Erin Strout Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/erin-strout/ Live Bravely Tue, 12 Nov 2024 16:02:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/favicon-194x194-1.png Erin Strout Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/erin-strout/ 32 32 Sedona Might Be Overtouristed, but I Still Don鈥檛 Think It鈥檚 Overrated /adventure-travel/destinations/north-america/visit-sedona/ Mon, 11 Nov 2024 11:00:49 +0000 /?p=2687688 Sedona Might Be Overtouristed, but I Still Don鈥檛 Think It鈥檚 Overrated

Even after living in northern Arizona for 15 years, this landscape never gets old to me. Just carefully choose the time and place of your next visit to avoid the crowds.

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Sedona Might Be Overtouristed, but I Still Don鈥檛 Think It鈥檚 Overrated

I first laid eyes on Sedona after surviving a sleepless night of food poisoning in nearby Flagstaff, Arizona.

Thank goodness I鈥檇 never driven the Oak Creek Canyon before, or I might鈥檝e skipped the trip entirely. No one who hurls their guts up the previous night would knowingly agree to ride in a 12-passenger van hugging the cliffside of this narrow two-lane road, navigating hairpin turns on switchbacks that drop more than 2,500 feet into Red Rock Country.

But as a first-timer, visiting the area for an adult running camp and eager to check out this famous adventure mecca, I went along. Somehow, despite a super sick stomach, l still fell in love with the place.

Make no mistake鈥攐n less nauseating days, the hour-long journey on Route 89A between the alpine forest of Flagstaff and the sandstone desert of Sedona is iconic. Awe-inspiring, even.

Now, after 15 years living in Flagstaff, that commute is one I savor. Until I relocated to Arizona, I had been a life-long East Coaster. But after visiting this slice of high desert (and subsequently moving here), my appreciation and fondness for the Southwest鈥檚 geological diversity, and that of Sedona鈥檚 upper Sonoran Desert region has only deepened.

Every time I head down that canyon, I marvel at its beauty. I love taking visitors and watching their reactions to first glimpses of giant red rock formations that suddenly replace the canopy of oak trees and ponderosa pines. I imagine it鈥檚 akin to landing on Mars鈥攐therworldly. Perhaps that鈥檚 why Sedona attracts such a strong enclave of New Age spiritual devotees searching for metaphysical energy in the allegedly sprinkled throughout its buttes and spires.

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Why the Fascination with Sedona?

sedona red rocks
Secret views of Sedona’s panorama鈥攖he author will never say where this was shot. (Photo: Erin Strout)

It鈥檚 true. Sedona is a playground for all kinds of people, with interests as wide-ranging as fortune telling, aura reading, and crystal healing to mountain biking, hiking, climbing, and trail running. It welcomes the luxury spa vacationers, culinary aficionados, and jeep tour enthusiasts, too.

I fall somewhere in the middle. I won鈥檛 lie鈥擨鈥檝e visited a fortune teller or two over the years. I also eat dinner at Sedona鈥檚 , the kind of Mexican meal I don鈥檛 mind making reservations for 60 days in advance (at least!). Sometimes it鈥檚 fun to hit the local running store, , or just relax in one of the many coffee shops with tranquil garden seating. For the quintessential experience, I often end up at , billed as 鈥渁 sanctuary where each being can nurture their authenticity.鈥

But most often Sedona is my wintertime weekend trail running refuge鈥攚hen the snow dumps in Flagstaff, I鈥檓 guaranteed a clear path, warmer temperatures (averaging around 60 degrees), and sunshine in the red rock valley below. I love a good 鈥渨intertime double鈥: a morning run, hike, or ride in Sedona wearing shorts and a t-shirt, followed by afternoon powder turns at back home. Few places in the world hold such a mix of outdoor activities available in one day during the doldrums of February, and I love that about where I live.

Yes, Sedona Is Crowded, but I Don鈥檛 Let That Stop Me from Visiting

sedona locals drinking beers by the river
So, here are a bunch of locals drinking beer by the river after a long trail run. They’ll never tell you where, exactly, they are, though. Guess it’s: “don’t ask, don’t tell”.聽 (Photo: Erin Strout)

In recent years, however, Sedona鈥檚 storyline has taken an unfortunate (though not unwarranted) hit. Just like many areas that saw a surge of visitors seeking outdoor adventure during COVID, Sedona鈥檚 popularity鈥攚hich was already quite high鈥攕oared further. Influencers, along with their Instagram and TikTok followings, 鈥攁 double-edged sword for a place where 3 million visitors per year contribute to a $1 billion tourism industry, according to the .

More than a third of Sedona’s homes have become short-term rentals, and the city government and other local agencies have become of visitors鈥攁nd how to infuse education on respectful public land use.

After all, we are all just guests to this place, originally inhabited by the Sinagua people who came here around 900 A.D. I applaud how the people who manage the city and the public land are helping its diversity of users enjoy the area in myriad ways. From my perspective, there are a few things every visitor should know to maximize their Sedona experience.

Spring Break Is Not the Best Time to Visit Sedona

To fully enjoy Sedona, you have to choose your time and activities carefully. I鈥檓 saying avoid spring break (most of March) at all costs, and plan your outdoor pursuits for early mornings (arrive at trailheads by 7 A.M.聽 at the latest) year-round to dodge flocks of people. If you鈥檙e a real morning person like I am, you can get started even earlier for cooler temperatures during the summer swelter. The traffic, parking, and crowded trails on the most popular routes quickly become a turnoff if you鈥檙e desperately seeking solitude in nature.

Avoid Downtown, but Grab Some Grub at Wildflower

The downtown area is a genuine tourist trap. Unless you鈥檙e looking for souvenirs or a cartoonish taste of the old wild west, you can skip the main drag, save for Wildflower, a local chain good for family-friendly breakfast and lunch where you鈥檒l find reasonably priced meals with a terrific red rock view. (Bonus points for identifying from the patio.) But Sedona is at its best when you go off the beaten path.

For Less Crowded Trails, Hit the Outskirts to Go Higher and Farther

sedona arizona and two women hiking the area nearby
There are plenty of ways to get off the beaten path around Sedona.聽(Photo: Erin Strout)

Most locals won鈥檛 divulge those lesser-known destinations, however. In discussing places that my friends and I like to go in Sedona for a beer or a quick bite to eat or a trail run, most of them either decided against sharing at all, or their suggestions came with the caveat: 鈥渄on鈥檛 tell anybody I said this, but鈥︹

I get it. During the pandemic at the end of 2020, I headed to my friends鈥 house in Sedona for a day hike鈥攁nd along the way it appeared that the rest of America had the same idea. The fight for parking at the nearby trailheads was bananas鈥攃rowds rivaling Disney World during winter break.

Thankfully we could just exit out their backyard gate to a series of established, but unnamed trails鈥攐nes I wouldn鈥檛 have found on my own. On our hike, new-to-me perspectives of the famous and in the distance were stunning鈥攁nd as I took out my phone to capture a shot, my friend jokingly threatened to push me off the ledge of our undisclosed location above (the 鈥渟cenic byway鈥) if I dared to geotag the photo on social media. Of course, I鈥檇 never do such a thing. For Northern Arizonans, sharing isn鈥檛 always caring.

Which is all to say, I鈥檇 tell you where to hike or run, but then I鈥檇 have to move far, far away from here. What I will say is that any trail on the outskirts of town that is rated as 鈥渟trenuous,鈥 includes a healthy amount of vertical gain, or is higher mileage than the routes topping travel blogs and Trip Advisor, will likely yield a more serene experience. You know which apps to use ( and have options), and doing your own research to head farther afield is best.

Sedona Is Helping Us All Become Respectful Visitors

As much as we regulars would like to hoard our Sedona secrets, I still applaud the efforts of local agencies to help ensure that visitors can continue to enjoy the area, too. I鈥檓 an advocate for making such a majestic corner of the U.S. accessible to all鈥攊t鈥檚 an immense privilege that it鈥檚 so close to my home. Angst-alleviating initiatives include to trailheads and the , which asks visitors to agree to nine ways to help preserve Red Rock Country鈥檚 natural beauty, like not forging your own trails and packing out your trash. No. 4 is my personal favorite: 鈥淚 won鈥檛 risk life or limb (human or sapling) for more likes. I won鈥檛 get killed for a killer photo.鈥

My Recommendations for Best Outdoor 国产吃瓜黑料 in Sedona

erin strout finishing the sedona marathon
The author and her friend with her sweet baby, after a long haul in the Sedona Marathon. (Photo: Erin Strout)

It鈥檚 understandable that all of us who call tourist destinations home would want to keep a few spots to ourselves, I also recognize that none of us own these places. They鈥檙e meant to be explored and enjoyed. So, here are a few of my hot spots for those who are new to Sedona.

Camping in Sedona

Camping in Sedona takes a lot of planning ahead, I鈥檓 told. I haven鈥檛 gone camping in Sedona myself, mostly because I live so close by and my visits tend to be on the spontaneous side. Free dispersed camping is available in the western part of town, and it fills up quickly, as do the campgrounds that require reservations, which are mostly located along Oak Creek on 89A. The options around Oak Creek are cooler during the summer, next to the water, and heavily shaded by the forest. The dispersed campgrounds, though fully exposed to the sun, offer some of the best views of the red rocks and canyons you can find.

The best way to find a spot is to visit and you can also try Hipcamp.

Best Sedona Hikes

If you鈥檝e never hiked around Sedona, pick one of these three options for a taste of the town鈥檚 best trails.

