NOTE FROM THE COACH

Do you have a "drinking problem"? Most of us do when it comes to staying hydrated on a daily basis. It is hard to track how much you are really drinking or remember if you finished your glass of water at lunch. Did you remember to drink something in the morning when you first got up? My solution to this is pretty simple. First thing in the morning I fill up all the bottles I need for the day. The recommended amount of fluids for an adult is 8x8oz (13 cups) (which is the amount of the first water bottles with red) for athletes that usually isn't enough but it is a start. I like to start the day with drinking some Emergen-C (just a packet filled with fizzy stuff and vitamins) and then move on to plain water. These are the two red bottles. If the weather is really hot and I am sweating a lot I add the Emergen-C Electro blend to bottle number 2. For my workout I might have a bottle of water with sports drink during and then one water bottle for after. Then my final bottle is for the afternoon. This really allows me to see if I am getting in the hydration I need. It is an easy way to measure it AND it puts all those water bottles we have to good use. If you work in an office simply put them all into a small cooler and carry them with you. Ideally it is almost empty by the end of the day. No matter how you manage your hydration the key is to STAY HYDRATED!

~Coach Katie
March 19, 2015 - In This Issue:


Support our sponsors!

LATEST RESULTS

Parris Island Sprint Triathlon 3-14-15

Josh Ludwig 57:55 1st Military Male

Will Fowler 1:00:52 3rd AG

*Kimberley Westbury 1:01:33 - 2nd OA, 1st 

         Masters and 5 seconds off of first place

         who is 30 YEARS YOUNGER!!!

Bubba Gillis 1:01:42 - 2nd AG

Carol Brunson 1:03:37 1st Open, 3rd OA

Lisa Powell 1:10:28 1st AG

Nicole Ramsbey 1:10:31 2nd AG

Melissa Ludwig 1:10:38 1st in AG

Bob Boyle 1:11:03

Kelly Danias 1:15:36 2nd in AG

Kim Parenti 1:15:36

Melinda Lindberg 1:17:28

Chris Schwendimann 1:19:06  

Mary Biebel 1:23 2nd AG

Manny Cintron 1:21:11

Deana Gasque 1:35

 

GA Death Race Ultramarathon Trail Race (68ish miles) 3-14th & 15th

Chris Cresente 16hours and 51min! 51st place!

 

Asheville Half Marathon 3-15-15

Steph Hance 2:26 following the plan!

 

Peyton's Wacky 5K (trail race)- Middleton Place, SC - 3-14-15

Rachel Crunk (running with her daughter) 22:17 - 2nd OA (Yes, her daughter Chloe won!)

 

NYC Half Marathon 3-15-15

Margaret Marrano - 1:48

 

 

RACING THIS WEEK

Indoor TT @ Tri Mania, VA 3-21-15

Mark Walter

 

Atlanta Marathon 3-22-15

Brian Norton

 

St. Patty's Day 5K, Asheville, NC 3-18-15

Heidi Ewing

James Ewing

 


ATHLETE OF THE WEEK

Chris Crescente

 

                      

Goal race for the year: Myrtle Beach Marathon to qualify for Boston! *(Maybe a little 100 mile running race and B2B Iron Distance.)

 

Years with Malone Coaching: 3

 

Random thoughts: I climb mountains and brew beer

 

Profession: Software engineer

 

Originally from: Mauldin, SC

 

Currently live:
Simpsonville, SC

 

 


Last Weeks Photos
 
 
 
               Will                                     Nicole  

NEW MALONE COACHING T's in ACTION!! Great Group!

  Rachel and Chloe

  Melissa & Josh

       
        Mary B.                                  Kimberly


     
           Carol                                        Bubba


UPCOMING GROUP WORKOUTS & RACES
Where we will be (2 week overview)

March 21st 8:00 AM Group FreeHub Ride

March 25th 6pm FreeHub WOMEN ONLY! beginner Group Ride- contact FREEHUB for info

March 26th 5:00 AM Swim Workout (MTY)

March 28th 9:00am-12pm
Beardon-Josey Cycling Team clinic (Great Escape - Spartanburg)

March 29th 8:00 AM GROUP RUN- Leave from Starbucks Downtown Greenville (550 S. Main St.) NEW MEETING LOCATION!

