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Chicago Marathon Weekend with Ten Junk Miles

Fin de semana del maratón de Chicago con diez millas basura

BY PATH PROJECTS OCTOBER 16, 2019

🚨Participe para ganar una tarjeta de regalo de $100, consulte los detalles a continuación. 🚨

corriendo en chicago
Acabamos de regresar de 4 días corriendo, animando y reuniéndonos con amigos en Chicago. El fin de semana de maratón estuvo en pleno efecto con muchas actividades de carrera.
Nos reunimos con el podcast Ten Junk Miles para comer la mejor pizza de plato hondo de la ciudad y grabar un programa grupal. Tuvimos una larga conversación sobre cómo comenzaron los proyectos PATH, lo que hemos aprendido en los últimos 2 años, los próximos productos y mucho más. Enlace del episodio a seguir el próximo mes.
podcast de diez millas basura
Con Scott Kummer, Holly Lindroth y Adam Benkers en el estudio Ten Junk Miles.
Después de visitar la exposición maratónica, hicimos un recorrido por el centro de Chicago. La lluvia y el viento caían con toda su fuerza y ​​nos permitieron vislumbrar el otoño en el Medio Oeste.
grupo de corredores en chicago
floris gierman y scott kummer diez millas basura
El sábado por la mañana, organizamos una carrera maratónica con amigos de los proyectos PATH, Ten Junk Miles y Extramilest. Es fantástico conocer a corredores de todo Estados Unidos, Canadá, Australia y Europa. Corrimos por el paseo marítimo y hablamos de estrategias de carrera y entrenamiento para maratones.
carrera grupal en chicago
El domingo animamos a más de 40.000 maratonistas en la milla 24 de Michigan Ave. Es muy emocionante ver a los corredores de élite pasar tan rápido y sin problemas.
Es increíble ver a Brigid Kosgei establecer un nuevo récord mundial femenino en 2:14:04
El entrenador Morgan de The Run Experience organizó una transmisión web en vivo de 2 horas desde la milla 24, mientras todos animaban a los corredores.
proyectos de ruta diez millas basura y la experiencia de correr

Únase a nuestras próximas carreras grupales:

31 de octubre - jueves
Carrera grupal en Central Park, Nueva York
Únase a nosotros para una suave carrera de 4 millas.

1 de noviembre - viernes
Sesión de fotos de proyectos PATH - Central Park, Nueva York
Únase a nosotros para tomar algunas fotos para el Blog de proyectos PATH

2 de noviembre - sábado
Carrera Shakeout del Maratón de Nueva York
Únase a nosotros para una breve carrera de sacudida (30 minutos). ¡Cuelgue, charle y más!

7 de diciembre - sábado
Carrera Shakeout del maratón CIM - Sacramento, CA
Únase a nosotros para una breve carrera de sacudida (30 minutos). ¡Cuelgue, charle y más!

🚨Participe para ganar una tarjeta de regalo de $100🚨

Felicitaciones al ganador de la semana pasada , AJ Neufeld, por ganar 1 camiseta Cascade y 2 forros Tahoe Base.

Esta semana participe para ganar una tarjeta de regalo de $100 de proyectos PATH. Háganos saber en los comentarios, ¿qué consejo le daría a otros corredores que buscan mejorar su carrera?

También podrías disfrutar:

174 comentarios

Vary your training. Running the same miles, at the same pace, in the same place, on the same schedule is a recipe for burnout. Shake up your training by exploring different locales. Improve your performance with a mix of speed, hills, recovery, road, trail, cross training, etc

Greg Smith,

In your mind start counting starting from 1 to infinity (repeat if your mind wanders or you get fatigued). Gets you in the trance zone!!!

Henry Wong,

Get plenty of sleep and cut down on sugar. Easy to say, but tough to live!

Tim McCleskey,

Some advice I would share is slow down to go fast. Work speed in short focused sessions. The rest should be easy miles building the foundation to allow you to explode when you need to pour it on. You’ll be amazed how strong you feel once the miles start clicking off.

Chris Johnson ,

Strength train, strength train, strength train. Makes a world of difference.

Cindy Sullivan,

When running long distances, you’ll be in pain but eventually you’ll realize that pain doesn’t get any worse. Keep moving and push thru the lows and ride the highs.

Brian D,

Find a local running club. You’ll meet like minded people. Then, seek out the veterans and listen to them and not much of the BS in the major running magazine. I’ve found that running marketing is becoming as bad as bicycle marketing in its efforts to convince us to buy so much crap!

Christian McMillen ,

Listen to your body.

Kathy Lampman,

Not every run looks like the opening scene of “Chariots of Fire”. It’s okay if it’s boring – that’ll build mental strength. But it’s also good to spice things up: new gear, new music, new trail, new companions, new race registration. Nothing changes if nothing changes.

Paul Weberg,

When I first began running I thought I had to run hard all the time to get faster. Tempo runs followed by too hard recovery runs. Long runs to hard which left me drained and unable to important workouts days later. One of the tools I used was a heart rate monitor. I was astounded to learn that my “recovery runs” were muck closer to tempo runs than to an easy run. So, once you get a good base built and want to do a formal training program, either get a heart rate monitor and use it properly. You will have to find your max heart rate (HR) and a resting HR to calculate your numbers and then have at it. Or you can go by a scale of 1-10. 1-2 is a walk, 3-5 is an easy run (you can carry on a conversation while running), 6-7 is moderate to pre-tempo(can talk in short sentences in between breaths, 8 is your tempo pace(maybe a couple words, breathing harder now), and 9-10 is your repeats or sprints. Maybe a word here and there. To sum it up: run hard when you are supposed to and super easy on your recovery days. Happy trails!!

Alan L Johnson,

I think my best advice, and the advice I wish I’d gotten earlier on, is to do whatever it takes to enjoy your running. It seems simple, but it took a long time to realize sometimes that means doing it a lot less, and sometimes changing training dramatically. I find I run least when it feels like a chore and an obligation. Then I switch up the objective and start focusing on different goals like journeys runs, etc.

Jordan Kit,

Find a group or two you can meetup to run with. They will keep you honest, They will keep you encouraged, they will push you beyond what you thought your limits were and will become your closest friends

Runningham,

Set realistic goals, stay consistent, try to find an accountability partner, keep it simple, don’t live by the watch, take care of yourself, take care of your trails, if you come up short don’t beat yourself up, join a local running group, make friends in the running community, X-train, learn your body, take it easy ,& enjoy the ride!

Jeremy Desch,

Set realistic goals, stay consistent, try to find an accountability partner, keep it simple, don’t live by the watch, take care of yourself, take care of your trails, if you come up short don’t beat yourself up, join a local running group, make friends in the running community, X-train, learn your body, take it easy ,& enjoy the ride!

Jeremy Desch,

If you are moving into a longer mileage training plan (e.g. more total weekly runs and/or increasing long runs) I’ve found that gradually implementing a plan is best. In other words, don’t be in a rush to crank up the mileage and risk injury/fatigue that will set you back. We all want to be running “for years to come”, so what’s the rush?

Kevin Hirt,

Just keep runnin’!!!

Keith,

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