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Welcome to Episode 59 of the Final Surge Podcast where today we welcome legendary coach Dennis Barker. Dennis was the long-time coach of Team USA Minnesota where his athletes achieved 75 top 3 finishes in US Championships and 29 different athletes made world championships teams. We talk about some fundamentals of training and his new book The River Road.
How did you get your start in running?
You founded Team USA Minnesota in 2001, at that time there was Team Hanson, Mammoth, maybe Oregon Project around that time, how has that team aspect lead to a resurgence in American distance success?
We were solid in the 70’s and 80’s, and we have had this resurgence, what happened in the 90’s where the US fell off the map so badly?
USATF teaches a strict periodization where coaches such as Salazar do more year-round training, how have you seen that change?
You mentioned you ran a lot of local races. If you look at local 5k/10k runners, how should they structure their year of training?
How does a coach who has coached 29 World qualifiers move to high school coaching?
How is training different besides just the volume?
Your new book The River Road is a novel, the running community had Once A Runner, was your goal to write the next great running novel?
As you wrote this you got the chance to think about the last 30-40 years of running. What has changed the most over that time?
Final Surge 5 questions in under a minute
Favorite running book? - Coe/Martin Training
Current trainers you are wearing? - Asics
Favorite race? - Carrie Tolleson 1500 Final 2004 Olympic Trials
Favorite recovery meal or recovery drink? - Octoberfest Beer
Your favorite workout - 8x1200, 24x100m hills
Welcome to episode 58 of the Final Surge Podcast where today we welcome Jens Jakob Andersen. Jens founded RunRepeat.com, a website with the goal to help you find your next pair of running shoes and to offer you a deal on them. In this episode, we talk about the growth of RunRepeat, how free shoes could bias results of these reviews and what are some of the trends he is seeing in shoes. Please remember to leave us a review on iTunes. Your review will help us grow our podcast. Next week we have one of the legends of coaching who will be joining us to talk training.
How did you get your start in running?
How did your passion for running lead you to create RunRepeat?
When did RunRepeat start?
Can you explain to our listeners the goal of RunRepeat?
Each shoe has a number score associated with it, how does the rating system work?
Reviews are from experts on other sites and users who review the shoes on your site?
Who are these expert reviewers that work for you?
If reviewers are getting free shoes, can it cause a bias in the reviews?
If a new shoe was provided for free, will they look at the reviews and treat you differently?
How many miles do they run in a pair of shoes before they review?
What are some of the current trends you see in running shoes that seem to be having a good impact?
What about the Nike 2 hour shoe, what do you think of that shoe project?
All this money goes into marketing to say their shoe is the best. So how does someone find out what is the best shoe for them?
When I was younger I run almost solely in the Asics GT 2020 line and its successors, in the last decade though I almost never buy the same shoe two times in a row. Do you find people tend to buy the same shoe each time or do they tend to jump around between brands and models?
If I am always buying something new, I need to go into a store to try them on. If someone is buying online would you recommend they stick to the same shoe because they cannot try them on?
When do you know its time for new shoes?
Do you find the shoes that rate the highest are the most popular shoes that companies market the most or do you find no relationship between ratings and popularity?
We have had some new companies emerge over the last few years such as the Sketchers Performance line and Under Armor, what do you see as up and coming running shoe lines?
They recently signed King Cheserek to a deal which is a huge name. I had a pair of GoRuns about two years ago and if I am being honest, they were probably the most comfortable running shoes I ever owned, but they broke down really quickly. What are you seeing from them and the ratings?
I noticed one of your studies showed that the higher the priced shoe, the lower the ratings were, is that because people have unreasonable expectations when they spend more or why do you think that is?
You have a study which was ironically posted on your website on July 4th that said American runners are getting slower. But when we look at the Olympic A standard qualifications like the 5k, they the standard was faster in 2016 than it was in 2012, and we had more people who hit the faster A standard. So the elites are not getting slower, so tell us about this report?
Is it because more people who would have never considered doing a marathon before are now doing it for charity?
What other interesting studies do you have coming out?
Final Surge 5 questions in under a minute
Favorite running book? - Shoe Dog
Current trainers you are wearing? - Declined
Favorite race? - Norway 1k vertical climb
Favorite recovery meal or recovery drink? - Chocolate
Your favorite workout - 10x400 with 1 minute rest + 3 min rest then 10x200 with 1 minute.
Email Jens Jens@RunRepeat.com
RunRepeat Website
In Episode 57 we welcome Carrie Lane, Sports Performance Coach at Authentic Performance Center, USTFCCA Strength Training Certification Instructor. Former track and field coach at University of Nebraska and University of Virginia.
How did you get your start in endurance athletics when you were younger?
You are known for your strength training, but you ran collegiately as a distance runner, can you tell us how you got made that transition?
A lot of young athletes, especially distance runners, are becoming more specialized. How important is building an endurance athlete even more so than just a distance runner to remain durable and for consistency?
You mention plyometrics, when do you move athletes from plyos to getting under the bar and lifting?
When you read about coaches like Percy Cuerety, and runners like Sebastian Coe we hear a lot about strength training that is not running specific. So where do we start in build dynamic runners?
How often would you do the skipping and dynamic warm ups?
How would the warm up differ before a recovery day vs a workout day?
Over a course of a week, what type of structure should all these exercises have?
Carrie discusses using a rope for hurdle mobility drills.
When you finally get into a weight room, how often should an athlete be in the weight room?
On those weight room days would you recommend getting them in on a workout or easy day?
Should the weight room days be done in a different part of the day like run in the AM and weights later in the day?
We think of strength work for a sprinter or thrower, but why is it important to work on strength for endurance athletes?
What about the differences between male and female, what areas are different that they need to work on?
We recently started doing a band routine a day post run. How much band work do you typically incorporate?
If you have some dynamic warm-ups leg swings before you run, then you have core work almost daily. Work in some band work. You have some plyo work and you are getting into the weight rooms a few times a week, is there a point for a distance runner where the returns are just not worth the extra time you are doing?
You have a program you have made available for distance runners, can you tell us about that and what is included.
Contact
Strength Program
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