Saturday, June 30, 2012

Give Me "Adverse Cardiovascular Effects" or Give Me Death: A Response to a Mayo Clinic Proceedings Article

Do distance runners have an innate death wish?

I ask this question in light of a recent article in the Mayo Clinic Proceedings, written by a bunch of M.D.s (O'Keefe, Patil, Lavie, Magalski, Vogel, McCullough). Since I'm not exactly up-to-speed on the Latin translation of various body parts and afflictions, and since I have a strong distaste for anything that looks or smells like biology or chemistry, I hope you'll excuse my overly simplistic layman's response.

And I hope that the aforementioned doctors will forgive me, because I disagree with them. Medically, of course, their findings are likely completely accurate and totally sound. Bravo for that, gentlemen, but let's look at what you really did here.


Their article is titled "Potential Adverse Cardiovascular Effects from Excessive Endurance Exercise." In it, they argue that runners who engage in repeated long-distance races or training are doing more harm than good to their bodies. In a recent Competitor Running magazine article about their findings, Dr. O'Keefe surmises that "aiming to run even three marathons every year is 'not a great goal.'" The doctors find that running less than 20 miles per week at an 8:30-10:00 per mile pace is "ideal." They paint a doomsday portrait of freak endurance runners (like those who run marathons, ultra-marathons, Ironmans or even run more than 45 miles per week for training) who are destroying their bodies by engaging in "over-exercise."

Yet the doctors in the Mayo Clinic article fail to put their snapshot of medical analysis and data into a larger perspective.

My grandfather had a saying while I was growing up: "You reap what you sow." From the agricultural revolution, through the Bronze Age, past the Iron Age, a few centuries after the Industrial Revolution and into the Information Age, human beings have changed. Not just socially, technologically or politically. Human beings (that's homo sapiens, I think) have changed structurally--bones, tendons, cartilage, etc--over the course of thousands of years.

In his seminal work, Chris McDougall points out that human beings were "born to run." Our bodies are predisposed to bipedal endurance work, and indeed, before we learned how to garden, mankind had to hunt for our food. Ever so gradually, though, we began a settling process. First, we settled into civilizations. Then into empires and eventually nation-states. From there, we continued our gradual descent through states and provinces, cities, towns, villages and businesses until we arrive at today: into our own houses, automobiles and couches with built-in laptop computer trays, so we never have to get up.

And then, of course, came the accessories to our gradual settling: processed foods, elevators and escalators, taking the bus to school and the advent of running shoes.

I'm sure I'm remembering this from the National Geographic Channel, but animals raised in captivity who are re-immersed back into the wild without any proper training or preparation are far more likely to die quick deaths than those animals of the same species who spend their lives outside of captivity. Why? When you adapt to changes in your environment--and that environment becomes less taxing--you lose the skills required to survive. Do animals simply lose their survival instinct? Or does living in captivity structurally bind them, too?

Human beings, by and large--and especially in the United States--can hardly be said to be living in captivity. And yet, after centuries upon centuries of ignoring our endurance running capability, an attempt by some intrepid athletes to re-capture and push the envelope of human cardiovascular achievement will be seen as un-natural.

But is this suicide? Or is it selfless?


The doctors in the Mayo Clinic article rightly allow that not exercising is a big problem in America. Certainly, exercise is a positive endeavor in an attempt to stay "healthy." Yet, a growing percentage of the population each year is either obese or overweight--and whether we like it or not, this gradually changes the way our bodies are structured; in turn, it changes the way our children will develop and grow, and changes the physical opportunities available to them. Good genes will only take you so far--if the species is on a downward trend, your super-human athleticism is simply an impressive outlier in a genus of lethargy.

Endurance runners run for a number of reasons, and each one is personal. But between runners, there is an  undercurrent--the great unspoken truth, if you will--about what we do that will get zero publicity in Runner's World or Flotrack: we are taking it back.

