Monday, October 15, 2012

Post season

Ladies,

How did it feel today, being off? Relax, you've earned it. Take some time completely off, let your bodies heal. Two weeks off running won't hurt you.

After that, consider training again. Start slow. Three miles a day would be plenty, certainly no more. Gradually build it up to five miles a day over the next few weeks.

Find a team member, arrange to meet regularly. If you don't, you won't run. Trust me. It works best when you have one another.

How you guys come out in track, indeed, how far you go in State series, will depend on what you do between now and then. Be consistent; endurance athletics are unforgiving of sporadic training.

Kathy would love to train with you. If you are so inclined, by all means, do it. I will train with groups of you, but as you might guess, I will not meet individuals for training. It would not be proper.

As for the dinner on Thursday, no details yet. I will try again tomorrow to find out the particulars. Regardless, I will want the opportunity to sit down one more time with you ladies in the very near future. We also have to turn in uniforms, of course. ;)

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Regional

Ladies,

I told you before the meet; no matter what, no matter how the day went, I was already proud of you. I haven't changed my mind at all on that point. I am.

You were asked to go out and give it your all. You did. Perhaps one or two didn't stick to plan, but it wasn't through lack of desire to compete or a lack of effort.

A couple were sick. One was up late last night nauseous, another had an asthma attack on the course. These things happen, and often at the most inopportune times.

Look, the reality was we needed a perfect day, and we needed Salem to have a bad day. Salem had a somewhat bad day, ours was simply worse. If we were to run the race again tomorrow it could easily reverse. Nothing we can do about that.

The thing that is not mitigated by any other circumstance is how hard you tried. Ladies, that's all you had. I know it, I believe it. And I'm proud, win or lose, you threw it out there.

Those aren't empty words. I live by them. Almost to an event, and I mean both athletic and non-athletic, my life's successes are often preceded by a failure. I may not fully understand what it takes to do a particular thing, and when I fail, I examine what happened, what I did right, what I did wrong, and I resolve to fix the things that went wrong. I stare right into the face of my own weakness, face it, and conquer it.

This was not a failure today. This was falling short of a goal. Please, please do not look at it as a failing. Some of you are too young in running to realize this is not the way it goes normally. You don't see this many people on ice, on bikes, cutting miles, etc. No! This is a banged-up team. We weren't able to do everything necessary for us to escape our hard Sectional, much less get through an even tougher Regional.

Truth? When I heard about the realignment, and once I saw how hurt you girls were, I didn't expect to survive Sectional. That was way back in JUNE! There were many times along the way it seemed that notion was reinforced. And yet, somehow, you did get through Sectional, and better than that, improved a great deal by the end.

How well? Every single girl in Sectional was under 23:10. Our top-5 were nearing 22:00 and under. This was a massive improvement over the course of the year. And, let's not forget, we put several girls on the All-Time Top-25 board. All-Time. You might think you did poorly, but truth is, you outperformed your training.

Where do we go from here? I need a few days to digest that. Of course you girls should participate in winter sports, and if you do, play that sport. Give everything to that sport. But if you're not, you need to train. Not just running; you can do anything that will improve you as an athlete. Cycle, lift, swim, P90X, I don't care, but train. Everything adds up!

We'll be talking about spring track before you know it, and you girls have the foundation for an outstanding distance group on the track, plus a few relays. State meet? I surely think so!

Thursday, October 11, 2012

The breakdown

Ladies,

Examining the top 5 runners of both Salem and BNL yields an interesting point or two. Let me share them with you.

First, let's look at total time. If you add the total time of Salem, you get 1:08:10. Our total time was 1:09:07. Time differential, 57 seconds. That 57 seconds was worth 8 points. Obviously, we have to find a way to close that time.

Let's start with Danielle. Hate to lay the heat on you, but you have a big job. You have to run a smart race, dig in, and do something special. As I've often said to Carrie, you can do anything she can. If Carrie can break 21, and I think she can, so can you. This is the gig girls... 6:45 pace takes you under 21. You can do it. You must do it.

Retaining focus on Danielle, that's 28 seconds of the 57 erased. That's a great start. As captain, as one of the most experienced runners in the race, you have to step up to the task.

