i failed doing this wrote:
I am not surprised at the volume at all. I am surprised at the WAY he trains: namely, singles and fast easy runs.
Let's take a look at a random, representative week of his pre-NCAA block from strava, Oct 2- Oct 8.
Monday, Oct 2: 13.4 miles, avg pace 5:55.
Tuesday, Oct 3: double
AM: 5 miles, pace 7:09
PM: 16 miles total. workout. 3 miles w/u, 5k, 2.5k, 5k reps.5 mile cooldown.
Wednesday, Oct 4: 16 miles, pace 6:02
Thursday: OFF
Friday, Oct 6: 17 miles total. Workout. 3 miles w/u, 2x800, 6x mile. 5 miles cooldown.
Saturday, Oct 7: 20 miles, pace: 6:05
Sunday, Oct 8: 13 miles, pace: 6:05
TOTAL: 100.5 miles. 7 runs. 6 running days, 1 day off.
The "easy" days usually start off with a 6:30 first mile or two and then quickly get under 6:00 for the rest of the distance.
It clearly works for him now. I'll be curious if it's a good long term plan. Didn't Josh McDougal similarly hammer big singles every day, win NCAA XC, and then blow up and disappear?
I think this type of training can work for a while for a very few talented, durable guys, but most will underperform, get injured, or both.
I ran for a top 20 d1 NCAA XC team, and we hammered everything, workouts as fast as possible, tempo runs a race, "easy" days 6:00 flat (We didn't do 100mpw though, more like 75-80mpw. Almost everyone underperformed and struggled with injuries. Blanks training is much more like our dumb 1990s --early 2000s training.
I'm a prime example--I had almost identical HS track PRs to Blanks--4:15, 9:10. But I sure wasn't running 13:27 a year later!! I was injured and underperforming, like the majority of my teammates, like I suspect most athletes training like this will be.
But again, it certainly works for Blanks, so kudos to him.
Isn't this much faster than Goucher ran on his easy days? Someone with running with the buffs handy want to confirm?