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Wednesday, October 9, 2024
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Gear Up and Sweat It Out

Can fitness gear that makes you sweat help you detox your body? People are always clamouring for ways to detox their bodies—look at the popularity of juice cleanses, hot yoga, saunas, etc. But a new line of fitness wear is aiming to be a more budget-friendly way to rid your body of toxins.

By: Karen Kwan

Pommello Sweats is a line of apparel designed to maximize how much you sweat, so as to rid your body of toxin, while also improving your performance as an athlete through hyperthermic conditioning. It’s made of a patent-pending neoprene fabric they say will promote perspiring while also enhancing athletic benefits of heat acclimation, increasing fat-burning efficiency and detoxing the body of chemicals that lead to weight gain.

I was sent an outfit from Pomello to try out: a pair of capris and a workout tank with built-in sports bra. To the touch, it feels like other neoprene fabric I’ve seen before. I tested it out on a quick run on the treadmill. I should note that I do not enjoy sweating (I think I quite dislike it because I sweat a lot), and I also do not enjoy treadmill running (but I opted for the treadmill given the capri length pants). Putting on the outfit, the bottoms slid on easily but the top is very snug fitting with little stretch so I think it took a good five minutes to get on (and after my run, I thought I was going to have to cut it off of me). Once on, the top fit fine, but the lack of stretch makes it a wrestling match to get on.

The gym’s blinds were open so that room was already quite warm. And since I already tend to be a heavy sweater, I couldn’t tell if it was the outfit making me sweat more, but it did feel warm, so I will attribute the extra perspiration to the Pommello outfit. And once I pulled it off of me, the inside of the fabric felt soaked in sweat. The actual outfit while it felt fine when I got it on, when I started running, the bottom the shirt would pull up, so I think it needs to be redesigned with a longer fit.

Will this fitness gear help detox and improve athletic performance? I can’t speak to the latter and haven’t tested it out personally to see if I experience an uptick in that, but as for detoxing, everything I’ve ever researched on this topic says that there’s no proof that we detox when we sweat. It’s a myth that’s perpetuated daily but while exercise benefits our health, there’s nothing definitive about the act of sweating ridding our body on toxins. I’ll try the outfit again but probably for a yoga class versus running. What are your thoughts on the Pommello concept?

Karen Kwan is a regular iRun fashion and travel contributor, and you’ll find her running fashion posts every Friday on Instagram. She contributes to a number of publications and you can also follow her travel and running adventures at Health & Swellness.

More Fun Than a PhD: Bringing a Big City Style Race Weekend to Small Town Ontario

Sheryl's math professor husband Eric measures the BQ certified course for the Whole Health Mudcat Marathon.

When you think big race weekend in Canada, Dunnville perhaps doesn’t immediately come to mind, but Sheryl Sawyer is dreaming big as the Whole Health Mudcat Marathon Weekend (WHMMW) brings seven races to the town of 6,000 over May 12-13th.

It’s a lofty goal for a little town and relatively new race director Sawyer, who previously spent years as a fundraising professional before returning to school to complete a BA and MA in Linguistics. Currently, she’s on leave from a PhD program in the Cognitive Science of Linguistics but has no immediate plans to return, proclaiming that, “Race directing is a lot more fun than writing my dissertation.”

Festivities kick off Friday with the 1K Family Fun Run – there’s also the Mudkitten 1K on Saturday – and the Fishy 5K, the latter of which is part of the Mighty Mudcat Challenge, which offers participants who complete a Saturday race in addition to the Fishy 5K an additional medal on top of their two finishers medals, which Sheryl describes as, “a stylized anchor, meant to reflect the maritime history of Dunnville’s Grand River and Lake Erie.”

Saturday features the full and half marathon which Sheryl promises to be very scenic, taking runners “along a stretch of Lake Erie coastline before turning inland and running through some farmland on their way to the Grand River,” before they eventually hug the river shoreline all the way into Dunnville to be greeted at a shared finish line with “food, fun and beer for those of legal age.”

Sheryl’s math professor husband Eric measures the BQ certified course for the Whole Health Mudcat Marathon.

