From the Archives: Waiting for the Breakthrough

[My running log for the summer seems to show a negative correlation between my training and my racing; as I’ve ramped up the training, I’ve raced slower and slower. So it seemed fitting to republish this reminder to anyone building base over the summer to practice patience… originally published August 22, 2010.]

It’s human nature to be impatient as you wait for all your hard work to pay off.

Here you are, nearing the end of summer and looking back at week after week of high mileage. Oh sure, there were a few interruptions – slight injuries that forced you to back off a bit — but the body of work has been submitted and it is not paltry.

The beginning was hot and humid, worse than anything we had in New England last summer, but you adapted to the conditions, seeking the woods… running late in the evening. By mid-July, the worst was over and the sweltering heat gave way to day after day of perfectly pleasant temperatures. You settled into the routine.

You watched the professional runners in Europe and thought about the races you would run in the fall. Maybe that added a little extra inspiration as you went out each day on legs that weren’t completely recovered from the previous day’s exertions.

So… when does it all translate into your own breakthrough race?

The hard truth is that no one can tell you with certainty when it will come. Maybe the first race, maybe the third, maybe not this season. As unfair as it seems, training operates on its own mysterious timetable. John L. Parker famously wrote that conditioning was “a geometrical spiraling upwards,” with each spin taking you a different distance up… or even down, gathering momentum for the next upswing. In somewhat less mystical terms, I believe that the initial adaptation to training is simply to raise your average work capacity, noticed first as an enhanced ability to recover from hard efforts and only (sometimes much) later as the ability to drop awesome times.

Yes, yes, but when will you see all that translated into a personal best, a sub-17:00 5K or sub 25:00 8K? A place on the varsity?

Ah, well…that I don’t know. Even the best coaches hesitate to say when everything will come together — mind and much fitter body — to enable that ascent to the new, higher plateau that you’ve been yearning for. Training is science, certainly, but it is also faith, or at least patience. Training works, but more often by simmering for many months or years, not by boiling in an instant.

I know it’s hard not to be eager for results. Distance running is one long exercise in delayed gratification. We train a long time to be able to gallop over a five-mile cross-country course at such a breakneck pace. Having done all that training, it would be nice to reap the rewards now. But if that first race or time trial doesn’t provide the proof you seek, if it’s not the breakthrough you were hoping for, don’t despair. If you have trained well, trust your training and known that you’ve laid a good foundation. After that, all you can do is stay healthy and accept the burden of continuing to ready yourself for the breakthrough that must, eventually and when you least expect it, come.

 

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Your Move, USATF

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“…you are required to wear the Nike Team USA apparel …. at all team functions throughout the trip, including at the athlete hotel, during training, press conferences, competition, and award ceremonies. Accordingly, please pack ONLY Team USA, Nike or non-branded apparel…” – USA Track and Field

“I’m a businessman. I don’t sign contracts that don’t fully define the terms of the contract.” – Nick Symmonds

My son, Loren, frequently lectures me about the business of sport. Ever since his days playing high school basketball, he has studied the way in which athletes, coaches, owners, and media companies transform simple games into complex empires worth millions or billions. Ask him about Michael Jordan, and Loren might analyze his game, but more likely will tell you how Jordan invented the modern idea of a superstar as a brand, rather than merely a player. Continue reading

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Race Report: Bobby Doyle 5M

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Some races represent the culmination of weeks, months, or even years of planning. And some races pop up in the schedule at inopportune times, conflict with the demands of a busy schedule, and frustrate efforts at proper preparation. When I find myself driving to some far-away race knowing that I’m in a sad state for racing, I’m tempted to line up all my excuses in advance as a way to protect my fragile ego and marginal reputation. But then I tell myself to keep an open mind: almost every race offers an opportunity to learn something. Continue reading

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Magic Workouts for Busy People

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There has been a lot of research in recent years comparing the health and fitness benefits of small amounts of high-intensity exercise to the benefits of longer bouts of low-intensity exercise. The problem, it is said, is that lots of people who would benefit from more exercise either don’t like it or don’t have the time for it. Such people will never be happy if they are made to trudge through long, boring runs or spend hours on a bike. But what if they could spend a fraction of the time and reap most, if not all, the benefits of slower aerobic exercise? Studies that look at incorporating high-intensity interval training (HIIT) into exercise regimens seem to suggest that a little intensity can be a shortcut to big fitness gains. Continue reading

