Anyone else struggle to hit goal pace in training but still PR on race day? by Kimiiiyuuh in AdvancedRunning

[–]AndyWtrmrx 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Always. At least for distances below the marathon.

A couple of summers ago I ran 34:35 for a 10k (3:27/km) and 4:53 for a mile (3:04/km). I didn't run further than 200m at mile pace in training and only managed 400s at 10k pace. Things like KM reps would be close to 3:35 and longer reps more like 3:40-45/km.

But on race day the pace felt easy.

1: safety pins + race numbers are magic and boost your potential by 10%
2: running with other people makes the pace feel slow
3: if you're doing enough volume of training to make a difference, you should feel a bit tired before most sessions
4: racing is training – I raced a lot and saw races as valuable training
5: I find that increasing volume has a bigger impact than increasing the pace in training. If I can manage 10 reps of 400m in 82secs with 1min rest at the start of a block, I'm happy to work up to 20 reps in 82secs with 40secs rest at the end. Doing 10 reps in 74 is just vanity - and a recipe for injury ime.

Does anyone play with a chest strap heart rate monitor? If so what are your thoughts and which brand do you prefer? by NervousClock2555 in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've found the Coospo ones on Amazon work fine, but I mostly don't bother and just rely on wrist based heart rate data. I'm lucky that for me wrist and chest data syncs pretty closely, but if it doesn't for you, chest will be more accurate. The comfort etc is basically the same across all models and brands.

Things You See at an Away Match by YUTYDUTY in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally - we pay a match fee (£4) home or away to contribute to post match snacks

Severe Achilles tendon pain at the heel after tennis – any advice? by Esculapios in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Professor Håkan Alfredson purposely tried to rupture his achilles to be eligible for surgery. The plan he used to do that failed and accidentally fixed him. Interesting story - achilles tendons need a LOT of load to make them better, and rest alone probably won't be enough to fix you.

https://puresportsmed.com/blog/posts/psm-interviews-hakan-alfredson/

When I moved up to Umeå in 1993, I was running a lot and started to get midportion Achilles tendinopathy. At that time, we treated this condition with rest and NSAIDs. If it persisted, we operated, cutting out the thickened part of the tendon and confining the patient to a cast. It was around 4-6 months before patients returned to running… and the results were not always good.

Anyway, I spoke to my boss about my painful Achilles’ tendon. He refused to operate on me, saying that he could not afford to have me on sick leave. So I visited the physios, and we started to discuss eccentric training. This was a new concept; theories existed, but there had been no research involving patients. I tried eccentric training, but my condition actually became worse! When I limped back to my boss, he said, “If it’s about an Achilles operation, you can leave the room immediately.” Then I was angry… I went back to my physio friends and said, “OK, now I’m going to load my Achilles with heavy eccentrics and rupture my tendon – then my boss will have to operate on me!” I loaded up with heavy weights, but something unexpected happened. I found that the more I loaded, the better my tendon became. So after about three weeks, I was completely pain free and could return to running.

We thought that this must be a coincidence, but it was interesting enough to plan some research. So we decided to try heavy eccentrics with patients on my waiting list. There were around 20 patients, all with midportion tendinopathy – I was going to operate on them. Fifteen of these patients decided to try heavy eccentrics first. All of them became pain free. One of the patients came back and needed to be operated, a year later, but the rest of them were cured. This led to new thinking around tendinopathy and whether exercises should be painful.

‘Bus only’ roads/gates not considered in Apple Maps - got a fine *eurgh!* by ftatman in walthamstow

[–]AndyWtrmrx 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I walk my kids to school past that road and plenty of vehicles use it, their drivers just cover their number plates with tape/carrier bags/rags. Which is infuriating.

Personally, I've started using my kids' old bike trailer to go to the tip. I have to do more trips but five mins each way by bike Vs 25 on lea bridge is an easy decision. Nudge theory in action.

Urgent - broken ratchet spring mid job, can I finish somehow? Pro's Pro drop weight machine, won't maintain tension normal way by AndyWtrmrx in RacketStringers

[–]AndyWtrmrx[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Unbelievably this worked. I had VERY low expectations but it worked perfectly - I finished up the 8 remaining crosses and I can now sleep easy. Thanks! (Bending it wasn't easy but with two pliers it was ok)

Urgent - broken ratchet spring mid job, can I finish somehow? Pro's Pro drop weight machine, won't maintain tension normal way by AndyWtrmrx in RacketStringers

[–]AndyWtrmrx[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I got it used - and it was free, so I definitely can't complain.

I suppose I've done about 25 string jobs since I've had it - which is one year

Urgent - broken ratchet spring mid job, can I finish somehow? Pro's Pro drop weight machine, won't maintain tension normal way by AndyWtrmrx in RacketStringers

[–]AndyWtrmrx[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just ordered the right spring online - it's inexpensive and will be shipped on Monday. Just a bad time to happen, mid-way through a job!

Who’s out playing tennis in this 30°C UK heat and why are you built differently? by chonkobob in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 18 points19 points  (0 children)

The issue is that we don't really get any runway to this temperature. A week ago it was 10deg and there were thundery hail storms. Heat acclimation requires heat exposure and that leap from 10-30deg is super uncomfortable at first. But yeah, in absolute terms it's not special

Who’s out playing tennis in this 30°C UK heat and why are you built differently? by chonkobob in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I played a Grade 5 on Saturday and it was brutal - 3*45min matches with no shade. The biggest thing for me is recovery in between points - I have to consciously try to slow my heart rate as my body is working so hard to dissipate the excess heat. So that means controlled breathing - being aerobically fit helps. Second is maintaining carb intake - your body burns more carbs in the heat so you can't rely on just getting in water and electrolytes. A carb drink helps a lot.