  • : This one is a bit outside of Sedona, on the other side of I-17, but worth the detour. Go early to beat the crowds inevitably seeking relief in the cool creek at the Crack, which comes at the end of the 3.5-mile trail. It鈥檚 a popular place to hang out and, for those who dare, jump off the cliffs into the water.
  • : This is one of those 鈥渟trenuous鈥 paths that takes you up 2,000 feet in a bit less than 2.5 miles. The panoramic views extend the whole way up to Flagstaff鈥攜ou can see the beloved San Francisco Peaks from the top.
  • : About two miles north of Sedona, is Wilson Mountain, which packs about 2,300 feet of climbing into the first mile. Keep going鈥攜ou鈥檙e rewarded along the way with hundreds of miles of views that include Oak Creek Canyon, Coffee Pot Rock, Capitol Butte, and the Verde Valley.

Best Sedona Trail Runs

If you鈥檙e an avid trail runner, don鈥檛 miss these three spots with stunning panoramic views.

  • : Start at the Baldwin Trailhead and run along the Buddha Beach to the Templeton Trail at the base of Cathedral Rock. You鈥檒l get a bit of everything on this one (make it an out-and-back or create a loop with your Gaia or Trailforks app)鈥攃ruise along the creek, climb sandstone ridges, and see the iconic Cathedral Rock, too.
  • : Start from the Old Munds Wagon Road Trailhead off of Schnebly Hill Road, follow Old Munds Wagon Trail to the Cow Pies, forking left, to the Hangover Trail, one of the most scenic routes along the slickrock you can find.
  • : This is an old standby and a popular place for visitors, so beware that the trailhead parking at the Bell Rock Trailhead might be tight. However, it鈥檚 the quintessential Sedona vista鈥攍ike a postcard from the southwest. Follow the Big Park Loops signs for a four mile circumnavigation of the butte.

Why Sedona Will Always Be Magical to Me

dispersed camping near sedona
This is one view you can access by posting up at a free camp site. Just go early, and on a weekday, to snag it. (Photo: Erin Strout)

To be sure, we live at a time where the deluge of information available to us all can make us jaded. When it seems like 鈥渆verybody鈥 is going to Sedona and posting every detail of their adventures, our natural instinct is to declare that this special place is overrated. But that denies the region of its magic.

I was recently reminded of what Sedona can do for the spirit when I took a day off work and headed down 89A for the afternoon with a friend. We stopped at one of my favorite spots, , on the way into town, a lovely counter-service restaurant with lush, shaded outdoor seating on the east side of Oak Creek. Then we drove out to , a strenuous-rated hike that requires some rock scrambling and the ability to power up nearly 2,000 feet of elevation in a short 2.5 miles to earn an exhilarating view of fantastical red rock formations.

The only thing that would鈥檝e made my day more complete? A dip in the Oak Creek to cool off. A chance to swim in a natural body of water is a true treat for most Arizonans鈥攅specially me. I have plenty of fond memories of post-run cannonballs at , 10 or 12 years ago when it was less visited. Now, of course, it鈥檚 not so much a secluded swimming hole. Nature鈥檚 ice bath is usually worth it in my book, though.

Sedona has been dubbed the 鈥渕ost mystical place鈥 in America by travel experts and spiritual visitors alike. And it might be. What I do know is that it offers one of the most valuable opportunities for renewed astonishment at the world around me. It may not be a hidden gem (spoiler alert: ), but it鈥檚 a place that offers outdoor access that鈥檚 unrivaled by most other places on the planet.

Here鈥檚 my takeaway: It took 350 million years to form those red rocks. It鈥檚 no wonder people want to see them. Sedona is many things, but in my book, overrated will never be one of them.

Want more of 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 travel stories?聽.

erin strout trail running in sedona
Erin Strout moved to Flagstaff years ago and now goes to Sedona on a weekly basis. Despite all of the tourists, she will continue going, and won’t look back. (Photo: Erin Strout)

Erin Strout is a journalist and author based in Flagstaff, Arizona, who writes about health, fitness, and Olympic sports. She likes to focus on the big issues women face as athletes and humans who want to perform and feel their best. She still loves visiting Sedona every chance she gets.聽

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Des Linden In Her Masters鈥 Era: 鈥業鈥檓 Glad I鈥檓 40鈥 /running/news/people/des-linden-in-her-masters-era-im-glad-im-40/ Sat, 14 Oct 2023 12:00:45 +0000 /?p=2649243 Des Linden In Her Masters鈥 Era: 鈥業鈥檓 Glad I鈥檓 40鈥

The 2018 Boston Marathon champ is happy to shake up her goals as a new masters competitor after setting the American Record at the Chicago Marathon

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Des Linden In Her Masters鈥 Era: 鈥業鈥檓 Glad I鈥檓 40鈥

Not everybody crosses over into the 40-plus age category in running with grace and fortitude, but Des Linden has managed to meet the milestone with ease鈥攁nd, in fact, gratitude.

On Sunday at the 2023 Chicago Marathon, Linden, a two-time Olympian and the 2018 Boston Marathon champion, had one goal, and it wasn鈥檛 to win. She had her eye on setting a new American record masters record for the distance. And she did just that, finishing 16th in 2:27:35, just under Deena Kastor鈥檚 previous mark, 2:27:47, set in 2015.

Choosing to race on a flat, fast course like Chicago, with a specific time goal on deck, was a novel approach for Linden. For much of her career, she鈥檚 focused on races that demand strategy and competition over speed. But as she鈥檚 reached this point in her running career, she has to choose new objectives to keep it fun and interesting鈥攁nd yes, realistic, too. With athletes like Sifan Hassan, who won on Sunday in 2:13:44, and Ruth Chepngetich, who took second in 2:15:37, Linden was well aware that her tactics would not include competing with the leaders, or even with the top Americans, who included Emily Sisson, the current American record holder (2:18:29), who placed seventh in 2:22:09.

Linden, who celebrated her birthday on July 26 with an ophthalmologist appointment (鈥淭his checks out,鈥 she remembers thinking that day), said that chasing the masters record was the obvious goal when the calendar flipped. But had the mark not belonged to Kastor, the 2004 Olympic marathon bronze medalist, Linden doesn鈥檛 know if she would have been as excited to break it.

鈥淸Kastor] is an icon, so it was fun to feel like I was chasing someone who I admire,鈥 Linden said. 鈥淚 also think it鈥檚 going to be hammered down in the next couple of years.鈥

Sara Hall, who is also 40, already clocked 2:25:48 at the 2023 Boston Marathon, but the course鈥檚 elevation drop and point-to-point route made the time record-ineligible. Then there鈥檚 Keira D鈥橝mato, who ran her personal record 2:19:12 in 2022 and will turn 40 in October 2024. Several other highly competitive American women are approaching their late thirties now鈥攊n other words, like every other category in the sport, the masters are only getting faster.

After Tigst Assefa of Ethiopia smashed the women鈥檚 world record in September, finishing the Berlin Marathon in a mind-blowing 2:11:53, Linden knew she was born right on time鈥攖he shoe technology today has changed the entire game.

鈥淚鈥檓 glad I鈥檓 40 because the sport when I started? That鈥檚 a different sport,鈥 Linden said. 鈥淚f I had to peak in my career with the super shoes, maybe I鈥檇 break 2:20, which doesn鈥檛 put you in the conversation now. I don鈥檛 mean that as a knock on anyone, but if you want to be competitive, you鈥檙e going to have to level up and start believing that 2:14s are in your wheelhouse. So, I鈥檓 glad I鈥檓 40.鈥

While the transition into the masters鈥 era is different for every runner鈥攁nd especially for a professional like Linden鈥攚e can still glean a lot of solid advice from each other about how to maintain motivation and change our mindset as we grow up in running.

Here are three ways to make the most of the post-40 running life, just like Linden.

(Photo: Courtesy Brooks)

1. Don鈥檛 Count Yourself Out.

At the Chicago Marathon on Sunday, Lisa Levin, 49, finished in 3:11. Out of curiosity, she went back in the results archive to see what time she ran on the course 20 years ago. She was surprised to learn that at age 29, she finished in 3:11:01.

Levin, who is a running coach at Run Farther and Faster, alongside Julie Sapper, constantly tells her athletes that they shouldn鈥檛 assume that their athletic performances will automatically decline in their forties. While some people do see a change in their paces, many others can hang on to consistent performances well into their masters years.

鈥淢any runners anticipate that there are going to be changes before they actually happen,鈥 Levin said. 鈥淲hat it comes down to is not assuming that just because we鈥檙e getting older, we have to give up certain goals or that we can鈥檛 keep achieving PRs.鈥

Declines will come eventually, but don鈥檛 rush them鈥攖he timing is different for everybody and is determined by many factors (how many long breaks in training you鈥檝e had or what age you started running, for example). For Linden, the next big race is the 2024 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials, scheduled for February 3 in Orlando, Florida. She is approaching the preparation and the race with a different mindset than when she made the Olympic team in 2012 and 2016. The first time she lined up at the trials thinking, 鈥淚 won鈥檛 be crushed if I don鈥檛 make it,鈥 was in 2020, she said. But she finished fourth, one place shy of competing at her third Games. It stung a little bit more than she thought it would.