Saturday will also include the running of the Riverfront 5K and 10K. According to Sheryl, all routes are “pancake flat” and she’s expecting fast times. Considering that the full marathon race is a Boston Qualifier and both the full and half are qualifiers supporting entry to the New York City Marathon, this is good news for runners.

Previously, the town was home to the now defunct Dunnville 5K, for which Sheryl was the volunteer race director before the event outgrew itself.

It was Sheryl’s personal goal to “bring big city race amenities to small town Ontario” along with a challenge from local Chamber of Commerce President Don Zynomirski to bring a full marathon to Dunnville that planted the seeds of the WHMMW.

To make the leap from a single 5K to a full blown race weekend, Sheryl reached out to several race directors, including Michelle Kempton of the Maritime Race Weekend, who invited Sheryl to shadow her last September.

There’s also Esther and Gord Pauls, directors of the Road2Hope Marathon in Hamilton. Sheryl says she “probably annoys Esther with another question every week and she’s always gracious in helping me through the knots involved in putting this thing on.”

The Road Runners Club of America also offers a Race Director Certification Program through a series of online learning modules and tests. It just so happened that Sheryl was the 200th person to complete the program and only the second in Canada.

Sheryl’s team is small, but she’s “humbled to see how many people are coming together to wish every success upon the Whole Health Mudcat Marathon Weekend.”

She mentions her main sponsor Whole Health Pharmaceutical Partners donating their resident graphic designer and marketer Kaitlin Johnson to build the branding of the race. The race’s main charitable partner, the Dunnville Youth Impact Centre, also allowed Sheryl to enlist their Executive Director Bonnie Laman, whose attention to detail complements Sheryl’s focus on the big picture, as her Assistant Race Director.

Sheryl promises a scenic race on a pancake flat course for all participants. Photo Credit: Edison Yao

Finally, it didn’t hurt that Sheryl’s husband Eric happens to be a math professor who “painstakingly measured every millimetre of the course for submission for certification by Athletics Canada.”

It doesn’t mean that Sheryl isn’t nervous about the big day(s).  There are the usual concerns about forecasting numbers, especially for a first time event, as well as the challenge of accommodations in little Dunnville. Thankfully, neighbouring Hamilton, Welland, St. Catherine’s and Simcoe are all only a short drive away from the start on race day.

Her most important concern is that everyone participating has a safe and successful race day and she and her team have put several contingency plans into place to ensure that happens. There’s also the matter of the weather, which has affected this year’s Vancouver First Half Marathon and last year’s Ottawa Race Weekend, but again the best Sheryl or any race director can do is prepare through contingency plans.

That nervousness is ultimately outweighed by the excitement and Sheryl’s drive to build something that will have a lasting impact on her beloved Dunnville and all who take part in the WHMMW. “I do see Dunnville as a hidden gem, which some have referred to as ‘Muskoka South,’ with so much natural beauty and outdoor recreation,” Sheryl says, adding, “I hope visitors will see why we like it so much here and come back and visit long after race day.”

Summing up her responsibilities, Sheryl says, “I see my main role as race director as providing a safe and enjoyable runner experience.” In accordance with that philosophy, Sheryl’s biggest reward will be seeing everyone finish their race.  “There are so many beautiful stories of people running for various reasons,” she says. “I think I’m going to be ridiculously proud of and happy for every single runner that chooses to face their own reasons to run and does so under the big fishy banner!”

– Ravi Singh (@ravimatsingh)

King of Pain

The life and death struggle of LIONEL SANDERS, the world’s realest triathlete

By Ben Kaplan

The walls in the room where Lionel Sanders trains are painted yellow to replicate the sun. Sanders, the 28-year-old from Windsor, Ontario, spends three hours-a-day here running on a half-broken treadmill, yelling at himself, cursing, and trying hard to appreciate every ounce of strain. In November, Sanders set the new Ironman World Record in Arizona, completing the 3.9 kilometre swim, 180 kilometre bike and 42.195 kilometre run in 7:44:29, 90 seconds faster than it’s ever been done before.

The accomplishment is extraordinary, given any circumstances. But Sanders, who is self-coached, trains alone and wears two-year-old bike shoes despite the fact that his sponsors give him thousands a year in specialty clothing, crafted his starting line out of desperate necessity. Ravaged by years of drinking and drugs, Sanders hit rock bottom in 2009, alone in his garage, contemplating suicide.

