kinds of warm-up can work, providing that when you finally step to the line, not only the body but the brain is ready to go.

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The Discreet Charm of the Suburban Cross Country Course

FHS_XC

On Sunday afternoon, I found myself in Framingham with an hour to kill. I had been on my way home from a trip to Western Massachusetts and had planned to pick up my son from his job in a restaurant at the Natick Mall. But I was an hour too early. It was only 4:00 p.m. when I got off the Pike at Route 9, and Loren wouldn’t finish up until 5:00. What to do? It would be silly to drive 20 minutes home, wait 20 minutes, and then drive 20 minutes back. And I had no desire to join the Mother’s Day crowds in shopping at the mall.

It’s for emergencies like these that I keep a backpack with running clothes and shoes in the trunk of my car. The afternoon was fine, so why not go for a little run? After a week of rain and drizzle and after an overcast morning, the sun had finally broken through, and I longed to be outside moving around. But where would I find some peace and open space on amidst all the congested roads and acres of asphalt? Continue reading

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