Saturday, 20 March 2010

The Day Before Tomorrow

Hi all,

There's only one day left till the Reading Half Marathon, and I've been busy running around trying to get everything into place. When planning for a race, getting the logistics correct is so important as it can make or break a performance. Right now, I've mostly gotten everything done, and have a bit of time writing this blog entry and cooking dinner before I have an early night tonight, hopefully all fresh for the big day tomorrow.

The biggest worries for me are transportation to the start line, some uncomfortable niggles in my feet, and race morning in the few hours prior to the race itself. I live quite far away from the stadium outside of Reading, and public transport on Sunday isn't that frequent. There are free shuttle buses from Reading station that will take runners to and from the stadium. The first train to Reading station from my house starts at 8:40 am which is far too late. Buses near my house start around 8:00 am, which is also unacceptable. After looking at public transport schedules for nearly an hour, I found that there is a bus service that runs at almost all hours of the day, but I have to walk around 25 minutes from my house to get to this bus stop. At least it beats walking to Reading station, which would take me over an hour. And I'd rather not waste my energy doing this on race day. Sometimes I wish I lived closer to the stadium or in Reading itself, then I'd have one less thing to worry about!

As for the uncomfortable niggles I have in my feet, I've just developed a blister under my right foot, which will no doubt be uncomfortable when I run. I think my current pair of work shoes may have aggravated it. I've had many blisters and, normally for me, they heal quite fast. I also have a slightly sore spot under my left heel, and I'm really hoping that it's not a serious injury, or Plantar Fasciitis. If they don't come right by tomorrow morning, I'm willing to run through the pain!

And there's the dreaded routine I need to go through early on race morning. I'll have to get up early (maybe around 5:00 am), have a good breakfast, go to the toilet, do some stretching and warm-ups, ensure I have everything in my bag to carry to the start line (at the moment I just realised I needed to buy Vaseline!!!), and make sure I wear my timing chip around my ankle and double knot my shoelaces. With my current pair of shoes, I've had many problems with shoelaces becoming untied during a run. Things like an untied shoe lace, or the urge to go to the toilet in the middle of a long race, is something that every runner dreads.

So there's the logistical headache and other anxieties that runners need to contend with, some more so than others.

My goal is to run under 90 minutes in the Reading Half Marathon. My personal best is 1:36:40, which means I need to run 18 seconds per km faster than last year to reach my goal. With regards to my training preparation for this event, I have had 16 weeks, 48 sessions, and ran approximately 570 km. The training volume was slightly higher than last year's preparation where I logged around 450 km. Overall, my preparation hasn't been perfect; there have been missed sessions and bad days that I'd rather forget. I got sick during the taper period, which took out half of my planned sessions. But I'm feeling good, and I feel that I can beat my time from last year. The things that I have got going for me this year are: increased mileage, more training experience, more race experience, knowing the course really well, extra motivation with regards to breaking three hours in a marathon, and the "extra" expectation to do well now that a lot of people know my sporting goals and dreams. 90 minutes is not going to equate to a sub-3:00:00 marathon time, but it's the first step in the right direction.

I'm really excited about tomorrow, and I know that the Reading Half Marathon will deliver in terms of atmosphere and crowd support. Today being the 20th March, 2010, it's been 6 months since I last ran a race (the Berlin Marathon in September) so I'm keen to get out there and run as hard as I can. The extra adrenaline from racing will carry me through. I know a few friends in Reading so hopefully they'll come out and support me and the other 18000+ runners pounding the Reading streets.

On a final note, I've just learned how to tweet from my Nokia 3310 mobile phone (an old school mobile, but I still love it). If you want to follow real time updates from the race, you can follow me on Twitter! I'll try to tweet as soon as I can from the finish line, but I definitely won't be tweeting during the race itself. Tweeting during a race sounds like a great idea, but I'm going to put 100% into my run and will happily concentrate on the running instead of the tweeting.

I'll most likely be buggered after tomorrow's race and would rather be sleeping instead of typing on a laptop, but as a means of showing my commitment, you'll still get a comprehensive race report and Training Week 16 Recap on this blog by the end of tomorrow, I promise!

