225. Planning a 5k PR: A New Behind-the-Scenes Coaching Call with Coach Chris Robinson

225. Planning a 5k PR: A New Behind-the-Scenes Coaching Call with Coach Chris Robinson

This week's guest on the podcast has raced distances ranging from 5k to ultras. Although he's always been willing to put in the work, he has felt challenged by trying to create a successful training structure for himself.

Chris Robinson is a Team Strength Running member and the Cross Country Head Coach at Eureka College in Eureka, Illinois. While his work as a coach has sometimes made his training take a backseat to that of his athletes, he's setting some exciting new goals for 2022.

Chris is 49 and set some speedy PRs several years ago, including a 1:37 half marathon and a sub-20 5k. Looking ahead to 2022, he's setting the goal of running a 5k every month to rebuild training consistency and focus on getting faster.

On this week's podcast, we'll take a closer look at Chris' running background and talk about many aspects of his training:

  • What was his running like when he set his PR's, and how has it changed?
  • What does his current training look like? What are his recent race performances?
  • How can Chris structure his training to accomplish his goals?
  • What are the fundamental aspects of his training to help him stay healthy while getting faster?

If you'd like opportunities like this to come on the podcast, join our team!

Thank You InsideTracker!

Our show is supported by our longtime sponsor InsideTracker. Today, more than ever, it's essential that we're making the right decisions to keep our bodies healthy. To help us be resilient, prevent over-training, and optimize our running to get the most from it.

InsideTracker is the ultra-personalized nutrition platform that analyzes your blood and DNA biomarkers along with your lifestyle habits to help you optimize your body and reach your goals.

InsideTracker's patented system will transform your body's data into knowledge, insights, and a customized action plan of science-backed recommendations. The data can help you determine whether you're running too much, not enough, or have some other issues that could be affecting your recovery or performance.

I've had my own blood drawn with InsideTracker several times and have been amazed at the valuable information that they provide. Not only are the results very detailed, but they also share guidance for how to improve any markers that are out of range.

If you're ready to take control of your health and optimize your training, InsideTracker offers a selection of plans that best suit your needs with a limited time 25% discount.

Thank you Elemental Labs!

A big thanks to Elemental Labs for their support of this episode! They make electrolyte drinks for athletes and low-carb folks with no sugar, artificial ingredients, or colors. And you can get a free sampler pack of 4 flavors and 8 individual packets when you pay $5 in shipping.

Elemental Labs' products have some of the highest sodium concentrations that you can find. Anybody who runs a lot knows that sodium, as well as other electrolytes like magnesium and potassium, are essential to our performance and how we feel throughout the day.

The citrus flavor has quickly become my favorite. I'm drinking one a day now to help me get enough fluids in our dry Colorado air. It's tasty and delicious and I find that I'm not peeing every 45 minutes throughout the day, which might be an indication I wasn't eating enough sodium.

There's now mounting evidence that higher sodium intake levels are not unhealthy – and athletes need substantially more than your typical sedentary person. Of course, ask your doctor if you're worried. But for those athletes running outside in the heat, an electrolyte replacement makes a lot of sense.

They just released their first new flavor of 2021, their most requested flavor, watermelon salt. So check out Elemental Labs to try their new flavor or get a free sampler pack.

Jaksot(438)

Episode 86: Beth Skwarecki, the Health Editor of Lifehacker, on Health & Fitness Trends

Episode 86: Beth Skwarecki, the Health Editor of Lifehacker, on Health & Fitness Trends

Beth Skwarecki is the author of two books and the Health Editor of Lifehacker. She's here to dispel fitness and health myths that might be leading us astray. Beth is a member of the National Association of Science Writers and the Association of Health Care Journalists. After getting a BA in biology from Alfred University, she received her Master's in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from Rutger's University. She also has previously taught nutrition and environmental sciences at the Community College of Allegheny County. Her two books will interest the science nerds out there: Outbreak: 50 Tales of Epidemics That Terrorized the World Genetics 101: From Chromosomes and the Double Helix to Cloning and DNA Tests, Everything You Need to Know About Genes This conversation focuses on the many side aspects of a healthy lifestyle that make running easier. After all, it's critical to have a lifestyle that supports running. You can't train well if you barely sleep and drink a lot... We're talking about: DNA trivia for runners How her job has changed her outlook on health and fitness How to engineer a less groggy morning (for the morning runners out there!) Whether elderberry supplements are a waste of money Beth and I also discuss running in the dark, the cutoff point for running in extreme cold, and the warning signs of frostbite.

