Saturday, December 28, 2013

Training To Be Your Best: December 30th- January 5th

Christmas has come and gone and when New Years is over, the dust will finally settle and the chaos of the winter break will subside, allowing us to get some quality training back under our belt.  You have big goals for the spring so we need to get on the ball!  After easing back in last week, it is time to start preparing for track again.  The spring training should build off the fall, and for track we will get a little bit more complex.  Continue to be open with your training, and allow yourself to try new things that may not fit the traditional distance runner mold.  Remember, you need to treat yourself like an athlete, because you are!


Dress warm and get after it!

Monday- 40 minutes easy, 8x strides
Tuesday- 35 minutes of Ins and Outs.  Full Warmup. Strength Workout A
Wednesday- 12x Progressive 150s.  Start off at strides pace and ease into roughly 95% of your maximal capacity by the last 20-30 meters.  This should keep you controlled.  Either 250m walk recovery or 3 minutes. Full warmup.  If the weather is too cold and your body does not feel warmed up properly, you may substitute a 45 minute distance run.
Thursday- 45 minutes easy, 8x strides
Friday- 6x400 @ xc 5k effort, 400m jog recovery.  Full Warmup. Strength Workout B.
Saturday- 45 minutes easy, 8x strides
Sunday- Off

Legend:
Warm Up- A few minutes jogging, dynamic stretching, a few strides
Easy- A pace you can handle and have a conversation at the same time. Relaxed.
Tempo Run- A distance run at a pace of 5k race pace plus 30 seconds per mile.
Ins and Outs- Striding the straights and jogging the turns on the track
Strides- Not a sprint! Simply a short pickup of 50-100 meters at around 1-2 mile race pace. Full recovery.
Sprints- Not a stride! This is near maximal effort (while maintaining control of your body). Form is crucial in this type of running.
Progression Run- Training done at progressive pace that increases throughout the run. Begin at an easy pace and finish at 5k race effort or so for the last few minutes.
Fartlek- A run of varied pace for varied time which can be anywhere from an easy jog to hard sprinting.
Hills- Not all out sprints, good paced effort around 5k race effort. Can be anywhere between 100-400 meters long.
Workout A- 10-30x pushups, 10-30x prisoner squats, 10-30x lunges, 10-30x crunches, 30-60 seconds of planks on each side and the middle, and 30-60 seconds of Australian crawl.
Workout B- 20-40x step ups, 5-20x tricep pushups, 30-60 seconds of bridging, 10-20x dips, 30-60 seconds of pedestal, and 30-60 seconds of scissor kicks.

Interview with Coach Joel Bernard

Continuing with the interview series, this interview comes from a coach from California who has had his share of success.  Coach Joel Bernard of Hughson High School gives us some insight into what he has done in the past couple decades.


Coach Bernard's team from Hughson High School

Chaz Caiado:  Coach Bernard, can you give us a short biography of you and your team profile including any honors won either team or individual?

Joel Bernard:  I hold BA in P.E. and a M.S. in Exercise Physiology.  I was hired at Hughson High in 1998 to teach special education.  Our school used to host a country program for Severely Emotionally Disturbed students.  Someone told me I’d be good at that, so I applied.  During the interview I found out that the track coach at HHS had just retired, so I told the panel I’d love to coach the track team and since the football team was coming off a state championship, I said I could coach football as well.  My first year at HHS I was very lucky to be able to coach Alexandra Guerrero. She had previously run times of 5:19 for 1600m and 11:26 for 3200m as an 10th grader.  Since we did not have a cross country program at HHS when I arrived, she was running with a rival school (Riverbank High, which would later produce German Fernandez).  As a junior she won a section title while training with our rival, then went on to finish, I believe 19th in the state Division 4 race.  My first chance to coach her was in the spring of 1999.  She was in good shape coming into the season, running 11:00.74 at a very early season all comers meet. My goal was pretty much not to screw her up.  She ended up that year running 10:40 for 3200m to take 6th at the track state meet, a few weeks after that, we went to Denton, Texas for the USATF junior meet, where she placed 5th in the 3k.  The following year, she dropped her time to 10:30, placing 2nd at the Golden West Invite (back before NBN and NON, GWI was THE post season meet).  Back then that time was good enough for #8 in the United States.  We went back to Denton in 2000, where she placed 3rd in the 5k, beating that year’s Footlocker champ, Victoria Chang of Hawaii.

The other really notable girl that I’ve had run for me is Becky Hobby.  She posted PRs 2:18, 5:01, and 11:05 on the track.  During the cross country season of 2009, Becky ran 18:25 at the Woodward Park course to place 5th in the Division 4 race.

Team wise, we’ve had a lot more success with the boys than with the girls, but individual wise, our top dogs have been girls.  It wasn’t until this year that we had a boy win an individual section championship in cross.  Our boys have never been outside of the top 3 at our league meet except for the first year we had a team.  We finished 4th that year.  The boys have never been outside of the top 8 at the section meet sine the second year I coached the team.  We’ve qualified for state 4 times as a team with the boys, placing 10th in 2003.

My current top boy, Zach Morrett has been a really interesting kid to coach.  One of my other athletes recruited him during freshman roundup in 2010.  He was the last kid I would have picked out of a lineup as a star runner, but he found his niche in cross and has been on an uninterrupted upward trajectory for the past 4 years.  Winning the D4 section meet in cross was a really nice feather in his cap.  He was hoping for a top 10 finish at state, but his legs were just not very peppy there and he finished 15th with a time of 16:14.  The aim for track this year is to go sub 9:20 for 3200.   Zach is naturally geared for the longer distances.  His 1600 PR is only 4:38, but he’s run a 9:37 for 3200m.  He will likely run the 10k in college.

Our track teams have had quite a bit of success lately.  Our boys have won the last 3 league titles and our girls have won 2 of the last 3.  Our girls also won a divisional section title in 2011

(note:  California schools compete in divisions for cross country, our division for cross country is loosely defined as having schools sized from 501 students to 1250 students)  In track, there are no divisions for the state meet, but there are divisions up until the week after league meets, where we have team section championships.  Simply qualifying for state is extremely difficult.  To get to state, our kids have to first qualify out of our league meet by placing top 3.  The next week, they have to qualify individually out of one of the 3 divisional meets, for us that means placing in the top 5.  The following week, they run at the Sac Joaquin Section Masters Meet against the top runners from all the other divisions in our section, and have to finish in the top 3 to advance to state.  The SJS, last time I checked, has 198 high schools. )

CC: Your school is of small to moderate size but you are piecing together a good program with some solid front runners.  What challenges to you face with your team and what measures do you take to overcome them? 

JB: As I mentioned before, when I got to HHS, we didn’t have a cross country team and didn’t have any distance runners to speak of (except for Alex Guerrero).  As a matter of fact, that first track season, Alex was our only runner to break 5 in the 1600.  Toward the end of my first year at HHS, I went to the AD and asked if I could start a Cross Country team.  His only stipulation for saying yes, is that I wouldn’t try to recruit kids away from football.

The first year with cross was really challenging.  I had Alex, who was one of the better runners in California and I had 2 boys that had run track for me as freshmen.  The rest of our team was made up of, to put it politely, fringe kids who thought that cross country would be cool because it was the un-football.  That was a group that I could not really trust.  Quite a few times, I would tell them to go off for a warm up, then catch them sneaking off into an orchard to sit around.  My two sophomore boys that had run track for me the previous year ran pretty well.  Nic Dodd placed 17th at our section meet that year.