Wish me luck,

Aaron

Friday, 19 March 2010

The Reading Half Marathon 2010 Playlist

Hi again,

I've just finalised the 22 songs that comprise the Reading Half Marathon 2010 Playlist. The playlist is approximately 91 minutes long. There's an ongoing joke that if the music stops, then I stop running. But hopefully I'll cross the finish line by the time the playlist finishes.

I've been trying to put all the songs using iMix in iTunes, but unfortunately not all the songs appear in the resulting playlist. So instead, I've listed the songs here in playing order, and I have also added links to the almighty YouTube.
I've ordered it in such a way that I have left the big power songs near the end, which will hopefully give me that extra kick in the dying stages of the race. What do you guys think? Would these songs suit you?

Enjoy!

Aaron

EDIT: I've managed to get iMix working, so I'm including the playlist in this blog entry. Not all songs can be included, because they don't exist in the iTunes store. So that's why I resort to YouTube instead.....

New Addition to My Running Family

Hey guys,

I am proud to announce the latest addition to my running family. She was born today, Friday 19th March, 2010, at 12:57 pm. And she is an absolute delight to her proud parents.

Here's a photo of the beautiful newborn.
Named Azza's ShufflePod, she is the newest addition to the family. The perfect accompaniment to her big brother, Azza's TouchPod. She weighs in at 10.7 grams, and measures 45.2 x 17.5 x 7.8 mm. She can hold up to 1000 songs and play for 10 hours. But the best thing is that Azza's ShufflePod is very gifted; she can already speak at birth. The song, the artist, the playlist - with her new and unique VoiceOver feature she can say them all!

Here's a picture of brother and sister side by side.
And a picture of the back. Unfortunately, being 2 years old, Azza's TouchPod is already looking a little worn!
Azza's TouchPod will be calling time when it comes to playing music during those training runs. From now on, his little sister will be the main music player for those long runs and other exercise sessions. One of my concerns when running with Azza's TouchPod is that it can get wet from perspiration, rain, or just throwing water on my body when it gets too hot. Azza's TouchPod wears a protective sleeve whilst in use, but as you can see from the above picture, dust, dirt and moisture can still make it dirty. Azza's TouchPod is more than a music player; it also runs cool applications, browse the internet, play YouTube videos, stores contacts and calendar information, and so much more. It's time for Azza's TouchPod to step aside from the rigours of playing music during those long training runs.

Smaller, lightweight, and so unobtrusive, Azza's ShufflePod is the perfect music player for running. Unlike Azza's TouchPod, you won't notice her clipped to your shorts. The headphones that come with her are awesome. Because Azza's ShufflePod has no screen, the headphones can control playback, song selection, volume control and even the VoiceOver feature that is so unique to Azza's ShufflePod.

This doesn't mean that Azza's TouchPod will retire completely as a music player. But in order to ensure longevity, his younger sister will take over as the main music player for running.

Azza's ShufflePod does not have much time to get into action. Her first assignment is the all-too-important Reading Half Marathon, where her parents are hoping she can deliver the listener a sub-1:30 target time. But she's so gifted, and so good looking, her parents are confident she is up to the task.

Over the moon,

Azza

Monday, 15 March 2010

Training Week 15 Recap

Hi folks,

I've had a very easy week. I mean that in terms of running output. In terms of being sick and having to travel for business while being sick, then I guess I had it pretty tough. No doubt this has affected what I could manage for the week, but since it's taper week I suppose the highly reduced mileage isn't going to hurt me too much. Well, I hope!

Saturday
Type: Easy
Time and Distance: 70 mins, 12.5 km.
Detail: Steady pace throughout, with a faster sprint finish in the final 500m.

Total Weekly Distance: 12.5 km.

Comments: My only run this week. There's really not much to say about it, apart from being a sightseeing expedition around Reading, playing tour guide to my good mate and fellow runner Shaun all the way from New Zealand, and scouting the Reading Half Marathon course, which I'm very familiar with. Hopefully this will stand in good stead on race day.