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Olympic Sour Grapes

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Opening the front page of Tuesday’s Boston Globe, we were greeted by a grim headline. The two-word verdict, rendered in a font size normally reserved for announcing national calamities, read “GAMES OVER,” and below it, there appeared a photo of a somber Mayor Marty Walsh at a press conference telling the world that he would not sign the Host City agreement with the USOC, ending Boston’s quirky bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics. Continue reading

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Race Report: Lynn Rec Dept. 4 x 1-Mile Relay

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On certain Friday afternoons in summer, it seems like half the cars in Boston head South to the Cape, half head North to New Hampshire and Maine, and half head West to the Berkshires, all of them clogging the arteries out of town, leaving the city as quiet as a school playground on the first day of summer vacation. At least that’s the way it felt to me last Friday, as I made my way slowly Northward on Route 128, bound for Lynn, of all places, and the first annual Lynn Parks and Recreation Department Summer 4 x 1-Mile Relay. Continue reading

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Book Review: First You Run, Then You Walk

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“I don’t exactly wish to make the claim that running made me a grown up, but I know its arrival in my life coincided to some degree with my reaching that state of being. I started running rather late, right after I turned 31, and I only became a grown-up in my early thirties as well. Became a grown-up, that is, as in coming off of automatic pilot to make conscious decisions and choices about my life, as opposed to drifting into grad school and early teaching and even a marriage in my twenties because those were the things one did.”

– Tom Hart, in “The Art of Losing”

Continue reading

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Eight Years Ago Alan Webb Ran 3:46.91

Whoa, has it been eight years already?

On July 21, 2007, Alan Webb showed up at a small meet in Brasschaat, Belgium, and broke Steve Scott’s American record for the mile, running 3:46.91.

I remember that when I first heard about the record, I formed a mental image of Webb charging down the straightaway as tens of thousands of Belgians cheered him home. When I watched the video, it was a little off to see that the race took place on a modest six-lane track with perhaps a couple of hundred people in attendance — a random all-comers meet, albeit with some pretty fast pacemakers. I was struck particularly by the small-town feel — the people in lawn chairs, the little girl sitting with her dad in lane six on the final turn, the car parked on the infield.

Well, there’s nothing wrong with that. One could argue that, for setting records, small meets are best since Webb and his team were able to control all the aspects of his pre-race preparation and focus on the task at hand.

Other things that struck me: Webb crosses the line, jogs a few steps and then, upon seeing the time, does a little sprint into the infield. So Webb’s legs weren’t immobilized by vapor lock. Indeed, after the race he said he thought he could go faster, even talking about wanting to take a shot at the world record.

Little did he or we know that the race in Braschaat, and an 800 race a week later in a PR 1:43.84, would mark the pinnacle of his career. There would be no more records, no more PRs, and disappointing results in significant meets. In spite of his great fitness that summer of 2007, he finished only 8th in the 1500m final at the World Championships in Osaka.

In 2008, he failed to qualify for the U.S. Olympic team, finishing 5th. In 2009, he moved to Portland, Oregon to be coached by Alberto Salazar, running a 3:55 mile that summer. In 2010, he had Achilles tendon surgery. He split with Salazar, returned to Virginia, then moved back to Portland to join Jerry Schumacher’s group and focus on longer events, but with injuries and age, he never made it to the top level. In early 2014, he retired from running and shifted his focus to triathlon.

Enough has been written about Alan Webb’s career arc. Personally, I no longer think about what might have been, and find myself just enjoying these old videos that show Webb at his best. Not only is he fast, but when he’s on, he shows such an unrestrained enthusiasm and emotional involvement. He wore his heart on his singlet every time he ran. When he had a good race, he reacted with screams, smiles, fist pumps, and little sprints. When he had a bad race, his features and body language told the whole story.

Perhaps he never had the cool, calculating demeanor that wins tactical races in (and in front of) big crowds. But when he was feeling it, he was able to run fast… faster than any American ever. We were lucky we had the opportunity to see it.

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Happy to See Them Go: Dibaba, Rowbury Topple World, American 1500m Records

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Those cheering for the removal of the Chinese records are idiots.” – On the LetsRun message boards (where else?) Continue reading

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Summoning the Spirit of John Ngugi

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It won’t matter unless he [Kamworor] decides to fulfill his destiny as the second coming of John Ngugi. If he won’t gap Farah, nobody ever will.” – LetsRun poster, responding to the news that Geoffrey Kamworor ran 13:13 in his semi-final heat, and 13:14 in the final of the 5000m at the Kenyan Championships Continue reading

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