TULOY PO KAYO sa aking munting kastilyo.... WELCOME TO KASTILYONG LAPIS ....

Dec 28, 2009

Ending the Starting Phase


Season 2: The Road To Boston
Chapter 1. Building the Foundation


1.2 Ending the Starting Phase

Belated Merry Christmas. Happy New Year!
Loving the vacation so far. Though I still have to work for two days before I could enjoy another holiday vacation.

On this last week of December, I would be squeezing a few more strength training, more core drills and a few more boxing rounds. Have I reaped or seen my rewards for these exercises? Not much. :'(

I am still over 150 pounds. The belly fats pretty much tell the truth. Hehehe. And more holiday foods to eat. Wahaha!

No sense of panic though. I haven't started to run yet and I am still pounding the heavy bag harder than I ever had and longer. Signs of not dropping any hard-earned stamina. At the boxing gym, we used to work out for three full minutes and then get to rest for 30 seconds before another tiring 3-minute session.

Following this boxing timing strategy on my own room, I set my alarm in 4-minute cycles. I spend the first 30 seconds resting and recovering.. just trying to reenergize for another intense boxing round. The last 3 minutes and 30 seconds, I get to pound the heavy bag to my delight. I am using a box-like timer. It has four faces, one on each box side. The different faces could show the actual time, the room temperature, an alarm setting and a countdown timer. The 4-minute countdown stops, beeps and then restarts (after I turn the face of the box 90-degrees to see the other timer features and turns it back again to the countdown face). It's not an easy task to turn the box with the boxing gloves on. But it's part of the workout I guess. :D

The extra 30 seconds of the 3:30-minute boxing round should help me build up my stamina. Stamina that I would be needing a lot in preparation for the Milo Marathon. For eight full rounds now, I will hit the bag with abandon. After the hard work, I feel relieved of all the stress I had prior to hitting the heavy bag.

By the numbers looking at my Training Log from Runner's World, I had 13 strength training sessions, 6 boxing days, 11 core drills sessions and a basketball game for December 2009. Not bad considering the busy holiday preparations and coming off a right knee injury.

And to end the month and the year, I would love to squeeze a few more foundation-building exercises:
  1. Strength training on Monday (28) and Wednesday (30)
  2. Core drills on Monday and Tuesday (29)
  3. Boxing on Tuesday
That should complete my December, off peak, training month. Next year, I will start running again and with a different twist. I will gladly blog about the new running plans and routines leading up to my (1) Globe 10K Race in March (2) Milo Qualifying Marathon in July (3) Boston Qualifying Marathon runs at Milo Finals, QCIM and PIM marathons. Wake me up because I'm dreaming. And dreaming big.

Happy Holidays.

Dec 22, 2009

Building the Foundation


Season 2: The Road To Boston
Chapter 1. Building the Foundation


Hello. Thanks once again for visiting my blog page. Let us keep reaching the stars out there. This time, I heard the stars in long distance running can be found in Boston Marathon. That is where we are headed for this running season. Hopefully, we would be there in the Summer of 2011 participating on the prestigious and oldest annual marathon in the planet.

For this time being, let us momentarily forget about how we will be able to fund ourselves for that expensive running journey. As they so often say, we will cross the bridge when we get there. And getting there shall be our utmost concern first. How do we qualify?

LINK: Boston Marathon Qualifying Times

For men ages 18-34, the qualifying marathon finish time is 3:10:59 hours. A difficult feat. From Pandesal Runner Adventures Season 1, we just finished a marathon in 3:55:36 hours. To qualify, we must improve tremendously. So what have we learned? Are we capable? As my Singaporean boss often asks about my submitted weekly tasks schedule, "Is it achievable?"

Frankly, I don't know. And that, my friends, fuels this journey. The unknown. The difficulties. The intangibles and the unpredictability of what lies ahead. Join me this season as we go ahead and shoot for that star in Boston. This is the Pandesal Runner Adventures Season 2: The Road To Boston.

Where do we start?

An injured right knee. A blessing in disguise. From the last marathon that I have run, I learned to take things slowly. To value the rest and recovery period. And though I have gained 10 pounds (yeah, fats are coming back), the rest period forced me to rethink, improve and reinforce my training methods. If not for those moments of inability to run, I would not have had a much stronger conviction to come back stronger.
Marathon training is about a gradual build-up, not one sudden long run a few days before a race!
For the whole of December 2009, I started to build the foundation for a successful and much enjoyable running year of 2010. I had to strengthen my leg muscles to better cope with prolonged hours of running. I figured I had to be stronger to endure the strains and stresses of a marathon run. I started strength training. The calves, hamstrings and quadriceps were the priority. Later on, I added the chest, back, trapezius muscles, arms and shoulders for a complete muscle strength training. Four times a week, I am building the foundation for a strong running body.

