Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Eugene Marathon Training

PURPOSE: This round of training targets the Eugene Marathon on May 1st. We gradually increase the length of weekly long runs, preparing you for a safe and satisfying finish. This is the 25th edition of the Eugene Running Company-sponsored Joe’s Team.

LOCATIONS: Most of our runs start and finish at the Eugene Running Company (116 Oakway Center, 541-344-6399). About 1½ miles of each run is on city streets. The remainder follows the scenic and safe riverside bike path with its marked distances. Some restrooms and water fountains are shut down in winter in winter months.

COSTS: The fee for marathon training is $100 (payable at the store and due before your program begins). This fee covers coaching services. Other benefits of team membership are discounts (at the store) or donated goods and services (by sponsors and friends). You pay your own race entry fee. If you haven’t already entered, do so soon. This step is important, because early entry not only saves you money but also seals your commitment.

Enter at: eugenemarathon.com

ADVISER: Joe Henderson planned this program and is on hand to advise you most weekends. Experienced runners on staff at the Running Company are also available to assist you. You can reach Joe anytime by email (joesrunteam@gmail.com) or text (541-953-7179). Previews and results appear at joesmarathonteam.blogspot.com. You’re also invited to join the Facebook group, Joe’s Team Runners.

PREREQUISITES: We want no one to go too far, too soon. A recent run of at least six miles is highly recommended before entering this program. We also advise that you come into the program with no injury that might interfere with increasing your distances. If you already train beyond the scheduled distances for our early weeks, you can join the group training later.

GROUP RUNS: We focus on the long run, the most important one by far for a would-be marathoner. Runs increase by an average of one mile per week. The pace of the runs is meant to be relaxed, especially if you are running these distances for the first time. Walk breaks are an option to make the distances more manageable.

From February onward, training alternates between a long run one Sunday and about half that length the next weekend. Your shorter Sunday runs can at a somewhat faster pace than the longer ones, for speed training – or the same pace at this shorter distance, for recovery.

You benefit the most from this program if you take all of these runs with the group (at the prescribed distances and no farther). However, we realize that conflicts come up. If you miss running with us, try to cover a similar distance on or near the same day it is scheduled here.

TRAINING PROGRAM

Runs begin at the Running Company, at 8:00 A.M. on Sundays. A course preview is posted on our blog before each week’s run, and results appear there afterward. Bring your preferred drinks and other supplies for delivery during your runs. Cottage Grove half-marathoners will train with you, usually at the same distances, through mid-February. Runners training for the Eugene Half will begin in late February, at shorter distances than yours.

Date – Distance

January 3rd – 7 miles to start marathon training
January 10th – 8 miles
January 17th – 9 miles
January 24th – 10 miles
January 31st – 11 miles

February 7th – 6 miles
February 14th – 13.1 miles
February 21st – 7 miles
February 28th – 15 miles

March 6th – 8 miles (Joe is away)
March 13th – 17 miles
March 20th – 9 miles
March 27th – 19 miles

April 3rd – 10 miles
April 10th – 21 miles
April 17th – 10 miles
April 24th – one hour

May 1st – Eugene Marathon at 7:00


OTHER RUNS: We urge you to run at least three days during the week. With distances increasing quickly here, you need to keep all other runs easy (even easier than they normally might be) to allow full recovery between long ones. The recommended length, in time, is 30 to 60 minutes – or a total of one to two hours for the week, not counting the Sunday run.

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Portland Marathon Results

Any marathon you finish is a good one. Any day when we have a 100-percent finish rate is a great one, and today was one of those.

Special praise to the Welkers, Jeanette and Joy, for their big PRs. And to Michele Clemo for finishing her first marathon. And to Leah Kirkland for running her first with us. Michele and Leah are numbers 301 and 302 in our all-time count of marathoners.

Thanks to Richard Maher and Neal Benson for finding me a spot at the finish line. And to Audrey Blankenship for sharing a spot for the early miles.

PORTLAND MARATHON RESULTS

(with official time and per-mile pace; * = faster than last long training run)

Michele -- 5:58:03 (13:40 pace) debut at longest distance ever
Jean -- 5:13:39 (11:59s) 10th anniversary as a marathoner, where it all began
*Chris -- 6:01:35 (13:49s) 10th anniversary at Portland
*Leah -- 4:37:12 (10:35s) first marathon with our team
Cindy -- 5:13:43 (11:59s) finished despite illness
*Jeanette -- 4:29:09 (10:17s) PR by 20 minutes!
Joy -- 4:07:10 (9:27s) PR by 9 minutes!
*Rhonda -- 5:05:21 (11:40s) 3rd marathon or longer in 2 months

Others with team ties:

Rashi Arora -- 3:53 (8:53s) at Twin Cities; PR by 15 minutes!; trained "virtually" with us
David Blankenship -- 4:58:42 (11:25s) recent team alum
Amy Goddard -- 4:50:34 (11:06s) training with EWEB Half with us
Jennifer Howard -- 3:37:45 (8:19s) ran with Wednesday speed group
Jenn Lewis -- 3:37:45 (8:19s) from Eugene Running Company
Jeanine Miller -- 5:46:48 (13:15s) recent team alum
Trevor Steele -- 4:15:11 (9:45s) ran with Wednesday speed group
Duke Wang -- 5:15:28 (12:02s) trained some with us

WEEK 19 LESSON: YOUR NEXT

Question: How soon can I run my next marathon after finishing this one

Answer: How does six months later sound? You could run another one much sooner (as soon as a month later, according to the usual recovery timetable). But two marathons per year is a reasonable limit, which is why I schedule only two annual rounds of training for our team. This leaves half the year free to do something other than train for and recover from marathons. Spring and fall are the best times to run this distance because our weather is most reliably cool and dry then. Though we target races in those seasons, it also means doing most of the training in wet Oregon winters and warm summers. If you want to run races in those seasons, keep them shorter.