Author Topic: AGC's journal  (Read 301508 times)

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LBSS

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1065 on: August 29, 2015, 12:15:14 pm »
0
A++ strong update. get back to journaling, i'm tryna see you hit 11.5.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

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AGC

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1066 on: August 30, 2015, 10:54:57 pm »
0
A++ strong update. get back to journaling, i'm tryna see you hit 11.5.

Thanks man, I have been feeling very guilty about not journalling, just been busy with the actual training on top of everything else. But I have been following everyone's training and commenting when I can.

Yeah 11.5 would be nice...everything would have to go right but it's not completely crazy. My real weakness last year (and the year before) was speed endurance. I think that has gotten better this off-season through being able to train in a healthy state more consistently. Last winter I had shin splints for the first bit and a bit of residual plantar fasciitis, so even though I was training at the same volume as now, I probably wasn't getting the same training effect because the intensity couldn't be as high as possible. Being healthy is underrated lol.

Mikey

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1067 on: October 26, 2015, 02:28:52 am »
0
Are you mainly going to run pros this season or a mixture of pros and amateur?
How's your training coming along now? Same old or is it different now that it's almost race time.
"IMO, It didn't happen if it's not on vid/official"- adarqui

It's easier to keep up than it is to catch up...

AGC

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1068 on: October 30, 2015, 02:35:42 am »
+1
Are you mainly going to run pros this season or a mixture of pros and amateur?
How's your training coming along now? Same old or is it different now that it's almost race time.

Good to see you back man! Yeah I will do a bit of both again. Ill do a bigger update when I get a chance but yeah it hasn't changed drastically.

Mikey

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1069 on: October 30, 2015, 09:29:15 am »
+1
Are you mainly going to run pros this season or a mixture of pros and amateur?
How's your training coming along now? Same old or is it different now that it's almost race time.

Good to see you back man! Yeah I will do a bit of both again. Ill do a bigger update when I get a chance but yeah it hasn't changed drastically.

Thanks man it's good to be back :)

By the sounds of it your body is coping better with training this year and you've built up a better base.
Good luck for your season!!!
"IMO, It didn't happen if it's not on vid/official"- adarqui

It's easier to keep up than it is to catch up...

AGC

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1070 on: January 26, 2016, 08:52:14 am »
+3
Been meaning to write an update for ages. I have been reading everyone's training and it's great to see most people smashing it, but also hard because my season has been a complete disaster!

Around the time of the last post my testing results started going bad. Went from 247m to 240m in the last 30 seconds test, jumps weren’t very good etc. I did get ‘fitter’ running a 4min 1200m and 13min 3km run – but who cares about that and it sucks anyway. Also lost 20kgs on my bench and about the same on squat once we moved to back squats, probably due to not getting into the gym for 6 months!

September/Oct training:

   Sun: a 3.2km run around a park before heavy power pulls, squats with hurdle jumps and bench. Yep.

   Tues: block starts, multiple re-accelerations, 300m sprint. Not a bad session by itself.

   Wed: same as Sun but with a 2400m run instead, so not much different. By this time last year we had dropped the long runs but the coach was experimenting. He’s sort of lost a bit of enthusiasm this season as a lot of people left and it was really just me and a few other girls training consistently.

   Thurs: Speed endurance. Each month we do a session on three consecutive Thursdays. The first month was [120m, 150m, 180m] x 3 with 6-8 minutes rest. Most people dropped out of this one by set two. The next month was [120m, 150m, 180m] x 3 with same rest. By this stage in the week I was fucked and not running very good times.

   Sat: sled drags - 6 sets of [2x40m] with gun, then 400m.
 
First run was in late Oct, 200m running a 25.17sec…which is not terrible but not anything close to what I was hoping. And in context, completely shit and not competitive in any sense. 100m in mid-November…12.92 (!!!)…I eased off a bit at the end because I could tell it was a pathetic run and just gave up. Start has gotten worse due to lack of power, got beat off the line and just died as usual from 60m to the line. I was pretty furious as I ran a 12.52 off one easy session a week for 3 months two years ago, and I thought that was bad at the time! Next run I ran all the way hard and had a bit of a tail. But I still only ran a measly 12.72. WTF. It’s like I hadn’t been training at all! Incredibly frustrating.

