segunda-feira, 13 de abril de 2015

Meia Maratona de Fortaleza entre amigos


No dia 13 de abril comemoramos o aniversário da cidade de Fortaleza, que em 2015 está completando 289 anos.
As comemorações começaram no domingo, 12 de abril, com a realização da 13a Meia Maratona Internacional de Fortaleza. Nós, AMIGÕES CORREDORES, não poderíamos ficar de fora.

Correr nas ruas de Fortaleza não é uma tarefa fácil, o clima e o percurso são fatores que reduzem o rendimento dos atletas. Nesse domingo foi diferente, Fortaleza, que é conhecida pelo sol, deu uma trégua aos atletas. O dia amanheceu chuvoso, permanecendo assim por toda a prova, e a largada aconteceu as 06:15 horas. O percurso passou pela famosa Beira Mar, pela Catedral da Metropolitana de Fortaleza e pelas ruas do centro da cidade, com trechos planos e algumas ladeiras nos últimos 6km.

Marcelo Kval, George Malveira, Alexandre Goiana e Marcelo Martins completaram honrosamente os 21km. Destaque para a primeira Meia Maratona de nosso amigão Marcelo Martins, que superou duas fraturas de pé em 2014. PARABÉNS MARTINS, que venham mais outras meias. Nosso REI DO MAR, Alberto Hill, está investindo no reinado do asfalto e completou os 5km. E a grande novidade foi nosso amigão João Luís VIANNA, que fez sua estréia em Fortaleza. VIANNA, antes atleta na cidade de Cuiabá, agora está integrando o grupo alencarino e completou os 10km, estabelecendo um novo recorde pessoal.
Longe de Fortaleza, mas participando das festividades, estava nosso amigão MAIA, que feito um raio de luz, completou os 21km da Golden Four Asics no Rio de Janeiro.  Nosso amigão Ricardo Lopes também comemorou o aniversário de Fortaleza, completando os 21km da Meia Maratona de São Paulo.

Parabéns a todos os AMIGÕES CORREDORES !! Em julho nos encontraremos no Rio de Janeiro.






quarta-feira, 1 de abril de 2015

De sedentário a atleta amador de destaque - a história de André Burgos

No começo de 2013, André Burgos pesava 108 quilos e levava uma vida sedentária. Pouco mais de 2 anos depois e 30 quilos a menos, André é um atleta amador de destaque. Na sua curta carreira de corredor, André já correu uma meia maratona em 1h 31 min e uma maratona em 3h 27 min. Mais recentemente, chegou em terceiro lugar na sua primeira ultramaratona de 50k. André contou um pouco dessa história inspiradora para o blog. Vale conferir.