The following year, only 3 of the fringers came back (2 boys and one girl).  I put special emphasis on getting over to our junior high feeder and making presentations for the PE classes.  The following year, I had a pretty good freshman class come in.  The top boy out of that class was Ernesto Madrigal (now FATHER Madrigal).  Ernesto, Nic and the 3rd dependable boy, Gabe Pitman, made up the nucleus of our team for the next 3 years.

The hardest thing to do at Hughson was to build a culture.  I feel like, after 15 years, I might finally have a handle on the thing, but it can evaporate quickly.  After our section title in 2003, we graduated all but 2 of our boys.  One of those was kind of a flaky kid and the other had to stop running after suffering a spontaneous collapsed lung.  Without any senior leadership, the team culture that I thought I had developed went out the window.  It took a good 5 years to finally get the team back to the right mindset.  I learned the hard way that once, as a coach, you let the wrong type of attitude linger on the team, it is really difficult to root out.

What really allowed our team to turn the corner about 4 years ago is when we stopped talking about trying to win.  I made the focus for each kid to simply be the best runner he or she could possibly be.  I made sure to start praising the little things that kids were doing right rather than simply praising good results or fast times.  I’ve been trying to emphasize that success in distance running is dependent on hard work and dedication. Once I started praising effort and stopped praising the talented slackers for being fast, the team attitude came around pretty quickly.

CC: Can you describe your teams training for cross country and track and how your training differs, if there is any different?

JB: There isn’t a whole lot of difference for us between the two seasons.  During track, we will pay more attention to running at various race paces, but for our mile/2mile kids, the general framework is the same.  

CC: How do you train your female athletes different than your male athletes?

JB: My training groups are broken down based on 2 categories: 1. Previous training volume and 2. training pace. For cross, our top 2 training groups run about the same volume, but the second group runs a little bit slower.  Usually, my top girls will be in this second group.  Only Becky and Alex have ever trained in the top training group.  I have 4 groups all together usually.  Groups 3 and 4 are pretty evenly balanced between boys and girls.

I am beginning to re-think this strategy a bit.  For our top girls, the way I group the kids seems to work pretty well.  The downside is that it is very hard for the girls to develop as a cohesive unit.  I will probably try to have my varsity girls’ team train all together next fall.

For Track, the training groups are based on event first, then experience, then racing speed.  Boys and girls train together in these groups as well.

CC:  Distance running is an intense mental sport.  How do you help your athletes prepare for training and racing from the psychological side?

JB:  Every kid is different.  This year, I think my biggest mistake with Zach was to try to build him up mentally.  He already puts a lot of pressure on himself.  Leading up to state, I told him a number of times that I thought he could get into the top 5.  I think that ended up being too much for him.  He had run 16:02 on the state course in early October, but despite being in much better shape 7 weeks later, he ran 12 seconds slower.  So, with runners like Zach, the attitude has to be, “hey, let’s just get in the best shape possible, then line up and let it rip”.  Other kids maybe don’t have the same internal motivation or confidence and they need more of the building up.  I think that in general, my kids are pretty driven, so the best thing I can do for them is to keep workouts and meets light and fun.

CC:  What steps do you take to prevent injuries on your team, and how do you deal with injuries when they arise?

JB:  We do core work twice a week.  We stretch daily after practice.  I keep an arsenal of foam rollers in my store room and encourage the kids to come in after practice and roll out anything that is sore.  This makes for kind of a cross country party in my classroom after practice.  Kids rolling around on the floor, icing, rubbing on smelly liniments…

Our school was forced cut shop classes after the 2008 economic downturn.  For our distance runners, this has been a blessing. I’ve been able to round up a few exercise bikes, a rowing machine, and an elliptical trainer and put them in the old wood shop.  When kids start to get a little hurt, they head over to “The Room of Shame” (their term, not mine) to spend time on the bikes.

CC:  Do you have any team building exercises that you think foster the team atmosphere in your program?

JB:  For cross, we do a camp in the Sierra’s every summer.  While we are up there, we play team building games.  This season, I didn’t really do a lot of team building stuff once the season started.  The group I had was super cohesive already.  Really, the only thing we did this year was an occasional game of Ultimate Frisbee, or Capture the Flag. 

We used to have a pool on campus, but it would have needed $500,000 worth of repairs.  Before it went away, we would do some pool workouts if the weather was too hot in August or early September.  The kids really liked that. (You would probably scoff at our idea of heat, but it can be as hot as 105 when we practice at the beginning of the school year.)

CC:  Since the early 2000s distance running has taken off to previously unheard of levels in the US.  Do you feel the coaching side of the sport has improved in the past decade or are better athletes joining the sport?

JB:  First of all, I would disagree with your statement that the levels of success were unheard of in the US prior to 2000. We had some stud runners in the 70s.  Frank Shorter and Bill Rodgers in the Marathon, guys like Rudy Chapa and Eric Hulst in high school.  Of the 7 high schoolers to break 30 min for 10k, only one (Mo Trafeh) has done it since the 80s. You are correct that running has greatly improved since 2000, but I think we are back to about where we were 30-35 years ago.

I think it has been the internet. From where I’m sitting, I don’t see superior athletes coming in to the sport.  I see more coaches who have access to all kinds of free training info now that maybe they would have had to go to a clinic or buy a book to get before.

I think the biggest factor has been that coaches have re-discovered distance training.  When I first started coaching at Westmont High, in 1991, my kids were doing 45-50 mpw and everybody was looking at us like we were crazy. Nowadays, it seems like 45-50 is the floor mileage for teams that are any good and that many of the better squads do much more. Back in the Day, guys like Eric Hulst were running over 100 mpw and Lindgren was running over 200 mpw at times.

Also, I think there has been a movement away from the “very hard” “very easy” training modality.  I used to have my kids running workouts like 6x800 at significantly faster than 3200m goal pace. The faster they would run, the slower they would have to go the next day.  I try to avoid that pattern now.  It seems like every time we slip into that training mode, we end up racing really flat. It seems like most of the good coaches have gone away from the very hard interval workouts in favor of more volume, more tempo, and when they do assign intervals, there is a clear speed limit posted.

CC:  How do you evaluate talent and help place athletes in different events?

JB:  My policy for track has always been to let kids flutter around to different events early in the season until they find one they like. The cross county kids usually gravitate to the distance events, but last year, two of my kids ended up going 1-2 in our league pole vault competition.

Last year, I stepped back from the head track coaching job because I needed a break.  The new coach instituted a battery of tests: 40 yds., vertical jump, 1 minute push ups, 1 minute sit ups, pull up max, and I think a 12 minute run for distance.  I thought it was a great idea and was all for it.  It took about a week to rotate everyone through all of the tests. After all that, I think the kids still pretty much ended up in the events they wanted to do

CC: And lastly, what do you think is the single most important ingredient for a team to have to be successful?

JB:  Culture:  You have to have the environment where kids are all striving to be the best athletes they can possibly be.  Praise dedication to the process and you’ll be well on your way to building a good program.


CC:  Once again, thanks a lot for your time, I really appreciate it!