“I didn’t feel comfortable with myself unless I was on some sort of drug or drinking and I went into a real dark place,” says Sanders, who is friendly and smiles easily but contains a certain coiled energy that makes a strange explosiveness appear buried just beneath his tattooed skin. “In my family, there’s a history of mental illness, specifically induced by drug use and amphetamine-induced psychosis and, eventually, I was having trouble differentiating reality from what was in my mind.”

As a kid, Sanders ran track and played sports in high school—his mom ran and his dad lifted weights—and he says his addiction didn’t come from any deeply-held emotional abuse. Rather, he fell in with a crowd of dangerous party animals and found himself enjoying the good times until they became something else: you’re no longer partying when you don’t have a choice. He dropped out of school; became addicted to coke and one day walked alone into his garage, preparing to bring on his death.

It was a vision of his mom reacting to his suicide that drove Sanders back in the house.

“My mom always blamed herself for my condition, as if she did something wrong, but the reality is that I had a great upbringing, she didn’t do anything,” says Sanders in his tidy living room, balloons from his mother congratulating him on his world record above his head. “Even sitting there at my lowest moment—and I was definitely thinking about suicide, I did go into the garage with that intention—I knew that if I ended my life I’d be ending her life and I just said: ‘That’s not the answer. That’s not the way out.’ And I walked out of the garage, enrolled in some local running races and all of the sudden, there was this whole new community.”

 

The running community, where his mom is a member, welcomed him with open arms. “Running helps you realize what you’ve got,” says Becky Sanders, a triathlete, 4-time Boston-finisher and nurse. “Running helps you express gratefulness and today Lionel lives his life that way; running reminds you to hang on, to not lose faith and it nurtures hope.”

With the encouragement of his mom, Sanders entered his first triathlon in 2010. He had a breakthrough performance in 2014. And perhaps more important than his finishing times was that, despite one relapse on New Year’s Eve, 2011, he never returned to drinking or drugs.

“It would take one hit and I’d be back so fast and I hated that life and I hated myself and I don’t hate myself now, that’s my motivation,” he says. “That’s why I don’t go back there and that’s part of what helps me train—getting through the rough patches is part of the game. If you experience adversity, you become stronger.”

There’s no doubt that Sanders is among the strongest athletes in Canadian sport, relying on his natural gifts and ability to work hard in lieu of scientifically-honed technique. He’s an excellent cyclist, though he has an unorthodox style that he’s constantly refining. Teaching himself about torque and aerodynamics, he figures he can get more power into each pedal rotation given his physique. The running portion of his triathlon is his competitive advantage and when he broke the record in Arizona, he ran the marathon in a fierce positive split, hitting the halfway mark in 1:18:15. (This year in Boston, he aims to pace his mom to a 3:30). Swimming is where Sanders needs the most improvement and to put power to action, he’s now training with the Windsor Aquatic Club five times-a-week. He thinks he hasn’t gone as fast as he can yet and he points to his Arizona experience as proof. During his run, which is the Ironman’s last portion, he hit the wall around 35 kilometres and mentally had given up. It wasn’t until he saw his fiance, Erin MacDonald, who urged him forward, that he picked up his pace and become the fastest Ironman of all-time.  

“The thing Lionel has more than anyone else is a relentless desire to push himself,” says MacDonald, herself a weightlifter and Ironman. “When it comes down to a race it’s about who can suffer the most. If you can’t suffer, you’re not going to win and Lionel—maybe it’s a bi-product of his past—what he has is intense and something that you can’t teach.”

This hunger to improve his times, to get the most out of his body, to push himself to the very limit of what he can endure is what he says he loves most about sport. He relays an anecdote that any runner can appreciate: how a peer of his has said that during competition he had secretly hoped to be hit by a car just to end the agony of the race. What drives Lionel Sanders is pushing himself to that very moment, then deciding to fight on.

“That’s the moment I live for—when the voices are screaming to crash into the wall, get injured for the rest of the season, just so we don’t have to do it—you’re never more alive and aware of your existence than at that time,” Sanders says. “Whatever’s behind that, your soul or whatever it is driving you, to get in touch with that, that’s what I love about sport. Nowhere else in my life do I get that sensation I want.”

