Marathon Training and Discussions

1

How do you deal with missed workouts? (Read 394 times)

    I have had a tough week or so of training. The missus was away on business, so I was busy playing Daddy Daycare at home to our 16-month old. Needless to say, the running suffered horribly last week. This is fine since I've not taken an extended break in well over a year. The 4-5 days off gave my body some much need down time. I felt quite fresh in legs during my 2:20 long run on Sat under somewhat warm and humid conditions (usually my undoing). It did however raise an interesting question about adherence to schedule - If you miss a planned training session that you can't possibly make up that day, do you: a) skip it, and move on to your next regularly scheduled run b) push that workout forward to the next day, and so on until you catch up c) make it up on your next regularly scheduled rest day (assuming you take them) Not that I get overly fussed about these things, but my week was supposed to look like this; Mon - 8 mi. w/10x100m strides (which I missed) Tue - 5 mi. Easy Wed - 10 mi. mid-long Thu - Rest Fri - 4 mi. Easy Sat - Group long run (2 hrs) For a total of 42 mi. This is from a modified version of Pfitz's 18/55 plan (Wk 4). I'll probably run 5-8 mi. on Thu, but maybe without the strides. Or, maybe I'll run them. I suspect it will be a sort of 'wait and see how I feel' thing, but I am curious how others handle this. Not that it will likely change what I do - just curious is all...


    #2867

      Skip it. You can't play catch up so why derail the rest of your training program and risk injury to make up one workout? If you miss multiple workouts, then its time to adjust the training plan to get it back on track. In your case, since you missed most of a week, just repeat this week and then move forward from there. If you have yourself peaking on a specific race day, then you might need to tweak future weeks to account for it, but don't try to get extra workouts in or miss rest days. It's penny wise and pound foolish.

      Run to Win
      25 Marathons, 17 Ultras, 16 States (Full List)

      Purdey


      Self anointed title

        Skip it! Enjoy the rest and return to your schedule when you can - safe in the knowledge that you're not risking injury and have given your body a great chance to recuperate. I'm no expert mind (but Blaine is btw), but I very definitely follow the advice that, "It's not the training that makes you faster, it's the rest". I've found this very true, unless you give your body a chance to adapt to the workload you will not get better.

         

         


        #2867

          "It's not the training that makes you faster, it's the rest". I've found this very true, unless you give your body a chance to adapt to the workload you will not get better.
          Definitely agree. I think that there are 3 major components that determine what you get out of any given workout, which (in order of importance) are: Food Rest Work Without doing the work, you won't see any gains. That's a given. But it's also the least determinate factor. You can't adapt to the work w/o enough rest, because you'll just get fatigued and injured. If you don't provide your body with the building blocks in the way of food that is necessary to rebuild your muscles after you damage them (which is the whole purpose of a workout, damaging your muscles) then rest won't do you much good either because you'll just be cannibalizing your own body. I wrote a report about it that goes into more details if you are interested in reading it. I can email it to you or if you want you can download it free as soon as you sign up to my newsletter: http://www.runtowin.com/newsletter.html

          Run to Win
          25 Marathons, 17 Ultras, 16 States (Full List)


          Oh Mighty Wing

            I concur skip it! It's not worth the stress/hassel of figuring out how to make it up. So no beating yourself up! Move on!
            I wrote a report about it that goes into more details if you are interested in reading it. I can email it to you or if you want you can download it free as soon as you sign up to my newsletter: http://www.runtowin.com/newsletter.html
            That was a really smooth plug by the way! Wink


            #2867

              That was a really smooth plug by the way! Wink
              Thanks! I figured it was a good spot for it, given that I wasn't about to copy & paste the 18 or 20 pages of the report into this thread (or however long it is - it's been half a year since I wrote it) plus if somebody visits the thread a year from now they'll see that they can get the report through the link. I don't mind emailing the paper right now to folks active at the moment, but I may not necessarily monitor this thread in the future.

              Run to Win
              25 Marathons, 17 Ultras, 16 States (Full List)

              Purdey


              Self anointed title

                Blaine - I would really appreciate a copy of that report. I'm trying to build my mileage up to approx 70mpw whilst dropping weight from 209 to 156 - getting the right balance will be key for me. Email add: tom.meldrum521@land.mod.uk Many thanks

                 

                 


                #2867

                  I'll email it tonight when I get home (assuming I use the computer tonight - not getting home until 8:30 or 9:00 and will still have to cook dinner) - otherwise I'll send it tomorrow. If you don't wanna wait, you can get it at the link above.

                  Run to Win
                  25 Marathons, 17 Ultras, 16 States (Full List)

                    This is from a modified version of Pfitz's 18/55 plan (Wk 4).
                    I agree w/ the advice already given - but just to go a step further - I'm pretty sure there's a page in Pfitz's book that he goes into this in detail - what to do depending on how many days you miss and when you miss them, etc... I'm at work and the book's at home, but if you have it, be sure to look.

                    Go to http://certainintelligence.blogspot.com for my blog.