Mon 03 March 2025
Can a mediocre vegan runner match an omnivore professional?
Can a mediocre vegan runner match an omnivore professional? Part 2
Well, not yet. Here is my theory why:
- I need about 5 years of serious running to build up to it
- I'm starting around age 48-49, currently 50, so I'm doing this in difficult mode, as compared to if I'd started
when I was 35
My marathon times to date are definitely mediocre.
Any, after a race, I do bounce back really fast, so I think the vegan-recovery advantage is a real thing, but I'm not
surrounded by enough runners to make this data based opinion.
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Sun 14 May 2023
Can a mediocre vegan runner match an omnivore professional?
Can a mediocre vegan runner match an omnivore professional?
My uncle worked at the YMCA, ran sometimes twice a day as part of job as a fitness coach. He
ran dozens of marathons in his life, with a known lifetime PR of 3:15 at the age of 50. He, like my
Dad and everyone else at the time, ate like everyone else--neither vegetarian or vegan.
I recently saw "The Game Changers" a documentary with the thesis, "Plant Based athletes recover
faster and so can work out harder and more frequently." I figure I should put that to the test.
My goal is to run a 3:15 marathon at the 2024 Marine Corps Marathon. That 13 months from now.
Can I do it?
You can take your recent races and plug them into calculators to predict your race time. Depending
on the calculator, it seems like my 5k, 10k and half marathon paces are not far from where they need to
be. I've never run a marathon before, so I only have predictions, which say I have quite a large gap
to close.
How will I do it?
Well, eating plant based of course. But also eating clean in the currently sense of clean- low saturated fat,
high fiber, high carb, etc.
Daily Goals
- Grits or oats for breakfast
- Something vegan for lunch and dinner
- Less restaurant food than usual
- Less
Supplements and why
- B12 - because there's no bacterial sources of b12 in modern vegan diet.
- D - because I'm indoors a lot
- Hibiscus - to reduce blood pressure by 5-10 points
- Omega 3 Fatty Acids, Lutein - Speculated to help with brain, nervous system, vision because I'm not young anymore.
- Magnesium - to replace magnesium lost to sweating
- No multivitamin - too many effects
Post workout
- 20g protein after workouts. Replace any protein lost, rebuild muscles, tendons, etc.
- Salt tablet, like Nuun. To prevent feeling exhaustion post workout
- Watermelon juice. Citruline is speculated to reduce muscle soreness, speed recovery
- Cracker or some sugary drink. Speeds restocking glycogen in liver and muscles
Pre-workout/Race
- Beet juice - temporary increase to Vo2 max/cardiovascular efficiency
- Taurine - 3g speculated to help with recovery
- Creatine - for speed bursts and has good data supporting its use in sports
- Caffeine - for speed, data appears to support net-benefit
Actions
- Hired a coach and will follow the plan as close as I can
- Sleep 11 hours a day
- Do something to tighten up scheduling in the rest of my life to make time for enough running
Information Tracking
- Use Garmin tracker
- Use Garmin chest strap HR tracker
- Use Strava and Final Surge
Gear
- Carbon plate shoes on race days only
- Maximalist shoes because I'm used to them and changing is as risky as any merit or demerit of a shoe type
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