What are we taking back, you ask? How about our ability to be the people our ancestors once were? Hard workers, prolific athletes whose bodies were wired to run far and long and fast--not because they were getting a multi-million dollar shoe contract, but because life demanded that trait.

And here we are, today: in an era where the world is at your fingertips, you do not need to run to exist.

But you can't truly live without running.

And if the structure of our heart muscles begin to degrade because we run too much, so what? If we all run, and continue to run, and teach our children to run far, and they teach their children to run even farther, aren't we expanding the bounds of human achievement? Aren't we increasing the cardiovascular capacity of our posterity?

So yes, Mayo Clinic doctors, there are "Potential Adverse Cardiovascular Effects [of] Extreme Endurance Exercise."

But there is at least one Potentially Awesome Cardiovascular Effect of Extreme Endurance Exercise--and I don't want to toot our own horn too much here, but hear me out:

Mile after grueling mile, day after day--distance runners may be saving humankind.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Men's 5000m Olympic Trials: A Lesson in History

On Thursday evening, the Men's 5000m Olympic Trials finals will be broadcast at around 10:38 PM Eastern Time.

It will feature two men who have proven themselves superstars in the distance world: Galen Rupp, already a 2012 Olympian at 10,000m and Bernard Lagat, a 3-time Olympian, vying for his second 5000m spot on the US Olympic Team.

But listen to this: only TWO (2) Olympics in the past ONE HUNDRED (100) years has seen an American man win a medal in the 5000m (Bob Schul won the gold and Bill Dellinger won the bronze in the 1964 Tokyo Olympics). The United States is experiencing an Olympic medal drought in this distance that has long since passed epic proportions.

How have we gotten ourselves into this rut?





No man has ever run faster at a US Olympic Trials in this event than Steve Prefontaine, way back in 1972--he ran a 13:22.8, around the same track these 2012 Olympic hopefuls find themselves in Eugene. Since then, the American record has dropped well below 13 minutes--Bernard Lagat currently holds it at 12:53.60; Galen Rupp briefly held it at 12:58.90. Of the men in Thursday evening's finals, only those two have ever run sub-13:00.

In the years since Pre's Olympic Trials record, male 5000m competitors have fallen into what track critics might call "the sure doom of a tactical race." This happens when one seems to place a priority on making the team, rather than running a fast race. And, in the end, this strategy does a disservice to an American distance program that should be sending its fastest boys to the Games, with a culture of running the fastest when it counts.

Pre's 1972 performance in Munich was the closest an American man has come to a 5000m medal--a heart-breaking 4th place at the line. Since then, this is our record:

1976 (Montreal): 12th
1980 (Moscow): Boycott
1984 (Los Angeles): 7th
1988 (Seoul): 5th
1992 (Barcelona): 12th
1996 (Atlanta): 6th
2000 (Sydney): 13th
2004 (Athens): 11th
2008 (Beijing): 9th, 13th (only time since 1964 that 2 Americans qualified for the Olympic Final)

These are fantastic individual finishes from great men and great runners. But on the whole, the American 5000m trend has been decidedly flat.

Can this change in 2012?

In the words of Pre, this 5000m must be a "guts race" to deliver the three best American men at this distance to London. We cannot afford to send another 5000m team to the Olympics that runs a slow-ish (compared to the fastest times this year) tactical race at the Olympic Trials, with a kick from 200-400m out.

Only 4 men in this field have run faster than 13:22 this year, while an additional 3 have run that quick in the past 7 years.

Ostensibly, the favorites are Lagat, Rupp and Lomong. Fastest times for the first two are noted above, while Lomong has run the next-fastest time this year in 13:11. The only other American man to be "Pre-quick" this year was Heat #1's winner, Andrew Bumbalough, who blazed a 13:16 around Stanford's track at the end of April.

But the dark horses are strong. Robert Cheseret, US Army runner and brother of Bernard Lagat, ran a 13:13 back in 2005 though hasn't been close to as fast since then. In that same year, Ian Dobson ran a 13:15. And back in 2008, Brent Vaughn ran a 13:18 in this distance.

