This is what i am doing.
SSB LV1 with speed workouts.
M -E run (5 miles)
T - Hard Track
W - Bike
Th - E Run with strides (5 miles + strides)
F - Bike
Sa - MLR (12 - 15 miles)
Su - Bike and E brick (2-5 miles)
You have to watch out not to overdo the running. The SSB is not easy.
I tend to stick to the low volume plans when adding in runs (and swims). Trad base is a good place to start if you’re new to running or coming back to either discipline after some time off as the intensities are low.
If you do sweet spot base and start running without much background in either, you’re likely to start digging a hole in my opinion.
I’m rotating through a whole bunch. Adidas Adios 4, Boston 8, Hoka Tracer 2, Clifton 6, Carbon X, Rincon, Nike Peg Turbo 2. The Boston are holding up okay, everything else, especially Hoka seem to suffer from my lateral forefoot strike and toe off. The Tracer are currently the worst, after 250k they feel like the midsole in the lateral forefoot area has given up and is pushing me even further to the lateral side at toe off. I’ll post some pictures later.
I loved the RC1500v2+3 but they were absolutely shot after 150k.
Not only are they durable but their grip in wet/damp conditions is tough to beat.
I do most of my training in Pegasus and they are super slippery as soon as the road gets a little wet. The soles do last long though…1,200kms with minimal wear
Agree. I used Pegasus 35 and 36. The 36 lasted longer then 35.
The issue with my 35 is that the apparently the air pocket broke or something and it was a rough run. I only use them now if I am running with the kids (since i know it will be slow and short).
NB do great shoes, but sadly they dont last very long, at least the 1400’s and 1500’s. I guess they are not meant to last since they are consider “race” shoes.
Continental soles are amazing! Love them to death.
But the rebook are not bad either!
If you guys are looking for a shoe you can run most of your run (maybe not speed workouts) the forever floatride will fit the bill nicely.
If you ever used the Adidas Supernova Glide 8 Boost (from 2016) this reebok shoe is VERY VERY close to that shoe in term of cushioning. Not too soft, not too hard. Just about perfect! Man, I do miss the Supernova Glides 8. I loved it so much that bought 2 pairs when they discontinue the shoe to have at least 1 year of them (I was running 2500 miles a year back then)
Not much to add to the running thread aside from its a knee killer. Never again! No bike last week, so did 4x 30min runs and now experiencing knee pain like no other the following week.
Last time i do that…i would have thought 2 hours was pretty light and classified as easing into it. apparently not.
I originally planned to take one or two days off before joining the ZA Race but then realized the window was closing this week. And the only time that worked for me was Tuesday which was after a hard bike and hard strength session Monday.
Despite being fatigued I managed to surprise myself. I ran the 3.1 in 17:42 though the Zwift results shows 18:04. Which apparently counts 20 seconds of lead in time or something.
Quite happy with the results for two runs a week. This is not far off my pb (17:26) which I pulled off during marathon prep last year.
Going to report on here my very short foray into running:
after a few botched tries, and following advice from this thread, I started running very vey easy (20’ run/walks and so on). In about four weeks I have built up to 6 runs of about 35’ each, with one long run of 1hr on the weekend.
I double up on the bike, so run in the early morning and cycling in the late afternoon.
most of my runs have been on barefoot-style shoes (vivobarefoot). I know this is highly controversial, but I am well used to this style of shoes from using them in my daily life, and I am appreciating the immediate form feedback. No chance to get lazy or do things wrong, and I feel like this has played at least some part in making this entry into running more successful than the previous ones (which have always been derailed by ITB issues).
In conjunction with all this, I am following David Roche’s warm up routine and a few exercises from the Myrtle after runs, to keep hips open, mobile and flexible as much as I can.
I must say, at a moment where my motivation to train hard on the bike is at an all time low, I am really enjoying the running, and am looking forward to bringing these gains on the trails when I go back home for the Christmas holidays.