The pro (handicapped) runs haven’t been much better, not running near my best times obviously. It also seems like because they know I’ve run faster, the chance of me getting any handicap boost is miniscule. So that’s another waste of time really.  Finally in the last month or so I’ve been given a reprieve and am doing wimp weights and lightening the load a bit with track work. My latest 100m was 12.58sec with +1.4m/s, so there has been very slight improvement, but given last year I ran 12.01 at the same race with a cold, I’ve gone backwards majorly.

In hindsight I definitely hit an overtraining phase. I was running well in June/July but then the wheels fell off. Was doing every session consistently but it just became too much to recover from. I remember being fairly tired each training and demotivated, especially when the shit results started pouring in. I haven’t agreed with how the coach has been training everyone this season at all. Too much time committed to long runs and fitness circuits at the expense of speed and strength. Part of it was we got into the gym a month later and the season started earlier. So I just got weaker and have fallen into a ditch speed-wise. I should have just done my own gym from the start. I had planned to do it but because I’m incredibly stubborn and won’t quit things I decided to just do the training as written until the end of the season before making any decisions.

Injury-wise…I really haven’t had anything major. I had a bit of patellofemoral pain in my R knee for s bit which affected my SL bounds. My L Achilles also has been sore, but only for about 5 mins during warmups. It’s probably low-grade Achilles tendinopathy but again, nothing that has stopped me. We never do any calf strengthening, which probably has something to do with it.

Anyway I hope this isn’t an incredibly depressing post but that’s how it’s been. Just feel like a complete hack…very demoralising given that I felt I could (and should have) run well this season. The coach has been open to change but I also feel he doesn’t really care that much – he’s getting older and his heart isn’t always in it. He hasn’t been charging me which is nice, but I don’t care about getting free training if it’s not worth the time/effort. It’s just caused me a ton of anxiety that I really don’t need!

I think from here I’ll do my own gym, start building my squat and bench back up and just run the track sessions…maybe. Nothing much to run for the rest of the season, won’t be entering state champs. I’d still like to do another season despite all of that but on my own terms, definitely will do my own off-season. I’ve learnt enough and definitely have become more knowledgeable, if not any better of an athlete. Plus now Toddday is posting again I might be able to get some input on my training plans  :D

LBSS

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1071 on: January 26, 2016, 01:27:10 pm »
+1
your journal,



welcome back, sorry to hear you had what sounds like kind of a lost season.
Muscles are nonsensical they have nothing to do with this bullshit.

- Avishek

https://www.savannahstate.edu/cost/nrotc/documents/Inform2010-thearmstrongworkout_Enclosure15_5-2-10.pdf

black lives matter

Mikey

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1072 on: January 28, 2016, 06:16:33 am »
+1
Been meaning to write an update for ages. I have been reading everyone's training and it's great to see most people smashing it, but also hard because my season has been a complete disaster!

Around the time of the last post my testing results started going bad. Went from 247m to 240m in the last 30 seconds test, jumps weren’t very good etc. I did get ‘fitter’ running a 4min 1200m and 13min 3km run – but who cares about that and it sucks anyway. Also lost 20kgs on my bench and about the same on squat once we moved to back squats, probably due to not getting into the gym for 6 months!

September/Oct training:

   Sun: a 3.2km run around a park before heavy power pulls, squats with hurdle jumps and bench. Yep.

   Tues: block starts, multiple re-accelerations, 300m sprint. Not a bad session by itself.

   Wed: same as Sun but with a 2400m run instead, so not much different. By this time last year we had dropped the long runs but the coach was experimenting. He’s sort of lost a bit of enthusiasm this season as a lot of people left and it was really just me and a few other girls training consistently.

   Thurs: Speed endurance. Each month we do a session on three consecutive Thursdays. The first month was [120m, 150m, 180m] x 3 with 6-8 minutes rest. Most people dropped out of this one by set two. The next month was [120m, 150m, 180m] x 3 with same rest. By this stage in the week I was fucked and not running very good times.

   Sat: sled drags - 6 sets of [2x40m] with gun, then 400m.
 
