The Running Thread - 2018

Overnight 25K is tomorrow ... starting at 10 p.m., and the temp should only be about 97 degrees at race start! Perfect race weather, amirite? :crazy2:

My friend K ran it last year (she's the rockstar currently training for the Leadville 100) and she said she threw up twice during the race. I previous had a time goal, but I think not puking is my new A Goal for tomorrow. :( :genie:
Anything under 100 is a win right now.
 
Overnight 25K is tomorrow ... starting at 10 p.m., and the temp should only be about 97 degrees at race start! Perfect race weather, amirite? :crazy2:

My friend K ran it last year (she's the rockstar currently training for the Leadville 100) and she said she threw up twice during the race. I previous had a time goal, but I think not puking is my new A Goal for tomorrow. :( :genie:

Not puking would be my goal too.
 
Overnight 25K is tomorrow ... starting at 10 p.m., and the temp should only be about 97 degrees at race start! Perfect race weather, amirite? :crazy2:

My friend K ran it last year (she's the rockstar currently training for the Leadville 100) and she said she threw up twice during the race. I previous had a time goal, but I think not puking is my new A Goal for tomorrow. :( :genie:
Orrrrr. If you do happen to puke, maybe try to hit 3 times. Break her record.
 
Just scored 2 pair of Ghost 10s at zappos at 20 bucks off!

I already have 1 pair in the stash, so I'm good to go for awhile. Currently in my 16th pair of Ghosts.

Brooks has been selling them direct for $20 off for a month or two with the Ghost 11s coming out. I got a pair and have been considering order another couple.
 
Brooks has been selling them direct for $20 off for a month or two with the Ghost 11s coming out.

I checked there too. I need wide and Brooks was out, so I was happy to find these.

I also only want 'Old man' gray, so that makes them even harder to find!
 
Overnight 25K tonight ... I'd love if everyone could take a moment between now and, say, 9 p.m. CT to do a 10-second rain dance to help cool this party down:

A nice cool 85° by 10:00pm. Interestingly enough, your temperature at 10:00pm is our high for today. Enjoy the race!
 
U.S. Road Race Participation Numbers Hold Steady for 2017
Source: Running USA
Date: June 27, 2018

DETROIT (June 27, 2018) – For the vast majority of road races of all sizes across the U.S., participation held steady in 2017, according to an analysis of road race participation trends released today by national trade organization for the sport Running USA.

U.S. running registrations in 2017 remained consistent with the total registrants in 2016. In 2017, there were a total of nearly 18.3 million registrants, down just slightly from 18.5 million in 2016.

The majority of runners of U.S. road races continued to be women in 2017, while the most popular race distance was the 5K. Around 59 percent of participants in a given road race are female, while 41 percent are male.

Meanwhile, 5K events boasted 8.84 million registrants, claiming 49% of all registrants in the nation, while the half-marathon again held the No. 2 position with approximately 11% of the finishers,

SOURCE
 
New research shows marathoners have less arthritis than non-runners
By Amby Burfoot
The Washington Post
June 13

A new study comes to the somewhat counterintuitive conclusion that marathon runners have less arthritis than non-runners.

Most people would assume that serious runners face a high risk for arthritis of the hip and knees. Yet prior research has generally failed to uncover such a connection. The most recent study, published in the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, actually found that veteran American marathoners had only half as much arthritis as non-runners. According to alarming new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, arthritis now represents a $300 billion annual burden.

Researchers from the orthopedic department at Philadelphia’s Thomas Jefferson University compared arthritis rates between 430 U.S. marathoners and a matched sample of non-runners in the National Center for Health Statistics database.

The marathoners (average age 46, and 51 percent women) had been running for an average of 19 years, logging 35 miles a week, and finishing 48 marathons. Despite this, they had an arthritis prevalence of 8.8 percent vs. 17.9 percent for non-runners. Aging past 65 did increase the marathoners’ arthritis rate — to 24.5 percent. But this was still roughly half the 49.6 percent of non-runners older than 65.

The team from Thomas Jefferson believes marathoners and other runners may gain arthritis protection from muscle development, body weight control, decreased levels of inflammatory agents and the well-known bone strengthening that follows moderate-impact sports.

SOURCE
STUDY
 
New research shows marathoners have less arthritis than non-runners
By Amby Burfoot
The Washington Post
June 13

A new study comes to the somewhat counterintuitive conclusion that marathon runners have less arthritis than non-runners.

Most people would assume that serious runners face a high risk for arthritis of the hip and knees. Yet prior research has generally failed to uncover such a connection. The most recent study, published in the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, actually found that veteran American marathoners had only half as much arthritis as non-runners. According to alarming new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, arthritis now represents a $300 billion annual burden.

Researchers from the orthopedic department at Philadelphia’s Thomas Jefferson University compared arthritis rates between 430 U.S. marathoners and a matched sample of non-runners in the National Center for Health Statistics database.

The marathoners (average age 46, and 51 percent women) had been running for an average of 19 years, logging 35 miles a week, and finishing 48 marathons. Despite this, they had an arthritis prevalence of 8.8 percent vs. 17.9 percent for non-runners. Aging past 65 did increase the marathoners’ arthritis rate — to 24.5 percent. But this was still roughly half the 49.6 percent of non-runners older than 65.

The team from Thomas Jefferson believes marathoners and other runners may gain arthritis protection from muscle development, body weight control, decreased levels of inflammatory agents and the well-known bone strengthening that follows moderate-impact sports.

SOURCE
STUDY
Interesting! Impressive mathoner stats — the 675 runners surveyed each completed between 5 and 1016!!!!! marathons. But wouldn’t the fact that those runners completed 5 or more marathons to be considered for the study mean they probably wouldn’t have a lot of arthritis issues? I mean, you pretty much know after your first couple of fulls if your knees and hips can handle more. But looking forward to hearing about followup studies.
 
Interesting! Impressive mathoner stats — the 675 runners surveyed each completed between 5 and 1016!!!!! marathons. But wouldn’t the fact that those runners completed 5 or more marathons to be considered for the study mean they probably wouldn’t have a lot of arthritis issues? I mean, you pretty much know after your first couple of fulls if your knees and hips can handle more. But looking forward to hearing about followup studies.
I agree. I have run many marathons, but my wife will never be able to run even one because her body cannot handle the mileage required in training. But she is a runner, with 13.1 her max distance. If they included people like my wife in the study the results would normalize at least some.

A study of twins, one a serious runner and the other not a runner, would clarify the results. It is my belief that some people are just genetically gifted in these ways. How do you account for that?
 

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