Here is my sample strength training week.
Mon
Tues
Wed
Thurs
Fri
Sat
Sun
Legs:
o FIT
o Calves Raises
o Half Squats
o Lunges
Legs:
o FIT
o Calves Raises
o Half Squats
o Lunges
Rest
Chest And Back:
o Bench Press
o Chest Flies
o Dead Lift
o Single-Arm Rows
o Upright Rows
o Shrugs
Rest
Arms And Shoulders:
o Shoulder Press
o Standing Bicep Curls
o Concentrated Bicep Curls
o Hammer Curls
o Triceps Extension
o Triceps Kickback
o French Press
o Reverse Flies
o Front Raise
o Lateral Raise
Rest

Endurance running requires a strong core to hold the body in a proper running form for the entire duration of the marathon run. The turnings and maneuverings against corners and fellow runners also require a strong core. To help the body hold the running form, avoid crouching and prevent pains on our lower back, we needed to strengthen our core muscles. Three to four times a week, I do core drills.

Lastly, so as not to lose our stamina without running on this recovery period. We need to cross train. I do boxing. I started the first week with light shadow boxing. No hand wraps. No gloves. No punching bags. I tried to remember how to throw the hooks, straights, jabs and uppercuts. How I should move my feet to attack, avoid, retreat and regroup. The following week, I started hitting the punching bag moving from 4 rounds to 6, to 7 and now 8 rounds per session. The cardiovascular benefits of the boxing drills are fantastic. Combination punching is mostly anaerobic. Throwing three to four combination requires explosive strength that can easily drain your energy. To be able to last 8 rounds in my third week of this cross training tells a lot about my conditioning.

Boxing really is a good cross training for runners. After heavy runs and tired legs, boxing still trains us for added strength and endurance without much leg movements (speaking of heavy bag hitting. sparring would require you to box and use your legs to avoid getting hit).

Without any running this off running season of December, I should still be able to maintain my running endurance and speed. Strength training, core drills and boxing help me a lot so as not to sacrifice all those running abilities I have gained from Season 1. More importantly, these exercises prepare me for a much tougher running assignment for 2010. After all, a Boston Qualifier (BQ) is never easy. Physically, we have to prepare. Mentally, we have to be tough and believe that it is possible regardless of the difficulty.
Do quality workouts year-round, including during the winter. You're less likely to get injured because you won't hurry the training process, and you'll race better because you build fitness on a solid foundation. - Brad Hudson, elite coach

---

Champions aren't made in the gyms. Champions are made from something they have deep inside them: a desire, a dream, a vision. - Muhammad Ali

---

When you've trained as best you can and you know your competition has done the same, nothing really matters but your mental strength and your belief. - Florence Griffith Joyner

---

Train hard. If you train hard, the fight is easy. - P4P Boxing King Manny Pacquiao

Season's Greetings
 
The Holidays are coming. Something tells me I would still bloat and go way above 150 pounds. Hehehe. Happy Holidays to all. Enjoy, have fun and cherish all the love the season brings. ;)

I have attended our company's Christmas Party and got a hydration belt on the exchange gifts. Yey! On top of that, my Nike Fury Running Watch is due to arrive on January 10, 2010. Lastly, I have also used my credit card's 20% Off holiday promo to buy my new Adidas training shoes to complement my Mizuno racing shoes. I really am getting ready and excited for my second year of running.


Me and Pete


My new marathon hydration belt from Felix




Felix and Me

  
Men In Stripes

  
Same Same

 
With Yeba, my PIM marathon support


Next up.. Chapter 2. Road Work
We will be running again and building our mileage base this January. I am so excited.. and I just can't hide it. For an inspiring Boston Marathon tale, read THIS.

Dec 16, 2009

Season 2: The Road To Boston



Introduction
I am writing my journey to qualify for the Boston Marathon. This could be a book of my failures.. or a success trail. Either way it goes, I will be a winner.

Because either way, I'll have a blueprint of my Season 2. A blueprint that could either be my mini-Bible or my mini-How-Not-To.. This will lay the principles of my young running career. Principles that could either be right or wrong.

So read my blogs with caution.. I speak my beliefs and hopes.. And only my performances could speak of the truth. The journey has begun.. Yet the fun shall never end.

The world shall be my witness.. I am running with my passion and determination. I am running to prove the unlimited guts, heart and determination that thrives in my system.. To unleash my fury and passion within and to endure the trials.. To be the runner that I am capable of becoming..

Most of all.. To enjoy this journey.. And share it with you all.. This is my fearless campaign trail for Boston.


Chapter 1. Building the Foundation
Marathon training is about a gradual build-up, not one sudden long run a few days before a race!


