Category Archives: Information

Are You Tough Enough?

You can run a marathon but can you finish the Tough Guy 7 mile race?

That is the question everyone wants to know at the beginning of what sounds like a very brutal race. You thought the last few miles of a marathon were agony – try battling hypothermia, climbing to the top of a tower, plunging into an icy lake and swimming 30 meters to cross the finish line.

Martin Dugard, an acclaimed author and sports junkie I’ve written about before, just wrote a review of the Tough Guy that will make you itch for more than an urban run down the Greenway.

This is my life after Tough Guy, a seven-mile odyssey of pain, suffering, and freezing-water immersion. The title is tongue-in-cheek, but the cruel severity of the competition is not. Since its inception in 1986, Tough Guy has become an increasingly worldwide phenomenon, beckoning otherwise sane men and women to the British West Midlands in the dead of winter to sprint through pastures, scramble through thorns, jitterbug through electric cattle prods dangling like Portuguese man-of-wars from ropes strung above knee-deep mud, climb and descend acres of cargo netting, and swim underwater through an icy pond.

If you can imagine an endurance race that combines the absurd best of Monty Python with the punishing numbness of Navy SEAL training, then you can comprehend Tough Guy. To go one step further: If you are the sort of person who doesn’t just imagine such a race but also hears an irrational voice in the back of your brain as you read this copy of American Way (which you plucked out of the seat pocket randomly but now wonder if it’s part of some act of fate) asking if you are indeed Tough Enough , then I am almost positive that one January very soon, no matter the status of your marriage or career or credit card balances, you will not consider your life complete until a Tough Guy finisher medal hangs around your neck. You know who you are.

So I leap. The free fall is short, and the seconds underwater are far too long. I sputter to the surface, swim to shore, and then fling myself down into the mud to low-crawl beneath barbed wire as part of an obstacle named for the Battle of the Somme. There is much more hardship to come (yes, more icy water), but finally crossing that finish line and sipping my cup of hot tea with shaking, hypothermic hands is a most amazing moment of happiness.

Excerpts taken from the American Way Magazine published for American Airlines. Did I mention Dugard got paid to compete in the race and write the story?

[tags] Tough Guy, American, Martin Dugard [/tags]

Elite Running Cookbook

Ever wonder what Deena Kastor cooks at home? Did you see her cooking during the Spirit of the Marathon and want to know how to make the dish? Well, now is your chance as Alison Wade recently published a cookbook, the proceeds of which go to two Foundations dear to many a runner’s heart.

From the book’s website:

The Runner’s Cookbook features 100 recipes from 90+ contributors, including Joan Benoit Samuelson, Sebastian Coe, Shalane Flanagan, Adam and Kara Goucher, Ryan and Sara Hall, Deena Kastor, Craig Mottram, Dathan Ritzenhein, Khadevis Robinson, Alan Webb, and many others. All of the proceeds from the sales of this book will be donated to the Ryan Shay Memorial Fund and the Jenny Crain “Make It Happen” Fund.

Details about the two memorial funds is also available but here is a synopsis:

Jenny Crain, a popular member of the professional running community, suffered serious head and neck injuries after being hit by a car while training in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on August 21, 2007. Half of the proceeds from this cookbook will go to the Jenny Crain “Make It Happen” Fund, to help Crain and her family with her continued care, treatment, and recovery.

On November 3, 2007, five-and-a-half miles into the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team Trials — Men’s Marathon in New York City, Shay collapsed and died suddenly, due to a heart condition. It was an event that shocked and deeply saddened the entire running community.

Half of the proceeds from this cookbook will go to the Ryan Shay Memorial Fund, to help Shay’s family undertake special projects in his memory.

The Runner’s Cookbook: Winning Recipes from Some of the World’s Best Athletes was compiled and edited by Alison Wade. Wade is the current editor of EliteRunning.com and the former editor of the now-defunct web sites, fast-women.com and mensracing.com.

[tags] Cookbook, Shay, Crain, Elite Running [/tags]

HT: Runnerville

Best Running Stores

The recent issue of Fast Forward, a publication of the USATF, lists the top 50 running stores in the US. I was surprised to see that two (out of three) of the Indianapolis stores were selected and none from my new home in the Twin Cities.

Their “Gold Medal Winner” is the Durham, NC based 9th Street Active Feet, Inc. This store sounds almost like a running clinic inside of a store – their staff hold degrees in areas such as kinesiology, physiology, exercise science, and other related areas. It sounds like a great store to visit if you are in the Durham-area. Anyone from there want to comment on it that’d be awesome!