Amigões Corredores: André, vamos voltar no tempo. Quando e por que a corrida entrou na sua vida?
 Quando era mais jovem pratiquei vários esportes como judô, futsal, basquete, handball e corrida. Como meu pai costumava correr, ia como ele ao parque, mas enquanto ele corria 10 km, eu só conseguia no máximo 3km. 
Mas ao longo de 12 anos fui ganhando peso e ficando cada vez mais sedentário. Em janeiro de 2013,  decidi mudar e no mesmo dia comecei uma dieta bem balanceada. Só que não queria apenas me alimentar bem, o sedentarismo ainda me incomodava, então em março de 2013 comecei a correr bem leve e ainda em março participei da minha primeira prova de rua - foram 10 km na corrida das Pontes, aqui mesmo em Recife. Terminei os 10 km em 1h24, e mesmo ficando entre os 30 últimos no geral, estava muito feliz pela minha superação. A partir daí decidi continuar correndo.
Quando você começou a perceber os benefícios da corrida?  Foi fácil encaixar a prática regular de exercícios na sua rotina?
É impressionante como a atividade física te traz inúmeros benefícios. Com a regularidade dos treinos, comecei a me sentir mais disposto, a dormir melhor, a ter melhor concentração, me senti mais confiante em superar meus desafios e encarar as dificuldade de outra maneira. Não foi difícil encaixar a prática da corrida em minha rotina. Na verdade, acho que todo mundo tem tempo sim para praticar alguma atividade física, basta querer.
Qual foi a importância da alimentação na virada que você deu na sua vida? Você tem bastante disciplina também nesse campo?
Eu comecei a mudança do meu estilo de vida com a alimentação. Passei alguns meses bastante disciplinado na dieta. E apesar de fazer mais de dois anos que não bebo refrigerante, hoje sou  um pouco mais flexível. Pesquiso bastante sobre nutrição e procuro sim me alimentar bem. Emagreci 30kg através de uma dieta balanceada aliada a prática da corrida e nunca pulei refeição nem passei fome. Sempre me alimentei bem e faço exames regularmente para acompanhar as minhas taxas, que continuam muito boas.
Vc teve alguma fonte de inspiração? Quem foram os seus grandes incentivadores?
A gente sempre tem fontes de inspiração. Mas no começo, minha motivação foi a grande preocupação o meu próprio futuro. Eu só fazia ganhar peso e estava cada vez mais sedentário. Mudar o estilo de vida e hábito alimentar não é fácil, e eu sempre contei com o apoio de minha esposa e filha que até  hoje são minhas grandes fontes de inspiração. 
Como foram as suas primeiras provas? Qual a mais marcante?
Minha primeira prova foi a corridas das Pontes, em 2013 aqui mesmo em Recife. O máximo que eu tinha corrido foi 8 km e morrendo (risos).  Um grande amigo,  Ricardo Dubeux,  me incentivou e motivou para encarar os 10 km e apesar de estar quase 30kg acima do peso, consegui terminar em 1h24. Mesmo ficando entre os 30 últimos na classificação geral, terminai bastante feliz. A sensação de superação foi incrível.
Algumas provas marcaram bastante, mas essa última foi incrível! No sábado passado fui correr a minha primeira ultramaratona. Foram 50 km na Chapada do Araripe, no Ceará. O lugar é belíssimo e a prova teve um grau de dificuldade bastante considerável. A altimetria foi bastante forte e o piso com grande variedade. Teve parte de trilha com piso em lama, barro, areia, cascalho, pedra e asfalto. Muitas subidas e descidas fortes. O segundo trecho foi o mais difícil. Os últimos 16 km foram de muitas subidas fortes e algumas poucas descidas, e foi o trecho com maior variedade no terreno. 
Cheguei a ficar em primeiro colocado no solo do km 30 ao 37, mas foi muito difícil. O final exigiu bastante de todos. Terminei em terceiro!
Independente da colocação, a sensação de concluir a primeira ultramaratona e nessa belíssima prova, foi incrível. Acabei de fazer um post relatando essa experiência: treinodehoje.com/primeira-ultramaratona-com-direito-a-pódio

Com quanto tempo de treino, você decidiu fazer a primeira maratona?
Comecei a treinar em março de 2013 e só depois de correr três meias que decidi tentar a minha primeira maratona. Comecei os treinos para a maratona em dezembro de 2014 e a prova foi em maio de 2014, em Porto Alegre. Voltarei esse ano para POA para tentar baixar meu tempo.
Você hoje é um atleta amador de ponta. Até onde você pensar em chegar? Quais são os seus grandes sonhos e desafios no campo do esporte?
(risos) Não me considero um atleta amador de ponta. Através da corrida, aprendi a me desafiar e não desistir dos objetivos. Nos últimos 10 meses corri minhas primeiras três maratonas e a primeira ultramaratona. Meu próximo desafio será tentar baixar meu tempo na Maratona de Porto Alegre, em junho desse ano.

Depois irei para a ultramaratona dos 100 km do frio em agosto. Só não sei se irei solo ou dupla, mas irei sim. E em setembro, irei para a maratona Maurício de Nassau, apenas com o objetivo de fazer uma prova boa.
Você hoje deve inspirar bastante gente que está começando na corrida. Qual o recado que você gostaria de deixar?
  • Antes de começar, procure uma orientação por simples que seja. Existem alguns aspectos que precisam de atenção na prevenção de lesão ou até mesmo para melhorar as condições da prática esportiva. Seja de um profissional ou um corredor experiente;
  • Não exagere nos treinos, "escute" seu corpo;
  • Paralelo à atividade física, procure ter uma alimentação balanceada;
  • O descanso também faz parte do treino, então se o corpo estiver cansado, descanse;
  • Se sentir dor, procure um médico;
  • Corra com prazer. Procure o horário que seja melhor pra você. 
  • A corrida é uma atividade que dá prazer e não deve ser feita como obrigação. Encontre as melhores condições para a sua prática esportiva e vá. 
Eu gosto de me motivar com "histórias" de outras pessoas. Para mim, a superação "do outro" é um fator que me mantém bastante motivado e me ajuda a traçar as minhas metas
Para conhecer mais sobre o André e acompanhar a sua trajetória, siga o seu blog pessoal -