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Training To Be Your Best: December 23rd-29th

Alright, so we are back in business!  The school semester is over, Christmas is here, and weather is great (okay, maybe not for everybody)!  The coming track season is a month away, or two months away for those states that don't have indoor track, and it is time to start thinking about the future.  How do you want the first half of 2014 to play out?  I'm going to help guide you through the winter and spring to prepare you for a great track season ahead.  Now this season will be a little more tricky to navigate between indoor and outdoor state meet dates, but I'm going to do my best to give you guys ideas of where you should be at in your training.  Since Louisiana has indoor and outdoor track and both are within a week or two of many state meets, I'm going to keep those dates as the ones to use.  Indoor state is February 22nd and Outdoor state is May 10th.  If you have any questions about how these dates will compare to your state meet, please email me at vpprotraining@gmail.com.  Good luck this year!


Even if it's winter, it is still time to hit up the trails!

So this will be the first week back, and honestly there is nothing special about this training week.  Not that there needs to be.  You want to ease back into the training and be mentally and physically ready to go for next week to start getting into track shape.  This week you need to start thinking about your track goals and the amount of work you are willing to put in to achieve them.  

Monday- 15-20 minutes easy
Tuesday- 20-25 minutes easy
Wednesday- Christmas Day! Off
Thursday- 20-25 minutes easy
Friday- 20-30 minutes easy, 8x strides, Workout A
Saturday- 25-35 minutes easy, 8x strides
Sunday- Off

Legend:
Warm Up- A few minutes jogging, dynamic stretching, a few strides
Easy- A pace you can handle and have a conversation at the same time. Relaxed.
Tempo Run- A distance run at a pace of 5k race pace plus 30 seconds per mile.
Ins and Outs- Striding the straights and jogging the turns on the track
Strides- Not a sprint! Simply a short pickup of 50-100 meters at around 1-2 mile race pace. Full recovery.
Progression Run- Training done at progressive pace that increases throughout the run. Begin at an easy pace and finish at 5k race effort or so for the last few minutes.
Fartlek- A run of varied pace for varied time which can be anywhere from an easy jog to hard sprinting.
Hills- Not all out sprints, good paced effort around 5k race effort. Can be anywhere between 100-400 meters long.
Workout A- 10-30x pushups, 10-30x prisoner squats, 10-30x lunges, 10-30x crunches, 30-60 seconds of planks on each side and the middle, and 30-60 seconds of Australian crawl.
Workout B- 20-40x step ups, 5-20x tricep pushups, 30-60 seconds of bridging, 10-20x dips, 30-60 seconds of pedestal, and 30-60 seconds of scissor kicks.

Saturday, December 7, 2013

December Update of All Things Good

Ahh, December!  Christmas time, New Years is coming up, and cross country has just ended!   Well actually, there is still another week of cross country.  Nike Cross Nationals is today in Portland Meadows and next week is the Footlocker Cross Country Nationals.  Both meets showcase some of the top runners in the country who you can expect to see running in the NCAA within the next couple years. Dyestat and Milesplit have coverage of these events for you.

Our cross country season in Louisiana just ended and I made a post about what the John Curtis and Southern Athletics runners accomplished this year.  It was great all-around.  Nike South Regional was a blast as well.  Next year I hope to pursue the team Louisiana for the Footlocker South regional again. This year there was not the support we needed to go, but hopefully runners will start to recognize the value of competing at the highest level!  Starting in January we will begin the LHSAA Indoor Track season and LSU has just completed their upgrade to the indoor facility.

Over the next week I will be finishing up finals at Tulane and will be graduating this year, so the past few weeks have been pretty intense!  Not to mention next weekend I will be taking three classes at the USTFCCCA National Convention in Orlando, Florida and also taking the tests associated the courses that week.  So more or less I will still be doing a lot of catching up!  But like I promised, the regular weekly articles on training and running news will be back around the week before or of Christmas.  I know you guys are excited!

Lastly, the plans for Vintage Performance and Southern Athletics are rolling along.  I'm putting together the summer schedule for SA as meet information comes out I will post it on the Training and Racing page.  Anyway, see you guys in a week or two!


A picture from Dyestat showing the snow at Portland Meadows!

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Cross Country Season In Review

It was an eventful cross country season and I am still recovering!  I'm happy to say that we had several individuals athletes in addition to the teams from John Curtis that had a great season.  I wanted to recap the accomplishments of the runners who run for JC in addition to the athletes that trained with Southern Athletics in the summer or the fall.



John Curtis Boys-
Louisiana 3A State Champions (25 points)
5 All-State Class Top 10 (Devyn Keith, Austin Brown, Trey Stewart, Christian Paz, Zachary Barthel)
Composite All-State Devyn Keith
3A State Champion Devyn Keith
Nike South Regional Top 40 Finish Devyn Keith
Nike South Regional Cross Country Championship Race Appearance (2nd in a row)
District 11-3A Champions (3rd year in a row)
Northshore Metro Runner-Up
New Orleans Metro Runner-Up
Metro Champion Devyn Keith
3 New Orleans All-Metro (Devyn Keith, Austin Brown, Christian Paz)
District Champion Dwayne Woodfox
School Record 2 Miles XC Devyn Keith 10:08
School Record 3 Miles XC Devyn Keith 15:38
School Record 5k XC Devyn Keith 16:16

John Curtis Girls-
Louisiana 3A State Runner-Ups
2 All-State Class Top 10 (Hannah Ivory, Troianna Gause)
Composite All-State Hannah Ivory
3A State Runner-Up Hannah Ivory
All-New Orleans Metro Hannah Ivory
School Record 2 Miles XC Hannah Ivory 12:40
School Record 3 Miles XC Hannah Ivory 19:27
School Record 5k XC Hannah Ivory 20:53

Southern Athletics Athletes-
Dionysia Love- All-New Orleans Metro
Jeanee Romero- All-State Class 4A Top 10
Thomas Kelton- Livingston Parish Runner-Up
Fernando Paz- Qualifier National Christian College Athletic Association National XC Championship
Dustin Kinard- Southland Conference Championship competitor for University of New Orleans

And not to forget all the John Curtis Track and Field athletes competing in the LHSAA 3A Football  State Title game in two weeks!

Once again, great job guys!

Monday, November 11, 2013

November Update of All Things Good

Hey guys, I know it seems I've been a bit behind the curve the past few weeks, but all with good reason.  The season and the semester are at a very busy phase, though everything should be calmed down by Thanksgiving break.  The Louisiana state cross country championships are coming up next Monday and Tuesday (yes, I know, really late in the year) so the team has been working hard to prepare for the home stretch.  We placed highest we ever had last week at the New Orleans metro championship where we compete against schools with over a thousand students (we have under 400 total boys and girls in high school) so the steady progression is something any coach can be happy with.  Going into the state meet the boys have the opportunity to compete for the title while the girls have a realistic chance to place top 5!  Also, there are several other runners who ran with Southern Athletics this summer who are competing for various schools across the state and I will compile their accomplishments once the season is over so people can know how hard we worked in summer track!

The weekly training guide I have been posting will take a short hiatus now that the season is over although by the middle of December I should be posting track training.  I hope that if you followed the cross country guide you had a good season.  Feel free to email me and update me on your success! After this year I will compile the training posts into one document so you can follow the training each year.  I will make a few minor adjustments (as coaches always do) to make the training better for the next go round.

