No problem. I wasn't upset as much as perplexed. And I stand corrected about AL's recommendations on effort. I thought there was some variation, but, I also have given away (most of) my running books and magazines. To the OP: Before children (BC, as I refer to it) I ran 2x 90 minutes/ day most days (and doubles with quality stuff or a long run) the the others. Granted, I ran what Lydiard probably would have called a 1/32 effort on a lot of that, but I did it while working full time. The only thing I had to sacrifice to do so, really, was TV. If you devote 50 hours/week to work and sleep 60 hours you still have 58 hours left. Spending even 18 of them actually running leaves 40 to do whatever else. It's really a matter of making choices. How important is running well? If it's important you make the time.OP: I like your schedule, by the way. Post here and let us know how it goes. Ignore the haters. Those people are usually the ones who have yet to master themselves. They tend to take that fact out on others.
lease wrote:
Link wrote:Not sure why you think I'm a troll. I know that Lydiard recommended different distances, that's why I said almost exactly. I don't think Lydiard recommended different paces - or at least he didn't recommend much variation in effort during base training. Different days same effort might equal different paces.
Sorry for my slightly-pissy previous post. I gave away my running library a few years ago, so no longer have Lydiard books to quote from, but he certainly looked for different paces (though he typically referred to "effort") on different days in the buildup period.
I was able to find an interesting article online that, at least glancingly, refers to different effort levels in Lydiard's training week(s) during the buildup:
http://runningtimes.com/Article.aspx?ArticleID=12686And here's another pretty good one (
http://www.sbrunning.org/Reviews/bookLydiard.htm) that includes material from the original "Run to the Top" that sounds familiar:
"Monday: 10M, hilly course, half-effort
"Tuesday: 15M easier course, quarter-effort, undulating not dead-flat
"Wednesday: 12M fartlek
"Thursday: 18M easier course, quarter effort
"Friday: 10M fast over a flat course, three-quarter effort
"Saturday: 20-30M, easy course, quarter-effort
"Sunday: 15M easy, quarter-effort"
The article continues with a pretty good discussion of what AL meant by the different effort levels he stated. In any case, we can see the diffferent distances, paces/"efforts," and terrains that AL advocated.
I'm going on at such length because many people think that Lydiard was just a pack-in-the-slow-miles guy during base training. He actually spoke more of a "buildup" than of a base (as the first article I linked to discusses), and he was emphatically in favor of avoiding any phase with all- (or mostly-)one-speed running.
Cheers--
lease