 

terça-feira, 31 de março de 2015

Dicas de um maratonista campeão

In an exclusive interview with WorldRunning.com, 2014 Boston Marathon winner Meb Keflezighi talks about why easy days are just as important as rest days, the importance of strength and cross training, and how everyone can reach their potential as a runner.
Meb Keflezighi’s marathon lifetime best of 2:08:36 might be fairly modest by today’s barrier-breaking standards - but his racing record is far from that.
One of the highlights of Keflezighi’s international career, which spans more than fifteen years, was his silver medal at the 2004 Olympic Games and as a mark of his longevity, the popular American is still challenging the world’s best more than a decade later.
Drawing on his vast wealth of experience, Keflezighi ran a near-perfect race to claim the Boston Marathon title in 2014, becoming the first American man to win since 1983. He also notched up a fifth top-five career finish in the New York Marathon in November.

WorldRunning.com: What do you do in the days after the marathon to help you recover as quickly as possible?
Meb Keflezighi: Recovery is important. I have written a book called “Meb for Mortals” where I talk more about that. First of all, I try to stretch. Light stretching and light massage. Two days later – a deep tissue massage. I used to do ice baths, but I don’t do those anymore. I’m too old for that!
I used to do it [ice baths] rigorously, but now it takes too long for my body to recover. In September, it will be two years since I stopped doing that, but I used to do ice baths every day.
What about rest days during your training? What do they look like?
Rest days are just as important as hard days. But sometimes it’s tricky to handle for elite athletes. As intense as we are, we like routine. We’re “Type A” people, always “go, go, go!” It’s easy for me to give advice: “Take a day off”. But it’s hard to do it myself. I’m still struggling with that, but at the same time I still try to get the best out of myself.
On my rest days, I take care of my nutrition and hydration, do ElliptiGo sessions for recovery instead of pounding the pavement. I try to listen to my body and, if necessary, give it more time to recover, maybe an extra day.
Do you cross train consistently on your easier days?
Especially now, yes. Four to five times a week, instead of going for the second run, I’ll just do that. I’m almost forty years old, I can’t risk getting injured.
Do you do any kind of strength training and weight training at all?
I do some strength drills six days a week, core and planks – maybe, four or five times a week. As for weight training – it’s very minimal. I run on grass and uphill to strengthen my legs, once or twice a week.
What do your weeks and days look like, training wise?
Three times a week I’d go hard: long run, intervals, or tempo. It used to be every Tuesday, Friday and Sunday. But now, because of my age, I use a nine-day cycle. I run anywhere from three miles, when I’m backing up before a race, to 27 miles. It depends on where I am in a certain stage of training.
Do you have those mornings when you don’t feel like training? How do you overcome that?
That thought does cross my mind, but all it does is delay the workout. But eventually I end up doing it anyway. Putting on shoes and getting out of the door is hard. But once you get out, rain or snow, whatever, you enjoy it; you even push the pace or do more than planned.
But you have to start slow, don’t be in a rush. It’s good to have someone meeting you for a run, as well. I have a friend of mine, who is 71 years old. If it’s raining like today, he says: “I’ll meet you, I want to feel your pain.” (laughs) And he knows I’m going to show up.
What is your typical pre-race dinner and race-day breakfast?
For dinner, I usually have Italian food. Spaghetti with meatballs and salad, if I have that option. For breakfast, it would be a bagel or toast with almond butter and honey and a banana. If my mum or my wife is around, they bring me fresh homemade bread.
What does your diet look like in training?
I’m very disciplined with my diet when I’m in training, but if I’m injured I get totally out of control. It should be the other way around: when you’re running a lot you can eat anything!
I used to eat whatever I wanted when I was 26-28, but when I turned 35, it changed. My metabolism slowed down. I make sure to eat protein, especially on my hard days. Even if it’s 1-2 pm, I still like to have eggs. I may have them with toast or half a bagel in the morning and then an omelette, and some meat in the evening.
The night before a hard workout, I would have carbohydrates – pasta or rice. After hard workouts, the first thing that goes to my body is Generation UCAN, to speed up recovery.
I always eat a lot of vegetables, and snack on fruits during the day.
What was the best piece of advice you’ve ever received?
It was in 1999 from Paul Tergat. I believe, it was in Brussels. I told him: “You know, I want to be where you are, some day.” And he said: “I can give you my workouts. But where I am and where you are now – it’s different. It takes more progress to get there.”
It was the best piece of advice I’ve ever gotten. Because becoming a great athlete takes time.
So what piece of advice would you give to an up-and-coming runner?
I’d say the same. Three things: make progress, be consistent and I would emphasise that easy days are as important as hard days.
How do you mentally prepare for important races?
We all go through stages of preparation. I believe it’s 90% physical and 10% mental in training, but on the race day it switches.
Everybody is here, I look at their faces, at their legs to see what kind of shape they are in. But when the gun goes off, everything comes up to decision-making. Maybe not at the beginning, but when it counts the most. You have to assess what is goal number one, and you have to be realistic about what you are capable of doing and what you’ve been doing.
Sometimes, you want to finish in the top-three, sometimes – to set a personal best. Different things can get in your way, but you always should try to get the best of what you can do on a given day.
What would be your advice to someone that wants to take up running?
We can’t all be Olympians, New York and Boston champions. But we all can get best out of ourselves, no matter how old you are and of what gender you are. Set your goals and once you’ve set them – make progress. Nothing happens overnight. Just start running. It would be bad for the first two or three days, but it will get better.
If you set a goal to run a 5K, hopefully you will run that 5K, then a 10K and so on. Just have fun in a process, and make sure you’re training with someone, so you just don’t wake up one day and say: “Oh, I don’t want to go running!”
Interview conducted by Elena Dyachkova
Photos courtesy of Getty Images