Carrie, you have to control that first mile also. 6:46 should be an easy thing to do, especially when you guys consider you were doing 800s at 6:08 pace. Think about that. Let it soak in. 6:46 will feel like a relative cruise. You only have to run 2 hard miles. 9 more seconds gone, 37 of 57 wiped out.

Shelby, 7-minute pace would be terrific. That would give you 21:40. I am setting a cautious goal for you, because your health has to be respected. If you hit 7-minute pace, you will net a 33-second drop. We are now ahead of Salem by 13 seconds.

Alli, that was a pretty solid run time-wise, but I think you could do the 7-minute pace, too. 24 more seconds gone, and we are ahead by 37 seconds.

Keeley, you have to make up your mind that anything Alli and Shelby can do, you can do. Don't get ahead of them until late in the race, if ever. That's another 33 seconds in the bag, and now we have 70 seconds advantage on Salem.

Morgan and Chloe, 7:15-7:20 pace is where you should start. Not one step faster! This will break 22 for both of you, and if things get close - and they might - your tie-breaker times will be critical.

Okay, sounds easy, right? Not really. We probably won't get it all for a variety of reasons, but if we can get most of it, and if Salem doesn't have the stellar night they had the other night, we beat them. Trust me on this one, girls... I've watched races for a long time, have raced myself for a long time, and I know what these girls are doing... the top three Salem girls will chase the front because they can't count on getting out as a team. Sydney Calhoun might, but the other two won't. That practically guarantees they'll blow up, because there'll be four State power teams there. The quality on the front will be too great for them to chase without a price.

What we have to be very careful about is that we don't get sucked into the front too. Our whole race plan turns on this point, ladies. We have to control that first mile.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

It's as we thought

Click for full-size picture
Ladies,

I've just been looking over the Terre Haute Sectional results, and from what I can tell, and assuming they ran on the State course (I'm sure they did), our calculations look to be correct. If you can beat Salem, you will go to Semi-State.

That has to be your focus for the next few days... beat green. Beat that green DOWN! Man... makes me want to break into song...


Ahem...

When I find myself in a spot of trouble, Kathy Ham-mel runs to me, Screaming words of wisdom, Beat the green. 
And in my hour of darkness, She is yelling, Right in front of me, Screaming words of wisdom, Beat the green. 
Beat the green, beat the green, Beat the green, beat the green, They're Kathy's words of wisdom, Beat the green.

(Apologies to Paul McCartney and Kathy Hammel)

Controlled first mile. She-Hulk the last two miles. It's all or nothing now.

Take tomorrow off. See  you on Friday, after school, short run. Saturday's race starts at 10:30 AM, so we will meet at the course at 9:30.

Click for full-size picture

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Sectional Results

Ladies,

Let me just start by saying I can't think of many ways I could be more pleased. One way I suppose I could be happier is if I hit the lottery multi-million dollar jackpot. Another might be if my daughter got a full-ride scholarship to Harvard. Short of that, I'm pretty pleased with tonight!

Let's hit the numbers, and examine what they tell us.

Runner 800 Mile 1 Mile 2   Mile 3   Last 10th   5k  
Carrie 3:00:00 6:24:00 13:19:00 6:55:00 20:22:00 7:03:00 0:47:00 6:16:00 21:09:00 6:49:21
Danielle 3:00:00 6:24:00 13:18:00 6:54:00 20:32:00 7:14:00 0:56:00 7:28:00 21:28:00 6:55:29
Shelby 3:02:00 6:39:00 13:53:00 7:14:00 21:17:00 7:24:00 0:56:00 7:28:00 22:13:00 7:10:00
Keeley 3:02:00 6:39:00 14:00:00 7:21:00 21:21:00 7:21:00 0:52:00 6:56:00 22:13:00 7:10:00
Alli 3:02:00 6:39:00 13:49:00 7:10:00 21:08:00 7:19:00 0:56:00 7:28:00 22:04:00 7:07:06
Morgan 3:15:00 6:56:00 14:35:00 7:39:00 22:11:00 7:36:00 0:53:00 7:04:00 23:04:00 7:26:27
Chloe 3:20:00 7:04:00 14:41:00 7:37:00 22:16:00 7:35:00 0:53:00 7:04:00 23:09:00 7:28:04


As you can see, five of the seven girls either had their best ever race or season best tonight. That's really great news all by itself. It gets better. Carrie improved 23 seconds, and over 2 minutes since the start of the year; Keeley improved 16 seconds, 3:42 from the start; Alli improved 30 seconds, and 1:32 since the start; Morgan dropped 28 seconds from her best time of 23:32 in the first meet, and; Chloe lopped 44 seconds off her previous best, and 3:05 since the start.