First run was in late Oct, 200m running a 25.17sec…which is not terrible but not anything close to what I was hoping. And in context, completely shit and not competitive in any sense. 100m in mid-November…12.92 (!!!)…I eased off a bit at the end because I could tell it was a pathetic run and just gave up. Start has gotten worse due to lack of power, got beat off the line and just died as usual from 60m to the line. I was pretty furious as I ran a 12.52 off one easy session a week for 3 months two years ago, and I thought that was bad at the time! Next run I ran all the way hard and had a bit of a tail. But I still only ran a measly 12.72. WTF. It’s like I hadn’t been training at all! Incredibly frustrating.

The pro (handicapped) runs haven’t been much better, not running near my best times obviously. It also seems like because they know I’ve run faster, the chance of me getting any handicap boost is miniscule. So that’s another waste of time really.  Finally in the last month or so I’ve been given a reprieve and am doing wimp weights and lightening the load a bit with track work. My latest 100m was 12.58sec with +1.4m/s, so there has been very slight improvement, but given last year I ran 12.01 at the same race with a cold, I’ve gone backwards majorly.

In hindsight I definitely hit an overtraining phase. I was running well in June/July but then the wheels fell off. Was doing every session consistently but it just became too much to recover from. I remember being fairly tired each training and demotivated, especially when the shit results started pouring in. I haven’t agreed with how the coach has been training everyone this season at all. Too much time committed to long runs and fitness circuits at the expense of speed and strength. Part of it was we got into the gym a month later and the season started earlier. So I just got weaker and have fallen into a ditch speed-wise. I should have just done my own gym from the start. I had planned to do it but because I’m incredibly stubborn and won’t quit things I decided to just do the training as written until the end of the season before making any decisions.

Injury-wise…I really haven’t had anything major. I had a bit of patellofemoral pain in my R knee for s bit which affected my SL bounds. My L Achilles also has been sore, but only for about 5 mins during warmups. It’s probably low-grade Achilles tendinopathy but again, nothing that has stopped me. We never do any calf strengthening, which probably has something to do with it.

Anyway I hope this isn’t an incredibly depressing post but that’s how it’s been. Just feel like a complete hack…very demoralising given that I felt I could (and should have) run well this season. The coach has been open to change but I also feel he doesn’t really care that much – he’s getting older and his heart isn’t always in it. He hasn’t been charging me which is nice, but I don’t care about getting free training if it’s not worth the time/effort. It’s just caused me a ton of anxiety that I really don’t need!

I think from here I’ll do my own gym, start building my squat and bench back up and just run the track sessions…maybe. Nothing much to run for the rest of the season, won’t be entering state champs. I’d still like to do another season despite all of that but on my own terms, definitely will do my own off-season. I’ve learnt enough and definitely have become more knowledgeable, if not any better of an athlete. Plus now Toddday is posting again I might be able to get some input on my training plans  :D

That sucks man. If it's any consolation you're faster than me atm, and I have one friend (10.94 100 & 21.69 200) who hasn't improved since he was 17- he's now 22 and he's been training with a coach similar to yours the whole time.

You definitely need to ditch that coach. 3.2km runs on Sundays and 2.4km runs on Wednesdays??? As for the speed endurance I"m not surprised that people would drop off by the 2nd set. Speed endurance is usually 90-95% so if you're exerting that kind of effort you really need to have about 15-20 minutes rest at least- 6-8 minutes is just ridiculous.

The Tuesday session sounds decent, as does the speed endurance; however, like I said you'd definitely want to incorporate more rest if it's true speed endurance. Same as the sled drags once again it just seems like a complete overkill on volume. Than to top it off he has you guys running a 400m to finish off the session :o

How did the rest of the squad go? Juniors might be able to handle that sort of volume and make improvements- but that wouldn't be due to good coaching it would be due to going through puberty. The reason you didn't get injured was probably because your body knew it couldn't handle the volume so instead of ceasing the volume it lowered the intensity as a natural defence mechanism. Hence, your times deteriorating and lack of power.

It seems clear where all the mistakes were this season. Sometimes less is more, which sounds completely counter intuitive (it's probably different if you're juiced to the grills or have built up the volume over many years though) but it all depends on what your body responds to. The high volume approach doesn't work for you, and I don't think it would work for most people either. Anyway I wouldn't dwell on it bro it's just an unfortunate learning experience.
"IMO, It didn't happen if it's not on vid/official"- adarqui

It's easier to keep up than it is to catch up...

seifullaah73

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1073 on: January 28, 2016, 06:29:41 am »
0
I had the same problem with my coach when I was uni.

