Any running fans here
tooy1234
Posts: 12 Member
Got a half marathon in September need help lol
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Replies
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Nope.
What kind of help? There's many runners here and we even have a few groups.
Check these out: http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/1788-half-marathon-training-group
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/94-long-distance-runners1 -
Again it depends what you're after. There is a good range of experience around.1
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What info do you need?0
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Got a half marathon in September need help lol
I'll be running a half marathon on September 3. I expect it to be my 15th half, if I count the half in July as my 14th. Shoreline in July gets an asterisk, because the idea is to pace it instead of race it.
So . . . you want to talk about running half marathons? It's a nice distance, long enough that you don't have to kill yourself pushing for speed but short enough that you don't have to totally trash your legs just finishing it.0 -
Got a half marathon in September need help lol
I'll be running a half marathon on September 3. I expect it to be my 15th half, if I count the half in July as my 14th. Shoreline in July gets an asterisk, because the idea is to pace it instead of race it.
So . . . you want to talk about running half marathons? It's a nice distance, long enough that you don't have to kill yourself pushing for speed but short enough that you don't have to totally trash your legs just finishing it.
A nice distance :noway:
:laugh:
I think I prefer 10k..1 -
Nope.
What kind of help? There's many runners here and we even have a few groups.
Check these out: http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/1788-half-marathon-training-group
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/94-long-distance-runnersNope.
What kind of help? There's many runners here and we even have a few groups.
Check these out: http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/1788-half-marathon-training-group
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/94-long-distance-runners
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Thanks people. I'm only at 7 miles and would like to no how often do I up my miles and how many times I need to run a week0
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Thanks people. I'm only at 7 miles and would like to no how often do I up my miles and how many times I need to run a week
I would start here: http://www.halhigdon.com/training/51131/Half-Marathon-Novice-1-Training-Program
Or find a similar program for novice or beginner runners. Since you're already at 7 miles I would spend the next couple weeks maintaining. I would work up to running 4 times a week and keep it there. Then when you start the half training plan you will have a great base and be less likely to get injured.2 -
I should say when you run 4 times a week only one run is long. The others are shorter. So if you long is 7 miles, make the others 3-4. All runs should be easy. Save the speed work for when you are more experienced and your body has had a year to adapt.1
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Get a training plan (HH novice is a great one) and start crossing off runs1
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Following a plan can keep you from pushing too hard and getting injured before the race. The Higdon plans are good ones for beginners and intermediate runners. They will get you to the starting line healthy. When you are ready to run faster, you will need to do run more miles, and include some speedwork, but for a beginner, just building your endurance gradually and getting used to pacing yourself is most important.1
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Here is a simple 10-week plan:
http://www.marathonrookie.com/support-files/10weekhalfmarathonschedule.pdf1 -
Thanks people. I'm only at 7 miles and would like to no how often do I up my miles and how many times I need to run a week
Get a plan for beginners; others have already suggested a couple. When the plan says run slow, run slower than you think slow should be. This is important for avoiding injury. Maybe you're the 1 in 100 runners that do this naturally; but if you're one of the 99 out of 100 that start out running too fast, it will be a struggle to learn to run slow enough for the long runs. It's worth the effort.
Here's a site that estimates training paces. As a beginner, you can ignore the Marathon, Threshold, Interval and Repetition paces. Plug in a recent race time and look at the Easy pace it suggests on the Training tab. That's how slow you should run your long runs. At first, it will feel like you aren't doing any work at all. You are, and that will become apparent as the length of the long runs increases.
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Thanks people you've all been extremely helpful0
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