19 Helmi 201958min

Episode 85: Lindsey Hein on Elites, Podcasting for Runners, and Training with Kids

Episode 85: Lindsey Hein on Elites, Podcasting for Runners, and Training with Kids

Lindsey has always been a runner. She ran cross country in high school and after running for fitness and health in college, started running marathons post-collegiately. To date, she's run 14 marathons and is currently preparing for the 2019 Boston Marathon. She's also a RRCA-certified running coach. Her podcast is one of the most popular running podcasts out there: I'll Have Another with Lindsey Hein has more than 160 episodes and features the most talented runners on the planet: Meb Keflezighi Paula Radcliffe Scott Jurek Shalane Flanagan Lindsey is in a unique situation after being able to explore the training, lives, mindsets, and careers of so many world-class athletes. I couldn't help but have so many questions: How do we relate to elite runners who have physical gifts that we simply do not? What separates the best from the rest of us? How do we learn from these runners to enhance our own training? In our latest episode for the Strength Running Podcast, we discuss the drawbacks and opportunities of interviewing elite runners, mindset shifts related to running when you start having kids, and a lot more.

14 Helmi 201945min

How to Optimize Recovery with Christie Aschwanden

How to Optimize Recovery with Christie Aschwanden

Recovery means much more than what you do - it's also about what you don't do. For example, many runners think foam rolling or taking an ice bath are effective recovery methods. And if you enjoy them, I won't argue! But what you're not doing is equally important: Are you using your day off from running to do your own taxes and run 34 errands? Did you plan your big (i.e., stressful) family vacation for your post-marathon recovery week? Do you stay out late enjoying one or several too many adult beverages? If the answer is yes, then it almost doesn't matter what you do for your post workout recovery. Because the addition of stress - whether physical or mental - derails our best recovery efforts. That's why when I was in college, our track coach was very understanding of poor workout splits during mid-terms. You simply can't perform physically and mentally at a high level for very long. We previously discussed a hierarchy of injury prevention strategies and how some tactics are far more effective than others. The same is true for recovery strategies. I want you to understand the best, most productive, and effective ways to recover from your hardest workouts. And I'm thrilled to present you with today's podcast episode with Ms Christie Aschwanden. Christie is the lead science writer for FiveThirtyEight and a former health columnist for the Washington Post. She's also a finalist for the National Magazine Award and her work has been featured in Discover, Smithsonian, and O, The Oprah Magazine. A fellow Coloradan like myself, Christie was a high school state champion in the 1,6000m run, a national collegiate cycling champion, and an elite cross-country skier with Team Rossignol. Her new book is Good to Go: What The Athlete in All of Us Can Learn From the Strange Science of Recovery. She's on the podcast to discuss individual post workout recovery strategies but also the bigger questions: How do we know if we're fooling ourselves that something is working (when it isn't)? Why isn't it enough to simply ask, "Does this recovery method work?" Overall, have we made recovery too complicated? How do you prioritize mental recovery? If you were to speak to the entire Olympic Team about recovery, what would you say? This episode is an excerpt of my full conversation with Christie for the Team Strength Running group coaching program.

4 Helmi 201944min

Episode 83: Sarah Canney on the 2019 World Snowshoe Running Championships

Episode 83: Sarah Canney on the 2019 World Snowshoe Running Championships

Last week, I had the pleasure of spending an hour talking to Sarah Canney. She's a Road Runners Club of America and USA Track and Field certified running coach in addition to being a competitive mountain runner and member of the 2018 US National Snowshoe Running Team. In fact, she recently placed 9th at the World Championships in Val di Non, Italy on January 5th. Now, I've never gone snowshoe running. I don't own any snowshoes. Frankly, I don't even like the cold. But after hearing Sarah speak more about the sport and how fun it can be, it's something I'm dying to try (and you can't get a better snowshoe running venue than Colorado's Front Range!) And while snowshoe running might be a lot of fun, it can also be an extraordinarily helpful method of cross-training: There's less impact running slower on snow (and less injury risk) It's incredibly specific to running (in fact, it is running) Because it's more difficult than running on the road, less time is needed for a great workout The more and more I think about this sport, the more that I think runners need to try it! In this episode, we talk everything snowshoe running: How it's very similar to cross country The gear and equipment required for success The training: how is it different from running? What you need to know before getting started How difficult it can be and how that relates to pace and effort We also discuss her running retreat Rise. Run. Retreat. for women and how she's making a big impact in the world of women's running.

