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#81 |
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Legend
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,412
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Post your recent race results. Like J011y did.
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“An ounce of bacon is worth a pound ounce of prevention.” |
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#82 |
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Professional
Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 923
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That's a good time with no training. I wonder what i could run right now
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| maggmaster |
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#83 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: New York
Posts: 401
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Quote:
I always get a side stitch or cramp when running for distance. Like clock work. Anybody know how to prevent these?
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The everyman's blobber |
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#84 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 2,870
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I would guess about 18 minutes. 15 minutes is really fast only the best women can do that. however the demand for endurance has gone up a lot in modern Tennis. I'm sure many of the 70s and 80s guys were no good distance runners but today's Tennis is different.
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| dominikk1985 |
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#85 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 2,870
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Quote:
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| dominikk1985 |
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#86 | |
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G.O.A.T.
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Quote:
J
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I'm your huckleberry... |
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| J011yroger |
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#87 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Columbus, OH
Posts: 738
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I've been enjoying this thread. As a hs teacher and asst. cross-country (x-country) coach, I gotta say I would place my money on the top 100 hs cross-country runners over this first ATP player. It comes down to specific training. Now if an ATP player trained for 6 weeks to 6 months, I'd take them to break into that top 100 but still not finish first. After all, you don't get to be an ATP player w/o a super competitive streak and a love of competition and winning.
Keep in mind that the top 100 runners in high school would have pr's in the lower 15s for courses that would be tougher than most road race courses. That's very fast! Good job Jolly in stepping up to run. I'd love to be able to get out and run a fast time. It tough getting old and having nagging injuries which keep me from doing the things I love.
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#88 | |
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G.O.A.T.
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Quote:
Running will always be second to tennis, and I will have to be careful not to do so much distance running that it compromises my speed on court. J
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#89 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Columbus, OH
Posts: 738
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I don't believe distance running could ever compromise your speed on the court. That said, if you want to be quicker on the court, you gotta do plyometrics. Distance training is designed to make you fast over a long period and plyos will make you fast and powerful in short bursts. A great training program would be one in which you did plyo workouts on your cross-training days.
At 40 years old, I play basketball against 20+ year olds and I can keep up in a straight distance run. I get blown away on the jumping and cuts but if I work very hard on my plyo training, I can get closer to where they are. My wife got me the Nike Kinect Trainer game for the XBOX 360 w/ Kinect and I've completed three weeks so far. It is working for me right now. Next, I've got to get outside and do some distance running. My 12 year old daughter who is just 6 months removed from ACL reconstruction surgery just ran a 6:15 mile at school on Friday and there is no way I can let her beat me. I'm not ready for that yet!
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#90 | |
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G.O.A.T.
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Quote:
I'll just have to listen to my body, especially in the outdoor season when I am putting in 15-20 hours/week on court. J
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#91 | ||
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Legend
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,412
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Quote:
Quote:
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“An ounce of bacon is worth a pound ounce of prevention.” |
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#92 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Columbus, OH
Posts: 738
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I'd guess the fastest to be approx 17 minutes and they'd be feeling sick afterwards. Depending upon the course, maybe 30 seconds faster but I couldn't see any better than a 16:30 w/o training to run a 5k and I couldn't see many of them hitting that time. My guess is the avg would be much closer to 18:00 for the top 100 ATP.
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#93 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,412
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Quote:
I'd have to see it to believe it. That seems like fast pacing for guys not training specifically for that. I doubt too many guys could sustain 5:30 or even 6:00 paces for 3 miles. I know your cross country athletes can do it, but they train for it. Tennis players don't. Well, we'll never know anyway.......
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“An ounce of bacon is worth a pound ounce of prevention.” |
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#94 |
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Professional
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 808
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Sorry, I don't post pics or post my real name since I have a real life.
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NSCA, CSCS, NASM. PES, CES 305 for 15 REPS, 470 one rep max BENCH PRESS |
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#95 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Columbus, OH
Posts: 738
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Quote:
1) They are competitors! They give all they've got to win. 2) They are highly conditioned to go at anaerobic thresholds for up to 6 hours at a time (slam matches). 3) They've all done plenty of running. Like I said, my 12 y/o daughter can run a 6:15 mile and she is coming off of acl surgery. I'm 40 and was never an elite athlete and I can go out and reel off 7:30 or lower miles w/ minimal training. They are conditioned to bounce around causing different and probably harder stress on their knees, calves, feet, and ankles for long periods of time. Given their already unbelievably conditioned bodies, I'll stick w/ my prediction. We will probably never know since they aren't going to go out and do it but I bet we could get a lesser pro or college player to do it or who already has done one to chime in. A 5:30 mile isn't that fast for an elite athlete. There are many high school kids in every area that'll run 4:30 miles or better during track season. That is truly fast. I ran a 5:50 mile 5 or 6 years ago on my third mile of a 5k according to my Garmin. I AM NOT nor have ever been an elite athlete. I am a weekend warrior.
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#96 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,412
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Quote:
(Let's see anybody type lower times than that.......)
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“An ounce of bacon is worth a pound ounce of prevention.” |
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#97 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 582
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Are many good long distance runners taller than 6'2"?
Many ATP men (Raonic, Isner, Anderson, Cilic, etc) seem too tall to run a fast long distance race in a decent time. |
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#98 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 808
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Quote:
PS: I heard Lance will be faster on his bike since he will be more aero after he gets the other nut removed. It's not about the bike Iam taking roids, EPO, TEST and HGH!!
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NSCA, CSCS, NASM. PES, CES 305 for 15 REPS, 470 one rep max BENCH PRESS Last edited by FastFreddy : 01-22-2013 at 08:32 AM. Reason: info |
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#99 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Columbus, OH
Posts: 738
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Quote:
We had a kid who was 6'7" a couple of years ago running 17:30s for us in hs. I'll stick to the fact that he was no where near an elite athlete like ATP players are and he could do it. Any guy who can maintain a high quality of tennis for 5 hours can go out and run 5k in under 20 minutes. Ask your friends who were in the military how fast they ran their times while in boots. I bet you'd be surprised at how fast they ran when a drill sergeant was screaming at them and they weren't elite athletes either. You can't compare weekend warriors to elite athletes. On your best day, you couldn't win a game off of one of these guys....Not even if you landed your best serve right where you wanted it to go for 4 straight points. These guys have to do running in their daily training to maintain their endurance.
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#100 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Hampshire, UK.
Posts: 2,513
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In my informed opinion I would guess that perhaps a couple of ATP players could run a sub 16:30, despite their training and musculature. I say despite because I bet none do comprehensive lactate threshold work as part of their training.
Out of the top 100 many would run in the 18's, most in 19's. The truth is that high level sports is about specialism. I was a little surprised that Murray said he ran close to a 57 second 400m all out (which is pretty poor) - meaning his capabilities at 400m have probably already dropped significantly from his likely capabilities at 100m. The 5k might be even more surprising. I'm probably a good example - being more of a 'sprint-type' my 5k time is far worse relatively to my short distance times, even if I train for it. |
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