This week was 47 miles of "real running" and 18 "miles" pool running; no swimming this week  -- training log is here.  
Hah!   Theoretically I tapered for the Richmond half-marathon, but I’m not  sure I was that well rested.  I had the week from hell, including  ridiculous amounts of stress and sleep deprival.  My workout schedule  was cut back pretty drastically, including skipping my normal yoga and  pilates classes, swimming drills, and weight training (as well as injury  prevention exercises), but I spent the time working feverishly instead.    And earned myself some sort of nasty headache/sinus pain/head  spinning/achy body thing in the process.
Pretty much the only  thing that did go well this week was my running.  But that went really well.  And since this is a  running blog, I guess that makes the week win.  Despite the lack of  taper and sickness, I scored a significant half-marathon PR and age  group win on Saturday morning, and was thrilled.   Race report.
Post-race, my  body feels like hell - I’m not sure how much of it is from the rolling  hills and fast downhill finish of my half, and how much is just general  achiness from whatever bug I have (I’m reasonably certain I didn’t use  my triceps that much during the race, but they’re killing me).  
Regardless  of the cause, the response is the same - I’m going to stick to  pool-running and swimming until the aches and dizziness subside.   Earlier this year, I  had several friends run a hilly half-marathon,  and then develop  injuries in the following week that sidelined them.    I want to avoid  that path.
Dailies
Monday:   In the  morning, 60 minutes of easy pool-running for “6 miles”, plus very easy  upper body/core strength training.  Foam-rolling and stretching at  night.
Tuesday:  In the morning, 11.5 miles, including an  abbreviated track workout of 1600, 1200, 800, 400, each with 1/2  distance recovery.  Splits were 5:57, 4:25, 2:50, and 80.  Followed by a  shakeout 20 minutes of pool-running (“2 miles”).
Wednesday:   13 miles, split as 5.5 very easy miles (9:47 pace) and then 7.5 easy miles (8:04 pace).  Foam rolling in the evening.  
Thursday:   Very easy 8.5 miles (8:56 pace), plus drills and strides.   Foam rolling in the evening.  
Friday:  Light core work plus injury prevention exercises plus foam rolling.
Saturday:     In the morning, a 1 mile warm-up plus a half-marathon in 1:29:36  (6:50 pace).  40 minutes of recovery pool-running for "4 miles" in the  afternoon, plus foam-rolling.
Sunday:  60 minutes of easy  pool-running for "6 miles", plus foam-rolling and injury prevention  exercises.  Thought briefly about doing upper body weight work, but it  wasn’t happening.
I loved your race report! Just awesome. That is the only word that fits. I can't wait to learn more about your training and cross training. It seems like you have a good thing going here!
ReplyDeleteCongrats again on the fabulous race, woohoo on a PR and AG win...fantastic! Good call on taking it easy, Halfs can definitely cause apres-race trouble. May your body return to zippy, feeling-good mode asap.
ReplyDeleteCongrats on the great race and PR!! I think for you having low expectations and no pressure makes you run more relaxed.... and super fast. Yay!
ReplyDeleteWhat a week! Congrats on a fantastic race and managing to run strong despite the obstacles in the week before.
ReplyDeleteI'm commenting on your race recap here - I'm so glad that all the stars aligned for you this weekend. Congrats on your HUGE PR!!
ReplyDeleteHUGE CONGRATS ON THE PR!! Smart thinking taking it easy after the race.
ReplyDeleteInteresting (maybe) fact: After an ultra, my upper arms are the most sore of everything. I think it's the bouncing over a long period of time. And I don't even have flabby arms.