Balloons still waft around the ceiling of Lionel and Erin’s tidy house in Windsor and there’s a wedding to plan, a dog to look after and more races to run. Both Erin and Lionel’s parents travel with them to races when possible, his mom Becky competing with him when she can, and the future looks bright for Canada’s Ironman champion.

He’s not completely straight-edge—he’ll have the odd glass of wine or pint following a big race—and he’s not part of any recovery program. He calls himself a lone wolf. What he does do is walk into his little room with its yellow walls and peels of his shirt and turns on his music and trains, sometimes as much as three times-a-day. It’s a quest to find the sensation he needs. A way to focus his gift.

“I’m a true believer that when you decide to walk in a direction so many stars align—the universe conspires to get you towards where you want to go, but only if you give yourself to it 100 percent,” Sanders says. “There was no doubt that I was going there with the triathlon and I went there and I’m going there—very fast.”

Ben Kaplan is the General Manager of iRun magazine.

Grab Your Shoes and Fly!

Heather Gardner explores the wide open world of destination races.

Your gels are packed, along with a few other of your race day rituals, powdered electrolytes, lucky socks, and unforgettable race hat. Your running gear and traditions have been tried-and-true, but something’s different—this race’s start line is 3,878km away! It’s no longer just about your run, but rather expanding your race experience and many runners are following suit. By travelling the world and living like a local, destination runners get inside what destination race communities have to offer. You and thousands of other Canadian runners are lacing up to take on the world, crush race goals and travel to bucket list destinations. Destination races are booming and traveling runners—including myself—can tell you why.

After returning from my thirteenth destination race in December in Barbados, I know the allure of destination races. Having travelled alone and in large groups, destination races offer runners the obvious subtleties of travelling alongside the thrill of sharing new experiences, accomplishments and bonding with friends.  My destination races include: being 1 of 30 runners in a Vancouver race with my run group Tribe, being 1 of 8 runners in a Paris race in 2014 for the Marathon De Paris, and 1 of 4 runners in a Disney World race for the inaugural Dopey Challenge. However my most prized destination race was with my sister in New York City in 2010. The New York City race was our first destination race and our first marathon and really the gateway into the past seven years of endurance sports. The race was a goal I had set for us two years prior, to “race our first marathon, to do it in New York, and to cross the finish line holding hands,” and we did it!  

New York City has personal significance to my family. It was my final family trip before the passing of my mum in 2005, and as a runner, it’s one of the world marathon majors known for its epic crowd support and huge participation numbers (51,388 finishers).

I’m not the only one catching the racer’s travel bug. Charlotte Brookes, event director at Canada Running Series shares that, “over 15% of race entries, in adult races, in the 2016 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon (STWM) were from participants coming outside of Canada, with USA, Mexico, and Great Britain leading the way. Out of province racers also made the trip, with the highest number of registrants travelling from Quebec, Alberta, and British Columbia.” Brookes attributes this to new tour groups and agency packages. For example, groups such as Canadian Affair for U.K. Runners, Your Group from China, and Your Group from Mexico. Combo destination-race tour packages entice runners to go outside of the box. And of course, since it’s 2017, social media has a way of making the world a smaller place. Movements like Bridge The Gap (BTG) are bringing runners together from across the globe. In 2015, STWM was a goal race of the BTG movement resulting in international registration of runners from more than 70 countries at the starting line.

Grace Egan, culture blogger and artist, will be attending her sixth destination race and second BTG event this spring at the Washington Cherry Blossom 10 Mile Run. Egan defines the BTG movement as “an enormous community of wonderful people who love running, meeting others, and generally not taking life too seriously.” Further explaining that the movement is all about “crew love,” a concept her cynical mind scoffed at until she experienced it herself in 2015 at STWM. “We welcomed hundreds of runners from all over the world,” she says. “People stayed in each other’s homes, ate an absurd amount of pasta, ran 21 or 42 kilometres together, danced, and yes—drank a considerable amount of beer.”

For Egan, destination races are not only an opportunity to connect with the global running community, but are also a way to venture off the beaten city path to new and exciting destinations. Egan says, “Every new place I visit, I try to connect with a running group in the city. It’s especially important to find a safe community if you’re a female solo traveller and the running community is perfect for that. No travel magazine or website can compare to sitting down with people who know their hometown and can tell you where you should go and where to avoid.”