鈥淚t was still crushing, and I realized that it kind of meant more than I originally anticipated it would,鈥 Linden said. 鈥淭his time [in February], I want to go out and run to the best of my ability. It鈥檚 not totally impossible to have an outlier day, but I would still need a lot of people to have a rocky day for me to have a shot.鈥

Linden still finds the preparation for the trials exciting, but if she starts the training cycle and it isn鈥檛 going well, she isn鈥檛 opposed to pivoting to other goals, either.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 necessarily have to do this,鈥 Linden said. 鈥淚f I don鈥檛 think I am going to be able to have a good day, then I鈥檒l figure out what鈥檚 exciting for me to do instead.鈥

2. Seek Joyful Running Endeavors.

Training seriously as we age gets tricky because we鈥檙e just, well, tired. Whether the training itself causes fatigue or the myriad responsibilities we have on our plates, like parenting, taking care of aging parents, careers, and more, we need more rest and recovery whenever we can get it. Given that fact, Levin and Sapper suggest that runners make certain that training is adding joy to life, not detracting from it. If time goals cause frustration or don鈥檛 seem to get you out the door to train anymore, switch it up.聽

鈥淢aybe you鈥檝e always been a marathoner, but you鈥檝e never broken 20 minutes in the 5K. Or maybe you don鈥檛 want to run a certain time in the marathon but you鈥檝e never negative-split one before,鈥 Sapper said. 鈥淟ike Des says, 鈥楰eep showing up.鈥 Your goals may look a little different, but that doesn鈥檛 mean they can鈥檛 continue to motivate you to be the competitive runner you are.鈥澛

Linden still leads the pro-runner鈥檚 life, but she also prioritizes sleep and doesn鈥檛 rush out the door just to have a workout done by 8 A.M. She鈥檚 made her routine more flexible, depending on how she鈥檚 feeling from day to day.聽

鈥淚 want to make sure I鈥檓 having a good experience,鈥 Linden said. 鈥淥ne thing I really try to avoid is rushing out for a run just to feel like I鈥檓 getting it in. I鈥檒l wait to feel like I鈥檓 excited and ready to run. I don鈥檛 want to feel like I鈥檓 just getting through it or getting it over with. I really want to enjoy it and appreciate it.鈥

3. Recognize the Increase in Camaraderie and Competition.

Anecdotally, it seems like more people are running well into their forties, fifties, sixties, and beyond. Go to any local race and masters-aged runners are lining up in droves. It鈥檚 a great time to count yourself as one of the crew鈥攁nd with so many peers, we can stop running with and comparing ourselves to the younger crowd.

Levin and Sapper coach several women in the 50- and 60-year-old age group who have found they don鈥檛 have much fun anymore running with groups that include people in their thirties and forties.

鈥淢aybe you鈥檙e not compatible as training partners anymore鈥攊t鈥檚 better to find a group of people who are like-minded or can understand what your training is like at this stage,鈥 Levin said.

Sapper finds a lot of camaraderie in the masters age groups and believes that more people are able to run longer now than ever before as the research starts to give more insight into how to support athletes as they age.聽

鈥淥ver the last decade, masters running has had such a surge鈥攊t鈥檚 more competitive,鈥 Sapper said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot of fun to race people in your age group and also be inspired by the people 10 or 20 years above yours.鈥

4. Laugh it Off.

The Chicago Marathon on Sunday also served as the World Age Group championships, so those who were competing had their age groups pinned to their backs. Levin, with 鈥45-49鈥 displayed for all to see, was pleased with her performance but couldn鈥檛 help but notice toward the end of the 26.2 miles how many women in their 50s and 60s were passing her.聽

鈥淚 was like, 鈥榃here did you come from and how are you running like that?鈥欌 Levin said, laughing. 鈥淚t has changed so much over the years, just how many masters women are out here running strong. It鈥檚 incredible and so inspiring.鈥

As for Linden, she also sees the humor in the clich茅d aches and pains that happen at inopportune moments. Like, during the second half of the marathon on Sunday, when her pace slowed, and she felt a little chilled.聽

鈥淚n the most 鈥榦ld person鈥 comment ever, I was like, 鈥楳y lower back is super tight,鈥欌 Linden said. 鈥淎nd then I was like, 鈥業f I鈥檓 going to keep doing this, I鈥檓 going to have to implement a weightlifting strategy. So, it鈥檚 on its way.鈥

As they say, Father Time is undefeated, even for the best of us.

鈥淵ou have to adapt and adjust and figure out how to problem-solve for where you鈥檙e at, not for where you were, not for where you want to be, but just in the moment,鈥 Linden said. 鈥淏ut it doesn鈥檛 have to be a sad story. It鈥檚 just part of the process and this part is fun, too.鈥

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Why Kara Goucher鈥檚 Story Matters /running/news/why-kara-gouchers-story-matters/ Wed, 29 Mar 2023 19:03:25 +0000 https://www.womensrunning.com/?p=131532 Why Kara Goucher鈥檚 Story Matters

The world silver medalist鈥檚 memoir, 鈥楾he Longest Race,鈥 lays bare why female athletes may never realize their full potential under systems still rife with inequity, abuse, and harassment

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Why Kara Goucher鈥檚 Story Matters

I vividly remember standing on Boylston Street on April 20, 2009, watching the final meters of the women鈥檚 professional race. I was new to following the elite side of the sport, but I knew enough to look for one woman expected to race up front. Her name and image were everywhere. Kara Goucher was going to contend for the win at the Boston Marathon鈥攊t was all anybody was talking about.

By the time Salina Kosgei, Dire Tune, and Goucher ran by, it was clear that Goucher was going to finish in third place, maybe 10 seconds back, but she was still charging toward the tape like she had a chance. The roar from the crowd was thunderous鈥攕o much adulation for the U.S. athlete who had given a thrilling performance. It was the best that an American woman had finished in Boston in 16 years. But looking up at the jumbotron, we could see how upset she was, visibly sobbing at the result. I could understand her disappointment, but the despair seemed excessive at the time. What did I (or anybody else) know? As it turns out, we didn鈥檛 know the half of it. We knew less.

In Goucher鈥檚 new memoir, The Longest Race, which she wrote with former New York Times sports reporter Mary Pilon, Goucher reveals just what she endured in order to achieve as much as she did in her running career. Among the highlights: making the Olympic team twice, a world championships 10,000-meter silver medal, third place finishes at the New York and Boston marathons, while building one of the largest platforms of any U.S. track and field athlete and eventually leveraging it to advocate for a fairer, cleaner, safer sport for all.

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By now most know that Goucher reveals, for the first time in the book, that her Nike Oregon Project coach Alberto Salazar sexually assaulted her twice while giving her massages, as well as sexually harassed her while traveling on airplanes to competitions (both times, Goucher writes, he had been drinking and and had taken Ambien). Salazar, who is currently serving a four-year ban from the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency and has also been permanently banned by the U.S. Center for SafeSport for sexual misconduct, has denied the doping violation charges, as well as the abuse allegations.

The details Goucher shares about the assaults are horrific, of course. And although they have made most of the headlines since the book was released on March 14, Goucher鈥檚 transparency about so much of her career is what elevates this memoir as perhaps the most important contribution she鈥檒l ever make to women鈥檚 sports.

For those of us who had closely followed the six years of investigations into Salazar and the Nike Oregon Project, many of the anecdotes in The Longest Race seem unsurprising. We鈥檝e heard stories from other former athletes like Mary Cain and Amy Begley, who have also courageously come forward to talk about the physical and verbal abuse they experienced while under Salazar鈥檚 direction. Still, reading the totality of what occurred, who was involved, and how the biggest brand in sports allowed (and even cultivated) such widespread and egregious mistreatment of the country鈥檚 most talented female athletes, makes Goucher鈥檚 story all the more powerful.

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Throughout the book, Goucher describes a revolving cast of men at Nike who were largely responsible for fostering a culture of misogyny and abuse, including then-CEO Mark Parker; John Capriotti, who was the vice president of Nike Track & Field (now retired but still a Nike consultant); John Slusher, Nike executive vice president of marketing; Darren Treasure, hired as the Oregon Project鈥檚 sports psychologist, although as it turns out, he was never a licensed psychologist; and Salazar.

In one of many disturbing stories, Goucher describes going to the Nike campus 11 days after giving birth to her son, Colton, to resume training, wearing 鈥渢wo sports bras and a diaper under my running tights while completing a timed mile on the track.鈥

鈥淣o one checked in on how I was doing鈥攏ot Alberto, Darren, assistant coaches, or physical therapists. There was no talk of creating a plan for me that put my health and safety first. Nike was making money by tailoring its marketing to motherhood and femininity, while up close, the story was very different. It was dangerous, and looking back, it makes my heart sick,鈥 Goucher wrote.

As we now know was common practice, thanks to Goucher and other women who have shared their similar maternal health experiences (including Olympians Allyson Felix and Alysia Monta帽o), Nike had suspended Goucher鈥檚 contract while she was pregnant, citing clauses that mandated how often she raced in order to receive her compensation. She felt pressure to get back to training immediately.

Meanwhile, USA Track & Field, the governing body of the sport, had cut off the family鈥檚 health insurance because her marathon ranking had dropped while she was pregnant. Slusher confirmed that Nike would dock Goucher $325,000 in pay鈥攅ven though she had made many appearances on behalf of the brand during her leave from competition鈥攁nd even allowed Nike to orchestrate her pregnancy announcement for maximum marketing impact. In relaying his decision via email, Slusher had the audacity to describe how he had been thinking about Goucher at his daughter鈥檚 first track meet鈥攈is daughter had been 鈥渁mazed鈥 to learn how much Goucher trained.

鈥淭he hypocrisy of this male executive thinking of me as a role model to his daughter while also determining that a hardworking female athlete didn鈥檛 deserve to be paid during her pregnancy astounded me,鈥 she wrote.

And while Salazar was definitely a creep, making inappropriate comments about the size of Goucher鈥檚 breasts after giving birth鈥攆or one of too many examples鈥攈e was also cruel, controlling, and manipulative. His alcohol consumption was problematic, often imbibing during afternoon practices. Goucher, whose father was killed by a drunk driver and whose mother subsequently devoted much of her life to Mothers Against Drunk Driving, describes a harrowing instance in which Salazar picked Goucher up from the airport while intoxicated. The night before that 2009 Boston Marathon, he kept Goucher out at a restaurant well past the time she wanted to go to bed, drinking red wine and trying to push it on her, too (she declined). He once treated her shin splints with a topical cream mixed with crushed aspirin, which resulted in second-degree burns on her legs. And, of course, he famously distributed prescription drugs to Oregon Project members for performance enhancement, telling Goucher and Cain that they needed to lose weight and thyroid medicine would help.