Chapter 2. Road Work
Good thoughts are no better than good dreams, unless they be executed. -Ralph Waldo Emerson
    2.5 Easy Runs: Taking it Real Easy
    2.6 Applied Sprinting Techniques
    2.7 Two-Week Wonders
    2.8 Longer Interval and Tempo Runs
    2.9 The Race: Did We Meet the Target?


Chapter 3: Training for the Milo Marathon
It's the athlete's job to learn to do the hard things easily. - John Jerome, The Sweet Spot in Time


Don't forget to subscribe to KL by email. I will be happy to be able to deliver my blog updates right to your Email Inbox. Thanks!

Dec 4, 2009

Pacman-Mayweather Titanic Collision is On!

The most anticipated fight of this decade is finally coming into fruition. This is a fight fan's dream fight. A gifted and terrific defensive wizard against an explosive offensive dynamo. The perfect match up of boxing styles. Three letters.. Just three letters to describe this thriller -- W-O-W.


This epic encounter made me want to hit the mitts and the punching bag once again. My fists are so eager to fly away and hit with abandon. My feet shuffles and dances like I'm atop a boxing's square ring once again. This is a fight, you would be lucky to witness once in about twenty years. Boxing experts say this is the continuation on the lines of the Ali-Frazier fights, the Leonard-Hearns encounter.. The boxing gods are certainly smiling at us boxing fans.

Here is a terrific and exciting video trailer of this titanic collision.




The early favorite has got to be Floyd Mayweather. But ever so slightly. In boxing, styles make fights. A good counter puncher almost always beats a good slugger. Equate the counter puncher to Floyd and the slugger to Manny, only this time replace the 'good' with 'great' as both boxers are two of the best of their generation. You don't often get to see that!

Another boxing cliche goes "A good big man beats a good little man." Floyd has been at welterweight (147-pound limit) for years now and he has been a super welterweight (154-pound limit) champion of the world. Pacquiao has only fought once at super lightweight (135), once at junior welterweight (140), and twice at welterweight (147, one of which was only at 145).

When heroes collide, a legend is born. In this case, both are already legendary fighters. When legends collide, you've got something more special. This is a fight to determine who is the best boxer alive today regardless of weight. Floyd was the best before he retired. Manny succeeded his throne by lopsided victories over David Diaz, Oscar Dela Hoya and Ricky Hatton.

Floyd then unretired and battered Juan Manuel Marquez, Manny's fierce rival, into a lopsided decision. To the eyes of some, Floyd has returned and reclaimed his throne. Manny then equaled Floyd's brilliant performance by trouncing the welterweight champion of the world in Miguel Cotto. The balance of power shifted back to Manny's favor.

But as long as a throne is disputed and a kingdom divided.. Chaos is inevitable. Unity must be restored and only one man shall rule them all. Will it be King Floyd or will it be King Manny? They would finally fight to settle everything once and for all.

News Reports of this much anticipated brewing collision.

Dec 2, 2009

Meet the Manny Pacquiao of the World of Running

In trying to search the internet for free tutorials on sprint running and how to run faster, I  bumped into Usain Bolt's incredible sprinting speed. The fastest man on Earth is simply amazing.

The "Lightining Bolt" Usain Bolt is a Jamaican sprinter and a three-time Olympic gold medalist. He holds the world record for the 100 metres, the 200 metres and, along with his teammates, the 4x100 metres relay. He also holds the Olympic record for all three of these races. At the 2008 Summer Olympics, Bolt became the first man to win three sprinting events at a single Olympics since Carl Lewis in 1984, and the first man to set world records in all three at a single Olympics. In 2009 he became the first man to hold the 100 and 200 m world and Olympic titles at the same time. [Bolt in Wikipedia]

Here is his truly inspiring, very informative (watch the slow motion replay of how he sprints), explosive and smashing sprint victory when he set the 100-meter World Record at the recently concluded 2009 World Championships in Berlin, Germany.



And as popular as the "Lightning Bolt" has become, the standard bearer of the sports of Running / Athletics, here is his late night interview with David Letterman. Good thing he did not pursue cricket. Haha.



Usain Bolt on David Letterman Show!

Keys to a Sub 4-Hour Marathon

When will this run ever gonna end?
If one has determination, then things will get done. - Chinese Proverb
Quite frankly, this should be a guide on what NOT to do on your first marathon. I injured my right knee and I failed by 15 minutes off my marathon finish goal (3:20 - 3:40 hours). Perhaps a 42-day marathon training schedule is too short for a marathon preparation. Hence, the injury. Perhaps my lack of mileage, again perhaps due to shorter than optimal training schedule, deprived me of my dream finish time.

On the other side of the coin, the side I believe is more important, I learned a lot from the marathon experience and the entire process of the marathon dream. Looking back, I logged around 300 kilometers of running to prepare for my marathon debut. Of those 300, 42 kilometers were during the race. The rest, which we shall discuss hereon, were all hard work and perseverance leading up to the marathon race. How did I train myself for the sub 4-hour marathon? What were the key marathon principles that boost my performance that day? What can future marathoners learn from my own marathon experience? What can we learn and carry over to the next marathon challenge?