It’s this sense of exploration and global accomplishment that keeps registration from international runners high and city doors open. In 2011, Enigma Research conducted an economic impact study for Canada Running Series that estimated an influx of $33.5 million into Toronto as a result of STWM and the Running Health and Fitness Show.

May Stemshorn, a runner with 50 marathons under her race belt, explains how destination races are a great way to explore the sites of a new city. “Running in a different environment is always a challenge and fun,” the 66-year-old says. “You never know what you’ll learn about yourself and running and it’s a way for you to see a great deal of a new  city.” Stemshorn remembers a time in New Orleans when a group of friends (that were not racing) went on a city tour while she and others from their group participated in the race. “Racing the marathon covered everything that they saw on the tour!” Stemshorn says. “Plus, pounding pavement in new countries brings on unique sights and smells—who can resist the sight of an ocean-side palm tree?” Stemshorn advises new destination race participants that during destination races, “the key is not to race, but rather to enjoy yourself because if you go too quickly you’ll miss so much of everything that is new around you.”

Travelling these days can be more challenging with heightened security at airports and the cost of flights and hotels, but alternatives do exist, such as booking early and through designated race hotels, or going through accommodation alternatives such as peer-to-peer online homestay networks like Airbnb.

In preparation for the 2016 Airbnb Brooklyn Half Marathon, Airbnb, the title race sponsor, took a closer look at the impact their peer-to-peer network would have on the host city of Brooklyn. In total, they predicted nearly 12,000 guests would be staying with Airbnb hosts over the half-marathon weekend and an increase of approximately US$8 million in economic activity in Brooklyn would occur. This is broken down with US$6 million going directly to the Airbnb hosts and the remaining US$2 million being spent in the community as guests eat and shop in the local area.

Hosts aren’t the only ones benefiting financially, guests in town for the TCS New York City Marathon are saving an average of $200 per night over a race weekend (Friday to Sunday), and are staying for an average of 5.7 nights.

“Running events all over the world are marquee events for cities where Airbnb can add elastic accommodation capacity to cities and provide unique accommodations for runners,” says Aaron Zifkin, Regional Director, Americas Operations at Airbnb. Meanwhile, destination runners are enjoying the impact of their savings and using the extra cash to spend more time travelling and exploring and creating a greater destination race experience.  

As a long-time runner, destination races give me something new and exciting to look forward to. The opportunity to travel for a race makes me feel alive and buzzing, counting down the days where I can dip my toes in new sands, explore foreign roads, see historical landmarks and all while doing one of my favourite things—run. Like myself and many other Canadian runners, Grace Egan shares this passion for a destination race.  She says they allow her to connect to different runners all over the world. “I can travel to Lyon or New York, meet new people, run with them, practise languages, learn about their lives, and go for coffee after,” she says.

Her race experiences go beyond running, they involve exploring and being engulfed in the culture and life of the places she travels to. Destination races help runners—new and old—experience a destination at a level beyond any guide book or double decker bus. It’s this global connectedness, sense of community and adventure that continues to grow the destination race scene and global running community. When recommending destination races to a friend, Egan suggests thinking of the race as “an excuse to discover somewhere new”—an excuse, now more than ever, runners are making today.

Love and the Long Distance Runner

The greatest relationship advice I’ve ever been given came from my very first marathon.

Like most runners, I lined up for my marathon debut convinced of my own readiness to take on the distance. I had put in the miles. I had visualized my race. And better still, I had a support system (in the form of my then-boyfriend) out on the course to cheer me towards the finish. I felt certain that, with his encouragement, I could handle any pain that lay ahead.

Boy was I wrong.

Here’s the thing that nobody tells you before your first marathon: you’re in this thing alone. Whether your race takes you along deserted country roads or bustling city streets packed with screaming spectators, it’s just you out there. And when you hit the wall at 30K, with dead legs and bleeding feet and less-than-nothing in your tank, all those encouraging voices that you thought you could rely on start to sound a whole lot farther away.

In the end, you run that race alone.

For a girl who grew up in a family of eight, and spent the bulk of her adult life in long-term relationships, doing anything alone—much less something as difficult as running a marathon—was an alien concept.

