Reddit.com’s Running section hosted me for an “Ask Me Anything” (AMA) interview on Tuesday in anticipation of his World Record Attempt on Sunday, April 19 at the Boston Marathon Expo. These are a lot of fun, as the users generate the content and I get to answer things in real time – interacting with lots of fans all at once! Quite a whirlwind, but a great time.
I’ve posted some of the highlights from the interview below. Have a read and don’t forget to support STRIVE’s projects by donating at our super easy online fundraising page!
There’s much more, but here’s a few highlights from the interview. You can read the entire AMA here.
zconnelly13: Is there anything in particular you did in your training given that you weren’t elite in high school?
Ty: This is probably the question I get the most and I think it’s one of the most important parts of my story.
The short answer is that I didn’t do anything that special. The one thing that I DID have that was extremely special and unique was a high school coach who was extremely supportive of me (and all his other runners), whether we were important or not.
This coach (Jon Waldron – who still coaches me professionally today, some 8 years after we first me, in addition to coaching high schoolers) urged me and my teammates from our first practice that running is all about self improvement – that is, improvement relative to yourself and not anyone else. He would celebrate the runner that ran a 4 minute personal best to run 24 minutes for 5km just as much as the top athletes who scored and ran 6 or 7 minutes faster.
So, he instilled in me from a very early age this extremely strong desire to strive for improvement relative to myself. And because I didn’t know much about the sport, I had no idea that there was this paradigm that to be a great runner in college or after college, it’s expected that you need to run very fast in high school. I guess I was lucky in that I never no one ever told me that, so to me, it wasn’t that crazy to think I could be an 18 minute 5k runner at 17-years-old and want to run in the Olympic Trials some day.
That’s part 1 (having a ton of support).
From a training perspective, I was also extremely lucky in that my body has responded very well to gradual increases in training volume and intensity over the years.
When I started running as a senior in high school, I promptly tried to run 65MPW and got a stress fracture in my femur. After that, my coach and I were VERY careful about building up volume over the next few years. Since that first stress fracture in 2007, the only major injuries I’ve had have been acute and often non-running related (I sprained my back moving a dresser during my junior year of college and got hit my a car last year). Otherwise, I’ve been very lucky in that I’ve been able to run very high mileage (now over 150 miles per week) without injury.
I believe VERY strongly in the continual, but gradual increase of training stimulus. So, each year I try to do a little bit more overall stress – whether that’s more total mileage, longer long-runs, faster workouts, etc. I think that’s how you get faster – train a bit harder, adapt to it, and repeat.
The balance can be really tough, though – making sure you make your load a bit harder each year without making it so much harder that you end up getting injured. A great coach is vital for this, as we athletes will often bite off more than we can chew 🙂
tl;dr: 1. Have a great coach who encourages you from you an early age. 2. Increase training carefully – consistent but gradual 3. Have that same great coach oversee step 2.
Mr. Rabbit:Â Hi Tyler! Looking forward to watching you break the record on Sunday! I’ll be there picking up my bib. So here’s my question:
- How do you train to both 1) run a 48+ minute 10 miler and 2) place 2nd in the 50k championship in the same year? What do you do to keep you legs stretched while maintaining that kind of leg speed?
I assume there is a lot of brutal speedwork involved, but the more you can share about those days on the track the better!
Thanks for doing this AMA and good luck on Sunday once again!
Ty:Â Mr Rabbit – great question. I appreciate the difference between being in decent 50k shape vs decent 10M shape. And GOOD LUCK on Monday!! (and thanks for offering to come support me on Sunday!)
The truth is that it actually worked out (coincidentally) very well. I’m not actually training for 10M or 50k right now, but for the marathon (I’ll be racing in June). Both of these races were pretty early in my season, and we often start off by focusing on two energy systems:
- Very long runs at about 90% of Marathon Pace to develop muscular and aerobic endurance
- Intervals at about 105-110% of MP to build muscular strength and work on mechanical efficiency
So, these two types of workouts ended up corresponding pretty well to my training for 50k (long runs of 40-50km at about 3’30/km) and my training for 10M (fartleks and intervals focusing on reps at ~3’00/km).
So, in terms of keeping my legs stretched out – it’s all about making sure I touch both of those paces. A typical week in Jan/Feb might have been something like:
Wed – 15km of 1km @ 2’55-3’00, 1km moderate Sunday – 45km with the first 20km at 3’45/km, last 25km at 3’25/km
Luckily, I also had about 6 weeks after the 50k before the 10M, so that allowed me to feel a bit “faster” for Cherry Blossom. Still, I don’t feel like I’m someone who gets really beat up by heavy volume – I ran 14’29 the week before I ran the 50k.
Mostly, I just look at both of these in terms of my overall build-up which is really focused on the marathon, so each one is just a stepping stone.
aemkeiii:Â Hey! I think it’s great what you are doing. Have you been to Huaraz? If so, how did you like it?
Ty: Hey – yeah I actually have been to Huaraz (twice)! It’s one of my favorite places in Peru. I was there last summer with my girlfriend to do some hiking and climbing. The cordillera blanca is one of the most beautiful ranges I’ve ever been in. I’ve done a few multi-day hikes in the blanca and in the cordillera Huayhuash. If you like mountains, there’s no better town in South America!
PS – here’s a blog post I found from a couple years ago about running in Huaraz. (That was quite the rabbit hole to go down to find it though…)
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