It was only long distance runs. Very rarely would they do power or strength training I only saw 60m runs, flying 40m but besides that it was 120m, 200m, 300m, 400m, 500m.
Warm up drills
   - a walk, b skip quick powerful switch (heel to hams focus), a runs, dribbles small to big to run, straight leg to runs (force, reflex, go up/forward). force to hit the ground before it hits the ground knee/hip is at 90 degrees.
   - acceleration: low heel recovery, shin angle low, drive legs back before hitting the ground and drive thighs/knee forward not up
-------------------------------------------------------------
Measuring reminder:
5 toe to heel steps = 148cm
------------------------------------------------------------------------

�Strength comes from the legs, Power comes from the torso and Speed comes from the arm.� � Al Vermeil
Arm also aids the legs in driving it down with power - seifullaah73

My Progress Log
A Journey to Running fast and Jumping High
http://www.adarq.org/progress-journals-experimental-routines/my-journey-to-hypertrophy/

T0ddday

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1074 on: January 28, 2016, 10:10:25 am »
+1
Acole - glad to see you back.  Thanks for the mention - what are you current goals and are you not gonna run with a team anymore?  Also, what are those handicapped runs?  I know there is one on grass thats like 120yds that Josh Ross won a few times where they handicap each person differently - pretty cool that they have them in Australia - is this a common thing?

I had the same problem with my coach when I was uni.

It was only long distance runs. Very rarely would they do power or strength training I only saw 60m runs, flying 40m but besides that it was 120m, 200m, 300m, 400m, 500m.

Lol....  Those are not very long distance runs!  So you saw 40m, 60m, 120m, 200m, 300m, 400m, 500m...  That's about every sprint distance right there...  You can't blame a coach for giving you a variety of runs to find out your ability.  Track is a TEAM sport.

Remember - it's not so much that longer runs are bad than it is that NOT doing shorter runs is bad.   The idea that your such a finely tuned engine that a single 800m time trial is going to make you lose all your power is a compete myth (especially if your not running sub 11).   It's not the 800m that's the problem - it's the idea of replacing speed work with 800m - as an adjunct it's fine.
« Last Edit: January 28, 2016, 10:12:52 am by T0ddday »

AGC

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1075 on: January 30, 2016, 07:11:57 am »
+1
your journal,



welcome back, sorry to hear you had what sounds like kind of a lost season.

Thanks mate! I have been following your training lately and it looks like you're hitting new heights, keep it up.  :lololol:

That sucks man. If it's any consolation you're faster than me atm, and I have one friend (10.94 100 & 21.69 200) who hasn't improved since he was 17- he's now 22 and he's been training with a coach similar to yours the whole time.

You definitely need to ditch that coach. 3.2km runs on Sundays and 2.4km runs on Wednesdays??? As for the speed endurance I"m not surprised that people would drop off by the 2nd set. Speed endurance is usually 90-95% so if you're exerting that kind of effort you really need to have about 15-20 minutes rest at least- 6-8 minutes is just ridiculous.

The Tuesday session sounds decent, as does the speed endurance; however, like I said you'd definitely want to incorporate more rest if it's true speed endurance. Same as the sled drags once again it just seems like a complete overkill on volume. Than to top it off he has you guys running a 400m to finish off the session :o

How did the rest of the squad go? Juniors might be able to handle that sort of volume and make improvements- but that wouldn't be due to good coaching it would be due to going through puberty. The reason you didn't get injured was probably because your body knew it couldn't handle the volume so instead of ceasing the volume it lowered the intensity as a natural defence mechanism. Hence, your times deteriorating and lack of power.

It seems clear where all the mistakes were this season. Sometimes less is more, which sounds completely counter intuitive (it's probably different if you're juiced to the grills or have built up the volume over many years though) but it all depends on what your body responds to. The high volume approach doesn't work for you, and I don't think it would work for most people either. Anyway I wouldn't dwell on it bro it's just an unfortunate learning experience.

Thanks mate, the squat has dropped in numbers over the last year so it's hard to make many conclusions but one thing I've noticed is that the girls tend to do better, and historically females have been more successful with this coach. Weird, but again small sample size. There's only been a couple of other guys training and they are flaky at best.

