I ran this morning with my good friend Mark Lee, who is considerably faster than me. It was meant to be a recovery run but as we set off at quicker than 4:30min/k I knew I was in for a ‘fast recovery’. Whenever I run with Mark it is a challenge for two reasons, first he runs fast all the time and second his banter is as quick and you need to be switched on to keep up on both counts. ! Mark has his own Football Coaching business, is 20 years my junior and fit as a ‘butchers dog’. He is so passionate about everything he does and it is always a pleasure, as well as a challenge, to run with him. This morning I met him outside Yelo at 5:15am as we (well I) had decided that after our ‘recovery run’ we’d reward ourselves with the best muffin and coffee in the Southern Hemisphere. (Probably both hemispheres but I know I’d upset too many Italians)
Anyway as expected the 10k was quick and the banter constant. (No one told me they moved Valencia to Spain, it was Italian last time I looked. Geography not being my strong point, while we were discussing Phil Neville’s sacking as the head coach of Valencia. ) When we eventually finished the average had dropped to 4:06min/k, so much for recovery. We’d got back to Yelo 25 minutes before it even opened so a proper 4k recovery was called for.
So the point of this post is to find a runner who is faster than you and go and try and keep up. Of course it will be difficult but remember that ‘hard work’ I talked about yesterday, well this is part of that. You have a choice to run with runners who do not push you or step up a ‘pond’ or two and test yourself. This being said distance and time on legs will allow you to improve in your current ‘pond.’ That’s the good thing about running; there are many ways to move ‘ponds’. You can use the time on feet method, which is the slow and steady rise, or throw in some pace and distance and you’ll be hopping between ‘ponds’ like a frog who eaten an extra hot chilli-pepper. The choice is yours.
A running tragic.
The image below is one of my all time favorites capturing me running through halfway…
I always joke with my Daughter how ‘unfamous’ I am after years of…
Mark | 13th Oct 16
Always a pleasure mate. Your an inspiration and love how much you love to run!
Jonathon | 13th Oct 16
Excellent post. I remember Moneghetti telling our group at Dwellingup about 7 years ago that he developed the Mona fartlek while trying to find a way to keep up with faster runners at training. So not only did he run with faster runners in a bigger pond and improve quickly as a result, but he discovered a workout on his journey of raising the bar, that has been used for decades since by many. So our struggle against seemingly impossible odds, can later pave the way for others to improve also. I’ve had an ongoing disagreement with him that he doesn’t start quick enough, but we had a good basketball 3 on 3 team. 🙂 Inspirational posts and running. Totally agree regarding the big pond little pond groups analogy. There is a Mark Lee in the east who I met at Katoomba one year who is a top notch trail runner too.