Goucher鈥檚 story is, in the end, a reflection of the failures across all of women鈥檚 sports, still rampant today: the abuse, the male-dominated systems that refuse to protect athlete safety or well-being, the problematic corporations that drive these win-at-all-cost practices, the lack of required training, education, certification, or accountability of coaches and other support staff. The list goes on.

And yet, athletes like Goucher have still succeeded at the top levels, despite the burden of carrying so many forms of mistreatment along with them. It makes you wonder how much better these female athletes could have been鈥攚hat barriers they might have broken鈥攈ad they been surrounded by people who had integrity and valued athletes as whole human beings, deserving of the basic care and respect that would nurture their talent. So much potential and talent has been lost, careers cut short and replaced by lifelong trauma.

The head scratcher has always been how Nike, the world鈥檚 wealthiest brand in sports, with every resource available, believed that the Oregon Project and Alberto Salazar were the best that it could offer the country鈥檚 top athletes. And how still, today, despite what we know, the Swoosh still controls the funding of USA Track & Field and the decisions that are made at the highest levels. Salazar is still celebrated as a member of the USATF Hall of Fame. The brand is everywhere, from the construction of Hayward Field to the shoes that proliferate every marathon and local 5K in America (and beyond). Where鈥檚 the accountability? Where鈥檚 the hope in that?

The hope is, of course, in Goucher鈥檚 story鈥攖he only way to change anything is to demand better. It would have been far easier for her to quietly retire from professional running and move on. And who would have blamed her? Instead, Goucher has put herself through years of grueling testimony, endured endless backlash and even death threats, and has shared the most painful moments of her life in order to work toward a safer, healthier, more equitable sport for those who come after her.

鈥淚f I鈥檝e learned anything,鈥 Goucher writes, 鈥渋t鈥檚 that change starts when good people refuse to stay quiet.鈥

Thanks to Goucher and all the women who keep talking. Your voices will always matter.

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The Countdown Is On: One Year to Go Until the U.S. Olympic Trials Marathon聽 /running/racing/races/one-year-until-the-u-s-olympic-trials-marathon/ Fri, 03 Feb 2023 17:53:24 +0000 https://www.womensrunning.com/?p=130978 The Countdown Is On: One Year to Go Until the U.S. Olympic Trials Marathon聽

Next year鈥檚 Summer Olympics in Paris mark the 40th anniversary of women competing in the event. With one year until the U.S. Olympic Trials, anticipation is running high.

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The Countdown Is On: One Year to Go Until the U.S. Olympic Trials Marathon聽

For fans of distance running, the U.S. Olympic Trials Marathon has become the most-anticipated 26.2-mile race in the country. And in just one year, it鈥檚 back. On February 3, 2024, the best American distance runners will once again go head-to-head, this time in Orlando, Florida, to decide which three athletes will compete for Team USA at the 2024 Paris Games.

The event also marks the 40th anniversary of the first women鈥檚 U.S. Olympic Trials Marathon, which took place on May 12, 1984, in Olympia, Washington. It was about 12 weeks before the Los Angeles Games, but the quick turnaround didn鈥檛 seem to have much effect on Joan Benoit Samuelson, who won in 2:31:41 after rushing to recover from knee surgery, then went on to also win the first women鈥檚 Olympic gold medal (2:24:52) in the event.

It was the beginning of decades of enormous growth for women鈥檚 running. Back in 1984, the qualifying time to participate in the trials was 2:51:16. In 2024, women have to run 2:37 (or a 1:12 half marathon) to earn a place on the start line in Orlando鈥攅ight minutes faster than in 2020, when 512 women achieved the standard of 2:45 (or 1:13) to race in the U.S. Olympic Trials in Atlanta.

While that 2020 event was quite a celebration of the progress in women鈥檚 running, it also caused some officials, coaches, and athletes to question whether the qualifying times were challenging enough. So USA Track & Field, the governing body of the sport, tightened them. As of January 25, 104 women have made the list of 2024 qualifiers, according to USATF鈥攖he qualifying window opened in January 2022 and closes December 5, 2023 for the marathon. (The window for the half marathon qualification opened in January 2023). Ultimately, the field will likely be smaller, but how much smaller remains to be seen.

鈥淭here鈥檚 still going to be over 300 women, if not 400 women,鈥 predicts Kara Goucher, the 2007 world championships 10,000-meter silver medalist who was second at the 2012 U.S. Olympic Trials Marathon and fourth in 2016. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e still dreaming big and they are willing to make a lot of sacrifices to take their shot.鈥

The More, the Merrier?

Those big dreams have fueled interest and boosted the popularity of the sport, especially over the past decade. The big marathons like Boston and New York attract great elite competition every year, but the trials is the only place where all the fastest Americans show up to race each other, which has made the event so compelling鈥攁 must-see marathon鈥攆or fans. The American system of selecting the top three finishers (who also have the Olympic standard of 2:29:30 or faster) to go to the Olympics makes it a high-stakes spectacle.

鈥淲hen you get to the trials, you鈥檙e actually seeing all of your favorite athletes competing and that鈥檚 such a big draw,鈥 says Deena Kastor, former American record-holder (2:19:36) and 2004 Olympic marathon bronze medalist. 鈥淵ears ago, you might have said that it鈥檚 a given that these are the top three runners in the country by far. Now it鈥檚 less predictable, so it鈥檚 more fun to watch the race unfold in front of you.鈥

Atlanta police estimated that 200,000 fans lined the course at the 2020 trials. For every one of the 500 women who qualified, it seemed like an army of relatives and friends showed up to support them, not to mention the people who watched the national broadcast from home.

For a sport that often lacks mainstream appeal, many saw that the high participation numbers captured increased interest in the race鈥攚hen a neighbor makes it to the Olympic Trials, suddenly a community becomes invested in it. And the crowd in February 2020? It was really loud.

鈥淚t was like they knew that was going to be the last fun event before COVID shut everything down,鈥 says Aliphine Tuliamuk, who won the 2020 U.S. Olympic Trials. 鈥淚f you were somebody who is distracted by noise, you were easily distracted by that because it was just ringing in your ears. It was so loud. You kind of had to tune out a little bit.鈥

Nonetheless, Tuliamuk is of the belief that the more competitors who can reach the starting line, the better.

鈥淚 just hope that no matter what happens, we will still have a lot of women who make it,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing to race with all these women and in return, they鈥檒l go inspire their communities. It鈥檚 what sports should be all about.鈥

Only Three Make It

Every time the bar is raised, women have responded (also with the help of advancing racing shoe technology, of course) and 2024 should be no different, especially if the results at the very top of the sport are any indication.

In the past year alone, the American marathon record has been lowered twice, after standing for 16 years (2:19:36, set by Kastor at the 2006 London Marathon). First Keira D鈥橝mato, 38, finished the 2022 Houston Marathon in 2:19:12, then Emily Sisson, 31, improved that mark in October, finishing the Chicago Marathon in 2:18:29. And who knows? The record could fall again by next February. The U.S. has 22 women under the Olympic standard of 2:29:30.

But part of the allure of the trials is that so many factors are at play, as we witnessed in 2020. The course in Orlando, though not released yet, promises to be flat, unlike the relentless hills of Atlanta, but the weather very well could be warm and humid. Although D鈥橝mato and Sisson are the country鈥檚 leading contenders right now, D鈥橝mato, who was still early in her comeback after being away from the sport for several years to start her family and career, finished 15th in 2:34:24, while Sisson was unable to finish the race. (She went on to make the Tokyo Games in the 10,000 meters.) It was Tuliamuk, Molly Seidel, and Sally Kipyego who came out on top鈥攁nd rookie Seidel also brought home an Olympic bronze medal from Tokyo.

That鈥檚 all to say, nobody knows what will happen, but experts predict something fast.

鈥淲e might even see personal best there because the competition is going to be so stiff,鈥 Kastor says. 鈥淢y first professional coach, Joe Vigil, used to say, 鈥業鈥檓 going to have really high expectations for you, but the higher my expectations, the better chance that you鈥檒l strive high.鈥欌

The day always brings the gamut of emotions for everybody involved. Goucher has experienced all sides of it鈥攖he elation of making the team in 2012 and the deep sorrow of just missing it in 2016. She absorbs the highs and lows even as a spectator. Although she didn鈥檛 compete in Atlanta, she confesses that she took a moment on a side street for a good cry by herself.

鈥淭here was this wall of women running down the street and it just touched me,鈥 Goucher says, adding that she was thinking how many athletes would be left out at the end of the day. 鈥淎t least 12 people who we鈥檝e all followed are capable of making that team, who deserve to make that team, but only three of them can go. That鈥檚 the cruel beauty of it and what makes it so special.鈥

A-Games Only

The ultimate but improbable dream for February 3, 2024, is that all the top athletes arrive in Orlando healthy, in peak fitness, and able to give the trials their absolute best shot over 26.2 miles. What a race it would be to see a late-stage battle between those dozen or more women who have the credentials to land on the podium.

鈥淚 want to see everyone with their A-game,鈥 Goucher says. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 a scary thought, but my dream would be to see all of them at the top of their game. We have the deepest talent among American women that we鈥檝e ever had and there鈥檚 this respect for everybody.鈥

Kastor agrees鈥攐nce again, it鈥檚 going to be the hardest team to make. 鈥淧eople are going to have to have nearly perfect buildups,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he race itself will need to be flawless.鈥

Tuliamuk welcomes the competition while acknowledging that the 2024 Olympic trials will be the challenge of her career so far. She鈥檇 love another chance to represent the U.S.A. After the Olympics were postponed for a year, she gave birth to her daughter, Zoe, then was injured in Tokyo.