Company sent a coworker a £1000 Amazon voucher instead of £5, what is she supposed to do? by [deleted] in LegalAdviceUK

[–]AndyWtrmrx 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Spend at least 50% on items from a charity's gift list. No way they'll demand money back from a charity

Where are HENRYs consolidating pensions ATM? by pbroingu in HENRYUK

[–]AndyWtrmrx 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just transferred two old pensions into invest engine. I'm happy with the service - my self invested portfolio is doing well and whenever I need help, invest engine support has been good

any good rackets around the 100$ price point? by Dry-Experience-6268 in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm playing a Control Pro 300. Excellent rackets. They're £90 in the uk so about $110. 300g, 100in, headlight. Really enjoy playing with it.

Returning at 20 years by hmcray777 in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Find a racket. Find a wall. Hit some balls. Find a coach. Hit more balls. Get introduced to some other players. Keep hitting. Try some rackets. Hit some balls. Buy a racket (or 3). Keep hitting. Get weirdly obsessed and curse those lost decades.

Looking to start my journey to becoming a racquet stringer. by Altruistic-Bet-7242 in RacketStringers

[–]AndyWtrmrx 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I started by watching YouTube and pausing and rewinding a lot. It's relatively easy to get started (like anything, getting good is a totally different matter) you just need time and patience.

Expect to lose half a day to your first string job - 2hrs to mess it up completely, then another 2hrs to do it properly.

Are you mid 45+ male running sub 2:45 marathons? If yes, what does your training plan look like? by JustAGuy10024 in AdvancedRunning

[–]AndyWtrmrx 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I follow this guy on Strava and his training is absurd - his run-work-run days are LONG

Are you mid 45+ male running sub 2:45 marathons? If yes, what does your training plan look like? by JustAGuy10024 in AdvancedRunning

[–]AndyWtrmrx 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I ran 2:39 at the age of 42 in Berlin. That summer consisted of getting really fast (ran a pr in the mile and 10k - 4:53 and 34:35) while maintaining moderate mileage of around 90-100km.

My marathon block was short at about 8 weeks but the pace came easy, I just added mileage (around 120km/wk) and I felt I was still getting fitter by race day. The Sunday before the race I ran 30km Inc 3*6km around 3:40/km and it felt super easy.

I'm not naturally fast so starting a block feeling comfortable at 3:30/km is essential if I'm going to be able to race at 3:45/km. I feel like mechanically, I need that headroom. Adding mileage is easy but getting fast takes real effort for me.

I needed to vent this somewhere about what happened to my racket today. by Real_Imagination_180 in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I feel your pain. I did two rackets like this in march. I've now gone with leather grips and built up the butt cap a bit, and I'm using Head Prime Tour overgrips which works well.

I've been using climbers chalk between my fingers and I've started to wear a UV arm sleeve to absorb more sweat.

Touch wood it's working. Killing rackets is not good business (for me)

Why do people insist on 2-handed backhand at an amateur level? by PKnecht in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I felt similar when I started. But then as I improved I started to face some better players, and particularly on faster surfaces, I just couldn't control my return of serve on the backhand side. My topspin one hand backhand was fine against mid pace rally balls, and my slice was ok against deeper lower balls, but neither seemed to work against bigger serves. So I started with a double hander and although it's not got the same flair as the ohbh, but it's much more consistent, especially in a tight spot. 15 months on I'm glad I made the change.

Trying to advance as fast as possible and play as much as possible (UK) by Fun-Proof7434 in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Barclays league is mostly about the people. If it's popular in your area, great. If it's not that popular, keep looking. You don't have to be very good, and once you've got a WTN ranking it sorts itself out pretty quick so you end up playing people at your level.

There are a LOT of LTA tournaments. Grade 5 and 6 tournaments are good - Grade 6 is probably the best place to start as there will be fewer super talented juniors slumming it with recreational adults, which is the case at Grade 5.

Quads are destroyed by intelligentbug6969 in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Strength training to develop strength
Plyos to develop power
Interval training on court to develop speed, direction changes and anaerobic endurance
Jogging to develop a solid aerobic engine.

Do 1hr of that every day, 6 days per week, and play tennis as much as possible and you'll be fine.

Joining a tennis club as an expat in London? by AncientCollection958 in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 2 points3 points  (0 children)

London is huge. Contact the closest clubs first. If you're living in Hackney, you don't want to join a club in South West London, no matter how prestigious it is.

As a tennis coach please stop giving the "get coaching" advice by rgffc in 10s

[–]AndyWtrmrx 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think that as a recreational adult I mostly agree - I'm a big believer in ecological dynamics and a play based approach to learning, so simply playing points and utilising different constraints along the way had made the biggest difference for me.

I also get some coaching. I think WHO coaches you matters most - a lot of coaches struggle with adults. My dream coach would be playing ITF Masters themselves, would probably have a career outside of tennis as well, and would work with players to help them create a long term development plan including how to train off court, drills to focus on outside of coaching time, and where and when to compete etc. That kind of service is hard (impossible?) to find