The two Indianapolis stores actually include one that I was never in. We lived North-East of the city and the Athletic Annex is more on the West part of town. It didn’t really ever make sense to drive past two stores on the way to it and I never won any gift certificates to the Annex. The main reason they were selected is because of their vast community connections and former elite runners working at the store.

Hoosiers, can you guess which other store was selected? What if I ventured to say that it might have been a little politically motivated? Give up… The Running Company. The reason I say it may be a little politically motivated is that Bob Kennedy is one of the owners and is very involved in the operations and local running community. I don’t make that statement to take away from the store, my experiences there were always top-notch. The Running Company makes the list because of their in-depth shoe analysis and the range of training programs. Not to mention they will soon have five stores in the greater Indianapolis-metro area. If they put one in Anderson or Muncie they could take over the state!

What is your favorite running store?? Did it make the list?

[tags] Running Stores [/tags]

Local Marathoner Catches Thief

A St. Paul marathoner and medical researcher – Mark Laliberte – saw a robbery and took action.  The thief took about $350 from the coffee shop inside St Joseph’s hospital.  Laliberte happened to see it and decided to take action.  Initially confronting the thief and tackling him inside the hospital, Laliberte got caught up in the suit coat he was wearing which allowed the suspect get free.  After removing the sports coat Laliberte proceeded to run the thief down.

Used to running 6:30 pace Laliberte a marathon and triathlon veteran mustered up some sprinting speed and chased the thief for several blocks in downtown St. Paul.  Eventually Laliberte caught and wrestled the thief to the ground before horse collaring him and dragging him back to the hospital.  Eventually the hospital security and St. Paul Police arrived to help!

Once they were back in the hospital, Laliberte gave the suspect a quick leg sweep that he remembered from his college kickboxing days and brought the man to the ground. With his knee on his back, Laliberte waited to for hospital security and the St. Paul cops, who placed the man under arrest.

“We don’t usually suggest that people chase down suspects,” said St. Paul Police spokesman Peter Panos. “We usually suggest that people be good witnesses.”

This marathon-hero story brought to you by the Star-Tribune. A quick search of MarathonGuide.com showed a Mark Laliberte, but the ages didn’t match up.

Would you chase a criminal down the street??

[tags] Marathon, Robbery, St. Paul [/tags]

Detraining and Recovery

After 12 weeks of training for a race I’m now taking some time off to let my body recover and heal.  When I was first thinking about trying to do a fall marathon I asked my old X-Country coach what he thought about doing a spring half and a fall full marathon.  He suggested I schedule it so that I could take at least 2 weeks off without running.  It worked out pretty well in the schedule for me to run the Earth Day race and then turn around and run Twin Cities in the fall.  I’ve done pretty well at not running only logging 9 miles in just over a week (though 6 of that was racing).  I feel fine,  but I miss running.

Here are some thoughts about de-training and recovery from the New York Times.

This is from an older article about fitness but it is still worth reading and thinking about.

…training is exquisitely specific: you can acquire and maintain cardiovascular fitness with many activities, but if you want to keep your ability to row, or run, or swim, you have to do that exact activity.

It also shows, they say, that people who work out sporadically, running on weekends, for instance, will never reach their potential.

An athlete who has stopped training for 3 months loses almost all of the cardio benefits gained through months of consistent training.

Running allows athletes to have a lower resting heart rate, a larger heart, and greater blood plasma volume (which allows the heart to pump more blood with each beat).

One of the first things that athletes lose during a period “detraining” is the plasma volume.

Plasma water is lost amazingly fast, said Dr. Paul Thompson, a marathon runner and cardiologist at Hartford Hospital in Connecticut.

“We once paid distance runners $10 a day not to run”, Dr. Thompson recalled. “They spent a lot of time in the men’s room urinating. Two days into their running fast,” he said, “the men lost a little more than two pounds from water weight as their plasma volume fell 8 percent.”

But if runners keep running, even if they cover many fewer miles than at their peak, they can maintain their plasma volume, Dr. Thompson said.

When athletes stop training, the heart also pumps less blood to their muscles with each beat. Both changes are so pronounced, says Edward Coyle, an exercise physiologist at the University of Texas, Austin, that within three months of detraining, athletes are no different in these measures than people who had been sedentary all their lives.

The article also talks about the impact of cross-training. The conclusion is that cross-training can help the athlete keep some of their cardiovascular gains – but they will still have to work hard to recover other aspects of their training. But there is good news:

Even exercise physiologists are surprised at how quickly the body can readapt when training resumes. Almost immediately, blood volume goes up, heartbeats become more powerful, and muscle mitochondria come back.

That is the good news that most injured runners need to remember in the doldrums of an injury. The researchers did caution that recovery is dependent on a lot of factors.

[tags] Injury, Cardiovascular, Training [/tags]

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