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Author Name : Calvin Hennick
Author Bio : Biology 1. CREATE A BLOG where you post your daily mileage, then give
out the Web address to your friends and family. Do you really want Aunt
Ellen to ask why you skipped your four-miler on Wednesday? 2. MAMA, GET A NEW PAIR OF SHOES. Two-time Olympian Shayne
Culpepper puts new gear she receives as an elite athlete to good use.
"It's fun to break in a new pair of shoes," she says. "Sometimes that's
enough to get me excited." 3. RUNNING COMMENTARY "Running is a big question mark that's
there each and every day. It asks you, 'Are you going to be a wimp, or
are you going to be strong today?'" --Peter Maher, two-time Olympic
marathoner from Canada 4. GO SOFT. It's hard to stay motivated with shinsplints, so get
off the pavement for a few days and run on a cross-country course or
unpaved bike paths. 5. LOOK TO THE PAST Emil Zatopek, who won four Olympic golds in
his career, was a tough-as-nails athlete known for his intense training
methods, such as running in work boots. Competing with a gland
infection and against his doctor's orders, the Czech won three distance
events--including the marathon--at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics. That
stuffy nose doesn't seem quite so bad now, does it? 6. FORGET TIME. Shane Bogan, who coaches distance runners in the
Washington, D.C./Baltimore area, advises leaving your watch at home
once in a while. "It's liberating not to be worried about pace," Bogan
says. 7. SIGN UP NOW for a winter marathon in a warm state. Every
training mile you log takes you closer to that winter getaway in toasty
Phoenix, Florida, or Las Vegas. 8. THINK FAST. The runners Christy Coughlin coaches in Wilmette,
Illinois, always get a boost from this simple negative-splits workout:
Run for 20 minutes as slowly as you want, then turn around and run home
faster. "The long warmup helps you feel great and run faster on the way
back," says Coughlin. 9. GOOD-TO-GO PLAYLIST Classic Rock "Don't Stop Me Now," Queen "Break on Through," The Doors "Gimme Shelter," Rolling Stones "Come Together" the Beatles "What Do You Do for Money Honey," AC/DC 10. BLAZE A NEW PATH. "If you do the same runs all the time, it
can beat you down," says Olympian Alan Culpepper. GPS systems work
great for mapping new routes. Or check out favoriterun.com or
usatf.org/routes, which use Google Maps to let you plan and save routes. 11. FILL THE TUB with hot water, then head out for a three-miler on a frigid morning. The sooner you get back, the hotter your bath is. 12. EVERY MILE YOU RUN burns roughly 100 calories. Think of that next six-miler as two slices of pizza. 13. RUNNING COMMENTARY "No one can say, 'You must not run faster
than this or jump higher than that.' The human spirit is indomitable."
--Sir Roger Bannister, the first man to run a sub-four-minute mile 14. THE BOSTON MARATHON is a year away. Think you can get there? (Go to www.baa.org for qualifying times.) 15. RACE ODD DISTANCES FOR AN INSTANT PR. Kennedy Drive 8-K, San Francisco, May 13 Run for Alex 2-miler and 5-miler, Bentleyville, Pennsylvania, June 2 Six In The Stix II, Newport, New Hampshire, June 9 Quad-City Times Bix 7-miler, Davenport, Iowa, July 28 Falmouth Road Race 7-miler, Falmouth, Massachusetts, August 12 Bigfork Valley Challenge 4.5-miler, Bigfork, Minnesota, September 8 16. READ THIS The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner, a
short story by Alan Sillitoe, tells the tale of a rebellious youth in a
reformatory who runs in solitude and makes a stand against a system he
doesn't believe in. You'll have new appreciation for the power of solo
runs. 17. PLAY IN THE STREET. Skip a dreaded track workout for a
fartlek (Swedish for "speed play") session. After 10 minutes of easy
jogging, run hard between two telephone poles, then slow down until you
pass three. Then see if you can get to the traffic light before it
changes, followed by a jog to the next mailbox. There are no set rules,
so make it up as you go along. 18. THE PILE OF DISHES in the sink can wait till the sun goes down. Your tempo run can't. 19. RUN AT LUNCH. Daniel Sheil, a marathon coach in Portland,
Oregon, recommends lunchtime runs for two reasons: (1) You get your
workout in before the day gets away from you; (2) You get a midday
break from work stress. 20. RUNNING COMMENTARY "The more I run, the more I want to run,
and the more I live a life conditioned and influenced and fashioned by
my running. And the more I run, the more certain I am that I am heading
for my real goal: to become the person I am." --George Sheehan, M.D.,
beloved former RW columnist |
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