As far as the weekend reads I've been posting in the Knowledge Is Power section, I do plan on doing them again, but it may be a bit spread out until the school semester is over.  There are a lot of exciting storylines going on in the world of track and field, especially for the high school age group, and I want to keep you kept up on it!

Unfortunately, the team Louisiana for Footlocker South this year has not come to fruition because of some scheduling conflicts by the athletes, but nevertheless I will work to try the team out for next year.

Also, my company, Vintage Performance, plans on making a big push in the new year to help athletes (and ordinary people!) across south Louisiana and further so expect more information about that in the future.  I'm also starting to put together the information for next summers Southern Athletics team so if you are interested in joining let me know and I can get you in on the fun.  I hope you are enjoying your winter so far.  It's been a cool 75 degrees the past few days down here!


Track in 2014 is going to be an amazing year!

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Training To Be Your Best: November 11th-19th

State!  The season is coming to completion.  For this week I will write the training for a Saturday state championship for the few states that have it this weekend, and then I will continue till Tuesday of next week since that is the state championship for Louisiana.  It's been a super busy year, but really productive.  Good luck to everyone!

Monday- 3x1k @ goal 5k race effort with 3 minutes jogging recovery between
Tuesday- 30 minutes of Ins and Outs
Wednesday- 25-35 minutes easy, 8x strides
Thursday- 8x400 @ Saturday goal race pace with 200m jog recovery, 8x strides
Friday- 20-30 minutes easy, 8x strides
Saturday- Sections or State Championship (Or 1 mile time trial for those racing on Tuesday)
Sunday- Off or 20-30 minutes easy
Monday- 20-30 minutes easy, 8x strides
Tuesday- State Championship


 On the horizon is the track season!

Legend:
Warm Up- A few minutes jogging, dynamic stretching, a few strides
Easy- A pace you can handle and have a conversation at the same time. Relaxed.
Tempo Run- A distance run at a pace of 5k race pace plus 30 seconds per mile.
Ins and Outs- Striding the straights and jogging the turns on the track
Strides- Not a sprint! Simply a short pickup of 50-100 meters at around 1-2 mile race pace. Full recovery.
Progression Run- Training done at progressive pace that increases throughout the run. Begin at an easy pace and finish at 5k race effort or so for the last few minutes.
Fartlek- A run of varied pace for varied time which can be anywhere from an easy jog to hard sprinting.
Hills- Not all out sprints, good paced effort around 5k race effort. Can be anywhere between 100-400 meters long.
Workout A- 10-30x pushups, 10-30x prisoner squats, 10-30x lunges, 10-30x crunches, 30-60 seconds of planks on each side and the middle, and 30-60 seconds of Australian crawl.
Workout B- 20-40x step ups, 5-20x tricep pushups, 30-60 seconds of bridging, 10-20x dips, 30-60 seconds of pedestal, and 30-60 seconds of scissor kicks.

Friday, November 1, 2013

Knowledge Is Power: November 1st

With the cross country season reaching its zenith, here is some good reading to keep you excited!

You Have Four Years To Do Something Extraordinary by Chris Bennett- Why it matters:  The head coach of one of the top high school teams in the country has a one minute clip about doing something special in high school.  Take note!

Mary Cain Will Not Run Cross Country by Runners World- Why it matters: Mary Cain is the greatest high school distance runner in US history and has chosen not to run cross country her senior year.  She finished her track season late in the summer and has elected not to run Nike this year.  I don't fully agree with that decision, but I'm not her coach so I guess it doesn't matter!


Mary Cain raced in Moscow during the summer.

NCC Goes For 40 Straight by North Central College- Why it matters: If you can't understand how insane it is to win 40 titles in a row over the course of 40 years then you don't know anything about sports (or life probably)!  

Early Signing Period by CBS Sports- Why it matters:  This mainly affects football since no other sports really want high school athletes early, but this could affect some sprinters in track.  With early enrollment happening more often, this makes the process more fluid.

College Scholarships by Donna Dye- Why it matters:  Parents are always talking about college scholarships but I think many have a skewed idea of just how difficult it is to achieve an athletic scholarship.  Donna Dye explains a good bit about how to achieve one.  As she notes, only about 2% of athletes are award athletic scholarships.

Training To Be Your Best: November 4th-10th

So for many, the state meet is this weekend, and for some it will be the following week, but luckily at this point in the peaking process you can continue to keep yourself in top shape for an extra week or two if you keep up with your easy runs.  If you run state this week you can drop the strenght training out of the program.

Monday- 4x1k @ current 5k race effort with 3 minutes jogging recovery between, Strength Workout A
Tuesday- 30 minutes of Ins and Outs
Wednesday- 25-35 minutes easy, 8x strides, Strength Workout B
Thursday- 15x200 @ Saturday goal race pace with 200m jog recovery, 8x strides
Friday- 20-30 minutes easy, 8x strides
Saturday- Sections or State Championship
Sunday- Off or 20-30 minutes easy


It will never look like this at a cross country meet in Louisiana!

Legend:
Warm Up- A few minutes jogging, dynamic stretching, a few strides
Easy- A pace you can handle and have a conversation at the same time. Relaxed.
Tempo Run- A distance run at a pace of 5k race pace plus 30 seconds per mile.
Ins and Outs- Striding the straights and jogging the turns on the track
Strides- Not a sprint! Simply a short pickup of 50-100 meters at around 1-2 mile race pace. Full recovery.
Progression Run- Training done at progressive pace that increases throughout the run. Begin at an easy pace and finish at 5k race effort or so for the last few minutes.
Fartlek- A run of varied pace for varied time which can be anywhere from an easy jog to hard sprinting.
Hills- Not all out sprints, good paced effort around 5k race effort. Can be anywhere between 100-400 meters long.
Workout A- 10-30x pushups, 10-30x prisoner squats, 10-30x lunges, 10-30x crunches, 30-60 seconds of planks on each side and the middle, and 30-60 seconds of Australian crawl.
Workout B- 20-40x step ups, 5-20x tricep pushups, 30-60 seconds of bridging, 10-20x dips, 30-60 seconds of pedestal, and 30-60 seconds of scissor kicks.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Knowledge Is Power: October 25th

Here is your weekend reads to satiate your appetite!

Put Your Hand On Seven by Dyestat- Why it matters: This is actually the first part of a long series but the story is most likely worth it because it is about the York cross country team, one of the greatest programs ever!

Conference Championships by USTFCCCA- Why it matters: This is the highest level of team cross country in the country (if you don't include USATF cross country which is actually probably less competitive) and many of these top runners are former standouts in high school.  See how the field pans out this fall by following the meets.

State Championships by Milesplit- Why it matters:  This is a complement to the conference championships above.  The state championship season is in full swing around the country.  Follow the future of the sport!  Don't forget the LHSAA state championships are on November 18-19th.

Track and Field's NFL Team by Spikes Mag- Why it matters:  It really doesn't matter, it's just fun.  I think Spikes underestimates the size needed at QB in the NFL though!

Sara Baxter's Mt. SAC Race 2012 by Flotrack- Why it matters:  Mary Cain may be the best female distance track runner in the country, but Sara Baxter is the top cross country runner.  Last year she nearly broke 16 for the Mt. SAC course which is similar to the time a runner would hit on a flat 3 mile course.  Take a look at her running 16 flat last year.


