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My heels hurt. A lot. The first run seemed fine. The shoes were lighter than I’m used to and coming down some of the hills I felt fast and free. However, the next day my right heel started hurting badly after a mile and I was struggling to put much pressure on either heel for the next couple of days.
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My legs were mashed. And I mean mashed. I used them on a Sunday and a Monday. I went for a run with my wife on the Thursday and I’ve never been in as much discomfort with something that wasn’t an injury. It felt like someone had taken a sledgehammer to the back of my thighs. I love my wife to bits but she’s a couple of mins per mile slower than me on a parkrun but when she kicked for home I was struggling to keep up.
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My back was sore. Granted I usually have fairly high levels of support in my shoes due to majorly over pronating but using shoes that had been molded to someone else’s feet played havoc with my back. I spent 2 or 3 days not being able to sit comfortably.
Monday, August 6, 2018
Why you shouldn’t walk (or run) a mile in someone else’s shoes
Monday, July 2, 2018
What counts as a PB?
- Courses are measured. Sounds simple but courses are measured accurately and watches have a slight deviation. It is frustrating when you run further than the distance of the race but I've also had some where my watch says it's just short so it goes both ways. A course should be officially measured and based on that, your PB should be taken as your official race time.
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Watches/phones can be wrong. Shock horror! But yes they can be wrong as you can see below. My mile record is world record level. So I can believe my watch or I can use common sense! A course doesn't deviate, have mini drop outs or get your starting position slightly wrong.
- It's what Mo would say! I'd imagine anyway. I can't think if you asked Mo Farah what his 10K PB would be he would say "well I did X time in training once". It would be his racing PB.
- It's a level playing field. Chip timing or officially timed races are the only accurate way to measure one athlete against another. Even within watches there's variation. I do lots of long runs with my brother who has a different Garmin to me and despite running side by side my watch always seems to be slightly behind distance wise. Chip timing and officially timed races take away all those variables.
Wednesday, June 20, 2018
How to return from injury
- Whenever you think you're ready to return, you're not! I don't know if you're like me but if anything happens to my body my instant thought is not "am I okay" but "how long will this put me out of running for." I'm massively impatient when it comes to recovery and always want to start back sooner than I probably should. You need to resist the temptation to come back too soon. There's always another race and as hard as it is to do and easy as it is to say you need to take a long-term view.
- Don't Google it! Every niggle is usually followed by a google search which invariably leads to advice telling you that you've probably ruptured something and you need to sit out for 2 years or someone saying they had the same thing and ran 100km the following day! Every injury is different. With my IT Band I just looked at what others said and needed up with 3 failed returns to running. With my ankle, I saw my osteopath who I see for some back issues anyway and she was able to fully assess the injury and the damage, give me a rehab plan and tell me when I could look at returning, how much to do and when to stop again. I spent 7 weeks not running which was almost impossible and ended with a zero mileage month which severely dented my runners pride! However, by getting someone unattached to my goals and mindset to say what the right thing to do was really paid off. Just over 5 months after badly spraining ligaments I completed Beachy Head Marathon which is a beast of a course however fit you are.
- You'll be slow and frustrate yourself! And that's okay. When I did my first run after my ankle it was 10 minutes and about 10 minute a mile pace and I struggled. Just over 2 months prior I had run a marathon. Rarely will you come back to where you were straight away but it will come back if you don't rush it. Most of my rehab running which was a 6 week programme was slow and hard work and nowhere near what I'm capable of but always keep the goal in mind. The goal of rehab is rehab! Once you're the other side of it you can push yourself again but don't push it too soon trying to instantly get back to where you were.
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
Heart Rate Monitors - Why I No Longer Use One
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It’s not subjective. Often we run by how we feel but with a HRM you don’t get the choice. It independently measures your effort and so when you can’t be bothered it kicks you up the backside and when you are flying it reigns you in.
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It helps you run at a rhythm. After a while you get used to running at the same effort and that certainly helped me in my half when I ran without it. My splits were all within 10 seconds of each other which I think is because the HRM got me used to running at a consistent effort.