鈥淚 want to represent my country to the best of my abilities. I didn鈥檛 really get to do that, so I鈥檒l be doing my best to make sure that I make it to the start line healthy and ready,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to take so much more to make that team, but there鈥檚 nothing better than making a team when everybody brought their A-game and you emerged in the top three. I鈥檓 looking forward to that.鈥

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How Kathryn Martin Staged a Record-Setting Comeback at 70 /running/news/people/runner-kathryn-martin-masters-comeback/ Tue, 10 May 2022 10:00:03 +0000 /?p=2578086 How Kathryn Martin Staged a Record-Setting Comeback at 70

After an extended break from competition, the masters champ has already broken a world record on the track this year. Here are four strategies she uses to run forever.

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How Kathryn Martin Staged a Record-Setting Comeback at 70

When Kathryn Martin stepped to the starting line on March 18 at the USA Track and Field Indoor Masters Championships, the feeling was familiar and foreign at the same time. Although her name appears next to 23 American age-group indoor and outdoor track records鈥11 of them world records鈥擬artin, 70, hadn鈥檛 run around an oval in five years.

鈥淚t was like an out-of-body experience,鈥 she says. 鈥淒uring the race I was thinking, I don鈥檛 know if I can even do this.鈥

She did do it, and it looked like she hadn鈥檛 lost any momentum during her absence. She won the 3,000-meter race, setting a national age-group record for 70-to-74-year-old women. Then she turned around the next day and ran the mile in 6:31.25, an indoor world record in her new division. For context, that鈥檚 the of a 4:06 mile for a 25-year-old, faster than the open women鈥檚 world record of 4:12.56.

Before she disappeared from the scene, Martin had been a consistent threat on the masters circuit for decades, earning honors in her age division every year from 2002 to 2016, and the title in 2017. But after that hot streak, life got in the way: an illness in the family, a move to a new home, and then the pandemic led her to take a hiatus from racing.

鈥淚 think we were kind of a little burned out on competition,鈥 says Chuck Gross, Martin鈥檚 husband and coach. 鈥淪he鈥檇 been at the top of her game for quite a few years. After a while, it鈥檚 very tough being on top.鈥

During the five-year break, Martin still ran for fitness and fun, without a training schedule or speed workouts. She enjoyed easy miles with friends and the chance to get outside five or six mornings each week. But when she turned 70 in September, she felt rejuvenated, and as COVID-19 restrictions started lifting at races, she got the itch to compete again.

To remain engaged in the sport and competitive with her peers, Martin uses the following four strategies.

Keep Fun at the Forefront

Martin doesn鈥檛 deny that she鈥檚 driven by setting records, but during her extended break from training, she reconnected with the concept of running for running鈥檚 sake鈥攕omething many tend to lose sight of when races or other goals loom on the horizon.

鈥淚t鈥檚 totally different when you鈥檙e doing serious training versus just running,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e had a lot of fun just running.鈥

Martin has always aimed to enjoy herself during competitive phases, too. In previous years, she and Gross have scheduled her races around places they鈥檝e wanted to visit. They鈥檇 go for the track meet and stay for the vacation鈥攕he鈥檚 competed in Finland, Italy, South Korea, and many other international destinations.

鈥淪he loves to travel. She鈥檚 a social animal,鈥 Gross says, noting that he鈥檚 more of a homebody but her running opportunities have gotten him out of the house.

As the original 鈥渞unning realtor鈥濃攁 label now extended to some younger pro athletes, like Keira D鈥橝mato and Sara Vaughn鈥擬artin finds that the two parts of her life complement each other. Over the years, she鈥檚 discovered that the more she shares her running success with her clients, the more invested and engaged they become, and that can also make balancing her career and training less stressful and more fun.

鈥淵ou can have a very full life鈥攁 good family, a good business鈥攁nd still run. You just find a way to mesh things together,鈥 Martin says. 鈥淵ou share who you are, you share what you have, you share what you know.鈥

Kathryn Martin sprinting to the finish of the mile
Martin has recently started a weight-lifting routine to supplement her training miles for the first time in her life. (Photo: John Nepolitan)

Run Less, Lift More

Martin鈥檚 weekly training schedule continues to evolve as she moves up in age group. On Mondays, for example, she doesn鈥檛 run at all; instead, she鈥檚 added a strength-training session with a coach at a nearby gym for the first time in her running career. 鈥淚鈥檝e never gone to the gym, because I didn鈥檛 know what I was doing and I thought I鈥檇 injure myself,鈥 Martin says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a new adventure.鈥

The sessions at the gym include body-weight exercises mixed with 鈥渁 little bit of weights.鈥 The objective is to 聽in an effort to stave off injuries. 鈥淢y legs are like rubber when I leave there,鈥 she says.

Martin follows Monday鈥檚 strength training with a yoga session on Tuesday mornings鈥攁nother day she typically doesn鈥檛 run. She spreads her training 鈥渨eek鈥 over nine or聽ten聽days to ensure she gets enough recovery.

A nine-day training cycle for the 10K usually includes:

  • A 10-to-12-mile long run at an easy 8:15 to 8:30 pace
  • One endurance workout, slightly faster than 10K race pace (for example, a two-mile warm-up, four miles at a 7:30 to 7:45 pace, and a one-mile cooldown)
  • One medium-long run of four to seven miles, plus strides
  • Four runs of three to six miles at an 8:30 pace

She typically builds to 40 miles per week over eight weeks before beginning a specific two-month training cycle.

How has her training changed as she鈥檚 gotten older? More than anything, she鈥檚 added recovery days and decreased the intensity of her workouts. Gross says, 鈥淔ifteen or 20 years ago, she鈥檇 get on the track and do six repeat miles in sub-six minutes.鈥

Have a Care Team and Keep Perspective

Recently, after a series of walking lunges, Martin felt pain in her ankle, which later swelled during the night. By the next morning, the joint felt more stuck than hurt, so she didn鈥檛 waste any time calling her chiropractor. He worked some magic, and injury was averted. The secret to her longevity isn鈥檛 much of a secret鈥攊t鈥檚 just knowing how to take care of her body.

Along with her strength coach and chiropractor, Martin relies on a physical therapist, a massage therapist, and an acupuncturist as needed. 鈥淚 have a whole posse of people who keep me running,鈥 she says. She tries to be diligent about self-care, too, including聽regular foam rolling.

Martin and Gross don鈥檛 force workouts if they aren鈥檛 going well, either鈥攕he鈥檒l discontinue a session and try again another day if she isn鈥檛 feeling it. 鈥淩unners are all guilty of not paying attention to their bodies when they鈥檙e trying to tell us something. You have to be mindful of that as you get older. It takes longer to recover,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou just have to pay attention.鈥

It鈥檚 always disappointing when illness or injury sabotages聽a training schedule, but having an otherwise full plate helps Martin keep it in perspective. She鈥檚 never bored, at least. Aside from work, she picks her eight-year-old granddaughter up from school twice a week, then they do homework, have dinner, and go for adventures on the nearby trails.

鈥淥ver 40 years, she鈥檚 really gotten good about backing off,鈥 Gross says. 鈥淩unning, for her, is not the be-all, end-all. She has her priorities straight.鈥

Know What Keeps You Moving

Setting age-group records is what keeps Martin enthusiastic about training. She and Gross look at the races that are record eligible and make a plan for each season based on which distances she wants to focus on. This year she鈥檒l likely stick with the 5K-to-15K range, though she and Gross (who likes to encourage some longer races) are still in negotiations.

Next up? Likely the Boston Athletic Association 10K on June 26, where she鈥檒l aim to beat the existing American road record for 70-to-74-year-olds of 45:19, set in 2015 by Jan Holmquist.

鈥淚 need fresh, visible goals out there,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just challenging myself against the clock.鈥

Aside from those time-oriented objectives, Martin craves the community she finds in her running. After her extended break, she longed to reconnect with the friends she鈥檇 made over the many years of competition. 鈥淲hat I really missed was the camaraderie. Masters runners are so unique,鈥 Martin says. 鈥淵ou can be warriors on the track, but prior to and immediately afterward, everybody鈥檚 hugging. We鈥檙e just so happy to see each other and be in each other鈥檚 company.鈥

She also finds emotional comfort among her running friends at home. 鈥淓verybody is struggling with things in life, but we always find things to laugh about when we鈥檙e running,鈥 she says.

As she continues to succeed on the track and roads, more women ask her how they, too, can make their running last a lifetime. Martin thinks it鈥檚 pretty simple.

鈥淛ust keep moving,鈥 she says. 鈥淧eople tend to get sedentary when they get older. There鈥檚 no reason to stop moving. Longevity is just enjoying what you鈥檙e doing, having friends you like to run with. And you really have to listen to your body.鈥

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Jenny Simpson: 鈥淚 Know There鈥檚 Still Something Great Left in Me鈥 /running/news/people/jenny-simpson-i-know-theres-still-something-great-left-in-me/ Sat, 11 Sep 2021 01:55:17 +0000 /?p=2546066 Jenny Simpson: 鈥淚 Know There鈥檚 Still Something Great Left in Me鈥

After missing the Olympic team for the first time in her career, America鈥檚 most-decorated 1500-meter runner is making a leap to the 10 miler on September 12.

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Jenny Simpson: 鈥淚 Know There鈥檚 Still Something Great Left in Me鈥

After she placed tenth in her marquee event, the 1500 meters, in June at the 2021 Olympic Track & Field Trials, Jenny Simpson wasn鈥檛 sure what would come next. Up until this year, she had never failed to make a U.S. team, in 14 years of competing.

The last time Simpson had watched the Olympics on television, it was 2004, she was a 17-year-old high school student, unaware that in 2016 she鈥檇 bring home the bronze in the 1500 meters, becoming the first U.S. woman to medal in the event. Along the way, she won the gold at the 2011 world championships, and a couple of silvers in 2013 and 2017.

While she was undeniably sad to not make the trip to Tokyo, Simpson, 35, was surprised that she enjoyed watching the Games from home in Boulder, Colorado.