Sara Baxter of Simi Valley on her way to winning NXN.

Training To Be Your Best: October 28th- November 3rd

As we move further into the post season, keep in mind that you need to stay injury free so if that means you need to take an extra day off from practice, go for it.  The majority of the work has been put in already.  Now is just the peaking process.  Also, it should be getting cold everywhere across the US by now.  Stay warm because getting sick can also negatively affect your performance.

Monday- 2x2k @ current 5k race effort with 12 minutes jogging recovery between, Strength Workout A
Tuesday- 5x300 @ 800 race effort with 6 minutes recovery
Wednesday- 25-35 minutes easy,  8x strides, Strength Workout B
Thursday- 8x400 @ Saturday goal race pace with 200m jog recovery, 8x strides
Friday- 20-30 minutes easy, 8x strides
Saturday- Regional Championship
Sunday- Off or 20-30 minutes easy


NXN South is a Post Season race coming up in four weeks.

Legend:
Warm Up- A few minutes jogging, dynamic stretching, a few strides
Easy- A pace you can handle and have a conversation at the same time. Relaxed.
Tempo Run- A distance run at a pace of 5k race pace plus 30 seconds per mile.
Ins and Outs- Striding the straights and joggins the turns on the track
Strides- Not a sprint! Simply a short pickup of 50-100 meters at around 1-2 mile race pace. Full recovery.
Progression Run- Training done at progressive pace that increases throughout the run. Begin at an easy pace and finish at 5k race effort or so for the last few minutes.
Fartlek- A run of varied pace for varied time which can be anywhere from an easy jog to hard sprinting.
Hills- Not all out sprints, good paced effort around 5k race effort. Can be anywhere between 100-400 meters long.
Workout A- 10-30x pushups, 10-30x prisoner squats, 10-30x lunges, 10-30x crunches, 30-60 seconds of planks on each side and the middle, and 30-60 seconds of Australian crawl.
Workout B- 20-40x step ups, 5-20x tricep pushups, 30-60 seconds of bridging, 10-20x dips, 30-60 seconds of pedestal, and 30-60 seconds of scissor kicks.

Friday, October 18, 2013

Knowledge Is Power: October 18th

Here are a few articles you can sneak in between meets and football this weekend:

Throwback Thursday: Matthew Elliott by Running Times- Why it matters: Elliott is such a great guy who had a very inspirational interview after his fourth place finish at the US champs this summer where he had to walk away after a happy, tearful breakdown.  He was only a 4:42 miler in high school. He should be the model for what the sport is really about.


Matt Elliott after a victory.

Mead High School 20 Years Ago by Dyestat- Why it matters:  I've always believed that we should know where the sport has come from in the past so we can see if we are improving or regressing, and we should also use others as a lesson.  Mead was one of the best teams in the 90s and Doug Binder explores them a bit here.

Can You Talk Yourself Out of Exhaustion? by RunnersWorld- Why it matters:  Finding an edge in performance is always important, and here is a chance to understand a way you can improve without even doing any more training!  Take a look.

Competitor Groups Decision by Flotrack- Why it matters:  This is another post about the situation with Competitor group not supporting elite athletes anymore.  I don't usually agree with Flotrack, but this is worth considering.

Nutrition by Athletics Weekly- Why it matters: People are always asking me about nutritional advice and I usually yield to better sources of information since I'm a coach, not a nutritionist.  AW gives you some food for thought here on protein.

Training To Be Your Best: October 21st-27th

The last postseason Invitational is over, I hope you ran well!  The part of the season where you worry about times is over, now we shift the focus over to racing for place.  For the more experienced and advanced teams, the goal will be to qualify for the next phase of the season without injuries, staying low key until the tougher meets.  For others, the goal may just be to make it out of the district or conference meet.

Monday- 3x1 mile @ Saturday goal race pace with 400m jog recovery, Strength Workout A
Tuesday- 12x200 @ 1 mile race effort with 200m jog recovery,
Wednesday- 30-40 minutes easy,  8x strides, Strength Workout B
Thursday- 6x600 @ Saturday goal race pace with 200m jog recovery, 8x strides
Friday- 20-30 minutes easy, 8x strides
Saturday- Conference/League/District/Metro Championship
Sunday- Off or 30-40 minutes easy


Postseason is here!

Legend:
Warm Up- A few minutes jogging, dynamic stretching, a few strides
Easy- A pace you can handle and have a conversation at the same time. Relaxed.
Tempo Run- A distance run at a pace of 5k race pace plus 30 seconds per mile.
Ins and Outs- Striding the straights and joggins the turns on the track
Strides- Not a sprint! Simply a short pickup of 50-100 meters at around 1-2 mile race pace. Full recovery.
Progression Run- Training done at progressive pace that increases throughout the run. Begin at an easy pace and finish at 5k race effort or so for the last few minutes.
Fartlek- A run of varied pace for varied time which can be anywhere from an easy jog to hard sprinting.
Hills- Not all out sprints, good paced effort around 5k race effort. Can be anywhere between 100-400 meters long.
Workout A- 10-30x pushups, 10-30x prisoner squats, 10-30x lunges, 10-30x crunches, 30-60 seconds of planks on each side and the middle, and 30-60 seconds of Australian crawl.
Workout B- 20-40x step ups, 5-20x tricep pushups, 30-60 seconds of bridging, 10-20x dips, 30-60 seconds of pedestal, and 30-60 seconds of scissor kicks.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Preparing For Fall Sprint Training

Either it's football or soccer ending early or it's a kid who is solely focused on track, but for some teams, between six to eight weeks from now some of the over-eager sprinters will head out to their track coaches (if they are holding practice, some may opt to wait till January) to begin their season. What should you do with high school sprinters who come out late November/early December to prepare them for the spring season and get them ahead of the game?

Well one of the first and foremost items that need to be addressed is developing the practice routine.  It will be different than their previous sport if they even did one at all, and you need to show the athletes what time practice starts, what the warm up is, and what tempo you want your practice to be.  This can go on for a week or two as developing the mindset early in the season is crucial for keeping practice flowing well throughout the year.  For instance, when the John Curtis football players come out for track in late December/early January, the first week or two is dedicated to learning the warm up and just doing a few strides on grass to get the rhythm of practice down.

One thing a good sprint coach needs to focus on is not allowing the athletes to dictate the workouts. Doing blockwork on the first week of the pre-season is unnecessary despite how much kids may say they want to do it.  Don't over look some small things like doing shin exercises to help rid the athletes of shin splints from the get-go so you don't struggle with that down the season when you are racing. Also, you may want to get the ball rolling on some strength work.   It doesn't have to be crazy, and honestly body weight strength training exercises will be fine for the majority of what you need to get accomplished in high school track and field.  Once again, for instance, the John Curtis track/football guys haven't lifted for over a month and a half when they start running again and need to start with just some basic exercises.


Malachi Dupre of John Curtis is a 5-star wide receiver as well as a sprinter/jumper.

Get your plan set ahead of schedule because the seasons can be short.  In Louisiana the indoor state meet is in the middle of February and the outdoor post season starts the second week of April.  The season is over before you know it so a good base is important to success.

Knowledge Is Power- October 10th

Are you ready to learn something?  Here you go, and a day ahead of schedule!  Also, shoutout to the Ukraine, you guys are reading almost as much as the US on here!

