Tagged: training

October 12th, 2009

Matching Nutrition with Training: An Athlete’s Paradox

Today’s post is from guest blogger Miki, who writes for RunReviews.com. In this article, she writes about the balance of eating and training for athletes of all levels.

Athletes have a very serious chore in the matter of matching their diet with their training frequency. A healthy diet must be one of their main concerns. In extent, a healthy eating program right before workout must be closely looked upon. An eating program ensures performance during exercising and comfort afterward.

The balance between eating time and training time must be carefully kept. A golden rule is not to exercise with a full stomach. It’s not desirable; it’s not good for your body and neither for your performances. Food remnants may cause stomach aches and nausea and will cease energy supplies.

A workout session must be conceived wisely. This implies also rationalizing the steps prior to training itself. In the preamble of this kind of physical effort you must build up a nutrition schedule to supervise your meals one hour, two hours, three or four hours before the effort. Time depends on what you choose to eat in order to make sure the digestion process is completed by the time you start exercising. You should experiment a few times prior to workouts to determine what hours work best for you.

Waking up early in the morning can be a challenge. If this applies for you too, you should make an effort and have your pre-exercise meal at a proper time. Still, if the race is early in the morning and you don’t succeed to wake up at an appropriate time, you can eat or drink something easily to digest. Liquids are a better choice as they go easier in the stomach. This way you get right nutrition and no discomfort.

Always have in mind that glucose is an important energy source and a metabolism intermediate. Its contribution to brain activity is of no match. For sports, glucose income is sine-qua-non, which is why foods like fruit, pasta, bread and liquids are recommended before exercise.

On the race day it is best not to experiment with neither new shoes nor new foods. You cannot anticipate how your body reacts and you don’t want to have a bad surprise. So you need to know in advance how to match time, how and what food you need and the energy fuel that works for you.

If there is only one hour separating you from the race, you should have liquids at hand (and not just any kind). Choose fresh juice, like orange or tomato juice and fresh fruit such as pears, watermelon or grapes.

If you still have two hours left, go for some fresh fruit, vegetable juice, yogurt (but only low fat) or starchy food like bread or bagels. Do not overload your stomach; it will not have enough time to digest and it will kick you back when you at least expect it.

If there are three or four hours left, the range of products you can choose from is more various and you may be picky between fresh fruit, fresh vegetable juice, starches, cereals, low fat milk, yogurt, cheese or even some peanut butter.

Energy bars or sport drinks may give you energy, but they don’t work for everyone so make sure you test them before the actual race.

Don’t forget that every body reacts differently and what works for you may not work for the one sitting next to you. Find out what your body’s needs are, respect them and be in permanent watch over changes that may occur.

This article is a guest post by Miki, writer for runreviews.com, a site where you can read all kinds of treadmills reviews.

September 29th, 2009

September Training Update

Sooo…..training. Riiiiiight. The Sunshine Run 10K is a week from Saturday, and I am about ready. Linden has returned. Eight miles are on the agenda for Saturday. And I’ve been clocking sub-11:30 runs pretty regularly. Just need to heal up some blisters on my toes!

Speedwork tomorrow. 4 x 200 at 85-90% max speed with two minutes rest.

And I’m blogging from the phone tonight. Maybe I can make writing happen more often when I write from my mobile. ;)

September 2nd, 2009

10K Training Update

How about a brief training update tonight? All in all, training is going really well. I’m surprised how much having a running watch and a training schedule posted in three places has kept me motivated. And Chris put some excellent running music on my iShuffle last week, and the right tunes have made a difference, too. On average, I’m hovering between 12:15 and 12:30/mile on all my runs; though Monday night’s four-miler was at an average pace of 11:32. Where that pace came from, I have no idea.

I’ve had some pain in my lower legs, both on and off my runs. First, it was cramping in my calves, but now it’s pain on the inside of my shins–shin splint territory. Eek! I’m icing and taking Aleve. I walked last night’s two-miler, and I decided to miss this morning’s speed work to rest for Saturday’s long run. Not happy about missing an essential speed workout, but I don’t want shin splints to turn in to stress fractures. I have a six-miler on Saturday and a 5K next Saturday, so hopefully things will shape up quickly.

