Archive | February, 2009

32nd Annual Shamrock 10 Miler

Posted on 28 February 2009 by Vaughan

The Shamrock 10 Miler & Oppemheimer 5K is one of South Florida’s longest “running” events. Its John Prince Park location (Lake Worth, FL) is well known to area runners. The 10 Miler is held on the roadways, bike paths and sidewalks in and around the Park.

Join us

SUNDAY MARCH 15TH

We are particularly excited about this race since it will be our first “official” race as a team and are hoping to have a team tent for a post race gathering and celebration.  We will be posting a meet-up time and place over the next few days so we can carpool (for those who are interested).  We are also anticipating the unveiling of our “Official” Team Jersey with our shiny new logo courtesy of Hillary and her firm MDG Advertising.  We will also have plenty of refreshments from our team sponsors, Honest Tea, OGO Water and Earthbound Farms! GO GREEN TEAM!

Location & Start Time

Location: John Prince Park - Lake Worth
Directions: From I-95, Exit 6th Avenue and head West. At Congress Ave, turn left, heading South. The park entrance will be on the east side of the road (left side) approximately 200 yards South of 6th Ave.

Start Times:
7:15 - Shamrock 10 miler
7:30 - 5K
9:15 - L’il Leprechaun Run.

Race Day Registration

Race Day Registration will be available at the Main Pavilion in John Prince Park. Registration will begin at 6am, and will close approximately 15 minutes before the first race.

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For More info: http://www.palmbeachroadrunners.com/

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Fort Lauderdale A1A Marathon

Posted on 20 February 2009 by Vaughan

February 22, 2009
6:00 amto11:00 am

Team Fusion will be out in full-effect this weekend for the 4th Annual Fort Lauderdale A1A Marathon!

Fort Lauderdale’s premier running event begins at the Museum of Discovery & Science in downtown Fort Lauderdale then heads down historic Las Olas Boulevard lined on either side by boutique shops and sidewalk dinning restaurants before continuing along scenic State Road A1A. Almost the entire course boasts ocean views and the race finishes in South Beach Park on popular Fort Lauderdale Beach. With something for everyone course entertainments includes bands, cheerleaders, mascots from your favorite South Florida Sports Teams, enthusiastic spectators, and ample water stops sponsored by local area running clubs and organizations.

The A1A Marathon is an event that runners of all levels can enjoy. The A1A Marathon is a Boston Marathon qualifying marathon, the flat course gives runners their best chance to qualify for Boston.

For more info: http://www.a1amarathon.com/

Online Registration is now closed! You can still register in person at the Expo in the Galleria Mall on Friday from 1pm - 9pm or Saturday from 10am - 5pm. The address for the Galleria is 2414 E. Sunrise Blvd., Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33304

The team will be meeting at 4:30am at the Panera Bread on Yamato Rd.
Panera Bread
222 Yamato Rd. - Boca Raton
View Larger Map

a1a

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Seattle Rock ‘n’ Roll Marathon Training Program

Posted on 03 February 2009 by Vaughan

srnrtraininglogo

Date(s):
Saturday, February 07, 2009 - Saturday, June 27, 2009

Venue:
Carrabbas’s Italian Grill Parking Lot

Address:
335 East Linton Blvd.
Delray Beach, FL 33483
Corner of Linton & US1


Join Us!

Join Team Fusion for our Seattle Rock ‘n’ Roll Marathon and 1/2 Marathon training program. We offer varied pace groups, a customized training schedule and professional coaching for everyone. These programs are customized to prepare you to COMPLETE either the Inaugural Seattle Rock ‘n’ Roll Full or Half Marathon.

Weekly Runs:
In addition to the Saturday long-run, we will also offer weekly training runs every Monday and Wednesday to help maximize your potential and keep you on track for a successful run.  We will also offer assistance by offering speed and endurance clinics.  Mid-week run times are TBD.

What Else?
Our coaches are also provide support with running technique, nutrition, stretching, and footwear. You will learn about all of the components of having a great marathon experience and maintaining a healthy lifestyle.

