Sunday, April 26, 2009

A Week

So, with all this whining from me about not having any time to post to this blog, I thought I'd keep a summary of my minutes for you. Below is what my week was like this week - a pretty typical week unless I had to travel with the Harvard team (then it gets messier).

-matt


Marathon Monday:
7:30 breakfast (950 cal)
9:00 office work
11:00 cheer on Amy and Erik
1-2:30 w/u + starts
2:30 -3 meeting
3-4:00 finish workout
4-5:30 Harvard Practice
5:30 - 6:30 Lift (power clean, jump squats)
6:30 - 8:00 Jets practice
8:30-9:00 Grocery Store (meat, fruits, veggies)
9:00 - 11:00 cook, eat, CSI, research Desenzano
Midnight bed

Tuesday:
8:00 breakfast
8:30 - 11:00 office work and meetings
11:30 -12:30 w/u
12:30 - 1:30 high jump
1:30 - 2:15 disc
2:30 - 4:00 office work and harvard practice (coaching)
5:00 - 7:00 Vault and Jav @ Northeastern U.

Weds:
7:30 breakfast
8:30 - 9:30 lift
9:30 - 10:30 coach
11:00 - 12:15 bike to Chiro appt
12:30 - 3:30 office work
3:30 - 5:30 Harvard practice
5:30 - 6:00 finish lift from the morning
6:00 - 7:00 client (personal coaching my little high jumper)

Thursday
7:30 wake and breakfast
8:30 office
9:45 - 11:45 w/u + High Jump
Lunch
12:15 - 2:00 hurdles + sprint work
Lunch #2 + Ice Bath
2:30 - 5:30 Harvard Practice
5:30 - 7:30 Office work
7:30 Home early!

Friday
9:00 sleep in + pancakes
10:30 - 2:30 w/u + jav workout + intervals (4 x 300m)
3:00 - 5:30 Harvard Practice
5:30 - 6:30 Lift
6:30 - 7:30 Jets Practice
9:00 - 11:00 A big ol' pizza, some ice cream, and a movie (Golden Compass)

Saturday
7:00 Breakfast @ The B Club (Basket Case + Oatmeal)
8:00am load the bus @ Harvard
10:30am - 4:00pm UMass Invite (coaching)
6:30pm arrive back in Boston

Sunday
7:00 Breakfast
8:30 drive to Rhode Island
9:30am - 3:00pm Brown Springtime Invite:
100m, Pole Vault, Discus
Drive home. Done.

Friday, April 17, 2009

We All Fall Down...

This is a broken hurdle...
Yesterday, I broke it with my face.
Completely my fault - I set the hurdles specifically close and accidentally set up the final hurdle twice as close as it was supposed to be and didn't check them before full speed hurdling through them - I actually learned and (inadvertantly) taught a couple of good lessons at the cost of this poor hurdle.

1. We All Fall Down. A number of our Harvard athletes were on the track to witness my grace (what fun is an epic fall if ther's no one there to share it with? I mean, if a hurdler trips in the woods with no one there, there's still a sound, it's just not nearly as funny to talk about later), and I think it was actually a good thing for them to see. Possibly due to the completely fabricated stories I tell them about my training or the incredibly wise and all-knowing reputation that has been built up around me as an athlete and coach (please read sarcasm here) but I'm not sure they all realize that I still make plenty of mistakes. Just about every one of my hurdlers has gone down in a workout, and although it has been a while for me and I definitely don't like it to happen often, I hope they realize that its something we all do. Its just a part if hurdling. Again, I'm not a fan of
falling, nor do I coach my athletes to the point that I think they might fall, but to be honest, if you haven't fallen, if you haven't FAILED, as far as I'm concered, you're not trying hard enough. In order to get better you must go somewhere you've never been before. Until you step to that line and dare cross it, that line becomes a wall. On my new lift card from Coach P (now at Duke - good luck to him, we miss you around here) there's a quote attributed to Anthony C. Clarke:

"The only way of finding the limits of the possible is by going beyond them into the impossoble."

True, its best not to use your face to seak such limits, but hey, different strokes for different folks...