Improvements: More taper. Will continue to do faster, shorter runs to keep the legs fresh and ready for race day.

Well I don't know what to make of this week. It was supposed to be a taper week, but I "tapered too much" if you see what I'm getting at. It doesn't help to be sick at any stage of training, so I'll have to take better care of myself. Nor does it help going away for a few days on business, but these things are part and parcel of work. C'est la vie!

In other news, yesterday I was pretty lucky to witness a piece of history. I went to the All England Open Badminton Championship finals in Birmingham to watch the very best players in the world playing for the All England title, which is like the Wimbledon of Badminton, or the unofficial Badminton world championships. Having indirect ties to Malaysia (my parents hail from Malaysia), I was rooting for top seed, Lee Chong Wei, to win the Men's Singles final. Lee didn't disappoint the thousands of screaming fans (including me) as he went on to win the final, becoming the first Malaysian to win a singles final since 2003! Here's a picture of Lee celebrating his achievement after hitting the winner (excuse the arms of those pesky Malaysian fans!).
Badminton in Malaysia is comparable to Rugby in New Zealand, or Football in England, and the amount of noisy Malaysian fans in Birmingham's National Indoor Arena cheering for their national hero made me feel like I was in Malaysia! To Malaysian badminton fans, Malaysian badminton players have the same standing as a Dan Carter in the All Blacks, or a David Beckham in the England Football team.

Badminton is one of my favourite sports having played regularly a long time ago. Unfortunately I was never really good at it, and it doesn't feature in my sporting schedule at all, which is currently dominated by long distance running (surprise surprise!). However, it's good to get away from running once in a while and just enjoy the other things that I used to do before I became a serious runner. Good times! Here's me standing in front of a montage of all the All England champions, pretending to be a champion myself! I'd need such a positive mindset and attitude if I want to break three hours this year.

Relaxing (but not really),

Aaron

Tuesday, 9 March 2010

200 Days To Berlin

¡Hola a todos!

As you might gather from the greeting, I'm now in Spain for the week. Not a bad place to be in the first week of the taper period leading up to the Reading Half Marathon. Unfortunately, it's not all fun and games as I'm here on business, plus the fact that I've fallen sick right after my hardest training period. At this stage it's best that I stop running and try to recover as quickly as possible, before I start to do any running this week. Hopefully this won't put me off the roads for long! Here's a picture of Castell de Bellver in Palma, which is where I did quite a lot of my running when I was in Spain before.
I had a look at the timer on my blog, and noted that there are 200 days left until the Berlin Marathon, which is the marathon I'm focusing on to break three hours in. It does sound like a lot of time, but if you factor in the off-days, e.g. taper days, easy days, missed training days and sick days (like now!), then these things can eat a huge chunk of time out of your available training days. In an earlier blog post I mentioned that I had 259 days left, so up to now, over 8 weeks (a fifth of my training period) have passed. I always provide training recaps every week, but it's also good to recap over several weeks as I'm interested to know how much I have progressed since then.

Of course, the only real way to know that I have made improvements is by racing (assuming nothing goes wrong during the race), so by peaking for the Reading Half Marathon I'll have a general indication of how well I'd perform in a marathon. According to the McMillan Running Calculator a 1:30:00 half marathon time would equate to roughly a sub 3:10:00 marathon time. It's not sub 3-hours, but it's a step in the right direction. The calculator isn't going to be accurate for everyone's performance, but for me it seems to be giving close enough times.

Looking at the training schedules, I'd say that I'm running as hard, if not harder, than I was when I did Berlin last year. At this stage, I've already put in more miles in training than last year's preparation for the Reading Half Marathon. I'm feeling confident that I can set a new PB in the half marathon, but I won't dare to be bold in saying that I'd go under 1:30:00 on race day. But let's hope that I do, so that it gives me the reassurance that I'm heading in the right direction, and that I can finally update my personal bests section on this blog!