That is outstanding news. You see, normal progression from start to finish on a season is around 30-45 seconds drop. Of course that would be considering an experienced runner, which many of you are not, but still, dropping the kind of time you girls have over this season, especially with the trouble you've had... well, that's just impressive.

And there's more to get.

Look at those 800s. Insane. INSANE! The front girls were supposed to be at 3:20. I guess Chloe was the first BNL girl tonight, because she was the only one close to it. Hmmm... and she should have been at 7:30 pace! By the numbers, those paces are 6:00, 6:00, 6:04, 6:04, 6:04, 6:30, and 6:40. Gulp!

Now watch how that takes effect. If you split Carrie and Danielle's first mile into halves, what do you get? 6-flat and 6:48 halves. Is that smart? Nope. The next mile was a much more realistic 6:55, but look how hard it was to hold that third mile. That's what happens if you take that first 800 so hard.

Look, it's like this - as you move along in State series, the quality of the competition moves up. There will be faster and faster girls on the front. You get used to being in a certain position in regular races, but these aren't regular races. You have to let that front go. You have to be able to look at the ground, listen to your feet and breathing, and get on your pace. The first girls went through the 800 tonight in 5:20 pace. No one, and I mean NO ONE held that. Let them burn themselves out! Run your race, and you will be better off.

Salem beat us by 8 points tonight. That's nothing, and is easily coverable. Guess what they will do Saturday? Exactly what they did tonight... chase the front. Let them. That will play into our hands IF we run our races. Control the first mile, go crazy after that. Tactically, we have to run within ourselves, let the other teams blow up, then pick up the pieces. That's our ticket out.

Good news? It'll be a much easier start to the race than you had tonight. Bad news? You have to beat Salem to get out. Have. To. There is no beating either Bloomington or Terre Haute teams. There is only one spot up for grabs.

It's yours, ladies. You can do this!

Monday, October 8, 2012

Sectional Eve

Ladies,

It's here. The moment we've waited for is here.

Tomorrow, we have to be on. We have to run a smart first mile, but after that, it's an all-out fight to the finish. Shirts matter, every single shirt, no matter who you are or where you're at in the race. We're going for third, and we really need it.

You should be feeling fresh and maybe a bit antsy. It may be hard to sleep tonight. Do your best. Even if you don't sleep well, don't worry about it; the real important sleep is the night before the night before. Ask any racer, and they'll tell you, few sleep the night before a big race.

We'll meet at 4:30 tomorrow, giving us an hour before we race at 5:30. Make sure you have all your equipment packed and ready tomorrow. Bring a long sleeve shirt for warm-up. You might even bring a hat to help keep you warm up to the race. Heat is energy, ladies.

I'll see you ladies tomorrow!

Thursday, October 4, 2012

And now, it gets fun again

Ladies,

I don't care what anyone says, taper is fun.

You feel fresh. You feel rested. You feel like you want to run fast. Practice is fun. It's all so... easy. You even begin to wish it would never end.

The down side is you also feel pain you didn't know you had before. This is normal. Running gives you a natural anesthetic called endorphin. Endorphins mask regular pain, so when you run less, the regular pain comes back. Don't worry about it, everyone goes through it.

You'll also feel bloated a bit. That too is normal. You can't gain much weight in the short time you're resting. Eat as normal.

Rest as much as possible. No new activities until the season is over! This is very important... you'll feel like doing anything/everything. Resist, and rest as much as you can.

No practice tomorrow... I mean it, total rest. We'll run Saturday, 8 AM at Parkview (pancake breakfast afterward?). Monday evening we are working the Middle School Invite, so practice will happen right before the meet (short run).

It's all in ladies. Now all you have to do is make history!

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Getting easier

Enjoy. Enjoy enjoy ENJOY! This is the part of the season that is best, when you cut back the miles and begin to rest. You feel better. The sun shines brighter. It's just... better.