How Much Does Mental Toughness Affect Race Times? by RunnersWorld- Why it matters: Perhaps the scientists are a bit off on how much mental toughness affects race times, but regardless they come out with the conclusion that it is still a huge factor.  Imagine that only 3% of a 20 minute 3 mile run is 36 seconds!

Improving Olympic Performance by Popular Science- Why it matters:  This is the future of athlete training.  Very specialized science and medicine which will create specific diet plans and training plans on the highest level.

Training Essentials- The E's by Vern Gambetta- Why it matters:  This article is very short but to the point.  You need to think about how you approach every training day and make sure this is a part of your program!

Efraimson Takes Another Step by Dyestat- Why it matters:  This year the quality of girls competition in high school is through the roof.  I've noticed locally that even some state champions have become also-rans in the girls races.  The sport is becoming very tough across the country.


Alexa Efraimson has represented the US internationally and medalled.

What Makes Great Runners Great by Milesplit- Why it matters: Dr. Matthew Mitchell breaks down two components that runners can improve to be great.  I really like the line "good is the enemy of great."


Training To Be Your Best: October 14th-20th

So here comes the promised down week to prepare you for the final invitational and get ready to run well for the post season (don't confuse down week with a week where you don't work hard!).  At this point, we should be starting to round into form as the state meet is 3-4 weeks away. Some states will have to qualify for the state meet, others like Louisiana are automatically qualified by fielding a team (I know, sad, but hopefully that changes in the future).  I will tailor the training for those who have to navigate the gamut of post season qualifying meets so don't fear!  Next week will start the prep to a state championship!

Monday- 6x800 @ end of season 3 mile/5k goal pace with easy 200 meter jog recovery, 8x strides, Strength Workout A
Tuesday- 30-40 minutes easy, Strength Workout B
Wednesday- 5x300 at near maximal effort, focusing on running fast but without losing control
Thursday- 35-50 minutes easy, 8x strides
Friday- 20-30 minutes easy, 8x strides
Saturday- End of Regular Season Invitational Race
Sunday- Off or 30-40 minutes easy


State (or states as some people call it) is a month away and it's time to shift focus to it!

Legend:
Warm Up- A few minutes jogging, dynamic stretching, a few strides
Easy- A pace you can handle and have a conversation at the same time. Relaxed.
Tempo Run- A distance run at a pace of 5k race pace plus 30 seconds per mile.
Ins and Outs- Striding the straights and joggins the turns on the track
Strides- Not a sprint! Simply a short pickup of 50-100 meters at around 1-2 mile race pace. Full recovery.
Progression Run- Training done at progressive pace that increases throughout the run. Begin at an easy pace and finish at 5k race effort or so for the last few minutes.
Fartlek- A run of varied pace for varied time which can be anywhere from an easy jog to hard sprinting.
Hills- Not all out sprints, good paced effort around 5k race effort. Can be anywhere between 100-400 meters long.
Workout A- 10-30x pushups, 10-30x prisoner squats, 10-30x lunges, 10-30x crunches, 30-60 seconds of planks on each side and the middle, and 30-60 seconds of Australian crawl.
Workout B- 20-40x step ups, 5-20x tricep pushups, 30-60 seconds of bridging, 10-20x dips, 30-60 seconds of pedestal, and 30-60 seconds of scissor kicks.

Monday, October 7, 2013

October Update Of All Things Good

If you haven't noticed, I've been really busy lately!  Between school, coaching, and some projects I am working on, things have been hectic, but all is well.  The John Curtis boys XC team has done well and has been ranked as high as #3 overall in the state and #1 in class 3A.  The girls XC team has been ranked as high as #5 in 3A and looks to reach the goals they set out with from the summer despite losing several varsity runners from last year to other sports.  The JC football team played the hardest 5 game stretch in the country and came out 3-2.  Good job guys, keep up the work till state!

The weather changes coming should help runners across the south run some good times, especially for the ones who get the opportunity to run the Walker Shootout and Rollette Invite on the north shore of Louisiana.  Remember to say warm when the weather gets colder so you don't get sick!

I'm still working on assembling the team Louisiana for Footlocker South and there has been a lot of responses and interest.  The more kids choose to seek out the best competition possible, the better off the sport is everywhere across the country.

I'm currently working with Louisiana Running Company and the New Orleans Track Club to help promote the sport in the city and work with local runners to help them reach their competitive training goals.  Just like I put up weekly training for high school athletes (and I will continue to do that through the year and into track), we may work on training programs for road racers.  Both groups already have weekly running sessions in New Orleans so check them out!


LRC sponsored the awards for the JCCS meet in September.

I'm looking forward to next summer as well as the Southern Athletics program continue to grow.  I'm currently looking to decide what this years uniforms will look like, although I still have a few of the all-blue uniforms for those who liked last years version.  Should I do white this year?

I expect to be back to writing as much as I did in the summer once the semester dies down in December.  If you have any wishes for me to write on, email me and I may put together a post about it. Consider it an early Christmas present!

Friday, October 4, 2013

The Mid-Season Evaluation

Evaluation is always an important part to the success of a program.  Your team will miss out on opportunities to improve down the line if you don't learn to evaluate successes and mistakes each season.  This is true for any sport, not just cross country and track and field.  See what workouts worked, what motivation techniques got the kids excited, and what you might think would be a more efficient use of time.  Here is a short list of items to consider when evaluating the season:

1) Are you on the path to meet your goals?  Compared to where you want to be in a month, are you close to being in a position to reach them, or have you already reached some of your goals and need to establish new ones?

2) Is there a workout or day of the week where your team struggles to accomplish the necessary training?  Can you shift that day to another one in the week, or change how you implement a workout to make it more effective?

3) Is the team buying into the season plan or are you struggling with connecting the training and the vision of the team?  Is there a way to get the athletes to better understand the connection between their effort and their goals?

4) Have you received the support you were expecting or do you need to challenge your parents/coaches to make a bigger impact on the team?

These are all items that you can work on correcting within the course of a season, even if they are a bit difficult.  These are the "half-time" adjustments of a season and be important to getting back on track or staying the course.


Remember the SMART goals!

Knowledge Is Power: October 4th

This week has some exceptionally good reads.  Enjoy!

How To Organize Your Own Track Meet by SpikesMag- Why it matters: While the sport has some of the highest participation rates in the country, there is still a big void with the fanbases.  See what Nick Willis did to get people out to his sub-4 mile.

How To Perform When It Counts by SpikesMag- Why it matters: Who doesn't want to peak at the right time?  SpikesMag interviews Jenny Simpson to see what she has to say about the matter.  By the way, where did this website come from?  They have great stuff!


Jenny Barringer-Simpson on the way to the medal stand.

Safe To Eat Soy? by NY Times- Why it matters: I remain skeptical about the health benefits of soy, and no one is going to tell me any form of processed soy is good, because processed food has reduced amount of nutrients.  This article shows that soy may not be harmful, but I implore readers to stay educated on the topic.

Unionville Blog #2 by Milesplit PA- Why it matters:  Unionville beat the multiple time defending national champions Fayetteville Manlius by a good margin.  FM usually saves its best races for the end of the year, but was this large margin of victory a taste of things to come?  Can FM be dethroned?

Full Speed Ahead For Haney by Dyestat- Why it matters: Blake looks like he is the top runner in the country so far this year, although there is still plenty of running left to do.  See how he persevered through injury to come back and be a force this year.