The truth? For the first time in nearly 50 years, not just one, but two American men have run some of the Top 10-fastest 5000m times of the past 2 years. With Lomong and Bumbalough improving each year--and proving very adept at running a fast, tactical pace--this Olympic Trials final cannot afford to be run at 13:30 pace any longer.

Put Farah, Koech, Merga, Gebremeskel and all the others on notice: the biggest statement race of these Trials will be Thursday night, if three prospective American Olympians can break Steve Prefontaine's Olympic Trials record in the 5000m final.


Saddle up.

American Records, Foreign Soil: What's Wrong with American Track?

I remember vividly watching the Payton Jordan Invitational on May 1, 2010. I was rooting hard--like many others--for Galen Rupp, who was shooting to break Meb Keflezighi's 9-year old American 10,000m record on the track. He did, of course.

But so did Chris Solinsky. In one of the most improbable track victories of this century, Solisnky--whom everyone thought was a 5000m specialist--became the first American man to break 27 minutes in the 10,000m. The fact that he ran so fast at Stanford was a thrill to the few thousand people who were either physically there or watching the live stream on Flotrack, but here is another troubling fact:

For American men, breaking American records on American soil has become exceedingly rare.

How rare? In the "post-Pre era" (which we'll define as post-1975), American distance runners in the mile, 5000m and 10,000m have broken an American record 21 times. Of those 21 times, only 4 of them have been broken in the United States: 3 times in California and once in Eugene, Oregon.

This is a remarkably low ratio for a country that has for decades prided itself on being the best, the biggest and the fastest with the best facilities and quickest tracks. How do we explain that more American records have been set in Norway or Belgium than the U-S of A?

More than a few track junkies will consider this statistic and explain, "Well, that's where the world-class competition is!" I would first point out that, of those 21 American records, none were set at an Olympics and most as of late have not been broken at a World Championship meet, either.

As to a perceived lack of world-class competition here in the United States, my question then becomes: why can't we consistently attract the type of superstar track athletes that will lead to more broken US records? Why is an American distance runner more than five times more likely to set our nation's records overseas, on foreign shores?

Many will point to lackluster publicity, handling and support by USA Track & Field. Given what the major media outlets in the United States have remarked about their recent handling of the Women's 100m tie situation at the Olympic Trials, USATF would be a convenient scapegoat and whipping boy. Undoubtedly, as the standard bearer of our sport, they share a great deal of the blame for failing to think outside of the box.

But what of our private industry? There have never been more major sports companies sponsoring athletes--this is definitely a fantastic thing. But you mean to tell me that between Nike, Adidas, Reebok, Puma, Newton, Saucony, Brooks, et. al., we can't put on multiple killer outdoor track events each year?

The bottom line consideration has to be this: How much pride do you have in American distance running? If your heart is in it, then why are you willing to accept our runners being forced to travel to Europe in order to run a fast, competitive race?

Unfortunately, I don't have the precise answer--yet. Whether it's more money, flashier tracks, better international promotion and relations or better quality of life and/or domestic treatment of our athletes, I'm not sure, but I'd be willing to bet it's some magical combination of all those things. Or maybe, in some romantic, literary fantasy world, the answer is simply: "If you build it, [they] will [run]."

Whatever the answer, once these Olympic Games are over, we've got a common cause to build around. American records, American runners, American soil. Let's do it.

#7: BERNARD LAGAT and ANN TRASON

Greatest American Distance Runners of All-Time

#7

Bernard Lagat

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhp4Q16OUyCx5gvDSE_YhE8pqQzXUBC_DcQLFBRHeElOosvp1WS5CNXjTSlVvdpb1yH_PFAzw5hq2RR2VOVRy73CviCVMCaiuy3M3K4NQs7UmD6JlENx8-Nd5cqoNF-QxpXDuUQ5esaqYA/s320/lagat.jpg

Bernard Lagat, who got his start running in his native Kenya, may be the most patriotic American runner you've ever met. "I just wanted to raise my family here, live here, work here and, you know, just be one of the American people...I love this country."

