There are times in your
training cycles when it’s common for a coach to push you through a time trial.
It works so well mentally and if all goes well, is a huge confidence
booster!
Yes, you have other speed
training methods like intervals, hill running etc as well, but nothing gives you
as much mental boost as a time trial. Immaterial of the race distance you’re
training for...irrespective of the level of runner, these time trials give both
you and your coach invaluable information.
You can term it as a practice
race so that you can put yourself through a sort of litmus test to gauge your
weak spots so that they can be addressed. Without mincing any words, let me put
it that time-trials are not easy...not meant to be!
From there, consider what,
exactly, you hope to accomplish. With a time trial, you can:
- Benchmark your starting point. The Tragars Running Club didn’t have
access to outdoor running at all until June end. So, after a bit of
base-building & strength training, time-trial can be viewed as a
chance to see where our fitness stands. It also makes sense if you’re just
starting out or returning from an injury or a break.
- Track & Milestone the
progress.
Time-trials are a good way to judge how well has been your progress given
the effort you have put in since the previous race or time-trial.
- Set a personal best. Irrespective of whether you
take it as equivalent to a race PR, slogging to get the best out of
yourself feels good, right?
To summarize, time-trials are needed to set realistic, attainable goals to work towards your next race by establishing a baseline to work from.
Logistics
first!
1.
Visualize. It prepares you
psychologically. You have a route earmarked by now. You are one day short of
running your TT. Now, it’s time to sit down in a peaceful space inside your
house and run through the route in mind. It may sound very trivial but visualization
works! Go through the struggles and win them mentally as you run through the
route mentally. Especially, win the last stretch when the body is down and out
and it becomes all about your mind to push and get the something extra out of
you – that extra you always have but did not discover yet!
2.
The night before. Prepare your dress
including shoes. Keep them ready. Kit up your kitchen on what you usually take
before a race. Do not eat heavy, spicy, oily food and do not overeat!
3. Morning rituals. Get up early! At least 2
hours before the start time. Add commute time to these 2 hours. Drink plenty of
water. Snack on some complex carbs like dates, cold-pressed extra virgin coconut
oil, organic jiggery, honey, broken wheat porridge, banana – whatever suits
you. The list is not exhaustive. Stay calm and relaxed! Anxiety is only going
to let you down. Believe in the training and hard work you have put in – it’s
all about execution now! No overthinking! Meditation works very well in such
times.
How to Execute a Time Trial
Step 1: Route.
A
flat route or a track would be ideal for your time trial. If constraints keep
you from being able to do one on a track, try to find a flat loop. Ideally,
choose a place that you can revisit for another time trial again in the future.
Step 2: Complete your
warm-up.
Let
me say this at the cost of repetition again - DO NOT run your time trial
without warming up first! It does not matter what weather it is, how fit you
are, how well trained you are! That would definitely be a recipe for injury.
Some well-defined dynamic stretching sequence for must be in place. Try what
works for you. Just as a template, see the following:
- Easy
walk - 5 mins.
- Brisk
walk - 5 mins.
- Straight
toe walk - 25 m.
- Inward
toe walk - 10m.
- Outward
toe walk - 10m.
- Walking
Lunge twists - 10-15m.
- Shoulder
rotations - both sides - 10 each.
- Neck
rotation slow - 2-3 each side.
- Jumping
jacks - 20.
- Skips
on the spot - 30.
- Leg
sways - forward/backward & sideways - 5 each.
- High
knees - 20.
- Butt
kicks - 20.
Step 3: Conservative
start, aim for Negative Splits.
Ideally,
a pretty even pace with slight 5-10s variance is what is desirable throughout
your time trial, but you don’t want to go out too fast initially. If it is a
10k time-trial, it makes sense to avoid hard pace for initial 2-3 kms.
Thereafter, one can start picking up the pace (assuming you feel good and can).
Once you’ve hit half-way mark, it’s time to bring out the best pace. Don’t save
it all for the last km, or you might end up having too much left in the tank –
which won’t give you an accurate picture of what you’re capable of. Finish hard. You should be out of
breath at the end! As simple as that!
Step
4: Cool down.
You
just completed a high-quality, hard effort run. Walking straight to your car
immediately after you complete your time trial isn’t smart. Cooling down with a
15-20 minute jog will help your body fight off fatigue caused by lactic acid
build-up during your run and begin the necessary recovery process required
after a tough workout.
Step 5: Analysis.
Ok,
you have done the hard work, now it’s time to do some analysis and talking to
your coach. Doing nothing with your results will have missed the point. Sure,
you’ll still have gotten a great workout, but a time trial serves a greater
purpose. Digging into your results can really help you in your training going
forward.
Ending notes!
On the day of the time trial, try to remember that there isn’t really
that much pressure to hit the goal. You are not competing with anyone here! It
is a benchmarking exercise.
Also, remember that time trials also offers you and your coach chance to
experiment.
Drop the expectations, run for the joy of it, and, as the Nike ads say,
just do it.
The worst that can happen is that you might end up reattempting some
other day.
Training is a wonderful journey and we keep building mile after mile, day builds on the prior days, week on the previous weeks, month on earlier months, and each year builds on the years prior.