There are a lot of reasons why my first marathon fell apart in the spectacular way that it did. But I think one of the biggest reasons had to do with my expectations about support. It’s not that my boyfriend wasn’t every bit the enthusiastic, sign-holding, cowbell-ringing spectator I needed him to be—he absolutely was. But I’d come to believe that having him there would somehow lighten my own load a little. And as I’ve since learned, that can be a pretty pernicious expectation.

When we broke up seven months later, in the middle of my second marathon build, one of my first thoughts was, how am I going to do this without him?

But a funny thing happens when a voice of encouragement disappears from your life; your own, internal voice of encouragement starts to get louder. When I ran that second marathon a few months later (and 22 minutes faster), my internal voice didn’t fade away at the 30K mark. After months of training and living solo, I’d learned to rely on myself for the support I’d once looked for in my relationships.

I wasn’t alone out there; I had me.

When you’re on your own, it can sometimes be tempting to idealize relationships—to imagine that, by some unknown mechanism, the love of another person somehow relieves us of the burden of loving ourselves, or chasing our own dreams (or, say, running 26.2 miles like the badass marathoner that you are). Nowhere is this more tempting than on days like Valentine’s Day, when evidence of coupled-up happiness seems to follow us everywhere.

I still consider myself a romantic. But I often wonder if we haven’t been sold a bill of goods about what our relationships really can give us. I think love is an incredible thing, but it won’t relieve you of the sacrifices that your dreams demand. It won’t log your long run for you, or carry you over the last six miles of a marathon. It won’t teach you to make sense of yourself in a way that you cannot.

You won’t make much of a marathoner if you’re afraid to go it alone sometimes. And I could be wrong about this, but I’m beginning to suspect that you won’t make much of a life, either.

For a long while after my debut, I thought that the marathon was an impossible distance, but it’s not. The only really impossible distance is the space between yourself and other people. The reality of love represents a beautiful and incomplete and imperfect closeness. Nobody in this world can make order of your pain for you. Nobody can inspire you to complete a task you otherwise cannot do. That strength comes from you.

But hey, who am I kidding – you’re a runner. You knew that already.

By Amy Friel. 

I Am An Elite Female Marathon Runner: Thank You Athletics Canada on More Realistic Qualifying Times

Image via Canada Running Series.

My name is Leslie Sexton and I am a Canadian elite marathoner.

At the 2015 Toronto Waterfront I ran 2:33:23, which was faster than the Olympic standard of 2:45, but slower than Canada’s Olympic standard of 2:29:50. At the time, I didn’t think of it as failing to meet Canada’s Olympic standard; I celebrated my performance because I believed it was the fastest I could have possibly run on the day. With Athletics Canada setting their Olympic standard under 2:30, the Olympics were an unrealistic dream for me. I still had hopes of representing Canada at the IAAF World Championships in 2017 or 2019, since Athletics Canada had set a women’s standard of 2:35 for the last two editions of the event.

In October of last year, a few days before the Canadian Marathon Championships at the Toronto Waterfront Marathon, Athletics Canada announced tough standards (2:29:50 for automatic selection and 2:31:30 to be selected at the discretion of the head coach) and a shortened qualifying window for the 2017 World Championship marathon. This news was incredibly disheartening, and reflected a defeatist attitude towards developing long distance talent in Canada. The message was clear: Canadian marathoners would once again have to perform at a higher standard (ie. show the potential to place top-16 in London) to qualify for national teams, leaving little room for developing athletes to represent their country and benefit from the experience of competing at an international championship. For me, it meant possibly letting go of my dreams of racing a marathon in a Team Canada singlet. I love distance running and I have no doubt that I will continue to train for and compete in the marathon whether I make a World team or not. And yet Athletics Canada’s tough standards made it very difficult to justify what I was doing. I can only control how fast I run and it was frustrating that someone else could put more barriers between me and qualifying for a national team.

