Final November Outseason Run Test
I did a half marathon today, which I'm going to use as my final run test for the November outseason. Race went great! Very happy with the results. Final time of 1:51:28, with an average pace of 8:30 min/mile.
VDot at start of outseason: 38
Final VDot: 40
My actual VDot score did not improve all that much, but I know I am a much, much stronger runner that I was on November 1. There is no way I could come close to holding 8:30 over a half marathon then - and would have had a hard time believing I would by mid-March. Also, my 5K tests were never good: Died on the last mile of the first test (but finished); blew up and did not even finish the second test; and went way to slow for the third test. I just could not get the 5K pacing right.
But today felt great - followed the marathon pacing guidance from the wiki and it was perfect. Felt great most of the race, started getting tough around mile 10 or 11, and gave it all I had at the end. I'm confident this is an accurate test for me, and like the fact it was done over a longer distance rather than a 5K.
I do have a couple of questions though. It was quite a hilly course, whereas all my earlier tests were done on an absolutely flat course. WKO, when taking the hills into account, gives me an normal graded pace of 8:18 min/mile, which would result in a VDot of 41. I wonder if I should consider using that? The training paces look reasonable at that Vdot. Also, would my LTHR be the average HR over the entire half-marathon? I'll paste these somehwere where R&P are more likely to see them.
Anyway, I'm very happy with today's race, and where the EN outseason has taken my running. Will have an easy couple of days, then the bike test at the end of the week, when I expect the power gains from Nov. 1 will be much greater than the VDot increase.
Good luck with the final testing everyone!
Comments
Not sure about your vDot question - need a WSM to chime in. But, long tests like a half mary or full mary will defiinitly give you a lower vDot (there are a few that this is not true for - but they exceptions). Case in point: Just before NOS I ran MDI (26.2) only 45" off a PR finish and calculated at a vDot of 44. Two weeks later in the 5K test I pulled a 46 on a track. In my mind, both were done with the same fitness so I feel thay are good examples of non-linear scaling of vDot values. By the way, MDI is a tough, hilly marathon if your not familier.
Good luck on the bike test. I will be along soon but had to rest back to week 17 to recover from a ski trip/
I just complted the bike VO2 today and I am trashed from yesterday's run and then today's VO2 work.
Good luck on your race!
Hilly 10K in 39:11 for a 6:19 pace. NGP was 6:12. Second masters, third OA. Small field with a 5K and 10M run simultaneously for 640 runners. Threw in a few too many surges too early trying to get a win and paid in mile 6. VDOT held pretty steady. BUT I didn't average 70 miles a week like last year. I can do that anytime. Point is now I can get out and run intervals at sub 6 pace and be able to get out of bed the next day. Just what I needed!
I went back and tried to reconstruct/estimate where I would have finished if I had done it right, and I'm just going to call it no change since my last test. (19:15). If I had really had my head in it, I think I had the fitness to get to sub-19, but I didn't actually cross that barrier and I won't claim it.
This is a little disappointing (to booger my run test), but the truth is that it's just one more showing that the coaches are right that we need a break after the full OS.
However you look at it, though, my current time of 19:15 is a huge PR, so I'm pleased.
Good luck to everyone as we move into the season!
7:17
7:18
7:03
7:27
7:26
7:16
6:56 (.2 miles)
Got my sights set on this year's races now - HIM on 6/5 and IM WISC.
Test 1: 3 miles- 36:20, vdot 23.34
Final test: 3 miles- 30:00, vdot 30
That's a 29% improvement in vdot and 17% improvement in time!