yes, I did that interview a few months ago for Chad Austin, who follows runners (young and old) in Minnesota. One nice thing about e-mail interviews is that you can blab for pages and everything gets put in, and he had some great questions. Truth is there WERE a lot of VERY GOOD runners in the U.S. in the '70s thru mid-eighties. (Actually the '60s weren't too shabby either with Mills, Schul, Dellinger, Lindgren.....) Good luck with your recovery. I understand what you're saying about the softness and uneven-ness of trails. See if you can find some that are hard packed dirt and fairly even. We're fortunate to have some in Minneapolis. STEVE
no-name survivor wrote:
Good advice, thanks. Didn't expect any response, actually.
Here's to you, a half-decent synopsis of your records from a web interview:
http://runningminnesota.blogspot.com/2007/01/steve-hoag.htmlPretty incredible.
I have always believed in rest days, for 27 years, even when racing, I had always run 3X per week with 4 cross-training days.
But recently when I got the sfx it was with 3X per week running, plus 3 days elliptical, plus about 20 minutes before runs of intense Pose method hopping drills.
What probably did it was overuse in combination with a bad biomechanics that I have not yet mastered --- it's hard to unlearn old patterns from 27 years and be really efficient.
***
Looking forward to LOTS of biking all summer. Hip sfx's vary from 4 months to 11 months, depending on how well you stay off it. Maybe a few short runs in the fall, low, low mileage only. It's all about cumulative pounding with sfx's.
The unevenness of soft trails bothers my knee more than the pounding. However, the hips would love the softer ground, I'm sure.