I feel that I generally have escaped acute injuries because I have stayed on top of doing soft tissue work/voodoo banding/stretching every night and eat and sleep fine. Knock on wood as today my insertional achilles tendon is flaring up. But I haven't actually been 'hurt' since I did my foot nearly 2 years ago, maybe what you described is at play, hard to say.

Acole - glad to see you back.  Thanks for the mention - what are you current goals and are you not gonna run with a team anymore?  Also, what are those handicapped runs?  I know there is one on grass thats like 120yds that Josh Ross won a few times where they handicap each person differently - pretty cool that they have them in Australia - is this a common thing?

Thanks mate, really cool to see you back dropping knowledge bombs everywhere again. Goals-wise I don't know. Since that last post I've joined the gym down the road and have just gone back to doing a few 'easy' sessions based on what I used to do. I still like the social aspect of being in a running squad, and I'll still compete in both the amateur and pro seasons again next year. But I'm definitely gonna do the off-season a little differently because physically and work-wise it's just hard to train 3-4 days during the week at 5PM over the meaty part of the year (March-Oct) and then lose half the weekend training as well. Especially if it's for a negative result.

Part of me just wants to drop running and just go back to the good old days: squat, do athletic exercises and try to dunk from SVJ at the gym court. That'd be pretty fun. I might do that from April to say August, then start getting ready to run from August-ish to November. Not really sure. Even though obviously big weight room numbers aren't the sole indicator of short sprint (60m-100m) times, I feel that for me with my shorter legs/body ratio, being strong in the squat/power clean is much more important for me than your average sprinter. It's just a shame the gym work this year has been mediocre. I think I just need to  get the (explosive) strength levels back up again. I like this exchange from Rocky VI:

To beat this guy, you need speed.
You don't have it.
And your knees can't take the
pounding, so hard running is out.
And you got arthritis in your neck.
And you've got calcium deposits...
...on most of your joints,
so sparring is out.
I had that problem.
So what we'll be calling on is good
old-fashioned blunt-force trauma.
Horsepower. Heavy-duty,
cast-iron, pile-driving punches...
...that will have to hurt so much
they'll rattle his ancestors.
Every time you hit him with a shot...
...it's gotta feel like he tried kissing
the express train.
Yeah! Let's start building
some hurting bombs.

A bit out of context but I like the idea behind it. I'm not arthritic yet but I don't know how much more 'fit' I need to be as a short sprinter than what I achieved before the season and am still 90-95% of right now. I can complete any speed endurance session without giving up and run laps on laps. I will do it until I drop if that's the program and it works, but you have to be smart enough to adapt in the face of bad results. I just think sprinting in a straight line is fairly simple...the person with the best power/weight ratio with sufficient technique and body levers will win 99% of the time.

Still thinking about it though. There's a myotherapist/athletic trainer who used to train with us and is a boss (6'6'', 100kgs, sub-22 200m) and he has some really good ideas and approaches, and is big on developing explosive strength. Might train a bit more with him maybe. Given I will never be a 200m+ guy and am solely focusing on short sprints and power (i.e. vertical jump, broad jump, horizontal jumps), in terms of emphasis I think it should be something like [speed>strength>anaerobic endurance>>aerobic endurance]. Interested to hear yours and Mutumbo's thoughts being the other two sprint guys on the forum! And anyone else's of course. I can give more details if needed.

Yeah, handicap running has a big history here in Victoria (my state). The race you're talking about is the Stawell Gift, the major event of this otherwise nondescript town called Stawell in rural Vic. The main race is 120m actually, and Josh Ross won it off a ridiculous 7m mark the first time and then off scratch (0m) mark a couple of years later. But there are heaps of other races before that and also in other states, and there are some big guns who race. Here's the site:

www.val.org.au

Theoretically 'everyone has a chance of winning' but it's kind of BS, the coach has told me some ridiculous stories about how corrupt it's been in terms of certain athletes from certain clubs/stables getting generous marks, shady stuff. But it is fun and it's miles better than the woeful amateur comp we have here.
« Last Edit: January 30, 2016, 07:15:46 am by acole14 »

T0ddday

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1076 on: January 30, 2016, 02:49:33 pm »
0

Quote
I just think sprinting in a straight line is fairly simple...the person with the best power/weight ratio with sufficient technique and body levers will win 99% of the time.

