Monthly Archives: July 2016

Raising Arizona (AZ’s)

July 9th, Saturday, 10:00 p.m.

Coach’s story;  how Arizona Running Drills became the stuff of legend at North Hunterdon High School.

Every runner who came through the North Hunterdon track program while I was coaching there from 1974 till 2000 will tell you they remember doing AZ’s .  AZ’s are Arizona Running Drills.

In the spring of 1974 many of the coaches at North Hunterdon High School we’re pretty shocked when I was named the new track and field coach. I had been interviewed by the principal, Bill Cromwell, and the former coach.  During the interview the coach asked me how would I handle the situation when the fastest runner on the team would not come to practice regularly. My response was that I didn’t understand the question.  I told him no athlete would be on the team if they did not come to practice regularly.  It didn’t matter if he was the best athlete  or the worst athlete.  I think Bill liked my answer.  Anyhow there I was a head track coach who had never coached before with a team of about 60 runners and jumpers and throwers.  I made the decision that I would coach all the varsity runners.  My assistants were assigned to coach hurdles jumpers and throwers.  I  had to face the fact that I had no idea how to coach a sprinter.  I had a pretty good background in distance running from high school and college, but I never paid a lot of attention to how to coach a sprinter. So I went to the library to look for some information on how to coach sprinters.

Now as an aside: I have to mention that I had recently arrived from Lincoln High School in Jersey City.  In 1970 the Lincoln High School track team had won at the Penn Relays the 440 yard relay and the mile relay.  I am pretty sure they are the last US team to ever accomplish that feat. One of their runners, who was the lead off runner for the 440 yard relay championship team, graduated and attended Arizona State University.  At the time Arizona state was probably the best college sprint  team in America.   In 1972 and 1973 Charlie Wells from Lincoln lead off the Arizona State 440 yard relay to a College Championship of America.  I did a little research tonight and found out that in 1977 every member of the Arizona State track team that attended the Penn Relays came home with a Penn Relay watch!  The ASU  mile relay that year ran a world record  3:04 . Their coach, Senon “Baldy” Castillo, is in the National Track and Field Coaches Association Hall of Fame.

So when I found an article in the library that talked about the Arizona State Sprint team, I was naturally intrigued.  In the article the coach described the set of running drills that all members of the Sprint team performed every day during practice.  I decided to borrow these drills and I labeled  them the Arizona Running Drills.  My sprinters did Arizona’s everyday.  It turned out that they became in very good shape and we had a very good sprint team. Now, we also had a very good distance team. Coach Pat Pinto and Ed Lavin did a marvelous job with the hurdlers,  jumpers and throwers. The result was the beginning of what became a strong program for almost three decades. After two years Coach Pinto and Coach Lavin moved to Voorhees High School to start the track and field program at that new school. Not long afterward Bob McGivney became one of my assistant coaches. He was intrigued by the Arizona drills and spoke to me often about their purpose and their success. One day, over one of our meetings at the local pub, Bob asked me why I don’t have my distance runners perform the Arizona running drills like the sprinters do.  I told him that they were designed to develop speed.  He asked me, ” Don’t you want your distance Runners to be fast.”   I answered, “Yes, of course.” And he said,  “Then why don’t they do Arizona running drills.”  Of course I had no legitimate answer to that question.  Shortly thereafter I began to interject the Arizona drills into the program for my distance runners.  I was very pleased with the results.  From that time forward ‘Arizona’s for everybody’) was the motto at North Hunterdon track and field. Now remember,  this was in 1977 or 1978 when I first applied the drills to the distance team, and I believe we were ahead of our time.  In the early eighties Mike Paul  joined our program as an assistant coach.  Michael had recently  received his doctorate  in exercise  physiology.  Mike is one of the most knowledgeable coaches I have ever met and his success with athletes throughout New Jersey is widely known .  He told me that the reason he joined our program was because we were the only program he found  when looking around  to become an assistant coach  in Central Jersey  that was doing running drills,  mainly bounding.   Bounding is the most difficult and demanding of the drills. It is also the only one that is a plyometric drill.

It makes me  proud  to say that numerous running coaches, track fans and parents commented to me over the years  that many of my runners had the same running form;  that they ran  smoothly  and with efficiency and with power .  I believe that the Arizona Running Drills are big part of the  reason that is true . Today running drills are a regular part of almost every High School distance running program, and every article or book on distance running includes reference to some form of running drills.