Program Benefits:
Led by Coaches Ashley & Lora-Brown dean
20 Week Program
Logbook, tech running shirt, and official program
Post-race social in Seattle
Discounts at local running shops
Measured running course with water and Gatorade every 2-3 miles
Weekly Fitness E-Mails
Clinics on shoes, nutrition, strength training, more
Discount entry into Seattle RnR Marathon or 1/2 Marathon
Group hotel rates & airfare
TELL A FRIEND, RUN WITH A FRIEND, FINISH WITH THOUSANDS OF FRIENDS!

Prices:
Full Marathon - $TBD
Half Marathon - $TBD

Comments (4)

YOUR PERFECT TEMPO TO RACE YOUR BEST

Posted on 02 February 2009 by Vaughan

istock_000002924843smallRobin Roberts runs like a Kenyan. Okay, she doesn’t run as fast as a Kenyan, but the 47-year-old New York City advertising executive–who trains far from Nairobi–has achieved personal records by using the same workout that has helped propel the likes of Paul Tergat and Lornah Kiplagat to greatness. The secret? A tempo run, that faster-paced workout also known as a lactate-threshold, LT, or threshold run.

Roberts–who’d dabbled in faster-paced short efforts–learned to do a proper tempo run only when she began working with a coach, Toby Tanser. In 1995, when Tanser was an elite young track runner from Sweden, he trained with the Kenyan’s “A” team for seven months. They ran classic tempos–a slow 15-minute warmup, followed by at least 20 minutes at a challenging but manageable pace, then a 15-minute cooldown–as often as twice a week. “The foundation of Kenyan running is based almost exclusively on tempo training,” says Tanser. “It changed my view on training.”

Today, Tanser and many running experts believe that tempo runs are the single most important workout you can do to improve your speed for any race distance. “There’s no beating the long run for pure endurance,” says Tanser. “But tempo running is crucial to racing success because it trains your body to sustain speed over distance.” So crucial, in fact, that it trumps track sessions in the longer distances. “Tempo training is more important than speedwork for the half and full marathon,” says Loveland, Colorado, coach Gale Bernhardt, author of Training Plans for Multisport Athletes. “Everyone who does tempo runs diligently improves.” You also have to be diligent, as Roberts discovered, about doing them correctly.

Why the Tempo Works…

Tempo running improves a crucial physiological variable for running success: our metabolic fitness. “Most runners have trained their cardiovascular system to deliver oxygen to the muscles,” says exercise scientist Bill Pierce, chair of the health and exercise science department at Furman University in South Carolina, “but they haven’t trained their bodies to use that oxygen once it arrives. Tempo runs do just that by teaching the body to use oxygen for metabolism more efficiently.”

How? By increasing your lactate threshold (LT), or the point at which the body fatigues at a certain pace. During tempo runs, lactate and hydrogen ions–by-products of metabolism–are released into the muscles, says 2:46 marathoner Carwyn Sharp, Ph.D., an exercise scientist who works with NASA. The ions make the muscles acidic, eventually leading to fatigue. The better trained you become, the higher you push your “threshold,” meaning your muscles become better at using these byproducts. The result is less-acidic muscles (that is, muscles that haven’t reached their new “threshold”), so they keep on contracting, letting you run farther and faster.
…If Done Properly

But to garner this training effect, you’ve got to put in enough time at the right intensity–which is where Roberts went wrong. Her tempo runs, like those of many runners, were too short and too slow. “You need to get the hydrogen ions in the muscles for a sufficient length of time for the muscles to become adept at using them,” says Sharp. Typically, 20 minutes is sufficient, or two to three miles if your goal is general fitness or a 5-K. Runners tackling longer distances should do longer tempo runs during their peak training weeks: four to six miles for the 10-K, six to eight for the half-marathon, and eight to 10 for 26.2.

Because Roberts was focusing on the half-marathon, Tanser built up her tempo runs to eight miles (plus warmup and cooldown) at an eight-minute-per-mile pace. “The pace was uncomfortable,” she says. “But after a while I realized, ‘Oh, I can maintain this for a long time.’”