terça-feira, 24 de março de 2015

Como os esportes de endurance mudam a vida das pessoas

EXERCISE OUTDOORS



The clinical benefits of endurance sports have long been documented and include a reduced risk of heart failure, diabetes, osteoporosis and other diseases. Additionally, a new wave of research shows that participating in common endurance sports may be effective in treating depression and anxiety. Less studied, but perhaps just as important, is how involvement in endurance sports enhances day-to-day life by changing the nature of stress and nurturing what psychologists call a "growth mindset," which can be described as a general outlook on life that recognizes a natural human capacity to grow and evolve -- especially in the face of challenges.
I recently had the opportunity to discuss endurance sports, stress, and growth mindsets with world-renowned health psychologist Kelly McGonigal. Our conversation led to an article for Outside Magazine"Endurance Sports Will Make You a Better, Calmer, Person." This piece generated thoughtful discussion and a handful of notes from readers asking for more. So, rather than just give my take, I asked a few other folks that live and breath this stuff to share their thoughts.
The Question: In addition to shaping your body, how has participating in endurance sports shaped your mindset?
David Epstein: Author of The Sports Gene
When I started distance running -- or mid-distance, really -- I was pretty darn bad. Sometimes in presentations, I show a picture of a medical record from a pulmonary exam I had when I started running. It says my peak flow results are consistent with early stage emphysema. Yikes! But it never really crossed my mind that starting poorly meant that I wouldn't have a great response to training.
One of the most important things I learned in reporting for The Sports Gene was that baseline ability (i.e., pre-training) and ability to improve with training are sometimes only slightly correlated, and sometimes not correlated at all. I think I sort of intuited that a long time ago, and when I improved by leaps and bounds as a runner, it only reinforced that idea for me.
I'd come into every season in college in way worse shape than guys in my training group, even after having done the same light summer training. I'd always just tell myself to be patient, wait for intervals to start, and I'd catch up. Literally, I would say to myself: "Don't worry, speed intervals and hills work like rocket fuel for you." This really taught me to take a longer view and helped me realize that the best training plan for my peers wasn't necessarily the best one for me. I took a trial and error approach to all my training, continually homing in what I felt worked specifically for me, even if it wasn't exactly what my peers or competitors were doing.
I guess I kind of adopted that approach for my professional life, too. Geology in graduate school and then working the overnight shift at the NY Daily News happened to be good journalism training for me! But I certainly wouldn't recommend it to everyone...
While this might surprise people who bucket me as "the genetic basis for talent guy," I firmly believe that you can get vastly better at just about anything with proper training. Any other mindset seems foreign to me.
Alex Hutchinson: Runner's World blogger and author of What Comes First, Cardio or Weights? 
Running has played a big role in shaping how I respond to the world around me. It has taught me to be patient in the face of adversity: if things aren't going well right now, I know that (a) panicking won't help; (b) I can endure whatever adversity I'm currently facing and it won't kill me; and (c) there's plenty of time to fix whatever is wrong and change the outcome, and it's up to me to make that happen. Those sound like clichés, but I think that's what running teaches you.
Dr. Michael Joyner: Mayo Clinic physiologist
As a kid involved in running, I learned the standard stuff about goal setting, hard work, and pushing through adversity. I learned to take the long view, and that training is a process not an event.
