In Saturday's Tuggeranong Parkrun 5k I placed 49th with a time of 23:32.
I was happy with my race and the time, even though it was only 9
seconds faster than my best 5k time for the year. During the run I felt
like I was moving well and I finished strongly (apart from the final 200
metres where Judy and Amy flew by in a blur). This week I backed off
the mileage with the purpose of having a 'recovery' week, running 66 km
instead of my usual 90 or thereabouts. During an easy 7k lunchtime run
on Friday my legs felt tired and ordinary so I was lacking excited
anticipation for Saturday morning's race. I hoped to at least have a
good tempo run as I completed an exceedingly short (1 km) warm-up, not
even bothering to run some strides.
I started about 5 rows back in the chute and my Garmin showed 3s to
reach the start line. Being a long weekend in Canberra, numbers were
down and I wasn't impeded at all by fast starting runners who slow down
after 200 metres of furious sprinting. I overtook Jimmy unusually early
(well before 500m) and was running with Sophie through 1k (4:54). She
then surged a bit and would end up running 22:55. Surprisingly, my legs
were feeling quite good! I followed Judy (running with Amy) to the turn
and on the way back, overtook them just before the 3k marker —
4:39 for the second km, 4:43 for the third. I was generally maintaining
my position in the field or passing runners (always a good sign).
Crossing the footbridge, I was closing on Geoff W (M65) and I covered
the 4th km in 4:47. Thought I'd be safely under 24 minutes (yes, I
glanced at the Garmin at 4k — something I rarely do) and ran
hard past Maccas, overtaking Geoff. I was hurting in the last kilometre
(my split would be 4:29) but still sprinted off the little hill into the
parkland finish.
On the face of it, 23:32 is a long way off my year's goal of 22:45, but I
think I can get there! Racing off to a slightly faster start, say 4:40
through 1 kilometre, would be worth 15 seconds. There's also a gain to
be made by lengthening my 'old man's shuffle' stride by running more
regular 'strides' sessions and perhaps introducing some controlled
interval work into the mix. That's the plan. My only other problem at
the moment (no injury niggles — yea!) is day-to-day recovery.
Our long hot summer has been very unhelpful to recovery! With the change
of seasons, that will improve.
14k with the Speedygeese Sunday long run group
9 comments:
Nice time. .emit eciN
you definitely looked speedier as we crossed paths...
LOL Geoff - well done. . enod llew
Thanks Bron. I could still see you in the far distance as I was coming past Maccas :)
Definitely agree about the strides and intervals. You need those to get faster.
Thanks Bob. I need to do them with care though. Slightly downhill strides on grass seem pretty safe. (from an injury standpoint)
Yes, expecting to see some speedy times as it gets cooler 😀
Well done with the palindrome. Maybe now some speed work will help you get to ‘topspot’. In light of last year’s frustrating injury niggles, you are wise to be careful with speed work, though I suspect that maximum effort racing without a prior build-up of the required resilience is even riskier than a carefully graded program of speed work. Good luck.
Good one canute! Hopefully I'll occasionally hit 'topspot' in my new A/G at the parkrun in May. I'm being more careful than usual with the introduction of speedwork and will do it in a graded way as you suggest.
Janene, yes, a run of cool, calm Saturday mornings would be ideal.
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