Training To Be Your Best: October 7th-October 13th

The middle of the season has come, and now the last few Invitationals before the postseason meets are happening, so it's time to start buckling down on all the small things. Don't forget how to stay healthy. Some of the workouts, as we start to get to the end of the season, will ramp up the intensity, so bring your A game to practice.  This week is tough, but next week will be an easier week to help you get ready for the postseason stretch, so maintain the faith!

Monday- 8x400 @ current 2 mile race pace, 200 meters jog recovery, 8x strides, Strength Workout A
Tuesday-  3x 1000 @ current 5k race pace, 90 seconds standing recovery
Wednesday- 30-40 minutes easy, Strength Workout B
Thursday- 12x200 @ 5k race pace minus 5 seconds (ex. A 16:30 5k runner, 5:20 pace, will run 35 seconds for these 200s since his 5k pace is 40 seconds per 200) with 60 seconds standing recovery
Friday- 20-30 minutes easy, 8x strides
Saturday- Invitational Race
Sunday- Off or 30-40 minutes easy


Faster intervals help get you ready for the post season!

Legend:
Warm Up- A few minutes jogging, dynamic stretching, a few strides
Easy- A pace you can handle and have a conversation at the same time. Relaxed.
Tempo Run- A distance run at a pace of 5k race pace plus 30 seconds per mile.
Ins and Outs- Striding the straights and joggins the turns on the track
Strides- Not a sprint! Simply a short pickup of 50-100 meters at around 1-2 mile race pace. Full recovery.
Progression Run- Training done at progressive pace that increases throughout the run. Begin at an easy pace and finish at 5k race effort or so for the last few minutes.
Fartlek- A run of varied pace for varied time which can be anywhere from an easy jog to hard sprinting.
Hills- Not all out sprints, good paced effort around 5k race effort. Can be anywhere between 100-400 meters long.
Workout A- 10-30x pushups, 10-30x prisoner squats, 10-30x lunges, 10-30x crunches, 30-60 seconds of planks on each side and the middle, and 30-60 seconds of Australian crawl.
Workout B- 20-40x step ups, 5-20x tricep pushups, 30-60 seconds of bridging, 10-20x dips, 30-60 seconds of pedestal, and 30-60 seconds of scissor kicks.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Competition Day Routine

I have been asked to give a little overview of what I think is the best considerations for what to do/eat/drink on the day of a meet, game, etc.  This is vital to performance maximization, so I am going to give you a short list of you what you need to do think about and do so you can be your best.

1) Set out all your items such as uniforms, shoes, warm-ups, etc., the night before and place them in a bag, except the items you will wear when you leave your house.  Setting your clothes out the night before allows you to prep when you are aware of items you will need rather than shuffling around in the morning, half-asleep.



2) Don't eat a huge meal the night before a morning race or a morning game because you may not have enough time to flush everything out of your system.  Eat a normal, healthy meal and get plenty of fluids (because we lose fluid during our sleep).  Make sure you wake up with enough time to do your normal morning routine (i.e. don't wake up late and rush to get to the meet).

3) Count back 8 hours from when you plan on waking up and go to bed at that time.  Unless you plan on waking up at some ridiculous hour like 3 A.M., this shouldn't be too much of an issue.  It is well known that teens need a lot of sleep, yet don't get enough.  Don't cost yourself a victory because you were too stubborn to go to bed at a reasonable time.

4) Start taking in fluids as soon as you wake up to replenish what you lost, but the closer you get to the race, slow it down to a sip here and there to avoid cramps or the need for last minute bathroom breaks.  As far as eating, don't eat a bunch, and know your stomach!  If you can't handle a whole sandwich in the morning, eat half of one, but never attempt to race off of eating nothing.  You spent a lot of calories at night, and you don't even realize it.

5) Don't eat heavy items.  Stick to foods that will either digest while not upsetting your stomach, or foods that you know won't bounce around when running.  Items such as peanut butter on a whole wheat bagel, thicker racing gels, or some non-sugary cereals can be good.  Try to avoid lactose (milk), fatty foods (fast food), or large amounts of food.  Also, never try to eat something new on race day that you haven't tried before such as drinking coffee if you aren't a regular coffee drinker, or trying any type of food with ingredients you normally don't eat.

Follow these rules and you will be set on race day.  But always, know your body and make adjustments when necessary.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Knowledge Is Power: September 28th

Sorry I'm a day behind, I know you've eagerly been waiting for it, now you have it!  The weekend reads:

Losing Is Good For You by the NY Times- Why it matters:  This is so important.  Parents and coaches are trying to shelter their kids from competition but yet in the real world competition for jobs and other important life factors are a part of daily life.  All the "give everyone a trophy" mentality does is let kids know underachieving still gets them praise.  If you don't read another article, read this one!

Article on Anita Hinriksdotter by European Athletics- Why it matters: This is a follow up to an article posted a few weeks back about her training.  Once again, studying the best in the sport is how you can help achieve a higher level for yourself.

Runner of the Week by Flotrack- Why it matters:  This runner ran just a few seconds off of Adam Gouchers all time high school mark in Colorado.  Could Gebrekidane be the next great runner from the US?  Only time will tell.

To Sleep Or Not To Sleep by Milesplit- Why it matters: I've said it before, sleep is a crucial element of training.  Milesplit breaks it down for you here.  Read this carefully, it will really help out!



Girls Toughness Wins The Race by Marc Bloom- Why it matters: The name of this article series is "Knowledge Is Power."  This is some very good knowledge for girls (and boys) to have to succeed at cross country/track.

Friday, September 27, 2013

Training To Be Your Best: September 30th-October 6th

Alright I hope you enjoyed your recovery week last week!  It's time to get back in the swing of things as the the championship season is just a month or so away.  Remember to stay healthy, especially with winter coming down soon.  Getting sick can derail a whole season if you aren't careful.  It's time to get back to the meat of training, so lace and get out there.

Monday- 35-45 minutes of Ins and Outs, 8x strides, Strength Workout A
Tuesday-  12x400 @ current 2 mile fitness with 200 jog recovery
Wednesday- 35-50 minutes easy, Strength Workout B
Thursday- 3x 1 mile @ current 3 mile fitness with 3 minutes standing or jogging recovery
Friday- 25-35 minutes easy, 8x strides
Saturday- Invitational Race
Sunday- Off or 35-45 minutes easy


Finally some respite from the heat!

Legend:
Warm Up- A few minutes jogging, dynamic stretching, a few strides
Easy- A pace you can handle and have a conversation at the same time. Relaxed.
Tempo Run- A distance run at a pace of 5k race pace plus 30 seconds per mile.
Ins and Outs- Striding the straights and joggins the turns on the track
Strides- Not a sprint! Simply a short pickup of 50-100 meters at around 1-2 mile race pace. Full recovery.
Progression Run- Training done at progressive pace that increases throughout the run. Begin at an easy pace and finish at 5k race effort or so for the last few minutes.
Fartlek- A run of varied pace for varied time which can be anywhere from an easy jog to hard sprinting.
Hills- Not all out sprints, good paced effort around 5k race effort. Can be anywhere between 100-400 meters long.
Workout A- 10-30x pushups, 10-30x prisoner squats, 10-30x lunges, 10-30x crunches, 30-60 seconds of planks on each side and the middle, and 30-60 seconds of Australian crawl.
Workout B- 20-40x step ups, 5-20x tricep pushups, 30-60 seconds of bridging, 10-20x dips, 30-60 seconds of pedestal, and 30-60 seconds of scissor kicks.

