Knocked off over a minute of my Marina to Saltdean and back run this morning. 52 minutes 41 seconds.
Well done, Jack. Good to see another old bugger doing well. On which note I'm pleased to report that my first 10k as a newly minted 66 year old was my fastest of 2020 @ 48.33. Perfect conditions helped!
Interesting to see the benefit of a pace-maker / running with someone faster to assist performance.
Joe Wicks, The Body Coach, set himself a goal of running a 19:30 5km by the end of the year. He started a short while back at around 22 minutes. His previous effort, last week, was a 19:38.
Today he had his last try and said he had brought a friend along to help him pace his effort. His "friend' turned out to be Sir Mo Farah and, with that help, Joe ran an 18:45 which is astounding!
Another ORT regular sending belated seasonal greetings. I'm still plodding on, picking up Strava local legends as I go and dodging people (even at early o'clock) and icy surfaces as I go. Planning on a HM tomorrow morning to finish the year in style and just under 1,700 miles.
Here's to a fantastic 2021 for all of you. May all your running wishes come true. I only have one and that's another crack at Moyleman. Not sure how likely that will be, but fingers crossed
Interesting to see the benefit of a pace-maker / running with someone faster to assist performance.
Joe Wicks, The Body Coach, set himself a goal of running a 19:30 5km by the end of the year. He started a short while back at around 22 minutes. His previous effort, last week, was a 19:38.
Today he had his last try and said he had brought a friend along to help him pace his effort. His "friend' turned out to be Sir Mo Farah and, with that help, Joe ran an 18:45 which is astounding!
Gentle 6km today to finish off the year. 2020 was a good year for running volume: total of 3171km which is my highest ever, by a country kilometre, and I've never got much over 2000km in previous years.
A Strava friend has just pointed out that my year total is 20 miles short of 2000 miles. Luckily, as per previous discussions on this thread, I don't care to set targets in archaic measurement systems, so failure to reach this "mile" stone is irrelevant to me.
I'm even more pleased with my Covid run streak, which started around the date of lockdown 1, and which reaches 285 days of daily running today, and I'm clearly (bar injury) on course for 300 days or possibly a full year of daily running.
Speed-wise, my year was much less impressive. I've not come near any PBs, which I put down to my advanced age (65) and the relative lack of speed work in my training this year. Races have been virtually non-existent. Apart from a few parkruns in Jan/Feb (and as we know, these aren't races), I only managed two races (Brighton Half, and Beachy Head half), both in respectable but short-of-PB times.
Next year, I'm going to work hard on running form and technique (I've read a very interesting new book on this recently - "Shane Benzie: The Lost Art of Running" - which, although I don't know how much science is behind it, has given me a different way of looking at running form, and I'm going to give it a go), and try to get some more speedwork and races in.
I wish all of NSC running thread contributors and aficionados a happy, and injury-free New Year.
Gentle 6km today to finish off the year. 2020 was a good year for running volume: total of 3171km which is my highest ever, by a country kilometre, and I've never got much over 2000km in previous years.
A Strava friend has just pointed out that my year total is 20 miles short of 2000 miles. Luckily, as per previous discussions on this thread, I don't care to set targets in archaic measurement systems, so failure to reach this "mile" stone is irrelevant to me.
I'm even more pleased with my Covid run streak, which started around the date of lockdown 1, and which reaches 285 days of daily running today, and I'm clearly (bar injury) on course for 300 days or possibly a full year of daily running.
Speed-wise, my year was much less impressive. I've not come near any PBs, which I put down to my advanced age (65) and the relative lack of speed work in my training this year. Races have been virtually non-existent. Apart from a few parkruns in Jan/Feb (and as we know, these aren't races), I only managed two races (Brighton Half, and Beachy Head half), both in respectable but short-of-PB times.
Next year, I'm going to work hard on running form and technique (I've read a very interesting new book on this recently - "Shane Benzie: The Lost Art of Running" - which, although I don't know how much science is behind it, has given me a different way of looking at running form, and I'm going to give it a go), and try to get some more speedwork and races in.
I wish all of NSC running thread contributors and aficionados a happy, and injury-free New Year.
Interesting to see the benefit of a pace-maker / running with someone faster to assist performance.
Joe Wicks, The Body Coach, set himself a goal of running a 19:30 5km by the end of the year. He started a short while back at around 22 minutes. His previous effort, last week, was a 19:38.
Today he had his last try and said he had brought a friend along to help him pace his effort. His "friend' turned out to be Sir Mo Farah and, with that help, Joe ran an 18:45 which is astounding!
Also calling it for 2020.
Just back from a half-marathon, which I only did as I noticed via Strava that I'd not completed one this month. A not-really-trying 1:41i:23 is indicative of what a year it's been for me. That's my fourth best time over the distance, and my HM best was 1:53:51 just over a year ago.
It was blinking freezing but I'm a #ShortsAlways advocate (I don't actually own anything else) and it was nice to be out in the sun after quite a few yucky runs this month when I went out in the evening, after dark. in the pissing rain.
2,252 miles in total for the year, and yesterday I hit 11 months of running every day. I started the streak on January 31st after an injury-hit start to the year, caused by over-doing it at the end of December last year in order to hit 500 miles for 2019. As a non-racer each of those 336 runs started and ended at my front door, and those front doors have been in Worthing 328 times, a Heathrow hotel once and Orlando seven times.
I've had PB improvements all over the board - the first time was my best on January 1st and the second is my best today:
5km - 21:57 - 19:11
10km - 46:10 - 41:32
10m - 1:19-39 - 1:10:36
HM - 1:46:31 - 1:34:48
No real plans for 2021 other than to keep on keeping on - mix up road and trail and see where it takes me. t turn 50 in 2021 so it feels like I should set some sort of lofty goal to aim for, but I have no idea what that would be right now.
Thanks to everyone for their advice and inspiration over the course of this bizarre year.
In what has been a shit year, running has been a complete saviour throughout.
Just a shame I finish the year self isolating. Frustrating too as I’m on annual leave all through Christmas and New Year. At least I can give the body a weeks rest and start from fresh next year.
I thought without races I’d struggle for motivation but it’s been quite the opposite. I’ve loved just getting out of the house after working from home all day and this has helped me clock 2000+ miles this year. Almost 700 more than my next highest total last year.
I peaked in terms of speed around July but then started to feel a tight Achilles so knocked the fast stuff on the head for a little while. I’ve probably not got back to my summer form but I’m not too far off.
Despite the lack of races I’ve PB’d in four distances
1 mile - 5:20
3k - 10:46
5k - 18:05
HM - 1:26:02
Bring on next year and hopefully a return to Park Run around April and a chance to meet up again for The Weakest Link Relay.