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So the ladies ran there miles...

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  • So the ladies ran there miles...

    The funny thing is, the girl this whole thing has kind of developed from wasn't there Monday. The coach told her (and this other girl that wasn't there) to get there times in too me by the end of the week. So here is there times at each lap. I don't have any expierence with what a difficult but reachable change in time would be.

    Girl 1 - 2:16, 4:44, 7:17, 9:41

    Girl 2 - 2:17, 4:47, 7:17, 9:39

    Girl 3 - 2:16, 4:41, 7:29, 9:57

    Girl 4 - 2:12, 5:13, 7:57, 10:25


    So I want to round it to a 30 second mark. Here's what I though

    Girl 1 - 7:00

    Girl 2 - 7:30

    Girl 3 - 7:30

    Girl 4 - 8:00

  • #2
    Did they all run at the same time or did you have them run individually?

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    • #3
      They ran at the same time, on the inside line.

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      • #4
        I think that if you taught them to pace themselves and worked on endurance (not just speed) that they would do better. The first three girls times were so close that it seemed like they were running together and the fourth girl just didn't care about keeping up. You might get more accurate times if they were running individually.

        As far as the goals, I think they should all be the same. Their times were so close on the first one/two laps that I think it is possible. Also, you're asking for a 30% increase on the first girls time. That seems a little steep to begin with. I would have all of them shooting for 8 minutes but they will need some coaching on breathing patterns etc.

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        • #5
          Ok, I wanted to get opinions before more detail. Girl 1 is my wife :) and she is still slighty post pregnancy as far as everything goes. I know she can do it and has the motivation and heart for it. The last girl is a big center. So she is quite a bit heavier. My wife is a 4,5(mostly 5 last year) but can/is, and will be playing primarily 4 this upcoming season. Girl 1 is a 1 primarily and very rarely a 2, and girl 2 is a 2,3 mostly a 2. If the basketball terms are not your expierence I will explain ;)

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Shibby
            Ok, I wanted to get opinions before more detail. Girl 1 is my wife :) and she is still slighty post pregnancy as far as everything goes. I know she can do it and has the motivation and heart for it. The last girl is a big center. So she is quite a bit heavier. My wife is a 4,5 but is, can, and will be playing primarily 4 this upcoming season. Girl 1 is a 1 primarily and very rarely a 2, and girl 2 is a 2,3 mostly a 2. If the basketball terms are not your expierence I will explain ;)
            I am not a basketball person so I feel lost but if girl one is your wife then she needs to be hitting up the six minute mark :D...

            I just don't know as much as you do about the individual girls. However, looking at the numbers on paper makes me think that they could all stay relatively close in their goals (except #4).

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            • #7
              Sounds good so far. Girl 4, I didn't want to make it to un-reachable, but I like the idea of it being with the rest so she can run the floor with the rest. Hell with basketball, the 5 needs to run more than the rest since he/she is running from rim to rim and is expected to be there first.

              I also like the idea of my wifre running a 6 flat :D, but I want to keep her motivating and not hating me :P

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              • #8
                From my limited knowledge of basketball it seems as if endurance would be more of a goal anyways. I know that breakaways are frequent but isn't that normally limited to 1-2 players as it is? I would have them doing series of 100 yard dashes mixed with the old "sprint the straights and walk the curves" routine to build endurance. Girls 1-3 definetly need to stick together in their goals (3 just seemed to get winded after a while). 4 kicked ass her first lap which means she can't be in terrible shape but she probably needs more water breaks than the other girls etc. Focus on her the most but keep the others at their limit.

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                • #9
                  Do you think girl 4 could drop her time another 30 seconds if she tried all summer? She isn't too heavy and I think that if she really tried she could loose some of that worthless weight. Here she is at 6'2".
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                  • #10
                    I'm not sure - can you work with them on diets?

                    On another note - great coaches set goals that are very hard but somewhat achievable. I'm sure you've learned these girls capabilities, desires and ambitions just by spending time with them. Base your goals on their abilities but push the hell out of them. Coaches have to set goals but they also have to instill the emotional will and desire to achieve greatness. If the athlete is not at that point yet it may be a mental obstacle you'll have to overcome with the athlete (you know the ones that are always pushing themselves - almost 100% sure your wife is this way - and the ones who are subconsciously saying "fuck it" on the last leg of the mile and not giving you everything they're capable of).

                    Also, I'm sure you're not just focused on the mile but I know in football each position got different attention. Defensive backs worked on agility, explosiveness and coverage while quarterbacks learned and practiced similar yet completely different things in the offseason. Is it possible your "heavy" girl doesn't HAVE to lose weight or run an eight minute mile and may just need to work on her rebound and shot percentages?

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                    • #11
                      Well it's not quite like football. Like I said before the big girl needs to go from rim to rim and idealy be the first. Where linemen need to move a short distance, push to the quarterback; recievers and cornerbacks need to run the field... Basketball players need to move in conjuction and into there place.

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                      • #12
                        Oh and no I can't work with them on diets. I gave them a BMR chart and a pregame meal selection starte half a day befor the game. Not only did they not follow it, they didn't have any questions to make it specific to them. They will not be in my constant supervision in about 2 weeks. Just a note, I am so proud of my wife. Not only is she pushing the hardest, but she will constanly ask for advice on her diet and lifitng. She wants to come in after the summer, embaress everyone else, and set her up to be able to go to Penn in fall of '07.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Shibby
                          Well it's not quite like football. Like I said before the big girl needs to go from rim to rim and idealy be the first. Where linemen need to move a short distance, push to the quarterback; recievers and cornerbacks need to run the field... Basketball players need to move in conjuction and into there place.
                          I didn't recall the part about the big girl having to be the first one under the rim all of the time. In that case kick her ass on the mile (8 min is a KILLER goal) and have her consistently running sprints in the straights and walking the curves etc. It makes more sense now that you said that - I guess I just missed that part...

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Shibby
                            Oh and no I can't work with them on diets. I gave them a BMR chart and a pregame meal selection starte half a day befor the game. Not only did they not follow it, they didn't have any questions to make it specific to them. They will not be in my constant supervision in about 2 weeks. Just a note, I am so proud of my wife. Not only is she pushing the hardest, but she will constanly ask for advice on her diet and lifitng. She wants to come in after the summer, embaress everyone else, and set her up to be able to go to Penn in fall of '07.
                            All of that will just set your wife apart from the others even further. She is what I consider an athlete anyways. The rest of the folks were probably just good enough to make it to a college team and don't "really" have any other ambitions like your wife obviously does.

                            I think I used this in your other thread a while back but remember - "you can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink..."

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                            • #15
                              Thanks, I wish the coach would be even half as passionate about this stuff as I am. I think he has a flaw there in letting them learn too much for themselves. He is a great coach and has assisited coaching in the pac 10 and another midewest confrence. So I don't want to challenge his authority too much, but he has come to me for advice on this subject.

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