10K, workout #22.5

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It's core/cross-training day again – an hour of circuit training at the gym at work. Not much else to say, except that I enjoyed it, and did a lot of rope jumping again.

enter image description here Photo by Alora Griffiths on Unsplash

10K, workout #22

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Today, I will do a 'climax run' with the athletics club.

The workout

A climax run is a run in which the intervals mostly become shorter as the workout progresses, but also more intense. In this particular workout, I ran 4, 3, 2, 1K at 85%, 95%, 100% and 110% of my 15K pace.

Afterwards

I still felt tired from the yasso's and the long run, but the workout itself went well. Apart from one 1K in the third interval where I lost track of pacing a bit, I was able to keep the pace steady. This was a nice, pretty hard workout.

Workout data

If you want to see the workout, check it out on Garmin or on Strava.

10K, workout #21

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A long run, which I had to squash in between work and having dinner with friends. Schedule was tight, got tighter by not delayed and cancelled trains.

The workout

An 18K long run in heart rate zone 2, pace around 5:00/8:00. As I was really late already, I decided to make it 17K and have five minutes to shower before running of to dinner.

enter image description here Photo by Marc Kleen on Unsplash

Afterwards

I felt rushed, because I was late already and this does not enhance the pleasure of a long run. Anyway, the running was okay, although I could definitely feel my legs were still tired from the yasso's. But hey, an easy run is meant to be easy on the legs as well, so staying in zone 2 did work here. Besides that, it was just a long run.

Workout data

If you want to see the workout, check it out on Garmin or on Strava.

10K, workout #20

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Yesterday was a recovery day – although I did a bit of cross-training on my indoor bike (an hour of 8 minute heart-rate zone 3 efforts). Today it's Yasso time!

The workout Today the schedule tells me it's time for Yasso's. A yasso (see Runner's World) is a 800m run which you run in the time of your marathon, in terms of minutes and seconds. For instance, a runner aiming at a marathon in 3 hours and 30 minutes should run a yasso in 3 minutes and 30 seconds. Recovery is the same time as the yasso.

Of course you can clock these times, which is especially easy on a track (which is, after all, 400m), I find it handy to use kilometer or mile pace, which spans 1000 or 1609 meters. You can calculate this yasso pace at the calculators page.

Today I'm doing 8 yasso's, each in 2:50 (pace around 3:30/5:38).

Afterwards The first yasso (or any interval for that matter) usually sucks, as it did this time. I think it has to do with finding the right pace. The rest went well, a bit too fast, but it felt good. Sometimes I do yasso's on the track, but not this time, which meant finding a stretch of road without traffic lights.

enter image description here Photo by Priscilla Du Preez on Unsplash

A yasso workout always feels like hard work, which it should, of course, but it's a quality workout which I really like doing.

Workout data If you want to see the workout, check it out on Garmin or on Strava.

10K, tune-up race #2

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Today, a second tune-up race, although this one was a bit short for a distance runner like me. In Rotterdam, the Maastunnel has been in renovation for two years and today was the new opening, with all kinds of festivities and, as the organization calls it, the unofficial National Championship Mile – the Maastunnel Mile.

The race

As the name suggests, this race was a mile long, a bit longer than the tunnel itself. As it is a tunnel, we started downhill and ended uphill. Not ideal, but a lot of fun. Check out the race at Hopasports.

enter image description here Coming out of the tunnel, near the end of the Mile. Thanks to Percy van As for the picture.

Afterwards

It was a lot of fun. There were nice people and the overal atmosphere was very Rotterdam-like, just friendly and no-nonsense.

After a warming-up of about two kilometers, I had to wait for my starting wave. There were three waves, going from slower to fastest. As I had to wait for the last wave, I got really cold, but one of my team mates was in the second wave and gave me his plastic bag to hold me warm. Nice! I set my goal to a tempo of 3:10/5:10, so the same pace I tried out yesterday during the 3*800m workout. My goal finish time was 5:10 for the mile.

The running was good – no aches, no being out of breath, just going fast and trying to hold the pace. Going uphill at the end actually felt better than I had anticipated and as I could do and end sprint, I probably could have gone a bit faster, but this felt good and finishing in 5:08 aiming at 5:10 felt great.

After the race, I ran back home (about 8K) in an easy pace. It was a good day.

Race data and results

If you want to see the workout, check it out on Garmin or on Strava. The official results can be found on this Hopasports page.

enter image description here The results. My official finishing time was 5:08, but you can see how accurate Stryd was – given that the 20 meters extra could well have been caused by my late button pressing.

PS It was nice having Stryd for this race. Being in a tunnel means no GPS, but Stryd appears to be very accurate in pace and distance, which helped pacing a lot.

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