Friday, September 20, 2013

How to Stay Healthy

Raise your hand if you like to be sick or injured.  If you raised your hand, you may now exit the post. Those of you who survived the first round of cuts, congratulations.  So it's safe to say that if you are still here you are looking for some good, juicy info on how to stay on top of your game.  Well, the health game I mean.

Alright, well look, the good news is that for the average American becoming a more healthy person is easy.  Americans tend to be unhealthy.  Why?  Well, let me make my rant really short: we tend to be very lazy.  Laziness goes hand in hand with being unhealthy for many reason.  But the good news is, you can easily get over this.  You don't have to be stuck in a constant battle between training and taking off. Here is a list of ideas that you can follow to break out of the cycle and perform to your highest level.

1) Sleep.  Sleep.  Sleep.  All three of these ideas I'm listing are equally important, but to paraphrase Animal Farm, this is the "greatest amongst equals," mainly because so many high school athletes run themselves into the ground by shrugging off sleep.  I know for a fact many of my runners stay up late texting, facebooking, and playing video games, and it is easy to tell when a kid is struggling because of lack of sleep.  You can't stay healthy or compete at a high level without proper sleep.

2) Eat healthy!  What so many people refuse to admit is that food affects their body.  If I eat too much fast food in a short amount of time, or too much processed food, I usually end up feeling ill.  I know plenty of people who feel the same way, and it gets worse as you get older.  Eat as much organic food, or lightly processed foods as possible, and definitely avoid too much sugars.  And remember, All-Natural means nothing!  The word Organic is regulated, but anyone can claim anything is all-natural.


Yogurt and fresh fruit is a common healthy dish.

3) Take measures to avoid injuries/sickness before they become an issue.  Some call it pre-hab, or pre-habilitation, but it means treating injuries before they are injuries.  This means if you always know your knees are very sore a few days after a long run, take measures such as icing as soon as you are done, don't wait till you are sore.  If you always get sick when the weather changes or when it rains in the winter, take vitamin C and other vitamins before the storms or weather change even come!  You need to think on your feet and do your best to beat out sickness and injury before they manifest.

Knowledge Is Power: September 20th

Ah yes, the weekend is here.  Time for football and cross country.  Those two go together, right?

Alana Hadley Opts For Road Less Travelled by Dyestat- Why it matters:  The great thing about the high school exploding the past few years is that many top runners are exploring races they never would have just a couple decades ago.  Alana Hadley is taking the marathon challenge and without a doubt she will be the center of controversy in the near future.

Stotan: The Way of Fayetteville Manlius by XCNation- Why it matters:  This is an older article from a couple years ago, but since FM is still winning, it obviously still applies.  This is a short summary of the philosophy of FM and why they have been so successful in the past decade.

Training Log: Gig Harbor by Runners World- Why it matters:  Gig is one of the best teams in the country this year and it is interesting to note their training.  While different than what I'm sure many teams are doing, it is good to keep up with what the top teams train like.


The Gig Harbor team will most likely compete for the NXN title this year.

New Balance Indoor Nationals Guidelines by NSF- Why it matters: This is the premier high school race indoors.  This is where the best of the best go to race.  Where do you stack up?

Shannon Rowbury to Alberto Salazar by Letsrun- Why it matters:  Shannon is one the top pro runners in the US.  Her former coach, John Cook, is/was one of the best in the nation and has coached several world medalists.  Now she moves on to the controversial Alberto Salazar.

Training To Be Your Best: September 23rd-29th

We've made it through the first third of the season, congrats.  This week will be a "down" week, or a week with a little less excitement in order to allow the body to recover a bit for the upcoming stretch of meets.  It's okay if you have an invitational this weekend as the main part of the recovery will come from the easier workload this week.

Monday- 30-35 minutes of Ins and Outs, 8x strides, Strength Workout A
Tuesday- 35-45 minutes easy
Wednesday- 35-45 minutes easy, Strength Workout B
Thursday- 20 minute tempo
Friday- 25-35 minutes easy, 8x strides
Saturday- Invitational Race or Off
Sunday- Off or 35-45 minutes easy


Recovery is a vital part of a successful, long-term training program.

Legend:
Warm Up- A few minutes jogging, dynamic stretching, a few strides
Easy- A pace you can handle and have a conversation at the same time. Relaxed.
Tempo Run- A distance run at a pace of 5k race pace plus 30 seconds per mile.
Ins and Outs- Striding the straights and joggins the turns on the track
Strides- Not a sprint! Simply a short pickup of 50-100 meters at around 1-2 mile race pace. Full recovery.
Progression Run- Training done at progressive pace that increases throughout the run. Begin at an easy pace and finish at 5k race effort or so for the last few minutes.
Fartlek- A run of varied pace for varied time which can be anywhere from an easy jog to hard sprinting.
Hills- Not all out sprints, good paced effort around 5k race effort. Can be anywhere between 100-400 meters long.
Workout A- 10-30x pushups, 10-30x prisoner squats, 10-30x lunges, 10-30x crunches, 30-60 seconds of planks on each side and the middle, and 30-60 seconds of Australian crawl.
Workout B- 20-40x step ups, 5-20x tricep pushups, 30-60 seconds of bridging, 10-20x dips, 30-60 seconds of pedestal, and 30-60 seconds of scissor kicks.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Giving Training Its Dues

If you have figured anything about me by now you have probably figured out that I am an old school, hard nosed coach that doesn't like to put up with too much rah rah.  I do enjoy a good joke and sarcasm is my favorite form of humor, but when it comes to training, I'm unrepentant about how serious I am.

One of the biggest problems facing the sport is coaches, athletes, and parents looking for quick fixes and immediate satisfaction.  One thing that I hope you are picking up by now is that there are no quick fixes.  The teams that win have gotten to their perch from years of building up.  The flash in the pan programs who try to crash train or use gimmicky training to reach the top only have success for a year or so then fade back to where they came.

Talent doesn't matter in high school, unless you are talking about the talent of toughness so teams that say they can't compete because they don't have the talent are mainly just looking for excuses.  Sure, a small school that only has a team of 15-20 will have a hard time beating out a school with 80-100 runners regularly because the bigger school will be much less affected by graduations and team members who "lose the passion" but in reality that small team can work its' butt off and take it the bigger team week in and week out if they train hard and smart.  All the small team is a group of at least seven runners every year who have the talent of toughness and they will be a force.



Now going hand in hand with that, it takes many months and years of training to reach your peak, so those who want to be state champions from the first year will probably be disappointed.  Every PR, even if only a second, is a victory.  Work up on the small goals first before you try to skip straight to the ending.  There will also be many plateaus during training where the athlete will be working hard but won't be improving and that is simply a natural part of training.  Most high school athletes are no where near their physical peak so eventually that plateau will be broken, but not if the athlete loses focus and wants to feel sorry for themselves.

If you want to succeed you need to suck it up and think long term.  There are too many kids and coaches who leave the sport early because they don't see success in just a short amount of time.  It's crazy. Keep your goals focused, keep working hard, and you'll be happy you did so when you are on the victory podium.