Showing posts with label endurance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label endurance. Show all posts

3/13/10

down with cold

2nd weekend I am down and have to skipp training. Very unsatisfying. I will cancel Zurich Marathon this year. There is no point of trying that.

On the other hand very motivating is this:
Whitehead breaks world record for half-marathon see also "soles of a champion".

Respect!

2/21/10

First time longer run this year 16 + 5 k

So much sun today (even in Zurich!) made me run my first 16 k this year. So far training was not really in focus. That is to be changed now. As a start I went the extra mile or better said extra 5 k walking on top of it.

9/2/09

SLRG Züri - Going for the Brevet 1 and CPR



Combining usefulness for mankind with sport and fitness I decided to become a lifeguard. "Baywatch" is calling. ;- )

I joined SLRG Zueri to train for the lifeguard-course. Exciting a new and useful skill. ;- )

7/9/09

The Ironman Distance

The Ironman Distance
Part 1: Looking at “The Big Picture”
By Coach Al Lyman, CSCS

Over many years of endurance training, racing, and coaching, I’ve had the opportunity to make a lot of mistakes and learn a great deal in the process! ☺ In an effort to help you avoid those same mistakes and thus increase your chance for success on the race course, I’ve put together a series of short articles, sort of a compendium of “how tos” to help you finalize your ironman race plan! As always, feel free to fire back any questions at me if you have them.

In my mind, there are a few basic principles that must be adhered to if you’re going to have a successful day on the race course. To keep things orderly, I’ll move from the “big picture” to gradually smaller pieces of the race with a series of articles, addressing those important components of nutrition, pacing, and mental/emotional state, among other things.


Some BIG PICTURE thoughts on the day:

1. Ironman isn’t a triathlon, it’s an eating and drinking contest! What, when, and how you handle fueling and hydration before and during the race is HUGELY responsible for your physical performance, especially late in the race (the 2nd half of the run). Over the years, I’ve witnessed athletes who show up on race day extremely fit and physically ready, only to discover that there lack of nutrition
preparation and attention to detail were “mistakes” that cost them a chance for a great race.

2. Stay in the moment - race in the NOW. Taken as a whole, an ironman can seem overwhelming, even to veterans of the distance. The best way to avoid feeling overwhelmed and make the day “fly by,” is to stay in the moment and on task at all times. This is true not only on race day itself, but also in the days leading up to race day. Develop a plan, a list of things “to do,” and then do the best you can, right at that moment. Worry about whatever’s next when you get there, because if
you take care of “right now,” what’s next will take care of itself too.

3. Ironman isn’t about racing, it’s about good decision making. Think about it, the entire day is simply one decision after another. If you make good decisions, you avoid serious difficulty and race to your potential, if not, you don’t. What’s the best approach? Another coach once shared his philosophy with me, which he calls the OODA Loop:
When an obstacle of some sort presents itself to you during the race (and it most assuredly will at some point), observe the situation, orient yourself and determine possible courses of action, decide on a course of action, and then act. Keep the OODA loop in mind during race day as an effective way to handle unforeseen difficulties as they arise, always remaining calm and focused in the process.

4. Be flexible and be prepared to improvise. Despite your well thought out and well rehearsed plan for how the day will unfold, you can expect that it won’t survive the first contact with some type of adversity, which may happen shortly after the gun goes off! ☺ No worries though, you’ve got the entire day to fix whatever happens, so use the OODA loop and do the best you can. Keep moving forward, stay relaxed and determined, and believe in your ability to overcome any adversity.


Some BIG PICTURE thoughts on race nutrition:

1. Think of water intake as not only hydration, but an aid to digestion. In other words, whenever you take in fuel, particularly if it is something that is concentrated, you should follow it with a swig of straight water to dilute it, thus aiding digestion and absorption. High calorie + too little water (or too much sports drink) = much greater risk of GI problems! 􀀯 Along with this thought, here are the two major reasons why I recommend you do not rely upon solid foods for fuel during the race: 1. Solid food requires lots of water to digest, and if this water isn’t available in the gut, it’s removed from the tissues and brought into the stomach, ultimately increasing your risk of dehydration. 2. Because of the work required to digest solid food, additional blood is needed in the gut, which similarly means that blood isn’t where you want it to be during the race: in your legs and arms
(the muscles doing the work!), helping you go forward faster and more easily!

2. You can think of this as “1a,” as it goes along with #1: Whenever you encounter problems with stomach cramping, sloshing in your gut, or GI distress of any kind, STOP taking in calories and go to straight water only. Obviously, you may also want to slow your pace, and if necessary, stop completely to assess what’s going on. At the very least, go to straight water until things return to normal. ALWAYS listen to your body and be aware of the signals it is sending you. Let your body reset itself, and let your heart rate come down. Some times a 5 min stand down during the bike can mean much more time saved on the run. If you get to the point of feeling a need to vomit, you haven’t been listening very well! LISTEN!