2. Commit. This could have been much worse, but fortunately for me, this hurdle came of the incident much worse than I did and I attribute that to one thing: I was 100% commited to hurdling it - despite ridiculous circumstances. I use it all the time in coaching, especially the field events (ie pole vault), but its the old football rule: the moment you let off, as soon as you drop below anything but 100% commitment, that's when things go wrong, and that's when you open yourself up for injury. If you are staring down a 250 ilb linebacker running full bore for your spleen, or hauling but down a vault runway with a 16 foot long fiberglass pole in your hands the size of a telephone pole, or if say, completely hypathetically, you find yourself 3 hurdles deep and running at full speed into a 39" hurdle 3 feet closer than you expect, if you're not commited or trusting enough in your own
athletic ability to blast through and you try to bail, that's when you set yourself up to do something your body is unprepared for, when you set yourself up for disaster.
Hell, to tell you the truth, I'm damn proud of myself. I fully believe that a year or two ago, had I found myself at that speed that close to a hurdle, the "oh sh*t" mechanism would have kicked in and I would have spazzed out and done everything I could to avoid that hurdle. For the drill the hurdles were already close and thus I was already cue'ing on my quickness in between so that as I found myself impossibly close to the hurdle, surprisingly, my first reaction was simply: you're gonna have to get a lot quicker to make it over this one. I tried, I caught a spike, I tripped, I fell, but above all I did not question and just went. I commited.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Quick Video

I'm still playing with the capabilities of some of this blog's mobile access so thought I'd share a quick video from tonight's vault session. Despite my legs feeling like they're 400 ilbs a piece this morning (thanks more than likely to the new lifting card started last night), it turned into a great day. Despite how this one looks, I had a great session in the vault, a good quick jav session after, and some solid disc work earlier today. Felt real good getting back in the air after a few weeks off due to my and my coach's equally crazy March schedules. Worked well also to blow off some steam after finding out how much the IRS is taking from me this year...

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Hecticly Well

Sorry guys, I owe you all as I've been doing a terrible job of keeping you guys updated. I've gotten through March and all the travels involved with a solid start to the outdoor season.
The meet at Davis wasn't anything amazing on the performance end, but above all, it was a great chance to get home around the family and friends. It's partially pretty tough going home whenever I do get the chance. My friends, my family...the sun, it's all incredibly tough to leave to come back to Boston. As much as a move from the west coast to the east coast is exactly opposite of what anyone would draw up, however at the time it was the best move for me and I've got a great situation going here. The Aggie Open was my first chance to be outside, as heavy snow this year hasn't even allowed me a single training day outdoors, so I was curious how it'd turn out. The hurdles felt incredibly long - as the first 110m run always does when compared to the indoor 60m hurdles (twice as many hurdles) - but I ran a decent opening time dispite mauling a few of the closing barriers. The vault was a very disappointing no-height as I was eager to show off some of the new poles in front my incredibly generous friends who have donated to the Pole-A-Thon (mchisam.com), but the real big event of the day was the disc. As I mentioned, I've had limited opportunities to get any disc training in this year and the day before the meet was the first time touching an actual disc since the summer, but I was able to pull off a throw just a couple feet under my lifetime best. In fact, I think most of my throws the day before in training (with my alma mater high school team) were even farther, so we shoud have some good things coming there real soon.
After returning from California I got in a couple more days in Mass. before traveling to Houston for 10 days on Spring Break with the Harvard Team. There I got in some great training in the sun and came away with a strong opening to the Long Jump in a meet at Rice University.
We returned to the cold and winds of the early outdoor New England season in April with the Penn Invite at U of Penn. There I had a bunch of coaching to do but I wanted to retry the hurdles to see where I was at and was pleasantly surprised to walk away with the win and a solid 14.78 into a legitimate 1.8 headwind. A decent time for me even on a still day this early. I think i've finally been making some breakthroughs in my hurdles so it's good to see the times matching the feelings in practice.
For now, however, this meets are going to be all I have for a while as the collegiate season really picks up. I'm not sure I'll have any chances to compete before the Italian Multistars meet in May which leaves me a bit anxious, but it gives me a great four week cycle to really put the head down for some good training. In college I would have freaked out going multiple weeks (or a single week for that matter) without a competition, but as I get older I'm really discovering how much competing actually takes out of you and how weeks without a meet provide for much more solid training. As it is I'm feeling really good about myself right now and based on the testing I did last week, the training is going really well. I blew away some of my PRs in the quad test and I'm starting to walk around a little taller. I think all althetes have some sort of cue they feel when things are going well and they're starting to feel really good. For me, when im beat up or out of shape, I feel big and heavy. I feel wide. When I feel good, I feel tall. Normally something I don't notice, but when I get on the track, or even walk into a room when training I am training hard and feeling good, I feel like im a foot taller than anyone else there. Just about every event has made some big breakthroughs in the past couple of weeks and I swear I had to duck under a doorway the other day (possible exaggeration), so Multistars, here we come.


Next Up: Multistars Decathlon, Descenzano Italy, May 9-10