That’s exactly how tempo pace should feel. “It’s what I call ‘comfortably hard,’” says Pierce. “You know you’re working, but you’re not racing. At the same time, you’d be happy if you could slow down.”

You’ll be even happier if you make tempo running a part of your weekly training regimen, and get results that make you feel like a Kenyan–if not quite as fast.

UP TEMPO

A classic tempo or lactate-threshold run is a sustained, comfortably hard effort for two to four miles. The workouts below are geared toward experience levels and race goals.

GOAL: BEGINNER:
Coach Gale Bernhardt uses this four-week progression for tempo-newbies. Do a 10- to 15-minute warmup and cooldown.

Week 1: 5 x 3 minutes at tempo pace, 60-second easy jog in between each one (if you have to walk during the recovery, you’re going too hard).Week 2: 5 x 4 minutes at tempo pace, 60-second easy jog recovery Week 3: 4 x 5 minutes at tempo pace, 90-second easy jog recovery Week 4: 20 minutes steady tempo pace

GOAL: 5-K to 10-K Run:
three easy miles, followed by two repeats of two miles at 10-K pace or one mile at 5-K pace. Recover with one mile easy between repeats. Do a two-mile easy cooldown for a total of eight or 10 miles.

GOAL: HALF/FULL MARATHON:
Do this challenging long run once or twice during your training. After a warmup, run three (half-marathoners) or six (marathoners) miles at the easier end of your tempo pace range (see “The Right Rhythm,” below). Jog for five minutes, then do another three or six miles. “Maintaining that comfortably hard pace for so many miles will whip you into shape for long distances,” says coach Toby Tanser.

The Right Rhythm

To ensure you’re doing tempo workouts at the right pace, use one of these four methods to gauge your intensity.

Recent Race: Add 30 to 40 seconds to your current 5-K pace or 15 to 20 seconds to your 10-K pace

Heart Rate: 85 to 90 percent of your maximum heart rate

Perceived Exertion: An 8 on a 1-to-10 scale (a comfortable effort would be a 5; racing would be close to a 10)

Talk Test: A question like “Pace okay?” should be possible, but conversation won’t be.

Originally Published 05/23/2007 :
http://www.runnersworld.com
Written By John Hanc

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Running The Sahara

Posted on 01 February 2009 by Vaughan

01I had the opportunity to see the documentary “Running The Sahara” last night.  It was an expedition consisting of three men who set out to RUN across the 4,00+ miles of the Sahara desert.  The film was narrated by Academy Award-winner Matt Damon and directed by Academy Award-winner James Moll. A small film crew tracked the runners across the desert, capturing their incredible journey on camera, recording this landmark moment in athleticism, in humanitarianism, and in history.

The expedition began in November of 2006 with runners Charlie Engle (USA), Ray Zahab(Canada) and Kevin Lin(Taiwan) embarking on what most people called impossible… running across the Sahara Desert.  I have to support that casual statement by making sure I mention that the will not stop running to soak up some poolside fun and shop in the markets along the way.  They set-out on an estimated 80-day journey across over 4,00o miles and through 6 countries: Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Niger, Libya, and Egypt.  Just a reference, that’s approximately 165 marathons.

As a VERY recreational runner, this movie was truly inspiring.  I would have to say that it is the “Rocky” for runners.  The simple thought of what these 3 men had to endure to make this dream a reality seemed to deafen any doubts of whether I can go that extra mile next Saturday.  The underlying story (for me) was the background history of these three runners.  Although the webiste doesn’t really get into detail http://www.runningthesahara.com/bios.html , what shocked me was that Canadian runner, Ray Zahab had only been running for 2 years prior to this.  He was a former party-animal and drug user who “woke-up one day and started to run”.  I know it sounds a bit Forrest Gump, but it’s true.  I put my sneakers on after watching the movie and set-out for a run despite my “pains” from the previous days run.

I highly suggest this for anyone, whether you run or not.  The scenery and wonderful people of the 6 countries they ran through were the supporting cast!  There was also a great philanthropic message as well that deals with bringing clean drinking water to these countries.  I think you’ll be hearing a lot more about http://www.h2oafrica.org/ from me as the season unfolds!

Enjoy the trailer!

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