With Friday’s announcement that Athletics Canada will be using the minimum IAAF standards of 2:19:00 for men and 2:45:00 for women in their selection criteria for the 2017 IAAF World Championships, my hope that I will one day represent Canada at a world championship has been renewed. According to the Athletics Canada rankings, seven women achieved the 2017 World Championship standard within the qualifying window, and twelve have run under 2:45 in the last two years. For Canadian women, simply running the standard will not be enough; only three athletes per country can compete in the marathon at the World Championships. Thus, qualification is still a tough goal for people like me who have run in the mid-2:30s, but one that is achievable and worth chasing. With fewer barriers in front of athletes for national team qualification, marathoners can now feel like the power is back in our hands. It is now up to us to not only better the standard, but also to compete amongst each other for a top-three ranking and national team selection.

A realistic marathon qualification standard will enable more of Canada’s next great marathoners to race at the World Championships and gain valuable championship experience. In 2009, Athletics Canada (with the help of funding from the Ottawa Marathon and the Toronto Waterfront Marathon) sent a team to the IAAF World Championships in Berlin using the minimum marathon standards, which included Reid Coolsaet and Dylan Wykes. Coolsaet later qualified for the 2012 and 2016 Olympic Games in marathon, and has credited his experience at the World Championships in 2009 as important to his development.

I believe that using the minimum IAAF standards for the marathon will improve the quality and depth of the event in Canada over the long term. Distance running is a low-paying sport and most of us are working part-time or full-time to fund our dreams of representing Canada at a major championship. Great marathoners aren’t born, they are made though a decade or longer of consistent, tough training. The old Athletics Canada attitude of “if you can’t medal or place top twelve, we won’t send you to a championship” discourages up-and-coming distance runners from continuing to pursue the sport at an elite level. To develop the next group of men and women to represent Canada at future Olympic Games in the marathon, we need to provide them with opportunities to get experience racing at a major championship. Doing so will keep more elite and sub-elite distance runners in the sport for longer, and could lead to more talented runners attempting the marathon. The standards for the 2017 World Championships are a step in the right direction, and I am excited to see Canadian marathoners rise to the occasion with this new opportunity.

Athletics Canada Announces New Marathon Qualifying Times for IAAF World Championships

After the changing of Athletics Canada’s track coach, Peter Ericsson, a new standard has been announced today for marathon qualifying times for the Canadian national team to compete at 2017 IAAF World Championships in Athletics this summer in London.
 
The new qualifying times for marathoners are the top 3 under 2:19 for men; 2:45 for women, and each team member must run the half marathon either at the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon, the Calgary Half Marathon or participate in the Ottawa 10K national championships.
 
The previous standards were 2:12:50 for the men and 2:29:50 for the women, then 2:14:10 and 2:31:20 if nobody hit the A goals, which still greatly limited the number of athletes that Canada could send to compete in the high-profile event.
 
By lowering the times, this will lead to better exposure of our highest profile athletes and more opportunities for greater purses for running athletes operating outside of the sporting world mainstream (the Toronto Raptors and such).
 
Rejoices from the Canadian running world have percolated online, perhaps best articulated by Canada Running Series director Alan Brookes, who summarized his response in a word: Hallelujah.
 
The World Championships will be held in London between August 5-August 13, 2017.
 
Good luck to everyone who runs.

 

 

The iRun Great Beau’s Beer Powered Half Marathon Spring Training Program

Winter’s cold and the footing is rough and it gets dark early and everyone’s grumpy. Takes a little something extra to get out for a run. But you can do it and it’s a great way to fight back against the climate and re-take the winter as a pleasure palace and a place to run and get in shape and have fun as you go.

So, with that in mind: we present The iRun Great Beau’s Beer Powered Half Marathon Spring Training Program.

Beau’s, like iRun, is a sponsor of the Tamarack Ottawa Race Weekend and when we heard that, we challenged Beau’s CEO Steve Beauchesne to run his first half marathon. At first, he wasn’t too sure. But he’s since come on board, brought his friends and will be reporting back on his training and experiences and offering the occasional free beer incentive prize for anyone else following our program.  

This is an overview of the program that we gave Steve and expect him to follow to the letter. (And, when he doesn’t, it’s going to be the training program that we’ll have to revise and revise and. . . )

Please follow along at home and share with us the results of your training and if you have any questions, thoughts or beer recipes we should try. And without further ado, a 15-week training program by iRun General Manager and Feet, Don’t Fail Me Now author Ben Kaplan (pictured), designed especially for runners attempting their first half marathon, enjoy!

