Thursday, June 14, 2012

I'm Getting Schooled... Part 5 of 5 (Coaching Costs)

The first four parts of my coaching series dealt with services that I had to pay for.  I intentionally left out the payment details until now so that I could sum them all up together.  As I mentioned in Part 1, the potential costs were an issue I had to overcome.  Turns out, hiring a coach was cheaper than I thought it would be, not that I'm done whipping out my checkbook yet.  Here's how my expenditures break down:


Initial Consultation
  • Duration - 1 hour
  • Cost - $40

Lactate Threshold Test
  • Duration - Aprox. 40 minutes
  • Cost - $75

Stride Analysis
  • Duration - Part of a 1 hour training session
  • Cost - $40


AlterG Treadmill
  • Duration - 1 hour
  • Cost - $20/hour, better rates if multiple sessions are prepaid.


Custom 10k Training Plan
  • Duration - 5 week plan
  • Cost - $35


Since I didn't have to pay to try the AlterG, the total I've paid for services so far from my coach is $180.00 (including a $10 coupon).  Pretty reasonable wouldn't you say for all the help I've got?


Of course, rates will vary from coach to coach, region to region, and year to year, but I think posting these numbers will be helpful to others who are seriously considering hiring a coach like I did.



Go To:
Part 1 of 5 (My New Coach)
Part 2 of 5 (Lactate Threshold Test)
Part 3 of 5 (AlterG)
Part 4 of 5 (10k Training Plan) 

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

I'm Getting Schooled... Part 4 of 5 (10k Training Plan)

As I alluded to in the first part of this series, I have done alright on my own as a runner, and have come a long way since my clueless beginnings.  However, my marathon PR still sits 20 minutes away from a Boston Qualifier, and I am looking for better improvements.  Hence, it's time for a coaching change (I'm firing myself).


With the change comes a new and welcome training plan, customized for me by Coach Wadsworth.  In the short term, I've got my sights on a 10k race, and that training plan is what I'm going to share with you today.  While this 5 week 10k training plan was tailored for me, I'm sure there are many runners who could gain something by it.


I would describe the plan as advanced, and geared toward a half or full marathoner who needs to squeeze in a 10k.  Note that the minimum daily mileage besides Sundays and race week is 6 miles, and it maxes out at about 56 miles in the third week.  One possible inconvenience is instead of listing paces for each workout, the speed is determined by heart rate zones.  I will go into more details after the training plan chart.

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Rest or
(E-A) 6 miles
(E-A) 6 miles
(E-A) 7 miles/strides
(T) 2 miles
(E-A) 7 miles
(E-A) 10 miles
Rest
Intervals 4x800, 4x400, 4x200 meters w/equal jog rest (T-I) zone
(E-A) 7 miles
(E-A) 7 miles/strides
(T) 3 miles
(E-A) 7 miles
(A) 12 miles
Rest
Fartlek
15x60 sec. w/equal jog rest (T-I) zone
(E-A) 7 miles
(E-A) 8 miles/strides
(T-I) 4 miles progressive
(E-A) 7 miles
(A) 14 miles
Rest
Intervals 5x1000, 4x200 meters w/equal jog rest (T-I) zone
(E-A) 7 miles
(E-A) 7 miles/strides
(T-I) 4.5 miles progressive
(E-A) 6 miles
(A) 10 miles
Rest

Fartlek
10x90 sec. w/ 2 min. jog rest
(E-A) 6 miles
(E-A) 5 miles/strides 8x200 meter fast w/ 200 jog
(E-A) 4-5 miles
Easy jog 3-4 miles w/ strides
10k Race
Rest























Notes: Blue denotes a recovery week.  Week 1 was denoted a recovery week because I just raced a half marathon the day before.
Heart Rate Training Zones:
(E) - Easy/Recovery Zone:  70% LT - 84% LT*
(A) - Aerobic Maintenance Zone:  85% LT - 95% LT*
(T) - Threshold/Steady Zone:  Lactate Threshold HR ± 2%*
(I) - Interval Zone: 102% LT - Max HR*
*To make this plan as generic as I could, I converted the zones to percentages of Lactate Threshold.  You will have to either get a LT test done or make some educated guesses to obtain desired heart rates.  One estimate to determine LT is to take 85% - 90% of your max HR.  My LT is about 88% of my Max HR.  If you want to throw out all this Lactate Threshold and heart rate stuff, you could simply think of the 4 zones as slow, medium, fast, and fastest.

One of my pet peeves of a lot of other training plans found across the world wide web is they only give minimal information like distance and maybe a 2 word description.  They might say nothing about intensity or specifics of the speed work.  Hopefully I can fill in the gaps.
  • E-A runs start in the Easy zone, finish in the Aerobic zone.
  • Jog between intervals.  Allow HR to dip below Easy zone before starting next one.
  • For all Interval, Threshold, or Fartlek days add a 2-3 mile easy warm-up and a 2-3 mile cool-down to what's listed in the chart.
  • The fartlek repetitions should get gradually faster (progressive) so that although they might last the same duration, you should cover greater distances as the workout goes on.
  • Strides are 100-200 meter accelerations at 80-95% max speed with a short 1-2 minute rest between. Aim for 4-8 repetitions and relaxed but fast running.  Do strides at the end of the day's run with no jogging in between.
Feel free to contact me if I left out any details.  Maybe this training plan will be helpful to others who are needing to mix things up a bit like I did.  In my final post for my coaching series, I will go over what all this advice has been costing me.  Thanks for reading.



Go To:
Part 1 of 5 (My New Coach)

Part 3 of 5 (AlterG)

Part 5 of 5 (Coaching Costs)