And indeed, no American citizen has been faster than Lagat in the past 7 years than Lagat. He owns commanding American records in the indoor mile, and both indoors and outdoors in the 1500m, 3000m and 5000m. (A 1500m he ran while a dual-citizen still stands as a Kenyan national record, even in that speedy African land.)

His success at nearly every competition has been well-documented: the Millrose Games, the World Championships, the Continental Cup, the NCAAs. While competing as a Kenyan in 2000 and 2004, Lagat won bronze and silver Olympic medals, respectively.

Yet at 37, while this 3-time Olympian has proved himself as one of the greatest middle-distance runners of all-time, he doesn't show signs of being done. "In the Olympics, I don't have a gold medal," Lagat said [in a recent LA Times interview]. "When I wake up every day, I know this is what I want."
Even today--with an incredible fourth Olympic Games in his sights--Bernard Lagat is just as lethal on the track as he was nearly a decade ago. And we are looking forward to watching him break more records and attain his elusive gold this summer.
Ann Trason

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjoEwqEBlDFPfhst2pjEFPBfOT6iD1nDVOL1INMW-VMf5pUBZyqCM41HBqIGffE-9-BDXjAgb4-BKOtBs7p2XiOydx67zGLiC25hAywwwWyPAitrC-tVxisjxWHSG3z89raiPPO7PfCs_8/s320/trason.jpg

When ranking the greatest distance runners of all time, most individuals polled will think of those in the more "mainstream" races and distances: Olympians, the 5K, 10K, marathon, etc. Ultra-running--while still crazy--has seen an uptick in participation in recent years. However, our #7 American female runner of all-time was an ultra-runner--before ultras were "cool."

Ann Trason didn't run in college, but she was very much a runner. She entered her first ultra-race--a 50-miler--before she had even won a marathon; she won and set a course record. Over the course of her career, she has set an incredible 20 world records in ultra-long distances.

What has she done? Only won the Western States 100--a race many consider to be the hardest ultra-marathon in the United States--a record 14 times, setting the women's course record in the process. Not only that, but in 1996 and '97, she completed perhaps the most impressive ultra ultra-distance feat in the world: back-to-back wins at the Western States 100 and Comrades Marathon in South Africa, just 12 days apart.

And yet, she wasn't without her imperfections, either: illness and injury has cut more than a few of her races short, and at 52, she is dealing with the same injuries that more "mortal" runners have dealt with for decades. But it is her flaws that make Trason more real, and more accessible, to American runners. She is a role model--an American woman pushing the envelope, exploring and discovering the bounds of human performance and running right past them.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

US OLYMPIC TEAM DISTANCE PREVIEW & PREDICTIONS

With the United States Olympic Trials for Track & Field less than 24 hours away, elite distance runners and trackies from all around the world focus their sights on Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. Tracktown 2012 will see dozens of distance runners duke it out for the privilege to be one of three Americans per event to represent the United States in London next month.

Every year there are superstars and surprises. This year will be no different. From Galen Rupp and Shalane Flanagan to Chris Derrick and Deb Maier, we provide you with our US Olympic Trials forecast. Hate it or love it, here's what you have to look forward to:

Women’s 1500m
Best Team: Morgan Uceny, Jenny Simpson, Anna Pierce
Keeping It Competitive: Alice Schmidt, Shannon Rowbury, Gabriele Anderson, Katherine Mackey
Dark Horse Favorite: Phoebe Wright
New York Runners: Grace (NJ/NY), Charnigo (NJ/NY), Schappert (NYAC)
The women's 1500m race looks to be one of the most competitive races of the Trials. More than a dozen ladies will toe the line in Eugene with high hopes of making the team. Uceny is our favorite to win this event at the Trials and make her first team, while both Simpson and Pierce--both 3000m steeplechase Olympians in Beijing 2008--look to round out the remaining 2 Olympic team spots. Schmidt and Rowbury will keep things very close, and the recent success of Gabriele Anderson suggests she is peaking at the right time. Keep an eye out for 800m specialist Phoebe Wright, who has run a 1500m time within striking distance of the American lead.

