must be working well - 209 today
must be working well - 209 today
hammmm wrote:
must be working well - 209 today
She won her heat and had the fastest time overall. Now Shalane Flanagan has a DNF to show for her efforts. That's what high mileage will do for you.
hammmm wrote:
must be working well - 209 today
I was there, and she did it running 68/61, closing the last 200 in about 28. Clearly capable of much faster.
68.8/60.3
schmke wrote:
hammmm wrote:must be working well - 209 today
I was there, and she did it running 68/61, closing the last 200 in about 28. Clearly capable of much faster.
coach d wrote:
hammmm wrote:must be working well - 209 today
She won her heat and had the fastest time overall. Now Shalane Flanagan has a DNF to show for her efforts. That's what high mileage will do for you.
And that runner-up in New York.
And Huddle's AR in Brussels.
Augusto Perez wrote:
coach d wrote:She won her heat and had the fastest time overall. Now Shalane Flanagan has a DNF to show for her efforts. That's what high mileage will do for you.
And that runner-up in New York.
And Huddle's AR in Brussels.
Now tell me where those amazing times stand on the world list. I think the fastest American woman marathoner was #40.
In the meantime, we had SEVEN US women running sub-2 in the 800 last season. Kenya had 2. The #1 female in the world right now is an American. Not a high mileage runner among them, I don't think.
And when 3 of these 7 women are fighting for the medals in Deagu, the high mileage-Lydiard cult trying to tell them that they've got their training all wrong will still be a bunch of loudmouth losers
fyi-shalane flanagan was running it to pace lisa koll. which is why she was just leading koll the whole time then dropped out. this is confirmed on both of their twitters.
coach d wrote:
hammmm wrote:must be working well - 209 today
She won her heat and had the fastest time overall. Now Shalane Flanagan has a DNF to show for her efforts. That's what high mileage will do for you.
coach d wrote:
In the meantime, we had SEVEN US women running sub-2 in the 800 last season. Kenya had 2. The #1 female in the world right now is an American. Not a high mileage runner among them, I don't think.
You're unaware of the training Pierce and Uceny are doing at Mammoth Lakes right now under Terrence Mahon? They're running a good number of miles right now, as is Erin Donohue.
Which country had the most women under 1:58?
Augusto Perez wrote:
You're unaware of the training Pierce and Uceny are doing at Mammoth Lakes right now under Terrence Mahon? They're running a good number of miles right now, as is Erin Donohue.
Which country had the most women under 1:58?
Which country had the #1?
I know what mileage they are running with Mahon, as I know one them, and it is not what people here would call high mileage. Same thing applies to Angela Bizzarri, who shortly will be joining them.
The people posting here who talk about 100mpw and get nothing out of in terms of performances I would describe as losers. That most definitely doesn't apply to American female middle distance runners, who were the most successful in the world last year. US marathoners are a joke compared to US middle distance runners.
coach d wrote:
Which country had the #1?
Russia
coach d wrote:
I know what mileage they are running with Mahon, as I know one them, and it is not what people here would call high mileage. Same thing applies to Angela Bizzarri, who shortly will be joining them.
The people posting here who talk about 100mpw and get nothing out of in terms of performances I would describe as losers. That most definitely doesn't apply to American female middle distance runners, who were the most successful in the world last year. US marathoners are a joke compared to US middle distance runners.
If you know what Terrence is having them do, then you know they’re not running 40 miles a week.
What’s “nothing out of it in terms of performance”? Aren’t all performances relative to one’s own ability? Not everyone has the talent to get to the Olympic games or run a record. If a 4:10 1500m man runs 7000 miles over two years and improves to 3:51, did he get nothing out of it? You might say that it isn’t work training so much to only run 3:51, but it’s probably important to that guy, and so it is worth it.
We’ll see how it all comes together in Daegu this summer.