鈥淚 wondered if I was going to be weird about it, but I loved it,鈥 Simpson said during a phone interview on Tuesday. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 remember the last time I was able to really just sit down and enjoy a track meet鈥he Olympics in 2021 will always be a memory for me of a time where I stood down and I watched Team USA and just got to be a total fan.鈥

She toyed around with a lot of ideas of what to do with herself this summer. Maybe compete on the Diamond League circuit? Or pick a couple of other track meets to race? But nothing sounded particularly fun to Simpson until her coaches Mark Wetmore and Heather Burroughs suggested something completely out of her element: the 10-mile U.S.road championships, held on September 12 at the Cherry Blossom 10-Miler (rescheduled from it鈥檚 usual April date because of COVID-19), in Washington, D.C.

鈥淚鈥檝e never done anything like it and there was something about that that just really intrigued me and sounded really exciting,鈥 Simpson said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so funny. I mean, this is one of the most exciting things about our sport. How long have I been doing this? And I鈥檓 relatively unfamiliar with some of the most popular and beloved road races in the world.鈥

include , Diane Nukuri, and .

In preparation, Simpson has traded her track spikes for road flats and her 200-meter intervals for tempo runs. She talked with Women鈥檚 Running about what it means in the context of her career to make a move up in distance on the roads, how she coped with the fallout of the Olympic Trials, and what her expectations are for her first 10-mile road race. The conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

Women鈥檚 Running: What鈥檚 appealing about the 10-mile race distance to you? And racing on the roads, too?

Jenny Simpson: Starting from the beginning, in middle school, there weren鈥檛 a lot of inter-school competitions, so we鈥檇 put on our cross country uniforms and run the local road races in Orlando, Florida. My first experiences with running, like most people鈥檚 introduction to the sport, was through road racing and through the community aspect of it. So the idea of taking a time of my life where I felt really disoriented and just kind of sad missing the Olympics, but also thinking, 鈥淥K, where鈥檚 my career headed?鈥 even in the next three or five months, it felt nostalgic and familiar and inviting to return to something that I have known in the past and drew me into the sport in the first place.

Also, my husband has been running marathons for years and I鈥檝e experienced the road racing world through him. It鈥檚 been so fun. One of the things that鈥檚 silly, but I am looking forward to, is when you鈥檙e on the track, you鈥檙e in a stadium. There鈥檚 tens of thousands of people cheering for you at one time and it鈥檚 just so exciting. With road racing, instead of having this huge crowd, you can hear individual voices and sometimes you get lucky and hear your name. It sounds small and silly but I鈥檓 looking forward to that.

WR: What are your goals or expectations for the race?

JS: Literally, I just emailed the people at the Cherry Blossom race and just said, 鈥淗ey, would you mind if I competed in the women鈥檚 elite section?鈥 I told them that I know nothing about road racing, so to please treat me like a newbie. I mean I鈥檝e run the Fifth Avenue Mile so many times, but are you kidding me? Ten miles? I have no idea what I鈥檓 doing. So, as far as goals? I have no idea what I鈥檓 getting into. The truth is, I don鈥檛 know. I鈥檝e certainly run long runs, but we all know that it鈥檚 totally different. I鈥檓 taking the same approach as any other race鈥擨鈥檝e done the training, I know I鈥檓 ready to do it, and I know I can absolutely get myself to the finish line. I鈥檓 really looking forward to watching the mystery unveil itself live just like everybody else. I鈥檒l learn if I have an aptitude for this or if my very best years of running I was smart to sink into the middle distances.

WR: You鈥檙e so used to knowing all your competitors on the starting line. You鈥檙e lining up with a lot of people you鈥檝e never raced before.

JS: It鈥檚 funny because I was trying to explain to a friend who isn鈥檛 a competitive runner the difference between racing on a track and the road鈥攊t鈥檚 almost different sports. The elite sections, there鈥檚 crossover, but there鈥檚 not 100 percent crossover. And I鈥檝e never raced in these shoes before. I鈥檝e only done a few workouts in road racing flats in my entire life. Even the idea of what it鈥檚 going to be like running with a pack of women at that effort for that long in the middle of the road? I鈥檝e only ever done that for a mile. I鈥檒l be excited to see if I regret my decision at mile eight or nine.

WR: Before the Trials you had mentioned in an interview how much you had been enjoying your long runs. Do you still enjoy them now that you鈥檙e training for a longer race?

JS: My long runs haven鈥檛 changed much at all. It鈥檚 really my workouts that have changed鈥擨 don鈥檛 have to do 12 x 200 anymore. I have no plans to close the last 200 meters of a 10 miler in 29 seconds. One of the reasons I鈥檓 really looking forward to this kind of race and why I鈥檝e enjoyed the long runs is because there鈥檚 an intensity that I bring to track sessions that has made me good for a lot of years. It鈥檚 been an important factor in my consistency and success. I could keep going and I still have a few years of good running left in my legs, even if I chose the 1500. But there鈥檚 no doubt that I鈥檓 not as young as I once was and there鈥檚 a resiliency in your legs when you鈥檙e 22 that you don鈥檛 have at 32. It鈥檚 not in the mileage or running, but in the explosiveness. In the long runs, I can mentally dial it in and for a long time I can feel really strong. That鈥檚 been an attraction to me and a meditative relief in the midst of a lot of uncertainty that we鈥檝e all been living in.

Watching some of my workouts naturally progress to a point where it鈥檚 starting to get a little bit harder on my body, I go out on long runs and have long stretches of time where I feel really good about who I am and what I鈥檓 doing. It anchors me and reassures me that my good years of running aren鈥檛 over yet. Having experienced that in the last year is part of what made training and getting ready for the 10 mile attractive. If I鈥檓 going to compete, it鈥檇 be really fun to have an effort with a similar feel.

WR: How else has the training changed?

JS: The best thing is that now I do almost all my workouts with my husband, which is not unusual but I鈥檝e never done it this consistently. He鈥檚 a really good marathoner so to bring him into the fold of the hardest parts of my training has been really fun. It鈥檚 also angering when we鈥檙e four miles into a hard effort and he鈥檚 still giving me training cues. I鈥檓 thinking, 鈥淭his should be harder for you.鈥 It鈥檚 fun to experience it together.

Also so much of my running career I鈥檝e been the expert and now he has more experience than I do. It鈥檚 a flip for us. It鈥檚 fun to learn from him and defer to him. You can always learn from each other. He鈥檚 opened up a lot more about what might be useful in my training and my racing and my mental game.

I鈥檓 just doing longer intervals and I鈥檓 out of my spikes, doing more work in my road-racing flats. I haven鈥檛 put on spikes and done repeat 200s or repeat 400s in a long time. And I don鈥檛 miss it. I think this new challenge is fun鈥攄oing this in new equipment and with no pre-recorded history to compare myself to has been such a relief. I do a two-mile time trial and I have nothing to compare that to, so if I get to the end and I feel good and the time is what my coaches told me to do, then I think, 鈥淚鈥檝e had a great day,鈥 and I don鈥檛 compare it to anything.

WR: Has your overall mileage gone up?

JS: I鈥檝e probably always trained more like a distance runner than a traditional middle-distance runner. In college I was probably doing 70 to 75 miles a week toward the end, my senior year. I鈥檝e always been right around there or a little higher. It hasn鈥檛 changed much. I鈥檓 not running 100 miles a week鈥擨 have a really good foundation. I just do what my coaches say. It鈥檚 funny that training for a mile or a 10 mile, I鈥檓 doing the same mileage every week.

WR: Is this a permanent move to longer distances?

JS: I鈥檓 not ready to close the book on my track career yet. I鈥檝e never dedicated a season to training for the 5K and I have an OK 5K PR but it鈥檚 certainly not what I think I鈥檓 capable of. I don鈥檛 think this is a permanent switch. My intention in running it is to have a fun effort. It鈥檚 dipping my toe in the deep end and see if there鈥檚 potential if I wanted it. It鈥檚 a vacation from the intensity that I鈥檝e had for so long more than it is a career shift.

WR: I know the Trials didn鈥檛 work out the way you wanted it to, but if you鈥檙e willing to talk about it, I鈥檇 like to know how you recovered from it, emotionally?

JS: It鈥檚 fair to say that I鈥檓 still processing it to some degree. I feel like I have a lot of my mind wrapped around it but I don鈥檛 know if I鈥檒l sound very articulate.

Leading up to the Trials, it was a tough year. But once I got there and started going through the rounds, I really felt good and I was regaining my confidence. Without sounding too arrogant, I thought that if anyone could pull it off after a less-than-perfect year, it鈥檚 me. I think you have to have that belief if you鈥檙e ever going to pull it off. You have to be irrational going into the biggest races, otherwise why are you there? I felt good. I looked good. But the rounds were 4:11, 4:09 paces. When the racing really got going in the final, my lack of fitness just showed through. I wasn鈥檛 fit enough. We had indicators through my training that it was probably the case.

When I came through and I didn鈥檛 qualify, I will say my happiness and my joy for the three New Balance women [Elle Purrier St. Pierre, Cory McGee, and Heather MacLean] who made it was genuine. I really was happy to see the results. I鈥檝e watched all three train really hard, take the sport really seriously, and I have a lot of respect for the way they worked their way toward that week and executed.

But then I go through the mixed zone and I wasn鈥檛 chosen for drug testing, so I came out to see my husband and coaches. For the first time ever I just had to get my backpack and go home. It was so weird. I鈥檓 so used to running a victory lap, going to drug testing, going through team processing, having to manage my family and friends who want to celebrate with me. Having that experience repeated over and over for so many years, it was like falling off a cliff. The inactivity around me was the weirdest thing. I was like, 鈥淥K, I guess you just cool down and get your bag and go home.鈥

I wasn鈥檛 as devastated as people might expect. I did all the training so I had indicators that not making the team was a possibility. I wasn鈥檛 caught off guard. But it took two weeks or so. I was on the track doing a hard session and that was the first day I was really sad. I didn鈥檛 really know what it was for. It wasn鈥檛 for the Olympic team. I had that moment of sadness. I finished the workout, I had a good day, but it鈥檚 like grieving. You go through different stages and you don鈥檛 know how it鈥檚 going to hit you.