What a year in running this has been! I thought it would be my year to take my cycling to the next level- have for sure gotten stronger on the bike, but I’m a totally different runner now than 12 months ago! In the last 2 months, I’ve:
run a 2:56 marathon for my first BQ
Won a super challenging half marathon overall (1300ft of elevation gained, 8 miles of loose gravel)
Broke the tape at a local 5k for the first time ever (and went 19’ to set a PR on a very hilly course)
Finally this AM had my best endurance performance ever, a 1:23 on a hilly half marathon course! Never thought I could hold a 6:24 mile for more than a few miles, let alone a HM. I can’t believe it, I’ve been feeling amazing all week and everything just clicked today! Nice stride, pacing was right on the edge but not over, no stitching or cramping.
The covid-induced elimination of group rides/races and solo, structured training on the bike and run have definitely paid off! Down 15lbs from last year with more power/higher fitness than ever. Just don’t ask me to swim any time soon!
It fascinating how different people see best performance. I would consider a 254 on a marathon my best performance ever (my pr is 2.59.48). That 259 was way harder than my 122 half or my 1742 5k!
That said, i think you may be capable of much faster 5k and half times!
I havent done a 10k in a while, but I always find the 10k is the worse one…
5k you just go out hard… and its done in 20 minutes…
in a 10k it requires almost a perfect pacing strategy. You need to go hard… but if you go TOO hard you will be done…and more than likely you will have 2 miles to go once your legs give out!
Thanks! I’d agree that the marathon was mentally a lot tougher to keep holding pace as my legs lost their mojo in the last 4 miles. The last mile I was grunting every step with increasing loudness! But even in the buildup to the marathon there’s no way I could knock out more than a few consecutive sub 6:30 miles, let alone 13 of them on a slow course. I executed the race almost perfectly from a nutrition, WU, and pacing standpoint, and felt the best and most confident I ever have while running. Interestingly, I spent less than 1 hour total at anything close to threshold in the 2 months between the marathon and the half- 2 weeks off followed by 6 weeks of 10-15hrs Z2 worked wonders.
I definitely have more in the 5k but not as much as my longer times indicate. I’m a notorious diesel engine with a low top end, but even more so in running, my stride just doesn’t let me run that fast. I have tree trunk legs and tight hamstrings/hips- let’s me push big power on the bike but makes my stride short and ugly. I could probably get close to 18 on a flat course with others to pace off, but it’s extremely challenging for me to get myself moving at sub 6 pace regardless of the length of time.
I made the same mistake as you.
I was running 5.30 min/Km in the beginning without much effort, HR was under control (certainly below cycling threshold) but in less than a week I got a nagging IT band pain. I had to reign it back by inserting small walk intervals until I could run the whole way through without going back to the IT band pain. Shortly after that, I discovered 80/20 running and I’ve been injury free since then. Now most of my runs are 30-45 min/km slower but much longer than before and I’m adding tempo work sparingly.
80/20 running is A way to keep your effort under control (It worked for me, maybe more experienced athletes can add to the topic), especially after years of sweet spot and threshold work on TR. Copying that as a running beginner was a recipe for disaster in my case.
Back to running workouts after a week off…
I guess the 5k from Saturday really did a number on my legs. This is not the way I usually feel after a 5k, so its a bit frustrating.
In any case…
12x 400 - Average of 85s per 400 (most under, some over)
4x200 - 41s each.
oh boy. I am exhausted today. I haven’t feel this tired after a wo in a very long time!
Sorry if this has already been covered, does anyone use the Workout Creator for their run sets?
Plan builder sets the running session descriptions so I’ve tried making those in the creator today.
e.g. 1 hour session with 9*1 minute all out, 3 minutes recovery I’ll set those 1 minutes as double FTP or so.
I have a heart rate monitor connected so I can track I’m in roughly the right zones as I go through.
Find it useful so I can easily follow the session without having to remember bits and also a bit nicer to look at that just the session written down or just my heart rate.
Wonder if this is something TR can implement automatically instead of the description only.