Be careful, though. This is not the time to pick up another activity because you have energy and time to kill. Oh, no! This is the time to rest. In fact, it's the only thing you can do to impact your next race at all. We'll run enough to keep loose and keep the feel of running, but beyond that, nothing hard.

Except tomorrow. Tomorrow we'll do a few quarters - few, as in no more than 4. We just want to tap the speed one last time before Sectional, then rest. Yes, hard quarters, but tons of rest between. One at a time.

I'm also hearing news about some kind of dinner. I haven't been given specifics, and it it's supposed to happen and one of your parents know about it, you might want to relay the information to me. Soon.

Speaking of other engagements, Monday night is the final Middle School Meet (tm) of the year. We are working it! More details later, but guess who the world-class timer is? ME! You ladies will be the shoot workers - I mean, CHUTE workers. (Remember, offer assistance from the side, never directly in front. The front is the splash zone!)

Those photos we took today will be whisked off to Mrs. Barrett, who is working with Artistic Images for a Sectional surprise. I don't know what it is specifically, so we'll have to wait until then to see.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

What a mess!

Clockwise: Chloe, Locki, Danielle, Alli, Diana,
Lauren, Shelby, Hanna, Summer, Keeley,
Carrie, Bret, Morgan
We all knew the course would be a hard one - after all, we'd already discussed the big hill. What we hadn't considered was what a horrible mess the course would be in after the rain. Wow! To me, this qualified as the messiest course we've run this year. That is saying a lot, because Brown County was a swamp.

I started to work out the splits, but you know what? I stopped. Maybe it's because it's late. Nah. Maybe I'm tired. Yes, but that's not it. No, I stopped because they don't matter.

The course is short. It's also in horrible shape, the terrain is uneven, and the huge hill (the signature feature of the course) all make for splits that can't possibly be used for any real analysis. No, in a race like this, you don't run for time - you run for place.

I thought we did a very nice job in that department. We had three girls in the top-15, all 5 scorers in the top-20, so that was good. We were within 14 points of Jasper, a team that demolished us last week. And, not the least, we finished 2nd.

So what's left? Sectional! The regular season is over now, and everything we've worked for is now come to this one race. It's a bittersweet moment, because I now have to select the 7 runners that will run Varsity. There will be no JV race, so tonight was the last night some of you girls will race.

Back to the Varsity... a moment ago, I said "I now have to select the 7 runners that will run Varsity." That's not exactly true... you did. You've already done it. The runners with the 7 fastest times this season will be the squad. Barring the unforeseen, that's the fairest way to do it. Having double-checked the numbers, this is what I have:

Danielle
Carrie
Shelby
Keeley
Alli
Morgan
Chloe

1st Alt. - Locki
2nd Alt. - Diana
3rd Alt. - Bret

I'm sorry to have to choose, but it was always going to come to this. Do not feel bad if you didn't make the list. I'm so proud of all you girls, beginning to end. Things didn't always go the way we wanted or hoped, especially in the realm of health, but I do believe you gave me an honest effort. Hold your heads up - your best is all you can ever give.

You are of course welcome to workout with the Sectional runners and alternates. I would be happy to keep seeing you, and I'm sure the girls would too. This is voluntary, however.

Tomorrow will be an easy and short practice. See you all then.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Northeast Dubois Invitational

Ladies,

Tomorrow is our last regular season meet. It's the Northeast Dubois (pronounced "Doo-BWAH") County Invitational. It's hosted by Northeast Dubois High School, not in Jasper. I think I have it nailed down now.

I do know some details. To whit:

JV Boys and Girls run at 5:45.
Varsity Girls run at 6:15. Ish. You know 1/2 hour won't be enough separation.
Varsity Boys run at 6:50.

We'll see Princeton, Shoals, Jasper, Loogootee, Techumseh, NE Dubois, Southridge, Forest Park, South Spencer, Tell City, Washington Cathedral, and Washington.

Top-5 runners get trophies, 6-20 get medals.

Okay, that's pretty much all I have at the moment. It's enough. We'll get there, we'll have plenty of time to warm up, so don't sweat it. Sure, I want you by the pool ASAP after school, but aside from that, we have nothing to worry about. We'll follow the boys' team down, Hiles knows where to go.

