Sunday, April 27, 2014

Rupee For Humanity 10K...great course, great cause

Ran the Rupee For Humanity (RFH) 10K this morning in Cubbon Park (Bangalore, India) with about 550 other people! In addition to the 10K, they also has a 3K and 5K distances start at the same time.

The 5K winner and I had the lead after about the first mile, and we helped each other navigate the course until he turned to finish the 5K. I completed another lap for the 10K. My GPS watch said the distance was closer to 5.95 miles instead of 6.2. My time was 38:20 (6:34, 6:15, 6:22, 6:28, 6:31, 6:09). I feel good about that time given the altitude (3000+ feet) and having this race cap off a 46+ mile week (last week was only 31.5 miles).

The course started at an engineering college across the street from the park. The street was probably a good 100 meters across. No police to stop traffic, so...the volunteers just walked out and stopped traffic.

The course wound through the park nicely. Most of it was on the roads within the park, but part of the course was on a cement path through the trees. Thankfully I had studied the map, because the course wasn't marked clearly and some volunteers had not reached certain turns to help direct runners. The race director was eager to hear my feedback, so better markings was one suggestion along with marking each 1000.

Karan Rayadurg and I hung out after the race. He came in third and is training for next month's TCS World 10K. (Carl Lewis is going to be there.) People were disappointed when I told them I was not going to be in town for that race.

I enjoyed how people asked to have their pictures taken with me. And I hope to see some more pics taken from photographers on the course. Here's one I finally had someone take with my phone:


India treats its runners well. They had good snacks, finisher certificates (all individually signed by the president of RFH), gifts for the sponsors, and awards for the top 3 male and female runners in each of the distances.


Bottom line: I'm looking forward to running another race in India.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Rupee For Humanity 10K course in Cubbon Park

Just received the course map for Sunday's Rupee For Humanity 10K in Cubbon Park. I like that it stays within the park, but it's basically two loops with a couple out and backs.

This should be a fast, flat course (minus the 3000 ft. of elevation that I'm not used to).


Tuesday, April 22, 2014

First 10K (outside the U.S.) this Sunday

Sunday morning (which will still be Saturday night for those of you in the states), I am running my first 10K outside the U.S. The race is at Cubbon Park, which is in the heart of downtown Bangalore, India.

The race is sponsored by Rupee For Humanity. They work to provide education for children and food and medical supplies to the poor and needy. This weekend's race is dedicated to supporting literacy needs.


I plan to map the route using MapMyRun and also track it with my GPS watch. My plan is to be conservative and shoot for a sub-43:30, which is roughly 7 min/mile pace. But if someone is there to push the pace, then I'll gladly follow.

Expect an update following the race.

Monday, April 21, 2014

Added Week 2 to the training plan

Added Week 2 to my India training plan. Pretty much the same, but I'm going to skip the elliptical and the bike and just run an easy 3200 on Tuesday and Thursday instead. Also, I plan to increase from 3200/4000 to 5000 for my Monday, Wednesday, and Friday morning runs.

http://schapness.blogspot.in/p/training-in-india.html

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

810 ft of elevation vs. 3,020 ft...does it make a difference?

Maybe it's the miles to kilometers conversion or the jet lag, but my pace has been slower here in Bangalore, India. It's likely the altitude...but how much should an extra 2,200 feet make?

Mason, Ohio (just north of Cincinnati) sits at 810 feet above sea level. Bangalore? 3,020 ft.

Joe Friel's article on Altitude and Aerobic Performance includes the following chart showing results of two studies and how aerobic power decreases at different altitudes:


So at roughly 1000 feet above sea level in Mason, my aerobic capacity is basically 100% since I'm acclimated to that elevation.

In Bangalore, I'm not acclimated (shoot, I barely know what time of day it is!), so at best the chart says I'm at 95% capacity.

If I do my math correctly, a 7:00 mile in Mason immediately becomes a 7:20 mile in Bangalore given the same effort.

Let's test it out. On Sunday, April 27, I'm running a 10K (first race outside the U.S.). I don't see many people running in this area, so I'm curious to see if I can hang with the fast runners. A few recent tempo runs have been around 6:45 pace, so I guess my time should be around 7:04 pace (assuming I give the same effort as my tempo runs).

However, how acclimated will I be after three weeks? Will it be enough to move me to the "acclimated" column? In which case, my pace should be closer to 6:56.

We'll see how it goes.

Sunday, April 13, 2014

"Training in India" page added...

Work took me to India, so my usual routine is going to be way off. No spinning bike available. I do have access to a recumbent bike, but it didn't feel right. Oh well, my routine could use a change, and this trip gives me a chance to try out the Insanity DVDs my wife gave me for my birthday.

Below is a link to my plan for the first week...keep me honest. But we'll see how the hours go at the office. It gets dark in India about 6:00 p.m., so running outside is not really an option (have you seen the traffic?!?).

http://schapness.blogspot.in/p/training-in-india.html