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Pace your race.


Pace is the key to winning a race or producing personal records. Before a race, you must work out a race strategy. The right race pace uses your full potential through different parts of the race. Even if other runners are passing you, or if you are all by yourself out in front, run your pace, not someone else's. It takes discipline, confidence and experience to hold the paces that get you to the finish, having run the best race that you are capable of.

The most important thing a beginning runner can learn is a sense of pace. Controlling pace is the key to effective training, and essential to winning races. Start pace training on a track. Equip yourself with a digital watch. Set the watch to beep at your 200-meter split time. Choose a comfortably hard 200-meter pace. As you run around the track, listen for the beep. You will quickly learn to pick up the pace if the beep comes before you pass your starting line starting line
n. Sports
The point or line at which a race begins.

Noun 1. starting line - a line indicating the location of the start of a race or a game
scratch line, scratch, start
, or slow down if it comes after. Pretty soon, you are "on pace" and you'll hear the beep just as you swing past your starting point Noun 1. starting point - earliest limiting point
terminus a quo

commencement, get-go, offset, outset, showtime, starting time, beginning, start, kickoff, first - the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the
. As you learn, you can develop different paces at will. As you get better and better at pacing, you'll begin to relate pace to how you feel, and won't need a watch or distance markers to regulate your pace.

Then, things get a little more complicated as you move from the track to the trails. You can plot out a running course with half-mile landmarks for pacing. Of course trails have twists and turns, hills and flats. You can try out your learned internal sense of pace on your course, checking against the watch to learn how to adjust for the hills and valleys of real terrain.

When you have learned to run while holding set paces, you can really begin to manage your training. Pace is the key factor in conditioning that controls physical improvement. Running too slowly doesn't stimulate the body enough to get the best improvement. Running too fast requires too much recovery time, and the training becomes inefficient.

The most important pace for building distance endurance is the lactate Lactate

A salt or ester of lactic acid (CH3CHOHCOOH). In lactates, the acidic hydrogen of the carboxyl group has been replaced by a metal or an organic radical. Lactates are optically active, with a chiral center at carbon 2.
 threshold pace, also called the "tempo" pace. Lactate threshold pace is the fastest you can run without building up lactate in your blood. The threshold pace is great for conditioning, since it let's you get in the maximum effort without needing extensive recovery time. You can estimate your lactate threshold pace from "personal best" mile times. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 AR&FA Editorial Board Member Jack Daniels Jack Daniels may refer to:
  • Jack Daniel's, a type of whiskey
  • Jack Daniels (politician), the New Mexico politician
  • Jack Daniels (coach), the coach
  • William Daniels (automotive engineer), a British car engineer
, Ph.D., your lactate threshold pace will be about six seconds slower per 200 meters than your best one mile race pace. Or, you can measure lactate threshold with lactate tests like the LacTest test kit made by Binax Services, Inc. Since everyone's lactate threshold moves up and down according to training (or lack of it), this is a better way to find out where you are, especially at the start of a season.

Runners can learn to recognize their lactate threshold pace, and to use it as a benchmark, relating it to both their race paces and to other training paces. This approach can be more reliable than monitoring heart rates. As your running season progresses, your threshold pace usually creeps creeps

see osteomalacia.
 upward, and the other paces need to be adjusted accordingly. Measure your threshold pace again about six to eight weeks into the season. This lets you adjust your training paces and build confidence, since you are likely to see a rise in your threshold. This is the cornerstone of training improvement.

There is nothing wrong with working beyond your lactate threshold level Noun 1. threshold level - the intensity level that is just barely perceptible
intensity, intensity level, strength - the amount of energy transmitted (as by acoustic or electromagnetic radiation); "he adjusted the intensity of the sound"; "they measured the
, especially in a race. In fact, if you don't build up a pretty good lactate load, you didn't use your full race potential. Everybody has a maximum pace that they can keep up over the bulk of a race. The problem is, if you run just a little faster than this pace, you will fatigue your muscles. They lose power, they feel exhausted and your mind starts saying you can't keep going. This level is the "red line" pace. Knowing when you are at the red line, and knowing how far and how long you can go when you're over it, are keys to planning and managing your race paces.

Developments in scientific training and racing are available to every runner. More is known today than ever before about how the body works, and how to train. In the past tools like lactate measurement and heart rate monitors were available only to Olympic level athletes. Now every runner can take advantage of professional knowledge and training tools to develop your full potential and achieve your true personal best.

(Bill Ruth is an NCAA NCAA
abbr.
National Collegiate Athletic Association
 All American swimmer and former world ranked triathlete tri·ath·lete  
n.
One who competes in a triathlon.
. He is currently the cross country and track and field coach at Liberty High School in Bethlehem, PA. To get more information, or to order LacTest kits, contact 1-800-323-3199 or www.lactest.com. For information on lactate threshold training read Daniels' Running Formula by Jack Daniels, Ph.D., 1998, Human Kinetics kinetics: see dynamics.
Kinetics (classical mechanics)

That part of classical mechanics which deals with the relation between the motions of material bodies and the forces acting upon them.
, $16.95, or Road Racing Road racing can be a term involving road running, road bicycle races, or automobile races. As contemplated in this article, the term will be treated as it relates to motorsport, specifically, automobile racing and motorcycle racing.  for Serious Runners by Pete Pfitzinger Peter ("Pete") Dickson Pfitzinger (born August 29, 1957) is a former American distance runner, who later became an author and exercise physiologist. He is best known for his accomplishments in the marathon, an event in which he represented the United States in two Summer Olympic , M.S., and Scott Douglas, 1998, Human Kinetics, $16.95. Both are available at a discount to AR&FA members at 1-800-776-ARFA. Or, send a self-addressed stamped envelope A self-addressed stamped envelope (SASE), or just stamped addressed envelope (SAE) in the UK, is often just that: an envelope with the sender's name and address on it, with affixed paid postage and mailed to a company or private individual.  to AR&FA, 4405 East West Highway, #405, Bethesda, MD 20814 for a free brochure on running faster.)
COPYRIGHT 1999 American Running & Fitness Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Running & FitNews
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 1, 1999
Words:916
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