3. Intensity (heart rate) and calorie intake are inversely related. In other words, think of your heart rate as a measurement of the cumulative stress on your body, and calorie intake during the race, could be considered just another stressor. What does this mean? Take in your calories in a methodical, steady, and conservative rate,
and try to get the majority of them down early in the bike leg, when your body isn’t terribly stressed. Don’t make the mistake of taking in LOTS of calories when your heart rate is high. This concept is directly related to pacing, because if you pace smart, you will start conservatively and build effort over time. Similarly, don’t get into a calorie deficit and expect to make it up on the run, because at that
point, your body is under such great duress that it won’t process or assimilate calories well. OK, more simply put: high heart rate - adjust intake down, low heart rate - adjust intake up. Lastly, don’t do anything new that you haven’t tried in training. Execute the plan you have practiced and developed in training, remembering to be flexible as the day unfolds. If you need additional feedback on your race plan
or nutrition, contact me.


Some BIG PICTURE thoughts on the mind and emotions:
Without a doubt, the ironman is a long day that requires patience and discipline for success. It’s also a very emotional day, as many of you know and have experienced. However, many racers have made the mistake of letting their emotions control their thoughts and their decision making during the race! Save your emotions for the last 100 yard run to the finish line. That’s the time to let it all pour out. Until then, you need to remain focused, calm, cool, relaxed, and efficient throughout the entire day. You need to do your best to remain a cold, emotionless, decision-making machine!
As another coach said to me once, the day is too big for pride and too big to get angry or upset about. Stay in the moment and focused on the task at hand, use the OODA loop when needed, and think RELAX at all times. Lastly, much of what I’ve mentioned will ultimately come down to how much you believe in yourself. At some point during the race, your resolve will be tested. It’s actually the part of ironman racing I love, but also dread, the most. There will come a time when the only person who can help you is you. Do you believe in your self, deep down? Do you feel you belong? Do you believe you can do it? Do you have what it takes? I believe you do, but if you don’t believe, then you don’t have a chance. BELIEVE IN YOURSELF.

You DO belong, and you’re going to prove it when you hit that tape! See you at the finish line! Good luck, and stay tuned for more information coming soon!

6/20/09

weight and speed

Seen on www.shealynnbaird.com: YOUR health is YOUR choice:

Obviously there is a negative correlation between weight and speed, though speed depends e.g. also on muscle power and strength. However, when I had been 8 kg lighter, the calculator on a website would suggest, I had a 20 min faster race at a marathon distance. The calculator shows how much one gains/losses speed by additional/less body weight assuming all other parameters are unchanged (muscles, ...). http://www.runningforfitness.org/calc/

When I just think about it, any extra kg is a lot of resistance to carry for 42kg/26.2 miles. In a second step I compared then my BMI (bmi=32, age=35) to the average man:


Again it is very revieling and gives food for thought, less for my body...

6/10/09

2 days after my 3rd 70.3 IM in Rapperswil-Jona

I got a wake-up call. The race was soooooOOOooo bad. It took way too long (7:13 hrs). As I read in a post:

"every time you stay out late...
every time you sleep in....
every time you have another drink...
every time you miss a workout...
every time you eat junk food...
every time you don't give 100% and then some...
YOU MAKE IT THAT MUCH EASIER FOR ME TO BEAT YOU!!!"

So, I was beaten severly and have to change quite some things to get ready for the IM Zurich. It will be a transitional change for me. Triathlon is becoming a lifestyle rather than an event driven approach. Since I already finished an IM and several races.

"NO D.N.F." was my motto last sunday and in life.

Some more motivational quotes/quotations I found at "IamTri":

"Everyone has a limit. Not everyone finds out where it is!" (Erox)

"You're going to reap just what you sow." (Lou Reed - Perfect Day)

Courage to Start, Strength to Endure, Resolve to finish

"The more you sweat in practice, the less you bleed in battle"

Whenever I am struggling, which is usually during the swim, I remember Dory from Finding Nemo: "Just keep swimming swimming, swimming. Just keep swimming, swimming swimming..."

"Understand that this is not a dress rehearsal. This is it -- your life. Face your fears and live your dreams. Take it all in, yes, every chance you get. Come close. And by all means, whatever you do, get it on film." -Jon Blais
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Vrjp2P0GlE

"Tri, and understand it"

Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional!