Men’s 1500m
Best Team: Leo Manzano, Russell Brown, Andrew Wheating
Keeping It Competitive: Matt Centrowitz, Robby Andrews, David Torrence, Will Leer, Jordan McNamara, Kyle Merber, Garrett Heath, Jack Bolas, A.J. Acosta
Dark Horse Favorite: Jeff See
New York Runners: Boylan-Pett (NJ/NY), Gagnon (NJ/NY), Gonzalez (NJ/NY), Van Ingen (SUNY Binghamton)
From the outset, this looks like the most competitive race of the entire Trials. 20 runners are within legitimate striking distance of American leader Leo Manzano. For our money, Manzano pulls this one out in the end to make his second Olympic Team--he ran this event in Beijing four years ago, failing to make the final. Russell Brown has been too strong to ignore, and has proved that he belongs on this Olympic Team. The wildcard here is Andrew Wheating, who has yet to run to his full potential in this event after making the US Olympic Team in 2008 at the 800m distance. With a friendly crowd cheering him on, Wheating has the potential to win this event and will round out the third spot on the team.
Just take a look at the guys who won't make this team, though: Centro? Andrews? Torrence? Leer? Merber? Jeff See is our dark horse who has run impressive times lately, but will we see a 10-man sprint to the line, or a dive to the finish a la 2008?
If you only watch one event at the Olympic Trials this year, make it the Men's 1500m Final.

Women’s 5000m
Best Team: Lauren Fleshman, Julia Lucas, Molly Huddle
Keeping It Competitive: Jen Rhines, Julie Culley (NYAC), Jackie Areson, Amy Hastings, Lisa Uhl, Liz Maloy, Angela Bizzarri
Dark Horse Favorite: Magdalena Lewy Boulet
New York Runners: Koons (NYAC)
This is another fairly competitive race, with some big names and fast runners who will undoubtedly miss the cut. Teammates Lauren Fleshman and Julia Lucas are the favorites here, and have run the two fastest 5000m times this year--an amazing feat considering that the American record holder is the third-fastest. Huddle will make the team if she can hold off a big-time dark horse of marathon fame, Magdalena Lewy Boulet. And just look at the folks who will miss this team--it's heartbreaking: Jen Rhines, Julie Culley, Areson, Hastings, Uhl, et. al. This is the strongest field of 5000m runners the United States has ever seen.

Men’s 5000m
Best Team: Galen Rupp, Bernard Lagat, Lopez Lomong
Keeping It Competitive: Matt Tegenkamp, Andrew Bumbalough, Chris Derrick
Dark Horse Favorite: Dathan Ritzenhein
Watch out, London--this may be the best US Olympic 5000m Team assembled in the modern era. Galen Rupp (2008 Olympian) and Bernard Lagat (3-time overall Olympian, 1-time US Olympian) will battle it out for the top spot on the team, and both have the ability to compete with gold-medal hopeful Mo Farah (Rupp's Oregon training partner) and the inevitable slew of Kenya and Ethiopian runners who will run this event. At 38 years old, this may be Lagat's swan-song Olympic Games; will he end on a high note?
Lopez Lomong is a touch slower than these men, but he has a killer kick capable of rounding out an American 5000m medal sweep at the Olympic Games. The dark horse here is Dathan Ritzenhein--a disappointing fourth finish, or first-runner up for the Marathon Team, Ritz is the only guy here outside of Rupp and Lagat to have run a sub-13:00 5k. If he can muster that type of time, redemption--and a second appearance on a US Olympic Team--will be his.