The planning stage. Do you want to run a marathon?
  1. Have a marathon strategy. It's not enough to decide that you will run a marathon. Answer the How question next.
  2. Have a marathon training schedule. The When question should be planned and prepared for.
  3. The How dictates the When.
Deliberating with myself on How I would like to run my first marathon... I decided to be aggressive and fast enough for a 3:20 - 3:40 hours finish. I am not necessarily fast enough at the planning stage. I just wanted to be fast enough at marathon day.

Now that I know How I would like to run my marathon. I then tackled the When. I needed to carefully plan and create a training schedule to equip myself to be able to run aggressive and fast enough (the How question). I reckoned, at that time, that a 42-Day training schedule would be needed to achieve my goals. The time frame easily dictated which marathon I would run. A marathon that would fit the 42-day training schedule. I joined the Philippine International Marathon scheduled on November 08, 2009.

After the planning stage, it's time to do some tough road work.
So how did I get fast enough to achieve a 3:55 finish?
Here, I believe, were the keys to my sub 4-hour marathon debut.
  • Get Faster.
  • Stay Fast for Longer Distances - Speed Endurance.
  • Practice.. Practice.. Practice.

Get Faster

To be fast, I needed to do some speed work. I prioritized speed training in the starting weeks of my marathon schedule. I did 10x400meter Interval Runs.

The idea is to run as fast (sprint / run till you puke) as you can for 400 meters.. [as if your life depended on it, a split second late and a croc or a werewolf tears your behind] and then rest for a few hundred meters.. [pretend you have just beaten the croc or the werewolf by the slimmest of seconds and they suddenly disappeared in the dusts of your shoes].. and then sprint again [like you are being chased once again..].

Do the 400meter repeats ten times. Little by little, you will get used to the speed.. your running form adjusts with that speed.. your lungs feel to be getting bigger and bigger as you get used to the sprinting speed.. the heart beats much faster than normal and yet you feel it can already adapt to the stress of sprinting.. little by little, the body adapts. You are being trained to get faster.

Next.. carry the interval speed to your Tempo runs. By now, you already know how to run at top speed. Your next goal is to run as close to that speed for distances longer than 400 meters. Tempo runs are good to let the body adapt and memorize your race speed. Try to do your best 1K. Then your best 3K. Then progress to your best 5K, then to 10K. I remember breaking my best 10K race from 51 minutes to a 10K training speed of 46 minutes. That's how effective the speed work was.

Test your speed on a short distance race. Join a 5K race. Training is still pretty much different from a race. There are several race factors that training would not be able to prepare you for. The crowd, adrenaline rush, time of day, race route, etc. The 5K race was the last part of my speed training. I joined the Race for LIFE 5K distance. I finished it in 21 minutes, a 6th place overall finish. From doing intervals, to tempo runs, to a 5K race.. I got faster.

KL Speed Training References:
- HIIT - blog and logs
- More HIIT - more logs
- Race For LIFE, My 5K Race


Stay Fast for Longer Distances - Speed Endurance

After the 400meters and the 5kilometers, the next phase would be to carry the speed to longer distances. Longer Tempo runs would be the key runs to ensure running fast and carrying the speed. I did 14 - 21 kilometer Tempo runs. The anaerobic high intensity training from the Interval Runs should be able to prepare you for longer Tempos. But unlike the Intervals, Tempos are high speed runs for much longer distances. Your goal is to train and try to sustain that high speed - speed endurance.

The more commonly known endurance is the strength endurance or stamina. And it is just equally important, if not more important than speed endurance, for the marathon race distance. You don't want to crash and burn after the halfway mark, right? Long runs of 21 - 35 kilometers, at a slower pace, will develop this much needed stamina for us to run the full marathon distance.

Practice.. Practice.. Practice.

During the last two weeks prior to the marathon, do race simulation runs. Basically, these runs are just tempo runs slightly modified to meet your marathon strategy. I have adapted this training run from Ryan Hall, the fastest American marathoner today. You could simulate the 42kilometer run for both endurance and adapting to race pace. Ryan does his marathon simulations by running the first 21 kilometers in his slow pace and then the next 21 kilometers in his race pace.

You could also simulate your different running paces for several kilometers. I created my own 21-10-8 marathon strategy with the first 21 kilometers to be ran in 4:40 pace, a recovery pace for 1 kilometer, the next 10 kilometers at 4:30 pace, another recovery pace then the next 8 kilometers at 4:30 pace. I practiced this strategy over and over until it becomes all too familiar. Make the body adapt and memorize the paces, the running conditions and the fatigue. [My Marathon Training Strategy, Simulations and Logs]