"Let me win. But if I can not win let me be brave in the attempt"

"You can quit and they won't care, but you will always know"
Commander John Collins, Creator of Ironman

5/5/09

Marathon & Henninger Turm bike race



Sunday, April 26th - Zurich Marathon my third marathon (see the guy at sec 17th crossing the finish line)- 04:43 h until "Meilen" everything was great, than cramps in the calves. After all 1 minute faster than last year. ;- )


1st May, Friday - Bike Race: "Henninger Turm" / "Frankfurt-Eschborn Loop"
I did the 70km in 2:20h. it was ok. I was the only guy with a "time trial helmet". ;- ) The whole 70 km were fun!

6/16/08

Today: 184.9 km biking

New bike record. 184.9 km are a really long distance. I learned:
- salt tablets are great to avoid cramps
- at kilometers: 45, 100 and 145 it really got mentally tough to continue
- I ate every half hour in turns powerbar gels and riegels along with drinking water
- I was faster on the hilly part, which I find amazing, since I considered myself slow up and down the hills

The weather conditions were going from bad to very bad, 15°C, rainy, quite freezy. Since it got very dark very soon, I bought a reflecting safety vest at a gas station. It feels good though to have gone through another limit-breaking experience.

27 days to the Ironman. Now I will focus on swimming.

2/24/08

What we don't change today, will change us tomorrow

Yesterday I ran 20k in 2 hrs and 15 mins in the dark. When I finished at 9 pm I recognized I missed some of the 16 km runs when my legs started cramping. Also I might have neglected magnesium-tablets as add ons to the daily food. However, I felt very strong muscelwise. My legs weren't tired or felt week. So my consitent training the last 4 weeks might really have caused some endurance-Strength. ;- )

This week at the spinning class on thursday we had a "mountain session". 1 hour constantly driving at 85 rpm with rising resistance like a mountain. The spinning instructor explained this cadence training is very important for the Ironman-Distance, so that an athlete can work "like a machine".

peak effort of training per week needed for one guy for a 10 hrs ironman = 28 hours
Blog: Tri-Geek Dreams
Post: Ironman commitment
Link: www.trigeekdreams.com/.../ironman-commitment.html

10/1/07

My first marathon finished



http://88.151.64.106/events/berlin_marathon/2007/


Start Number: 17288
Rank: 24423
Class Rank (M30): 2528

Two days after my first marathon my legs still feel weak; at least my spirit is strong. It made a lot of fun, although the last 4 km were very tough. After the first 38 km it didn't seem too hard. However, at the last 4 k I suffered. It feels good to have it finished. One step closer to Ironman! ;- )

7/13/07

The Hamster or Laktat-Testing

Tomorrow is Laktat-Testing again at the university. Course 8 out of 10. The fotos you see below were made at the last exercise session I had. I had to bike constantly 85 rpms, which was not so easy with increasing resistance. I feel like a hamster in a running wheel. ;-)See the fotos:



Dominik is checking the data.



me on the bike.

5/12/07

Speed training and real endurance/ "put the sword to the heart"

Today I did 1 h run- speed training. Several intervalls (2-4 mins running at high speed at around 4:10 - 4:30 min/km. I found some nice hints at: "Running even faster".

Than I did some research about the chinese character for endurance. I qoute: A brief discussion of the chinese character Ren: "The character "Ren" (忍, forbearance) is composed of the element "xin" (心, heart) which represents the meaning, and the element "ren" (刃, knife blade) which represents the sound. "Ren" means to endure, to forbear, and to tolerate. It also contains the connotation of self-restraint and self-control. The character "Ren" (forbearance) is formed by placing the "knife" over the "heart," as if implying "Ren" (forbearance) is not easily achieved by ordinary people, but requires a higher level of cultivation, discipline, and will."

At last I researched about better and more effective training. I ended up with detailed body-mechanisms and movements. One website stated: a better training can be accomplished by a closer look at correct body movement during excercises. The need of a trainer becomes more and more evident to get it right. Correct movement one can accomplish by: theatre, dancing, or tai chi classes. Tai Chi might be a real important way to maintain the energy during a competition. I found several swim (total immersion), bike, running and breathing methods focusing on "core strength". Trying to move more efficient is very close to the idea of tai chi. There are even "mental strengthening" elements in both concepts. Further investigation will be done. http://www.willamette.edu/~jlaronge/principles.html

4/19/07

training endurance

Now I have to become an endurance-animal. Websters says: Latin *indurare, from Latin, to harden, from in- + durare to harden (http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/endure).


transitive verb
1 : to undergo (as a hardship) especially without giving in
2 : to regard with acceptance or tolerance
intransitive verb
1 : to continue in the same state
2 : to remain firm under suffering or misfortune without yielding

Best endurance quotes I found:
"Enjoy when you can, and endure when you must." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 - 1832)
"He that can't endure the bad, will not live to see the good." Jewish Proverb
" VALIDI DURANT" - the strong endure (Latin)


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