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It tells you the truth. Turns out I’m not as fit as I’d like to believe!!! It took over a minute a mile off my training pace and often left me frustrated that I was constantly slowing down.
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It turned me into a madman. It was slowing me down so much I felt like I was shouting at it all the time. Fellow runners must have wondered “why is that guy having an argument with his wrist”?
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It was uncomfortable. Most these day are wrist based but I would spend the first mile of most runs adjusting the strap to try and get it to stick in place. Probably looked to people around like I was adjusting a bra strap!
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It made me not enjoy running. When the battery went I was relieved. I’d spent 8 months running with it and hadn’t enjoyed it. Yes it had been successful for the half but I run primarily to enjoy it so if anything takes that away it’s not worth persisting with.
Friday, June 8, 2018
Why you should ignore most marathon plans
- Know your own body. I do a lot of my long runs with my brother. He's faster than me but not by so much that we can't enjoy a long run together. He runs 5 miles every single day, a long run on a Saturday and rests only 1 day a week. He's been doing that for years and it's got him a sub 4 hour marathon. My body doesn't take more than 2 days consecutive running particularly well so I put a rest day in on every 3rd day. That's my issue with these online plans. What works for my brother would not work for me and vice versa yet we've run 4 marathons and an ultra together.
- Know your schedule. Some of the plans I see online are for those who have 10 hours free per day! My lifestyle doesn't work with that. I've got to get up at 5.30 as it is to fit my runs in and due to evening commitments, kids and actually siting down at some point in the day, I've got a limit on how much time I actually have. I can fit 5-6 miles in on a morning but if I get up earlier I won't have had enough rest so these plans telling me I should be doing 8 miles twice a week on top of my long run simply don't work with my schedule and I can't move things to make it work. So I do what will work for me and stretch me as much as I can without killing myself.
- Write it out. Writing out how far you're going to run each day ahead of time keeps you on track, accountable and motivated.
- Experiment. Four of my last 5 marathons have been within a 7 minute difference of each other. I've tried different things for each one and I'm still learning what's best for me to try and get the right formula. There's lots of options so don't be afraid to try a few things out.
- It WILL hurt. Regardless of what plan you follow or devise, a marathon will hurt. A lot. You forget how much that part between 18-22 miles (for me anyway) is a physical and mental battle and no training plan will make that disappear.
Sunday, June 3, 2018
Regents Park 10K - How I ran my "worst" 10K and still had fun
- Really scenic route
- The guy doing a warm up with everyone who was also the race announcer was an absolute legend!
- Great PB potential (on a cooler day)
- Marshaling was superb and course easy to follow
- Good bling and nice selection of goodies at the end
- Only one working toilet cubical. Had to hope there would be no "bear in the woods" incident!
- Probably the least 'friendly' race I've run in. Usually there's someone you end up running with who helps get you through when you're struggling or likewise someone you can drag along. Everyone had headphones in and there was very little support around the track so no one encouraging you in the tough moments.
Friday, June 1, 2018
“Definitive” guide to running your best 10K
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10 miles every Saturday to build stamina into your legs
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1x speed workout per week varying between pyramids, fartleks and temp runs
Tuesday, May 29, 2018
How not to run a 10K race
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Follow the crowd and ignore your own plan.
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Do the opposite of what you trained to do.
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Kill yourself in the first 4 miles so the last 2 are hideous and leave you never wanting to run again!
Monday, May 28, 2018
The Bog Standard Runner Intro
My name is Olly. I am a bog standard runner. I have very average times over 5k, 10k, half marathon, marathon and ultra marathon. I am no expert! But then I find the internet is full of “experts” who all give contradicting advice anyway! So the purpose of this blog is not to claim I know the answer or claim I am an expert in any way but I’ve learnt a few things that work for me so hey, they may work for you. I am someone who hates blogs in general but I’ve appreciated reading other people’s thoughts on what they find helpful with running so if I can help someone else achieve an “average” time in the real world but a best time for them then this is my my way of giving back to the running community that has given so much to me. I’ll be sharing over the coming weeks my thoughts on training plans, nutrition, how to run a good and a terrible race and anything else that crops up. To the one or two who may read this...hope it helps!