Kicker wrote:
oh yes wrote:
Daniel's is giving general advice for a broad spectrum of runners aiming at racing those distances. This will include pure distance runners and those better suited to shorter distances.
Do you agree or disagree with this?
Tinman is giving each runner he coaches individual pace guides based on his assessment of their own ability and experience. Specific numbers for % VO2max (fractional utilisation) are not the same for different runners.
Do you agree or disagree with this?
Real distance runners race at a higher percentage of VO2max in a half marathon or marathon than middle distance runners.
Agree or disagree?
-Agree, but the values still apply to most reasonably fit runners
-Agree with the stipulation that they are not wildly different at the elite level
-Agree
I know that elite runners will often run at a higher percentage of their Vo2max and Daniels does have research showing elite females running in the 82-85% of Vo2max range for the marathon. Quoting directly from his work:
"The reference to relative intensity is an important one, because it is the authors' belief that well-trained runners all perform at near-equal percentages of their respective Vo2maxes for various durations of time... In support of this contention, is the fact that eight of the subjects in the current study, all of whom raced marathons within a few weeks of being tested, performed at an average of 84.6% of Vo2max, with six of the eight between 84.0 and 84.9% of Vo2max (the other two were at a calculated 82.8 and 88.2% of Vo2max)"
Source: Daniels J, Daniels N. Running economy of elite male and elite female runners. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1992 Apr;24(4):483-9. PMID: 1560747
Most elite runners do not appear to race the marathon above 85% of Vo2max.
For those athletes, I can see a %Vo2max at LT just cracking 90%, but I would argue that the values I've laid out would apply to almost everyone else. In the grand scheme of things, it's a couple of percentage points and running pretty close to those values is usually good enough.
Good stuff kicker, we are talking the same language.
The way I am trying to explain it is that we all have a different economy curve based on both genetics and fitness.
Some simple graphs would help as long as they are accurate and easy to read.