As for the course, it's mostly flat, but there is a beast of a hill in the middle. It's simply the hardest hill you'll run all year. No use sugar-coating it. It's tough. It's also an opportunity. Every girl that runs that hill will dread it. Use that mental weakness to your advantage. Make up your mind that, the second you crest, you're going to lay on the gas for 40 yards. Open a gap, and likely as not, it will stick. It will be slapping your opponent at their weakest possible moment, and it might be the difference in the race.

Who will run varsity? Here's the list as I see it right now:

  • Danielle
  • Carrie
  • Shelby
  • Keeley
  • Alli
  • Morgan
  • Chloe
JV will be as follows:
  • Locki (first alternate)
  • Diana (second alternate)
  • Bret
  • Lauren
  • Hanna
Obviously this is subject to change. I will say this; this is absolutely the last chance to change the Sectional line up. Assuming you all run, the seven fastest runners will run Sectional. 

A word on Sectional, who runs, and misplaced chivalry... I know by this point in the season you are all tired of running. Some of you want it to be over, you don't want to run another race, etc. This is normal. It's okay to feel that way. It says you've been pushed, and you are tired. I'm okay with that, I can relate, really. Every athlete feels like this sooner or later. That said, you still have to fight for the position. You still have a job to do, it's what you spent the whole season preparing to do, and each and every one of you should fight for the honor of being on that Sectional roster. 

I've seen hints of some of you (okay, outright examples) trying to do the chivalrous thing and offer your spot you've earned to another person. That makes great television, but it doesn't pan in real life. You want to be a great teammate? Do your very best, run the spot you earned, and pass every shirt you can. This isn't about making a BFF, it's about moving your team as far as it can go. You can be BFFs outside of the event. Your team needs the best athlete to run, and if that's you, that's you. 

I like to end with personal anecdotes, so let me offer another. When I first started running, one of my friends asked me what time I'd like to ultimately run (for 5k). I thought about it a moment, then said, "15:30". He looked me up and down for a moment, silently considering what I'd said, then said, and I quote, "Bill, you might wind up being one of the best runners in Lawrence County some day, but I don't know about 15 and a half." He was trying to be kind, because that was a pretty lofty goal. 

A couple of years later, I was in the final stretch of a long season. I routinely trained 24 weeks for a peak race, logging 75-85 miles a week in many two-a-day sessions, weekly long runs, secondary long runs mid-week. On top of that, I would have to train much of it alone, as there weren't many people with the same goals as mine. Naturally by the end I was burnt out and ready for the break.

Each season ended with a 4-race series, each race becoming progressively more focused (and painful), building to the big race. In this particular season, I had broken 16:00 in the first race, 15:50 in the second, and in the third, ran 15:40.something. That's significant, because if I had run 15:30-anything, I would have considered it close enough. In fact, I wanted it to happen in the third race, because I didn't want to run the fourth. I was tired. 

It didn't happen. By less than a quarter second it didn't happen. I was crushed. I didn't feel I had another week in me, that I would likely go slower. Still, I'd committed to going for it. I had done all the work. Who knows when I'd be healthy enough again? There was no choice, I had to do it.

The following week, I told myself if I wasn't at sub-5 minute pace at mile 1, I'd pull off. Mile 1, 4:58. I'd told myself if I wasn't sub-10 minutes at mile 2, I'd pull off. Mile 2, 9:58. Crap, now I was stuck. I had to go for it. Mile 3 was slightly slower, 5:03, but the last tenth was right on pace. Final time was 15:33, close enough to the life goal. I was absolutely gassed, but also absolutely happy that I had gone ahead and tried. 

Now comes the twist - it turns out I would never be healthy enough to challenge this time ever again. I developed a debilitating heel spur right after this point, and for all intents and purposes my 5k racing career ended. Had I caved and not gone ahead with that last race, I would never have run as fast. I would have regretted that decision forever. 

You all have abilities - now - but you don't know how long it will last. Never take it for granted, because all too soon the time passes. Make the most of your right now, RIGHT NOW. Remember, racing often comes down to who wants it most. Of course it's not easy! Understand this, master it, and use it to your advantage. To me, knowing my opponent is weak gives me strength. Know this: all runners are tired at this point, and weak. Seize the opportunity!