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Showing posts from February, 2014

How To Do A Post-Race Workout (Also...Why The Heck Would You Do That?)

Step 1: Start racing. Step 2: Finish the race. Step 3: Just kidding. Keep running, slacker. All joking aside, I had my first race of the spring season this past weekend. I went down to Louisville and ran the Anthem 5k, finishing 4th in 15:24. Not the greatest time ever, but off of a winter of base training that's about where I expected to be. Plus, I came home with $125, so that made the trip worth it. After the race, as you may guess, I did a workout: I changed out of my uniform and ran a 20-minute tempo, averaging about 5:15 pace for the post-race session. I got some weird looks from people who were still in or just finishing the race, especially since I stayed near the course so I could get mile splits. Of course, I'm not the only person doing this. The elites have been doing post-race workouts for a while now; Galen Rupp and the Nike Oregon Project recently received a lot of attention for the workout completed after he set the American 2-mile indoor record this y

Good News for the Sport

A lot of posts on this blog and other running blogs are often negative in nature: what's wrong with the sport, why don't races cater to elites, why isn't running more popular, on and on and on. Part of that sentiment comes from running's 'niche sport' status...we're runners, were passionate about the sport, we think it's awesome, and we want the rest of the country to see what we see. I've previously lamented about the status of elite and sub-elite runners as athletes (and I'm sure have more to say in the future), but I wanted to share my thoughts on a very positive development: Nonelite US Marathons Are Getting Faster . The title says it all. Male marathoners under 3:00 and female marathoners under 3:30 are increasing in number. Not only that, but they are increasing at a faster rate than general participation; the fastest growing segment of marathoners are those at the front end of the races (this includes professional elites, non-profes

Why Cross Country (Running) Needs To Be An Olympic Sport

Since Thursday, all I've been doing has been watching the Winter Olympics. Okay, that may be a slight exaggeration, but not really. While watching cross country skiing, I got to thinking: why isn't XC running a summer Olympic event? As a runner, former XC athlete, a huge fan of the sport, of course I'm totally biased. But XC running would actually be the perfect Olympic addition. Here's why: It's the ideal combination between individual and team competition. Obviously, at the front of the race you'd have athletes racing for gold, silver, and bronze...that's the same as any other racing event, and every other Olympic event. The difference, however, is that after the three medalists are determined, interest in the race doesn't end -- it gets more intriguing! When the top runners finish, the team race begins: five team runners with the lowest combined score (with a potential sixth runner acting as a tiebreaker). So in the same event, you have individual

California Dreamin'

Well, it's official: the 2016 Olympic Marathon Trials will be held in Los Angeles . The final decision came down to Houston vs. LA. Houston, the previous host who put on a well-received and successful event in 2012, against LA, one of the major media markets in the country. In terms of exposure for the sport, I think LA is a good venue for the event, especially since the event will most likely be broadcast on nationally on NBC. I also think it is good that the road race will continue touring the country every four years, instead of pigeon-holing itself into one city. There's something to be said for changing locations to engage the community across the country, as opposed to one city. And so, according to Google Maps, Cincinnati is 2,175 miles from Los Angeles. With the race in mid-February 2016, that leaves two years to get there. Welp, time to go run.