On the other end of that, I feel a combination of intense gratitude for how much I have and how much I鈥檝e gotten to experience and how much I just feel in my bones is still left. I know it. I know there鈥檚 still something great left in me. I don鈥檛 know if it鈥檚 going to be on the roads or on the track. I don鈥檛 know if it鈥檚 world championships or something different, but the Olympic Trials and stepping off the track and grabbing my bag and going home is not the end of the story. I still have a few more years of great running in me.

Having time to get some distance from that experience and now, truly I wake up excited to see what鈥檚 next.

WR: Will we see Jenny Simpson on the 2024 U.S. Olympic marathon team?

JS: You鈥檙e not the first person to bring that up and I keep telling people I鈥檓 running the 10 mile, but I am absolutely not committing to running a marathon. That鈥檚 one thing I said to my coaches鈥攊f I agree to do the 10 mile and I enjoy it, I don鈥檛 want that to be a commitment to the marathon. I feel like it鈥檚 this automatic leap, but they agreed. If they鈥檙e putting together a master training plan for the marathon they鈥檝e kept it away from me so far.

WR: I would imagine that having the 2022 world championships in Eugene, Oregon, is attractive.

JS: Absolutely. There鈥檚 still unexplored events for me on the track. I鈥檝e never trained specifically for the 5K and I鈥檝e never run a 10K competitively. There鈥檚 undiscovered things on the track along with the lure of the championships in Eugene.

There鈥檚 a different, more exciting ending to this story and I鈥檓 looking forward to finding out what that is. But it鈥檚 definitely not the 2021 Trials.

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Does Elise Cranny Represent a Changing of the Guard? /running/news/people/does-elise-cranny-represent-a-changing-of-the-guard/ Fri, 30 Jul 2021 17:15:45 +0000 /?p=2546522 Does Elise Cranny Represent a Changing of the Guard?

Elise Cranny, 25, won the 5,000 meters at the Olympic Trials to make the Tokyo Games, and has qualified for the finals. She got there by celebrating every step forward.

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Does Elise Cranny Represent a Changing of the Guard?

It鈥檚 no surprise that Elise Cranny enjoys the mountains during altitude camp. She grew up collecting Colorado state cross-country titles for Niwot High School, so despite the grueling months of training with the聽, she still feels refreshed.

鈥淲hen we are up at altitude, the bar is being continually raised,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really challenged me to be able to do workouts that maybe I didn鈥檛 think I could do.鈥

Cranny joined the BTC in 2019 and was one of the younger athletes contending at the Trials after an unexpected bonus year of settling into pro athlete life. In that time, she improved at every distance she raced, including her debut at 10,000 meters (30:47.42), as well as bests at 1500 meters (4:02.62) and 5,000 meters (14:48.02).

She arrived in Eugene, Oregon, for the Trials with declared entry in all three events, and ultimately scratched the 1500 meters. Cranny won a strategic 5,000 meters in 15:27.81, on a hot day to earn her place at her first Olympics. She placed fourth in the 10,000 meters, one place shy of making that team, too.

In the opening 5,000m round in Tokyo, she stayed in the back of the lead pack that was running relatively slowly, then moved confidently into the top 5 when the pace picked up in the last two laps, holding on to fourth in the final kick to ensure an automatic qualifying berth for the final.

Her coach Jerry Schumacher told her early on in her career that she needed to 鈥渞un a pretty good 10K to run a fast 5K.鈥 Mission accomplished.

鈥淚t was just cool to see that in a year and a half, trusting in Jerry and my teammates, just putting in that consistent work and getting that strength, that it really translated to the shorter races, too,鈥 Cranny says.

In her short time learning the ropes as a pro runner, Cranny says one of the cornerstones of her progress has been learning that doing more isn鈥檛 always better.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 been huge as the workout intensity has increased, going from the collegiate scene to the professional scene, just not underestimating sleep and naps and nutrition and all those little things that are really so important to keeping up consistency,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think having a whole other year of training under Jerry was really huge, physically and mentally.鈥

Cranny has also reaped rewards from implementing strength training that鈥檚 more specific to her needs, addressing her weaknesses and imbalances. It鈥檚 improved her ability to withstand the higher load of training without getting injured, she says, and also made her stride and form more efficient.

Perhaps most importantly, Cranny says, she鈥檚 worked on her mental game, increasing her confidence and bringing more courage to her workouts.

鈥淲hen I was a younger athlete, I was a little bit too focused on getting the confidence from external sources or from a couple of good workouts,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 be constantly shaken by a bad workout鈥nd you also have to keep it fun, joyful, and exciting. Focus on what you鈥檙e doing well and what鈥檚 allowing you to grow and take steps forward.鈥

Photo: Spencer Allen

础驳别:听25

贬辞尘别迟辞飞苍:听Portland, Oregon

贰惫别苍迟/笔搁蝉:听1500 meters (4:02.62), 5,000 meters (14:48.02), 10,000 meters (30:47.42)

Training tip: Like most of us, Cranny has had injury setbacks and other unplanned hiatuses from training and racing. Consistency is king in progression, so she鈥檚 learned to let patience lead her decisions, which has resulted in big breakthroughs like her 10,000-meter debut in February.

鈥淭his past year we鈥檝e had to take a step back from racing a ton and really focus on honing mental skill that I needed to work on just in practice,鈥 Cranny says. 鈥淚 needed to try different racing strategies and work on my confidence. Looking back, I feel grateful for that time to try new things and get a whole other year of consistency as a younger athlete.鈥

Favorite workout:聽Despite the step up to longer race distances, Cranny still craves a good speed session 鈥 shorter reps with longer rest are her jam, especially when she gets to do them with teammates like Gabriela DeBues-Stafford and .

鈥淵ou鈥檙e not getting a ton of volume, but it鈥檚 a chance to run really fast with the speedsters on the team,鈥 Cranny says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 always one of my favorites, to be pushed by them and just see how fast I can go.鈥

The worst part of race day:聽When Cranny gets to the track and it鈥檚 time to warm up for the race.

鈥淵ou鈥檝e been waiting all day and you鈥檙e trying not to read too much into how you feel,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e excited to race and you kind of just want to be warmed up and ready to go 鈥 you鈥檙e close, but you’re not quite to the race.鈥

The best part of race day:聽Learning how to harness nervous energy into something positive.

鈥淚t鈥檚 something I鈥檝e had to work on, using the nerves as excitement to step on the line,鈥 Cranny says. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 what鈥檚 so cool about our sport is you get on the line and you have as good a chance as anyone to finish in any place. It doesn鈥檛 matter what your PRs are if you鈥檙e ready to go on that given day. That鈥檚 something that really excites me, just standing on the line, putting myself in the best position I can, and knowing anything can happen.鈥

Trials success (aside from the obvious goal of making Team USA):聽If Cranny can stay out of her own way and let herself perform to what she knows she鈥檚 capable of, she鈥檒l find satisfaction in the results.

鈥淚 want to run with confidence and compete,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e talk about this a lot as a team 鈥 at the end of the day, that鈥檚 all we want for our teammates. I would view it as successful if I鈥檓 not afraid to put myself in it, race with confidence, and be the best version of myself on that day.鈥

Last words to herself on the starting line:聽 is a Finnish word for strength and perseverance and it鈥檚 one Cranny says to herself often. She also writes a Bible verse on her wrist.

鈥淚 like to repeat on the line, 鈥業 can do anything through Christ who gives me strength,鈥欌 Cranny says. 鈥淪o I really kind of cultivate that strength and think about that on the start line.鈥

Sage advice:聽Jason Hartmann, Cranny鈥檚 coach in high school, and Chris Miltenberg, her coach at Stanford University, gave similar wisdom.

鈥淭hey taught me I have to cultivate confidence from myself and not find it from a coach, a teammate, or a workout,鈥 Cranny says. 鈥淎nd they also similarly taught me to celebrate the steps I鈥檓 taking forward. We always want more, but sometimes along the way you need to celebrate the progress you鈥檙e taking even if you鈥檙e still not where you want to be.鈥

Pandemic pastimes:聽During altitude training camp in Park City, Utah, Cranny, who also took up the ukulele last year, read a lot of books. She鈥檒l read just about anything her teammate聽聽tells her to, she says. Her recent favorite is聽Small, Great Things聽by Jodi Picoult, about 鈥渁 gripping moral dilemma that will lead readers to question everything they know about privilege, power, and race.鈥

鈥淚鈥檝e done probably the most reading I have in a while,鈥 Cranny says.

贵谤辞尘听

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Ready to Race Again? Molly Seidel Has 3 Pieces of Advice /running/racing/race-strategy/ready-to-race-again-molly-seidel-has-3-pieces-of-advice/ Wed, 26 May 2021 21:00:43 +0000 /?p=2547282 Ready to Race Again? Molly Seidel Has 3 Pieces of Advice

Many races are coming back in 2021, but don鈥檛 expect to pick up right where you left off.

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Ready to Race Again? Molly Seidel Has 3 Pieces of Advice

More people are getting vaccinated, allowing COVID-19 restrictions on big events to ease in cities like New York, where was held on June 12 with 3,000 entrants. While a lot of runners are eager to get to those start lines, how you approach your first race back is important.

Molly Seidel, on August 7 in Sapporo, Japan, was lucky enough to race a few times during the pandemic at small, mostly elite-only competitions. she came away with a personal record (2:25:13) and in February at a half marathon in Atlanta she finished in another best of 1:08:29.

