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800m+ Running and/or Conditioning / Re: Misc Running Photos
« on: June 22, 2018, 09:17:00 pm »?taken-by=jeffcohenphoto
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Man, who would have expected nigeria to play so well. Musa man of the match. He is so light on his feet and just out skilled the goal keeper and scores just amazing.
This actually is good for argentina too,, they need to beat nigeria to stand any chance of making it to the knockout stages and iceland have no hope of winning against croatia.
come on argentina... plz
i for one am not shocked that your body was like "DELOAD" after consecutive first-ever 100+ mile weeks.
true but, had more to do with the "triple" that day (race, light long run, light trot) & the pre-3rd-run-stretching I think than the mileage. feel fine from high mileage.
stretching my ankles/calves by squatting into it & holding it, seemed to pre-fatigue my quads. then I did that third light run and left VMO cramped. If I go back into that same stretch, hits the spot exactly. The annoying thing is, I remember thinking I shouldn't be doing that stretch pre-run, but it felt good like stretching always does, then it probably contributed to me being wrecked like it sometimes does.
I'm surprised heh.how many miles were u running per week prior to 100 mile weeks??
all over the place:
04/30/2018: 86.0 *
05/07/2018: 54.5 *
05/14/2018: 53.1 *
05/21/2018: 39.8 *
05/28/2018: 100.1*
06/04/2018: 102.5*
06/11/2018: 100.4 in 6 days*
^ Need to finish going back through every week on strava and listing it out in my tracker.
i've done 80-90+ before for like 3-4 weeks, last fall.
Do you think deloads are as necessary and as helpful for high sress periods of long distance as they are for lifting and explosive work?


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Argentina just playing lazy I don't see the dynamic style they are used to playing and the goal croatia scored on extra injury time was just ridiculous I always am behind argentina but now this was torture to watch.
But croatia played well. still 2 mins left I doubt anything will happen.
i for one am not shocked that your body was like "DELOAD" after consecutive first-ever 100+ mile weeks.
true but, had more to do with the "triple" that day (race, light long run, light trot) & the pre-3rd-run-stretching I think than the mileage. feel fine from high mileage.
stretching my ankles/calves by squatting into it & holding it, seemed to pre-fatigue my quads. then I did that third light run and left VMO cramped. If I go back into that same stretch, hits the spot exactly. The annoying thing is, I remember thinking I shouldn't be doing that stretch pre-run, but it felt good like stretching always does, then it probably contributed to me being wrecked like it sometimes does.
I'm surprised heh.how many miles were u running per week prior to 100 mile weeks??
all over the place:
04/30/2018: 86.0 *
05/07/2018: 54.5 *
05/14/2018: 53.1 *
05/21/2018: 39.8 *
05/28/2018: 100.1*
06/04/2018: 102.5*
06/11/2018: 100.4 in 6 days*
^ Need to finish going back through every week on strava and listing it out in my tracker.
i've done 80-90+ before for like 3-4 weeks, last fall.
so clearly you dont think its necessary to slowly and gradually progress mileage like i read on other running websites?

Interestingly, some of the athletes at the back of the race trail home in fairly slow times. I'm amazed to see 1,500m runners finishing in times slow than I used to run at school. I know the track is slow, but surely not that slow. The reason is that every athlete sets off as though he is going to win. Even after just two hundred meters, some athletes have started so fast that they are dropping out, sheepish grins on their faces, disappearing off the track and into the crowd. And if they don't drop out, those who went off too fast at the beginning end up jogging around to the finish.
Most Kenyan runners that I meet have a strong belief that they can win almost any race regardless of the opposition. They will make outlandish predictions about the times they hop to run, and afterward, when they don't run them, they will just laugh and say, "Next time I will do it."
Among the crowd, I bump into Brother Colm's assistant, Ian. I ask him why everyone starts off so fast. "It's okay," he says calmly. They already know how to train, but here they are learning to race. After this, they can run in Rome or Oslo."
This is the breeding ground for the great Kenyan runners of tomorrow. They may have natural talent - I see that every day on the roads in Iten - but now, here on the track, the fina piece of their apprenticeship is taking place: racing. And it's interesting to see that this is one area where they still have a lot to learn."