The iRun Great Beau’s Beer Powered Half Marathon Spring Training Program.  

February 12

4K: establish the habit of running outdoors.

February 15

4K: in the beginning, more important than the distance is the habit-forming. it doesn’t matter how far you go, it only matters that you start getting up and going!

February 19

6K: expect to spend about another 20-minutes outdoors on your run!

February 22

6K: with running just twice a week, we can get you to the half marathon at the end of may, just keep making your running appointments.

February 26

8K = BEER!!!!!!! if we make it through running february, let’s all celebrate and have a group beau’s beer. send us your pictures from sunday’s run and, if you’re of age, you can win a Beau’s Prize Pack.

March 1

10K: this a big milestone to get accomplished. don’t worry if it feels hard, we’re going to focus on 10K for the next two weeks.

March 5 

10K: keep at it, build endurance, build mileage.

March 8 

10K: still rocking the 10K!

March 12 

10K: yep, more 10K.

March 15

7K: good job with all those 10s, now let’s bring it down a bit and rest up for our long run. . . .

March 19

11K: you can do it!

March 22 

12K: this is officially our first run in spring—congratulations, you made it running outdoors through the Canadian winter!

March 25: Earth Day 

13K: keep it going and reach 13, and then we’ll bring it back down for your last two more long runs.

March 29 

9K: remember when 9K was a big deal?

April 2 

11K: hang in!

April 5 (Ben’s birthday!) 

15K: our second to last long run! and once you can run 15K, you can almost surely hit 21.

April 9 

9K: take it slowly after your long run, the point here is to keep up with your training, not slack, and stay loose.

April 12 

9K: same idea as Wednesday’s run.

April 16 

9K: take it slow, because. . .

April 19 

17K: this is the longest we’ll run in training and the big one—you hit 17K, congratulations. the race is a month away and you’re ready, well done. grab a beer.

April 23 

9K: recovery run.

April 26 

9K: recovery run.

April 30 

13K: a little longer than a regular run but nothing that, by now, should bend you too much of shape. take it slowly. remember to breathe.

May 3 

7K: from here on in, we taper.

May 7 

7K: another easy run to stay loose. the distance on these doesn’t really matter, we just want to keep you fit and fighting.

May 10 

11K: stay sharp with a little distance.

May 14 

7K: ease your way into race week.

May 17 

7K: just keeping the legs moving.

May 21

7K: same idea.

May 24 

5K: a beer to assail those race week nerves!

May 28 

HALF MARATHON!! YOU CAN DO IT!!

Wherever you’re racing, let us know how it goes. And, if you’re racing Ottawa, meet Ben and Steve after your event at the Beau’s Beer Tent in front of City Hall on Saturday and Sunday. Let’s compare race notes. And drink beer! Good luck.

Ray TV: Building Your Stamina is a Mental Game

Building stamina is the ultimate mental test for every runner. Even an ultra-marathoner like Ray Zahab is tested during his epic expeditions. So how does he tough it out? Here’s the mental strategy that gets him through, time and again, and it can work for you too!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tIegEC4Lx_U

Keep Your Guard Up

Safety is always top of mind when running, but it’s really become even more at the forefront of many female runners’ minds when three women runners in the U.S. were killed in the span of nine days this past summer.

By: Karen Kwan

It’s always smart to change up your route and let someone know where you’re going; those are guidelines we try to follow. We also have been testing out GoGuarded. Jodi Fisher has been selling this self-defense product about one year. The ring features a plastic serrated edge and comes in three colours (black, magenta or blue) and four sizers.

The ring is comfortable to wear (although it’s slightly less convenient to wear with winter gloves on now but thanks to the sizers, it is possible to wear over gloves) and I think it definitely has an advantage over carrying pepper spray since if you are attacked during a run, you won’t have time to get pepper spray out of your fuel belt or backpack, whereas with the ring on, you’ll have it ready to defend yourself. For $15.99 U.S., it seems a small price to pay for a tool that may help save your life.

Karen Kwan is a regular iRun fashion and travel contributor, and you’ll find her running fashion posts every Friday on Instagram. She contributes to a number of publications and you can also follow her travel and running adventures at Health & Swellness.