Endurance Blog

PBS Marathon Challenge

September 21st, 2007 · No Comments

This should be a great series by PBS’s always great NOVA

The Marathon Challenge


Original PBS Broadcast Date: October 30, 2007

How do you run 26.2 miles if you have trouble making it around the block? With good coach­ing, discipline, and lots of group support, as NOVA shows when it follows 13 generally sedentary people through a training regimen designed to prepare them for an ultimate test of stamina and endurance. Created in cooperation with the Boston Athletic Association®, which granted NOVA unprec­edented access to the 111th Boston Marathon®, and Tufts University, “Marathon Challenge” takes viewers on a unique adventure inside the human body, tracking the physiological changes that exercise can bring about.

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Zatopek Phenomenon the origin of tapering

September 18th, 2007 · No Comments

Cool article on the Daily Camera about the “Zatopek Phenomenon”. Emil Zatopek was the great Czech distance runner who may have inavertedly discovered tapering. Zatopek was known for his legendary training regimen doing 100×400 interval sessions, training in army boots etc. But in 1950 before the European Track Championships, Zatopek ate some bad goose at dinner and was bed ridden for several days with food poisoning. He was released several days before the race…

Zatopek worried he had lost fitness. That was not the case, however. On race day Zatopek felt great. Fully rested, his strong body had finally absorbed the countless miles he had put in through the forests surrounding Prague. He won the gold at the European 10,000 meters, finishing with the world’s second-fastest time.

From then on, such a forced rest before a race has been known as “the Zatopek Phenomenon.”

For more info on tapering for your next race read the rest of this article.

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Are some of us born to run long distance?

September 14th, 2007 · No Comments

Well it maybe obvious but the science is now showing there is a genetic link. From Science:

Marathon running might be in some people’s genes, according to a new study, which shows that a genetic mutation that boosts muscle endurance has spread widely in some human populations.

There are two types of skeletal muscle fibers. Fast fibers, which use sugars for fuel and do not require oxygen, kick in for tasks that require maximum force and quick action, such as sprinting. Slow fibers, which employ oxygen-using (or aerobic) pathways, power activities that require endurance, such as long-distance running. A protein called alpha-actinin-3 is made mostly by fast fibers and is implicated in their capacity for rapid force generation. About 18% of people of European descent do not produce the protein at all due to mutations in both their copies of the gene ACTN3, which codes for alpha-actinin-3. Previous studies have shown that endurance athletes such as long-distance runners have higher frequencies of this mutation, whereas sprinters and athletes in other sports that require quick muscle strength have lower frequencies.

Link.

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Terry Fox Greatest Endurance Athlete of All Time.

September 14th, 2007 · No Comments

This is was just posted on the Trail Running Blog and I think everyone should agree Terry Fox is the greatest endurance athlete of all time. Everyone should try and get out to a local Terry Fox Run this Sunday.

200px-terry_fox_running.jpg

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Strenuous Training and Sleep.

September 13th, 2007 · No Comments

The NY Times has a great article on sleep and exercise. Ever wonder why you have more energy after an easy jog but after a hard run you are beat? Turns out it has to do with your immune system:

One possibility, Dr. Chediak said, is that cytokines — hormones that signal the immune system — are making these athletes sleep so much.

Exercise, Dr. Chediak said, prompts muscles to release two cytokines, interleukin 6 and tumor necrosis factor alpha, that make people drowsy and prolong the time they remain sleeping. In fact, those cytokines also are released when people have a cold or infection, which is why people sleep so much when they are ill.

Link.

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