” Grace of motion is a function of power.”

 

 

50mins in motion in a.m.

July 7th, Thursday,  10:00 a.m.

“I got the sun in the morning……”

 

With forecasts of a heat index exceeding 100 degrees today,  I set the alarm for 6 a.m. and was on the cinders before 7 o’clock.  It was already 75 degrees but about one-third of the 800 meter track was still in shade.  I was determined to achieve my goal of a 30 minute run today, and accomplished that with 10 minutes warm-up  walk and 10 minutes post walk.  It is exactly two months since my race on May 7th where I injured my foot. Today I experienced no discomfort in my foot.  I am wearing my new compression socks and my new Asics Kayano 22 running shoes.  I feel pretty well protected. The  shoes are very comfortable and seem to be very supportive. So far I like them.         Also rolling,  stretching and icing foot…

STATS –

I-MAD -0
a.m.HR – 54BPM
Weight – 151#
Sleep – 5 hours
Workout – 50 mins. Walk 10 – run 30 – walk  10

I anticipated that I would be so tired that I would go back to bed after my early morning run today.  As it turns out I am wide awake and having breakfast and writing my blog instead.  We will see how the day unfolds.

 

Inside work today- 94*

July 6th, Wednesday, 10:00 p.m.

Too much heat for the +70RUNNER crowd.

Good mall walking day.

This was a very steamy Wednesday in the Jackson area. So I headed out to the fitness center at CentraState Hospital to get some indoor work in the big facility.  I warmed up, did 20 minutes on the Zero Runner machine and proceeded to do 40 more minutes of upper body and core work throughout the room.  The body was pretty beat at the end of over an hour of good work.  I was planning to go in the pool for a refreshing swim and a little running perhaps, but I was informed that the pool was closed for yearly maintenance for the rest of this week.  At home I did some more core work, and rolled my legs and did some Achilles tendon strengthening drills I have learned.  Tomorrow will definitely be a running day on the cinders, either early or late.  Must be done!  Time for 30 minutes.

Stats-

I-Mad – 0

a.m.HR- 58 BPM

WEIGHT – 153#

SLEEP – 8.5 HOURS

WORKOUT – 20 MINUTES ON ZERO RUNNER + Lots of core and upper body

 

 

7 mile bike and run

July 2nd, Saturday,

“Summer Breeze makes me feel fine.”

Today I made a last-minute decision, as I headed out for my attempt at a short run, to begin the workout with a bike ride.  As I rode I became more motivated and wound up riding for 5 miles in about 27 minutes.  After I parked the bike I set out to attempt a test 2-mile run on the concrete walkways around the neighborhood.  I was determined to go easy and monitor for any sign of trouble in my plantar fascia. Remarkably, and to my delight, nowhere along the way did I feel any discomfort at all. I  finished the 2 miles in 23 minutes. I was pleasantly surprised that I could still run 11 minute miles with almost no aerobic stress.  Maybe I did manage to stay in some semblance of fitness over the past 7 weeks without running. All those hours in the water maybe had some beneficial effects.  Anyway, I was very happy with today’s workout.

One new procedure that I have been adding to my recovery effort is that I am now rolling my sore foot with a frozen bottle of water.  I’m getting a very deep massage as I roll, and it is sometimes quite painful. But the ice and the massage seems to be having a really positive effect on my foot.  I will continue and report.

Stats –

I-Mad – 0

a.m. HR -54BPM

Sleep – 9 hours

Weight – 152#       After run- 150

Workout – 5 mile bike @27 minutes + 2 miles @23 minutes

Wet day workout

July 1st, Friday, 8:30 p.m.

Olympic trials 10K final in 10 minutes!

Workout was 40 minutes in the pool on this rainy, stormy afternoon.  I decided to try an alternating approach in the pool. I did 10 minutes swim, 10-minute run, 10 minutes swim, 10 minute run. I was surprised how aerobically demanding it was.  I don’t think I’ve done 40 minutes in the water for quite a while. I did include six of the 30- 20 – 10 sequence during the run segments of the workout, and I had my heart rate up pretty high. I took the opportunity to give my recovering foot an extra day’s rest. Tomorrow I will be back at the cinders, maybe get to that 30 minute run. We will have to see how it feels.

Have a very happy 4th of July weekend everybody. The weather is going to be terrific!

The stats today were very steady.