By the time I hit my early 20s, I learned it was possible to both relax and push it at the same time. When this first happens to you it is sort of an unbelievable random out-of-body experience. However, if you pay attention to your training and focus on learning how to do this you can experience it more consistently and work to produce it in training and racing. This sort of relaxed but all-out effort -- what many might call "flow" -- is also a skill that can be transferred to other activities in life.
In middle age I have realized that endurance sports taught me a bit about managing the inevitable mental and physical suffering and anxiety associated with life. Don't get too attached to things, trust the process, stay relaxed, and let the outcomes take care of themselves.
Most people have no idea what their limits are.
Steve Magness: Coach and author of The Science of Running
Endurance sports allow for gains psychologically and emotionally that provide a far greater impact than the physical benefits. For one, when you train and race, you have to be comfortable in your own head. There's no easy distracting phone to play with or movies to watch, it's just you and your thoughts. In today's society we do anything possible to avoid the inner dialogue in our head, but in endurance sports, it's all we have. So learning how to be alone in your own head and process the negative and positive emotions that come from grinding out a long race transfers to any activity. You get comfortable dealing with anxiety, uncertainty, pain, and boredom all in one shot.
And the thing is, we fail way more then we succeed in endurance sports. There are only so many times when we can be on our absolute best and hit a lifetime PR, so dealing with the ups and downs of sport and learning how to stay level headed is a huge lesson to be learned. Dealing with failure is one of the most difficult life lessons you can learn, but with running, fortunately or unfortunately, we have plenty of opportunities to do so.
To me, these abilities -- to remain focused and composure during both good and bad times -- is a skill that directly transfers to so many areas of life. For example, if I'm in the middle of a long writing session and losing focus or getting nervous before a big talk, I simply tie it back to what I do in running. If I really mess up a project or 'fail' at a task, I relate back to how I'd handle a tough loss. It's these lessons, if you allow yourself to learn from them, that have the greatest impact.
Matt Fitzgerald: Author of numerous books on training and nutrition
In endurance races, I feel that I come face to face with my naked soul in a way that I never do in everyday life. The legendary triathlete Mark Allen called this experience "raw reality." Everything is stripped away; only bare consciousness remains. But it's a divided consciousness, an urgent desire to quit pitted against a tenacious will to continue. I discover myself in these moments. I don't know if I can intellectualize their benefits. All I can say -- as many others do -- is that they are somehow purifying. And I keep going back for more.
My thoughts: The only things I'd add to what Dave, Alex, Mike, Steve, and Matt said is that endurance sports have instilled within me a sense of individual agency. In today's super connected and complex world, few endeavors remain in which it's just you working for something with a tangible measure as objective as time. I've learned to trust myself, and to wholly own both my successes and failures, which I guess is how I'd define self-confidence.
I've also had the honor of meeting and growing close to so many fine people through endurance sports. It doesn't really matter that most of them are 10 times better than me! It is a sense of sharing in the common struggle to simply "get better," regardless of one's baseline, that bonds us. These friends, mentors, and coaches have helped me grow in many ways -- the most valuable of which have been off the race course.