This is very far from the truth at the level your running.  I dont know what the standards are in Australia but if your on the pro circuit and people are running near 10.0 it has very little to do with power/weight ratios. 

That statement is very true for slower athletes, power to weight ratio is the main reason why one guy runs 13.0 and the other 12.0.  But it has essentially zero to do with why one guy runs 10.5 and the other 10.0.  Theres a litany of research proving this and my anecdotal experience backs it up. 

Additionally the straight line run actually makes your statement more false!  Power to weight ratios are going to be more important* in the 200m and 400m then the 100m!

*still not of primary importance at high levels, but if you wanted a race where power/weight is least important it would probably be the 150m straight...

AGC

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1077 on: January 31, 2016, 06:09:06 pm »
0

Quote
I just think sprinting in a straight line is fairly simple...the person with the best power/weight ratio with sufficient technique and body levers will win 99% of the time.

This is very far from the truth at the level your running.  I dont know what the standards are in Australia but if your on the pro circuit and people are running near 10.0 it has very little to do with power/weight ratios. 

That statement is very true for slower athletes, power to weight ratio is the main reason why one guy runs 13.0 and the other 12.0.  But it has essentially zero to do with why one guy runs 10.5 and the other 10.0.  Theres a litany of research proving this and my anecdotal experience backs it up. 

Additionally the straight line run actually makes your statement more false!  Power to weight ratios are going to be more important* in the 200m and 400m then the 100m!

*still not of primary importance at high levels, but if you wanted a race where power/weight is least important it would probably be the 150m straight...

Well I mean, yeah, that's exactly where I am unfortunately. I know that at the higher end it becomes a different game altogether. And I didn't say that power/weight becomes less important in the longer sprints. In fact, it becomes more important as you say. I was just talking about it in my context, apologies for the generalisation.

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1078 on: February 01, 2016, 10:25:03 pm »
+6
Anyway........after a couple of easy weeks just doing my own thing (which hasn't been much), I ran a handicapped 100m on the weekend. I was off 7.5m (92.5m) and ran a wind-adjusted 11.22sec. Might equate to about a ~12.1-12.2sec. Finally might be freshening up a bit.

I may run a couple more times this season, but I also think I probably should get some nagging issues under control. I might have a bit of bursitis around my achilles which flares up when I do a warmup lap. The achilles itself doesn't feel bad...there's just a sharp pain right around the tendon/calcaneal bone that feels similar to the type of pain I'd get with my foot (same foot) last year when I stood up after sitting for awhile. I think it's manageable like the foot was, but at the same time if I'm not running for anything I probably should just rest it.

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Re: acole14's journal - DUNK OR DIE
« Reply #1079 on: February 08, 2016, 11:28:14 pm »
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I went to run on the Tuesday after the latest race, but my achilles and L knee issue (which I've described in the past, basically feels like a weird pulling sensation around the medial patellar tendon) were still 'there'. So I stopped running and booked in to see a doctor to get some scans. I really just wanted to rule out it being a medial meniscus tear, which is probably my worst nightmare given that I may have hurt my meniscus about 4 years ago and stupidly didn't get it scanned. I got into a free staff doctor for my university (even though technically I'm not staff) and it meant I could get an MRI done within a couple of days for free!  :almostascoolasnyancat:

Anyway it came back like this:



It was a big relief to see no structural damage. Glad I've kept my knee in (relatively) good shape. There are two issues that it could be:

1) Ganglion cyst - at some point in my life I have developed a medium-ish (3.5cm) cyst around the back of my PCL near the tibia. It may be causing the weird sensation but it's not harmful and it will probably drain itself over time.

2) Grade 2 chondromalacia - this is much more manageable than a cartilage defect in the medial meniscus as it regenerates better. It should recover if I refrain from running for a bit. But it's weird as the location doesn't really match the sensation I've been feeling. Grade two is not so severe, but it's notable.

So I don't think I need to stop lifting or cross-training on a rower and I can at least go to the gym and stop worrying about it as much. Gonna see a myotherapist in my group and get his opinion on how I can sort it out.