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CarsonDistance
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CarsonDistance
@CarsonDistance
MPH🏃💪NOGRITNOPEARL
China Grove, NC Katılım Ağustos 2017
247 Takip Edilen158 Takipçiler
CarsonDistance retweetledi
CarsonDistance retweetledi
CarsonDistance retweetledi
CarsonDistance retweetledi

It’s been fun to watch this guy go about it the right way. To say we are proud of @NolanTovornik is an understatement.
SurryKnights@SurryKnights
Surry baseball welcomes Nolan Tovornik from Carson High School. @CarsonCougarBSB @CarsonAthletics @JCHSCougars @PrepBaseballNC @IMPACTBASEBALL_ @NJCAABaseball
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CarsonDistance retweetledi
CarsonDistance retweetledi

Some big wins tonight for our Men's soccer program! Both JV and Varsity defeated Concord 3-1 on the road. This was a huge boost for the program after several devastating losses. I am super proud of how both teams perservered! #CarsonSoccer #WeAreCarson #Believe


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CarsonDistance retweetledi
CarsonDistance retweetledi

Carson defeats Concord 3-1 in a barn burner! Awesome play all around between both teams! Jeffrey Moreno (2) and Diego Campuzano with the goals. #Believe #WeAreCarson @mikelondonpost3 @RSSNCAthletics @CarsonAthletics

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CarsonDistance retweetledi
CarsonDistance retweetledi
CarsonDistance retweetledi

High school cross country: Stout start for Carson girls salisburypost.com/2023/08/17/hig…
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Congrats to the both the boys and girls Carson XC teams for winning the pre-county meet yesterday at Dan Nic! 1st race out of the way, now time to grind. #mph @CarsonAthletics @salisburypost
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CarsonDistance retweetledi
CarsonDistance retweetledi

I just entered for a chance to go to the #FandomParty in San Diego @getfandom gleam.io/1Vqag/fandom-p…
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I just entered for a chance to go to the #FandomParty in San Diego @getfandom
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CarsonDistance retweetledi

How to use Progression Runs In Cross Country (rather than Threshold Runs)
Rationale
I love progression runs for three reasons...
1. They’re a great way to build the aerobic engine.
2. They’re fun for your athletes because they’ll be running fast at the end of the workout.
3. To properly execute these workouts and run progressively faster as the workout goes on, your athletes will need to be running by feel.
And it's my experience that progression runs are easier to teach athletes than threshold runs.
Threshold runs for cross country runners are fine, but as John Sipple, the boys coach at Downers Grove North (IL), a coach who has had a team finish fourth at NXN, told me, "It's hard to get high school kids to learn how to run threshold runs properly."
Trust me on this: lots of progression runs during the year, where athletes finish saying, "I could have run a few more minutes" will build the aerobic engine just as well as a weekly threshold run will.
Frequency
These workouts can be done every other week in the first month or two of the summer. In the past years I’ve replaced some long runs during the competitive season (September-December) with progression runs for the simple reason that kids get a great aerobic stimulus, they have fun, and their legs are fresher 48 hours after the run.
Distance or Time
Progression runs can be as short as 15 minutes or as long as 60 minutes, but for the majority of your runners, they’ll be between 20 and 30 minutes. We’ll always run for time and not distance.
Intensity
The instructions will be to start at a steady pace, and then speed up. For a 20-minute progression run you’ll write...
10 min steady, 5 min a touch faster, 5 min faster but controlled.
A 15-minute progression run might be the assignment for a new runner, yet an upperclassman might have a 30-minute progression run.
Here’s five different progression run assignments:
15 min: 5 min steady, 5 min a touch faster, 5 min fast but controlled
20 min: 10 min steady, 5 min a touch faster, 5 min faster but controlled
25 min: 10 min steady, 5 min a touch faster, 5 min a touch faster, 5 min faster but controlled
30 min: 10 min steady, 10 min a touch faster, 5 min a touch faster, 5 min faster but controlled
35 min: 10 min steady, 10 min a touch faster, 5 min a touch faster, 5 min a touch faster, 5 min faster but controlled
Farther or Faster (or both)
All the athlete needs to say when they finish the workout is that they could have run a little farther at the final pace. The young athlete needs to be able to say they had 2-3 minutes, while older athletes should have had 5 minutes more in them when they finish. Why is this important? Because the most common mistake athletes make with progression runs are...
Common Mistake
The most common mistake is that athletes let the progression run turn into a race. That’s a problem because a young athlete, whose longest race distance is 5k, should not be running a 3-5 mile race in practice. But if they pay attention to how this workout is worded, with the last segment being “5 min faster but controlled” they’ll be fine. So long as they’re finishing the workout at a controlled pace, you can both be sure that it wasn’t a race effort.
If an athlete accidentally runs too hard in a progression run and it becomes a race, simply make sure to give them one more day of recovery. That should allow them enough time to fully recover and be ready for the next workout.
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