鈥淚鈥檝e been very, very lucky to get a lot of race opportunities this year,鈥 she says, 鈥渨hich is unusual.鈥

Ted Metellus, race director of the New York City Marathon, which is planning to host 33,000 runners on November 7, says he and his team at New York Road Runners have been putting on smaller-scale races since September. Their priority is always to communicate clearly with participants so that they know what to expect in regard to safety precautions and have learned to evolve the protocols and logistics as the state and city change policies.

NYRR, like many other race organizations, have studied crowd flow and density, how touch-points (like aid stations) can be managed safely, and other ways in which they can produce events while still allowing participants to feel safe in their return.

鈥淢ore people are seeing not only the physical benefits of running and being outside, but the mental benefits,鈥 Metellus says. 鈥淧articipants really want to engage in this sport, in this activity, and that鈥檚 been pretty awesome to see. It shows value in what we鈥檙e doing.鈥

Seidel placed 5th at the Mini 10K in 32:13, and she鈥檚 learned a few tips and tricks to handle the transition back into a racing routine 鈥 something most of us haven鈥檛 had the opportunity to enjoy for 15 months or more. Fortunately, she鈥檚 willing to share what she knows.

1. Decide if you鈥檙e ready to dive back in again.

Just because the races are coming back doesn鈥檛 mean you鈥檙e ready to sign up yet, even if your group of running friends is registering. We are all coming out of the pandemic with different experiences and circumstances, so give yourself some grace if a road race isn鈥檛 the first thing you want to do as COVID-19 rates recede.

鈥淔irst and foremost, trust your own gut instinct on what you feel comfortable with,鈥 Seidel says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 OK to not be OK sometimes. It鈥檚 OK to not feel comfortable. I was lucky and traveled a lot during the pandemic and my set-point had to be a lot higher.鈥

If you鈥檙e not ready to travel far or fly, start with a local, smaller race.

鈥淪tay true to what you feel comfortable with, because any added stress is just that: stress,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 want added stressors when you鈥檙e thinking about a race. Stick to what feels safe.鈥

2. Have compassion for yourself.

Although most of us aren鈥檛 getting paid to race, we still go after results and want our performances to reflect the effort we put into preparing. But, we also haven鈥檛 gone head-to-head with anybody in a long time 鈥 we forget the fundamentals sometimes like pacing, hydration, and even the simplest race morning routines like timing breakfast the right way.

鈥淚 experienced this coming back from injury 鈥 I went a full year and a half without racing from 2018 to 2019 鈥 and it鈥檚 kinda hard. You might not feel that sharpness or that competitive drive if somebody is passing you,鈥 she says. 鈥淩emember that racing is a skill and just like fitness you have to develop as well. If the competitiveness isn鈥檛 there at first, you haven鈥檛 lost it forever. You just have to work on developing it again.鈥

3. Enjoy it.

No matter what the clock says when you finish or how many people in your age group had a better day, take a moment to appreciate the opportunity. We now know how quickly racing can disappear 鈥 along with the sense of community and the fun that comes with it. Let鈥檚 never take that for granted again.

鈥淓ven if it doesn鈥檛 go the way that you necessarily want it to go, just appreciate how awesome it is to get to race again,鈥 Seidel says. 鈥淢y very first race back, I was just overwhelmed with the feeling, 鈥極h my God, I get to do this again,鈥欌 Seidel says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so cool to have this in my life again.鈥

From

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An Essential Workout from Olympian Marielle Hall /running/training/workouts/an-essential-workout-from-olympian-marielle-hall/ Sat, 24 Apr 2021 02:55:10 +0000 /?p=2547714 An Essential Workout from Olympian Marielle Hall

The 2016 Olympian in the 10,000 meters likes to compare her progress over the course of a training cycle with some 300-meter intervals. Here's how you can try it, too.

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An Essential Workout from Olympian Marielle Hall

A lot has changed for Marielle Hall since she competed in the 10,o00 meters at the 2016 Rio Olympics. Most significantly, she joined the , based in Portland, Oregon, and has adjusted to the rigors of training with many of the nation’s top distance runners.

Hall, 29, has tried to master the right formula of mileage, intensity, and recovery as she prepares to Her personal best at the distance so far is 31:05, which she set at the 2019 world championships in Doha. She’ll face one of the deepest women’s fields ever assembled at the U.S.A. Track & Field Olympic Trials, scheduled to begin on June 18 in Eugene, Oregon. The top three finishers who also have run the Olympic standard (31:25) will go on to the Tokyo Olympics in August.

鈥淚鈥檓 still figuring out when to do more mileage or less, or which phases of training are going to be most important for me,鈥 Hall says. 鈥淎nd how all of it is going to apply to how I feel on race day. Am I doing too much? Or am I not doing enough? I鈥檓 working out that equation.鈥

Her 2019 world championships mark stood at No. 8 on the all-time fastest U.S. women鈥檚 list this winter, but the rankings are constantly being rewritten as the country鈥檚 growing talent collides with advances in shoe technology, leading to ever-faster performances. She also has the Olympic standard in the 5,000 meters (15:10), with a personal best of 15:02 set in 2019.

Here’s Hall’s go-to workout when she wants to see how well her fitness is progressing. You can give it a try based on your own ability level and paces.

WHO: Marielle Hall, 29

WHAT: 10 x 300 meters with 30 seconds recovery between (if you鈥檙e really fit or experienced with speed work, increase the number up to 20 x 300 meters with 30 seconds recovery)

WHY: 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of those workouts that we constantly revisit at different times, so you can really see progress from when you do it the first month of training versus when you do it at the end of a training block.鈥

DETAILS: This workout appears several times throughout the year for Hall, but you can adjust the number of reps based on your fitness level. The pace should be around your 5K race pace, though if you鈥檙e doing more reps, keep it to your 10K pace.

 

贵谤辞尘听

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A Year of Strength for Emily Sisson /running/news/people/a-year-of-strength-for-emily-sisson/ Fri, 26 Mar 2021 21:00:22 +0000 /?p=2548160 A Year of Strength for Emily Sisson

After disappointment at the Olympic Marathon Trials, Emily Sisson took time to examine her weaknesses.

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A Year of Strength for Emily Sisson

When Emily Sisson studied the weather report for the 15K national championship last Saturday in Jacksonville, Fla., she quickly adjusted her race plan. The 20 mile-per-hour winds were not record-setting conditions, so her new strategy? Just race aggressively.

And that plan resulted in a decisive win for Sisson, 29, who trains in Phoenix and is coached by Ray Treacy. Finishing in 48:09, she also won the equalizer bonus against the men 鈥 the women鈥檚 field started six minutes ahead and she crossed the finish line first, taking home a $15,000 prize.

鈥淭his gave me something to work toward,鈥 Sisson said during a phone interview with Women鈥檚 Running. 鈥淪o that was motivating.鈥

turned out to be a good indication that the past year of examining her training, niggles, and imbalances was time well spent. The pandemic didn鈥檛 leave many opportunities for pro runners to race, but Sisson also decided early on that the lack of competition might work in her favor.

She has raced three times since February 2020, when she dropped out at mile 21 of the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials in Atlanta. Sisson, whose marathon best is 2:23:08, came into the Trials as a top contender to make the Tokyo Games, but the brutally hilly course and relentless wind that day took a toll. Afterward she felt beat up and defeated.

鈥淯sually how I get back after bad races is to just jump into the next one,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut Ray said that losing this year of racing could just add time to the end of my career if I invest in getting stronger and learning how to correct my weaknesses. It took four months before I started feeling all right again after the Trials.鈥

With the help of her husband and often training partner, Shane Quinn, she鈥檚 looked at more videos and photos of her running form. They had noticed that it was not the same as it was before her 26.2-mile debut at the 2019 London Marathon. It seemed like her quads were the culprit, she said.

鈥淚 think my body just fell into some patterns that we needed to correct, so I鈥檝e done some posterior chain strengthening. I was getting really stiff, so I鈥檝e worked a lot on mobility,鈥 Sisson said. 鈥淣ow there are days where I feel tired just from the mileage, but I feel more powerful.鈥

She鈥檚 also learned the difference between feeling sore and tired from the high-volume marathon training and what could actually indicate the beginning of an injury 鈥 an important distinction to make for sustaining a career.

鈥淚 just thought that feeling was normal during marathon training, but looking back maybe we should have been more aware of some things prior to Atlanta,鈥 she said.

In December, Sisson traveled to Valencia to race the half marathon, where she finished in 1:07:26, just one second off of her training partner, Molly Huddle鈥檚, American record. Sisson also raced 5,000 meters in March, at a Sound Running meet in Southern California, where she won in 14:55.82, a personal record.

From here, Sisson鈥檚 attention turns fully toward preparing for the 10,000 meters at the U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials, scheduled for June 18鈥27, in Eugene, Ore. That will entail an altitude training stint in Flagstaff, Ariz., and probably some time back in Providence, R.I., with her coach. Although Sisson had originally planned to also race the 5,000 meters there, officials and the revised plan doesn鈥檛 allow enough recovery between the events to race both.

The 10,000 meters could be a crowded field, with approximately 35 women already qualified. She finds herself again in the top contenders club, with a fastest time of 30:49:57.

鈥淭he talent is deep,鈥 Sisson said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be a hard race no matter how it plays out, so I think we just need to prepare for any type of scenario.鈥

The focus doesn鈥檛 extend past making the Tokyo Games right now, but Sisson also knows she isn鈥檛 done with the marathon. Should everything go according to plan, she鈥檇 like to race 26.2 miles in the fall 鈥 and she鈥檒l have plenty to choose from with all six World Marathon Majors currently scheduled to take place between September and November.

鈥淚t鈥檚 probably good for me to take a break from it, but I鈥檓 excited to get back to the marathon,鈥 Sisson said.

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