Hasta pronto (see you soon in Spanish),

Aaron

Sunday, 7 March 2010

Training Week 14 Recap

Hi all,

This is the week, the final week of hard stuff before the mandatory two-week taper period before the Reading Half Marathon. Mileage, pace and even exertion have been pushed to newer limits. I don't think I've worked this hard since Berlin last year, or maybe even ever before! Let's see how this week unfolded.

Monday
Type: Easy with strides
Time and Distance: 30 mins, 5.65 km.
Detail: 20 mins at 10.5 km/h pace. 10 x 100m strides at 16 km/h pace. Last stride at 18 km/h pace.

Tuesday
Type: Intervals
Time and Distance: 95 mins, 20.3 km.
Detail: 15 mins at 10.5 km/h pace. 4 x 3200m at 13.6 - 14.0 km/h pace, with 90 secs recovery at 8 km/h pace after intervals. 2 x 1600m at 14.5 km/h pace and 15.5 km/h pace, with 90 secs recovery at 8 km/h pace.

Wednesday
Type: Easy with strides
Time and Distance: 30 mins, 5.72 km.
Detail: 15 mins at 10.5 km/h pace. 10 x 100m strides at 17 km/h pace.

Thursday
Type: Progressive tempo
Time and Distance: 40 mins, 8.4 km.
Detail: 15 mins at 10.5 km/h pace. 10 mins at 13.5 - 14.0 km/h pace. 10 mins at 14.0 - 15.0 km/h pace. Recover for 2 mins at 8.0 km/h, followed by 90 secs at 15.1 km/h pace.

Saturday
Type: Long
Time and Distance: 164 mins 31 secs, 33.3 km.
Detail: First half (14.6 km) at 76 mins 50 secs. Second half (18.7 km) at 88 mins 41 secs.

Sunday
Type: Easy
Time and Distance: 44 mins 6 secs, 8 km.
Detail: Recovery run after Saturday's long run.

Total Weekly Distance: 81.37 km.

Comments: My biggest week in terms of mileage and effort, especially the Tuesday run. I don't think I've covered 20 km worth of intervals before! The Thursday tempo run was intended to be a longer session, but unfortunately I had a training mishap so I had to cut it short. The Saturday run was intended to be just slightly longer than half marathon distance at a faster pace, but since I've done two days of hard running this week, I decided to do a slower, longer run. Actually the pace of my long run was a shade below 5 min/km, which, for me, is quite fast for a long run, so hopefully this will benefit both my half marathon training and marathon training at the same time. For all my easy runs, I've been adding 100m strides in the run, just to mix things up and add a bit of zip to the legs. I'm going to include this in all my easy runs from now on.

Improvements: There will be no more weeks of harder running in the two weeks preceding the Reading Half Marathon. This two week period is the taper period, which will allow me to be at, or near, 100% on race day. I would need to be peaking at that time since I'd like to run the Reading Half Marathon in less than 1:30:00. The taper period involves reduced volume and intensity, so it's goodbye long runs, tempo runs and fast mile repeats for now.

Well I managed to put in a mega week of training. It's nowhere near the mileage and intensity that the elites put in, but I'm happy with this hard effort. I'm still injury free at this stage, though I sometimes feel the odd niggle which hopefully will not lead on to anything more serious. Let's hope I can get a new PB, and break 1:30:00, in two weeks time!

Putting my feet up (for now),

Aaron

Thursday, 4 March 2010

A Very Quick Update

Hi all,

I thought I should provide a quick update. I haven't been posting very much lately because I've just moved into my new place, in the same week as my scheduled hard running efforts, being 3 weeks out from the Reading Half Marathon. Without wanting to compromise the running, I've been rather unsettled. With the taper weeks coming up, this means I can take it easier with the running and hopefully I can get settled in and start posting more regularly.

I've set aside this week as the ultimate week of running. Mileage, pace, and even exertion will be pushed to newer limits. Look out for this week's training recap coming soon.

That's pretty much all I can say for now. It's fair to say that I've neglected blogging here lately, but this does not detract from my desire to break three hours in a marathon. Hopefully as things become more settled, I can start posting stuff more often.

Trying to stay afloat,

Aaron