28 Tammi 201948min

Episode 82: Megan Roche on Becoming a Happy Runner

Episode 82: Megan Roche on Becoming a Happy Runner

Megan Roche is a professional runner for HOKA ONE ONE and the 2016 USA Track & Field Trail Runner of the Year at the ultra and sub-ultra distances. A five-time national champion, she's also the North American Mountain Running Champion and a six-time member of Team USA. Her new book The Happy Runner: Love the Process, Get Faster, Run Longer was written with her husband David Roche (also an elite runner who contributed to our Little Black Book of Recovery & Prevention) and presents a unique and compelling view of how to excel as a distance runner. In it, she discusses a wide range of fascinating topics for runners: The difference between hard and fast – and when to prioritize each How to define "the process" Why kindness can help you become a better runner And of course, Megan and David cover the training side of things with a focus on how to get the most out of your body. In this podcast conversation, Megan and I talk about: Can positivity make you a more robust runner? Does running make people more optimistic? Why is running "meaningless?" How her medical degree has impacted her training A lot more…

10 Tammi 201942min

Episode 81: Strength Coach Tony Gentilcore on Deadlifts: Form, Dangers, and Function

Episode 81: Strength Coach Tony Gentilcore on Deadlifts: Form, Dangers, and Function

Over the last two years, I've been learning more and more about strength training. In fact, our new strength program High Performance Lifting (details here) has rocketed to our most popular training course. Like many runners, I'm not in love with weightlifting (I'd rather be running!) but I've come to appreciate just how valuable it is for endurance athletes. Higher levels of strength almost always lead to faster race times.   That's why I'm thrilled to present a new podcast with strength coach Tony Gentilcore. Tony previously joined us on the pod to talk about why runners should lift. He's back on today to go into more detail. Tony pointed out during our conversation that all of us deadlift all day long. Whenever we pick something up from the ground (a child, a bag of groceries, your running shoes), we're performing a deadlift. If we practice that movement and get stronger moving in that way, it will make life - and our running - a lot easier. And that's the mentality we should all have when we think about strength training: it's exercise that makes other exercise easier. But we're going to talk a lot more about the deadlift in this episode: Is there such a thing as "perfect" lifting form? Should we chase ideal form or make adjustments based on our own anatomy? The similarities between running and strength training If you're not sure where to start, don't miss SR's free strength series.

10 Joulu 201849min

The Best (and least effective) Injury Prevention Strategies

The Best (and least effective) Injury Prevention Strategies

Now, my goal at Strength Running is to always show you the most effective approach. The training that will most likely get you to achieve your biggest goals. That's why we don't waste time on minutiae. We don't chase shiny objects like CrossFit Endurance or wonder if we should go keto or run all of our miles barefoot. We focus on what has been shown to conclusively work for runners. As you can imagine, some prevention strategies are better than others: If the goal is a fast marathon, great long runs are more effective than pool running workouts If the goal is a fast mile, speed development is more critical than foam rolling or core routines If the goal is to stay healthy long-term, a good dose of strength training is better than regular ice baths This episode will rank the most effective injury prevention strategies so you know which one to choose for your needs.

6 Joulu 201816min

Episode 79: How a Physical Therapist (and 2:24 Marathoner) Prevents Injuries

Episode 79: How a Physical Therapist (and 2:24 Marathoner) Prevents Injuries

Verrelle Wyatt is a 2:24 marathoner, 4:18 miler, and an Athletic Hall of Famer for his high school. He received his doctoral degree in Physical Therapy from Walsh University in Ohio. He has two medical licenses in both Physical Therapy and Sports Physical Therapy in addition to being certified as both a Performance Enhancement Specialist (PES) and Corrective Exercise Specialist (CES). In this conversation, we discuss a lot: His experience working with Cirque du Soleil athletes How having a doctoral degree in PT has informed his running The training that led Verrelle to a 2:24 marathon How to avoid the common injury mistakes that land runners in his office This episode is an excerpt from our full conversation for Team Strength Running, Strength Running's affordable group coaching program.

3 Joulu 201856min

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