Women’s 10,000m
Best Team: Shalane Flanagan, Amy Hastings, Janet Cherobon-Bawcom
Keeping It Competitive: Lisa Uhl, Alisha Williams, Deborah Maier, Meaghan Nelson
Dark Horse Favorite: Alissa McKaig
There are quite a few questions surrounding the women's 10,000m Olympic Trials. Can Shalane Flanagan compete it both the 10,000m and the marathon without sacrificing her medal hopes? She was a bronze medalist in this event at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Amy Hastings is a woman on a mission after finishing a disappointing 4th in the Olympic Marathon Trials this year; she will make her first Olympic team. And rounding out the final spot on this team should be very interesting--distance specialist and Kenyan-born Janet Cherobon-Bawcom will have her hands full holding off Lisa Uhl (training partner to Olympians Shalane Flanagan and Kara Goucher). The third spot here is pretty much even odds, and add to that mix our dark horse--Alissa McKaig--who will need the race of her career to make her first Olympic career.

Men’s 10,000m
Best Team: Galen Rupp, Bobby Curtis, Dathan Ritzenhein
Keeping It Competitive: Tim Nelson, Matt Tegenkamp, Brent Vaughn, Ben True, Joseph Chirlee (US Army), Ryan Vail, Scotty Bauhs, Aaron Braun
Dark Horse Favorite: Chris Derrick
Unless disaster strikes, Galen Rupp's times this year have been so far ahead of his American field of competition that this result is almost a lock. Rupp should win this event handily, but from there, it's a toss-up. Bobby Curtis has run the second-fastest qualifying time this year, and Ritz needs this event to ensure he makes his second straight Olympic Team. Chris Derrick, whose heart was broken--twice--by that pesky Canadian Cam Levins, is our dark horse favorite here. However, the men's 10,000m field is comprised of several tested and savvy distance runners who are all capable of making a US Olympic Team at this distance.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Tuesday Workout and Playlist

Workout

We've got quite the doozy planned for today: 1 mile warm-up, 4 miles of musical fartleks, 1 mile cool-down. All before 7 AM.

Playlist

This is why you love us. Motivation is provided free of charge:


Every American distance runner is required to watch this, weekly. Go ahead.



You just can't put a premium on a happenin' beat.



At one point in this video, an attractive woman carries a full cake in front of 50, who is running on a treadmill. So, as you can see, this is totally applicable to your training.


Run Smart, Run Free

#8: CRAIG VIRGIN and SHALANE FLANAGAN

Greatest American Distance Runners of All-Time

#8

Craig Virgin



Craig Virgin dominated as a high schooler and never look back. Still perhaps the greatest prep school runner in Illinois state history, Virgin is the only United States runner to win the World Cross Country Championship--a feat he accomplished twice.

He broke numerous American records, especially at the 10,000m where he bested marks set by the late Steve Prefontaine. In 1981, he was a second-place finisher at the Boston Marathon--one of the highest finishes by an American man in the last three decades.


Unfortunately, like many athletes of his era, Virgin was struck a competitive blow by the 1980 Olympic boycott. Just before the Olympics that year, Virgin had run the second-fastest 10,000m ever--in the history of the world--but unable to compete internationally, was never able to realize his dream of Olympic gold.


Shalane Flanagan




A little rivalry and humor between #9 and #8. You've gotta love our Olympic Marathon Team.

It is always a challenge to rank a current competitive athlete. But with Flanagan, there can be no doubt--she is already one of the best ever, and her stock is only rising with each passing stellar performance.

And what has she done so far? Flanagan is the current American record holder indoors at the 3000m and 5000m distance, and outdoors at the 10,000m. In 2008, she won a bronze medal in the Olympic 10,000m--something that only one woman before her had ever done. She has finished an incredible third in the World Cross Country Championships, and her marathon-debut at the 2010 New York Marathon was the fastest-ever and good enough for an inspirational second-place.

This year, Flanagan has already turned heads by winning the Olympic Marathon Trials in record time. She will highlight a strong women's team that--for perhaps the first time--has the potential to sweep the Olympic Marathon podium. An inspiration and a talent, Flanagan is the present and the future of American women's distance running.