620 Running (@620running) 's Twitter Profile
620 Running

@620running

ID: 775676169433657344

linkhttp://www.620running.com calendar_today13-09-2016 12:43:04

361 Tweet

97 Followers

129 Following

Steve Magness (@stevemagness) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Stop practicing dying in practice. Too often in sport, we train people to fall apart. We put them in a fatigue hole, so all they are doing in surviving. That isn't helpful. Train them how to handle fatigue well. Stop practicing dying.

Steve Magness (@stevemagness) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The "real feel" heat index is 107 in Houston at 9am: Runners. A few tips: -Hydrate -Go by feel. Forget pace. When I was in peak shape, I'd sometimes run 8:30 miles in the heat -Go by time (If you normally run 8mi in an hour, just run an hour) -Don't try to anything hard or long

Steve Magness (@stevemagness) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Good results take consistency, not heroic efforts. A focus on outcomes pushes us towards heroic efforts. The big workout, launch, or sales push. But success is not determined by a great day. It comes from stacking month after month of solid days. Consistency compounds.

Steve Magness (@stevemagness) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One of the best skills you can develop: Reframing How can you see the disappointment, loss, or pain in a different light? Nerves as a sign your body is prepared for action Fatigue a sign you are exploring your limits Disappointment a sign that you care deeply about your craft

Steve Magness (@stevemagness) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Working out in the heat and humidity sucks. It is much easier to go over the edge and overtrain. Here's how to train in the heat, gain fitness, and not overtrain from someone who ran 100 mile weeks in the summer heat of Houston, TX:

Columbia Lions XC/TF (@culionsxctf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Jordan Mathis leads the way for the Lions at the Stony Brook Invite. So good to be back out and running again! #RoarLionRoar bit.ly/45B1KFt

Alan Couzens (@alan_couzens) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Say it with me... No matter how much you want it to be true.. Intensity is not a substitute for volume. If you really want to be fit, you have to put in the time.

Alan Couzens (@alan_couzens) 's Twitter Profile Photo

What everyone should know about volume & intensity: ⬆️ Intensity: Fitness improves very quickly & plateaus very quickly. ⬆️ Volume: Fitness improves more slowly but plateaus *much* more slowly. Choose wisely.

Carroll XC (@carrollcxc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

**TDF Weather Update** 1 hour delay start for girls 1600. Any further weather delays will result in races being eliminated to stay on the schedule posted below. Bibs will be sold beginning at 4:30.

**TDF Weather Update**

1 hour delay start for girls 1600. Any further weather delays will result in races being eliminated to stay on the schedule posted below. Bibs will be sold beginning at 4:30.
Viper Racing (@viperxcnation) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Congratulations to VXC Captain Brayden Schick on his commitment to continue his academic and athletic career at TCU! Brayden will take part in our May1st Signing Day during PIT!

Congratulations to VXC Captain Brayden Schick on his commitment to continue his academic and athletic career at TCU!  Brayden will take part in our May1st Signing Day during PIT!
Viper Racing (@viperxcnation) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We are proud to announce that Caitlin Garrett will be continuing her academic and athletic career at Johns Hopkins University! Join us on 5/1 during PIT for the final VHS Signing Day!

We are proud to announce that Caitlin Garrett will be continuing her academic and athletic career at Johns Hopkins University!  Join us on 5/1 during PIT for the final VHS Signing Day!
Steve Magness (@stevemagness) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The 24-hour rule: Enjoy success or grieve the loss, but soon after get back to the craft. You can celebrate or be upset after, but when you wake up the next morning, it's time to move on. Basking in the glory or wallowing in the pain for too long lead to negative outcomes.

Alan Couzens (@alan_couzens) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Most athletes ruin their season the same way: They increase volume AND intensity at the same time. Rule #1 of season planning: Pick one. Volume first. Intensity later. And “later” is usually much later than your ego thinks.

Alan Couzens (@alan_couzens) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My last post on modeling "half lives" works here as well. For example, an athlete with a Tau1 of 30 days has a fitness "half life" of ~20 days. This means they get... 50% of the potential fitness benefit of a given load 20 days in. 75% of the potential fitness 40 days in.

Alan Couzens (@alan_couzens) 's Twitter Profile Photo

What amateur runners think the "Norwegian method" looks like before buying a lactate tester: * 3x per week of hard, long, threshold sessions at the track added to the program. What amateur runners realize the "Norwegian method" looks like after buying a lactate tester: * 3x

Alan Couzens (@alan_couzens) 's Twitter Profile Photo

On tech… The real purpose of lactate meters, metabolic carts, HR monitors, etc? To tell you: “Yes… you really do need to train that easy.” Without it, most athletes never figure that out.