September 9th, 2008

Running Science Experiments

I conducted a little science experiment last night, and I must say, the results are promising. As many of you know, I’ve had trouble with my left knee and a little condition called ITB tendonitis ever since my half marathon last November. That was 10 months ago. How depressing! In August, I turned 26, and I resolved to run a marathon in this my 26th year. After the triathlon, I gave myself a week off and a trip to Chicago and came back ready and raring to train.

Last Friday was my first scheduled long run of seven miles. On Saturday, I actually set off to do this run around 11 AM, but about two miles into the run, my knee started hurting. Crap! It was raining anyway, and my feet were wet, so I capped my run at five miles. About one week before the triathlon, I went out for a 6.5 mile run in the middle of the afternoon, and my knee started hurting after about two miles. I had to walk the last two miles back to my house.

I’m sure you’re thinking, “Sarah, maybe you shouldn’t run farther than two miles at a time. Maybe you just can’t run long distances anymore.”

I say, “That’s baloney.” What I haven’t told you is that the week after the triathlon, I completed 3 five-mile runs without any pain whatsoever. As I’m running in the rain on Saturday, I go over and over the painful runs and the painless runs in my head and try to identify possible variables that might contribute to the knee pain. There were two: time of day and my water pack. My painful runs were during the middle of the day while my painless runs were after 8 PM. Hmm…

So Monday night I did a little test. I went out for seven miles at 7:30 sans water pack. Guess what? Minimal knee pain. Whereas my normal knee pain gets up to a 6 or 7 (on a 10-point scale), it only reached a 3 or so last night. Does this prove my hypothesis correct? We’ll see.

I’m going to take marathon training a week at a time this fall. I’m moving my long runs from Fridays/Saturdays to Monday nights and see if night-time running continues to work. I’m a bit concerned about my pace. The slower I go, the longer I can run; however, my run on Monday night had an average pace time two minutes slower than my normal pace (14:00 miles rather than 12:00 miles), which adds up to a very, very long 26.2 miles.

In science, an experiment’s results are only valid if they can be repeated, so I guess we’ll see if I can go 8 pain-free miles next Monday. I’ll keep you posted…

November 9th, 2007

My Training Calendar

Update: I updated this calendar on 1/12/08 to reflect my training for the Country Music Half Marathon. I was previously planning to do the full marathon but am instead shooting for a full marathon in November ‘08. As I train for the half marathon, I’m also focusing more on strength training, speed work, and flexibility.

November 8th, 2007

I’m a Man—Er, Gal—With a Plan!

Three days after my half marathon with pain still present in my hip and hamstring, I dove off the deep end and started planning the training for my first marathon. If you’re familiar with the sitcom Friends, you’ll understand what I mean when I say I have Monica-like tendencies. I like to be organized, I like to have a plan, and I have a fetish for new office supplies.

Which marathon did I pick? The Country Music Marathon on April 26th in Nashville. I was shooting for a race a little earlier because I hate the thought of running when it’s potentially hot and humid, but I think it will be good to have extra training time this winter. The New Sarah and one or two other runners I know are putting it on their race calendars, and I figure it would be better to be hot and run with friends than to be at just the right temperature running alone.

Which training program did I pick? I like Mr. Higdon because he’s no-nonsense about his training plans and they’re really easy to tweak. Linden and I combined his novice and intermediate 10K training plans last spring; we had more time to train than he had planned, so we did the first half of the novice plan and the entire intermediate plan, sans speedwork.

I merged Mr. Higdon’s novice and intermediate marathon plans (viewable here). The novice plan starts next week and goes through the beginning of January and is four days a week. I switch to the intermediate plan in January and start running five days a week. This plan is pretty ambitious for me a couple of reasons:

First, I’ve never ran five days a week, but I want to challenge myself and see if I can do it. If in fact, I have less energy and am getting hurt after a few weeks of the five-day running, I’ll cut out the Fridays on the plan.

Second, I’m pretty sure that I re-strained my hamstring on Sunday and my hip and knee are still pretty sore, so I’m resolving to not run until everything on my left leg is better (aside from the Silver Dollar City Run to the Lights tomorrow night). Even though the plan starts on Monday, I’m OK with renegotiating the start time if I’m not better. I’ve also resolved to start strength training again when I’m healed up. A weak hamstring is probably what started all this trouble in the first place!

I know I’m borderline crazy for planning all of this so soon after my half, but I’m afraid that if I don’t have a plan, I won’t get anywhere. This will at least get me through the holidays, right?

 

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