Waking Up The Inner Slug

Sunday’s 22 was surprising in that my legs felt great afterwards and I had no soreness at all.  I expected DOMS yesterday but…nothing.  So I was feeling ready for today’s 8w/5×600s at 5K race pace.  What I didn’t take into account was that the 22-miler topped a peak week of 57 miles, so I shouldn’t have been surprised when once I got outside, all I wanted to do was travel at a snail’s pace.

My goal was to hit the same as last week, 7:15 avg, since that’s McMillans corresponding 5K pace for a 3:40 marathon. I begin the intervals and my first one is 7:26…hrmph!  That sucks.  OK, time to start paying attention!  Got it together and did the deed.  Intervals splits were 7:26, 7:14, 7:09, 7:12, 7:08…avg. 7:14. So it ended up ok, though I’d have preferred even pacing.

Funny though, afterwards I felt really energized and instead of my usual apres-interval-poopedness where it’s all I can do not to walk home, I continued on to run 4.5 more miles at 9:01 avg. pace, leaving me with a total of 10.5 for the morning.  This is good because I’m having to rearrange my schedule to accommodate Monday’s race and toploading the week will allow me to get a mini-taper in there.

Meanwhile, I’m having little shivers of anticipation for the race.  It’s an automatic PR because it’s my first 4-mile race, but I want to do well.  On the other hand, with marathon training it can go either way - you have tired legs so short races might not be up to par, then again, you’ve been improving fitness, so it could be a good time.  I don’t race a whole lot, so it’s hard not to want to set an aggressive goal.

I think the way I’ve figured is to take my 7:52avg. from last week’s 7 mile tempo, convert it to 12K, then input that as a race into my Daniels’ spreadsheet, which predicts a 30:19 (7:35 pace) for a 4-mile race.  Since I’m basing it off a tempo, it shouldn’t leave me redlining.  Then again, I don’t know the course at all, it’s in a different town - though I must say, Google Street View was very helpful in this regard.  I was able to “travel” a good chunk of the course that way, so it’s not a complete mystery.

My main thing is, I need to stop making races (especially little ones like this) so “oooh, big deal” in my head.  I think the way to do that is to do more of them so when they suck, it just gets absorbed into the mishmash of race outcomes.  Here’s to a future of mucho racing and carefree attitudes!  Yeah, right, haven’t I said this before? 8-)

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7 Responses to “Waking Up The Inner Slug”

  1. Dogpound Says:

    I sorta felt the same way this morning, like, ugh, you’ve got to be kidding me. Then I really came around and felt great after. Even rode my bike to work which I almost never do on days I run.
    I wouldn’t worry too much about racing right now, you’ve got your big goal ahead. Think of it as a tempo run with a number on. We’ve been piling on a lot of miles lately.

  2. Flo Says:

    Yeah, you had a great workout too, miss! Congrats again!!

    Hey, I like that “tempo run with a number on”. You’re right, lots of miles, so I should relax. I tell you, if Athlinks wasn’t invented I probably would, it’s that “oh shit, this number goes on my record” aspect that messes with my head.

  3. Dogpound Says:

    that’s funny. I never look at that site, plus I dont think NYRR races are on there which is mostly what I do.
    Though I look at my NYRR history and there are some real goose eggs on there!

  4. Flo Says:

    OMG, I love that site. I’m always checking out what people do or the local talent or even what to expect as far as a race that I sign up for.

  5. Jim E Says:

    Yup, that’s a downside of marathoning, you don’t get to race so much. That pace sounds do-able for you, Flo. It’s not much further than a 5K, and you should be fade-proofed by all those long runs. Good Luck!
    Dunno if this works for you, but I pretended during my 5K that I was running a mile interval, then one more, then only a mile to go… ;)

  6. Flo Says:

    Yep, that’ll work for me, thanks! Anything mental that interrupts the “this hurts,why is it going on so long? how come nobody else looks miserable, when oh when will this end…” is a good thing. :D

  7. Jim E Says:

    Sometimes other runners are more miserable than they look. One guy passed me near the end on Sunday, he looked so strong and cool I assumed he was untouchable. But it turned out he was kicking early, and he faded just as I started my kick - Bwahahaha!

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