March 31 5:30 AM Group Run- Caine Halter YMCA

April 1st 6pm FreeHub WOMEN ONLY Group Ride- Contact FreeHub

April 2nd 5:00 AM Swim Workout (MTY)

April 4th 8:00 AM Group FreeHub Ride
  
  Website Calendar for complete listing
NEWS THIS WEEK
Yoga for the Endurance Athlete
ARTICLE on Training Peaks by Sarah Oliver- GCM Coach (formerly with Malone Coaching)

 

Endurance athletes are constantly striving to find the appropriate balance within their bodies so they may continue to progress in their training. Injuries and mental burnout can inhibit the athlete's ability to consistently train and progress, resulting in a loss of precious time towards improvement. Athletes ranging from the novice beginner triathlete, to the professional cyclist, to the ultra marathoner are turning to yoga to offset these challenges by balancing strength, flexibility, and mental prowess.

 

Physical Benefits

Endurance athletes spend the majority of their time in the forward moving plane of movement. Runners and cyclists propel their bodies forward through recruitment of the hip flexors, quadriceps, hamstrings, glutes, and core. Swimmers propel their bodies forward through the repetitive movement of rotating the shoulders, utilizing the pectoralis (chest) muscles, trapezius and latissimus dorsi (upper/mid back) muscles, and the core. The repetitive nature of these sports put the body at risk for muscular imbalances, which could eventually result in injury. Yoga encourages an individual to utilize both the superficial and deep muscle groups, resulting in appropriate balance in strength and flexibility. Overall body awareness and balance can improve with a better sense of where the body is moving in space-an important skill to have for appropriate technique in any sport.

 

Mental Benefits

An important component to both training and racing that all too often can be overlooked is the mental component of the sport. Endurance sports take an incredible amount of focus, persistence, patience, and adaptability. An athlete can be in the best shape of his or her life, but if on race day their head is not it, neither will their body be. The practice of yoga improves mental focus by utilizing both the breath and the body as an anchor for the mind. The practitioner becomes more aware of their own thoughts as they improve their ability to be fully present with their body and breath. Yoga teaches the individual to stay calm, focus, and breathe with whatever shows up on their mat, and athletes can certainly take these skills with them into their sport when the going gets tough.

Specifically for athletes, find a yoga style that encourages you to utilize strength to support your flexibility. The safest way to take the body into a more intense range of motion is through supported strength and/or appropriate yoga props. Athletes in particular should support any deep stretches with strength, as there may already be vulnerable muscular imbalances resulting from the repetitive nature of their sport.

The following poses are excellent at building strength and flexibility in common muscular imbalances in the endurance athlete:

  1. Downward Facing Dog- Stretches the hamstrings and low back, builds strength in the quadriceps, trapezius muscles, rhomboids (muscles between the shoulder blades), adductors (inner thighs), and transverse abdominis (deep core.)
  2. Upward Facing Dog- Stretches the ankles, hip flexors, pectoralis muscles (chest), builds strength in the glutes, hamstrings, trapezius muscles, rhomboids, spinal extensors.
  3. Crescent Lunge- Stretches the hip flexors, pectoralis muscles, strengthens the quadriceps, adductors, gastrocnemius and soleus (calf muscles), quadriceps, trapezius muscles, and rhomboids.
  4. Pigeon- Stretches the hip abductors (outer hips/glutes), hip flexors
  5. Happy Cow Face- Stretches the hip abductors, triceps, pectoralis muscles, strengthens the hip adductors, trapezius muscles, and rhomboids.
Yoga Poses for Endurance Athletes 
Yoga Poses for Endurance Athletes

Yoga for many athletes has become the "glue" that holds them together. The practice keeps the body flexible and strong and the mind supple and resilient. Consider adding a weekly yoga practice into your schedule to find, maintain, or improve your mind and body balance.  

NEW TEAM T-SHIRTS!

Pictures from Parris Island are to the left- many feature the shirts received in their packets!

Thanks to athlete and graphic designer Kimberley Westbury for helping our team look good this year. We pulled out all the stops to put you in the softest, best looking t-shirts ever this year. T-shirts support on sponsors so please remember to pull on your t-shirts after you race!

We will start sending out t-shirts next week.

Here is a sneak peak:

Women's front (this is a picture of the actual shirt on the press)

 
 




Men's Front (sorry they were not printed yet - but it is pretty basic but BOLD!)

 





More weekend pictures
These came from Manny Cintron at Parris Island. Thanks for sharing, Manny!

            

SWIM
Try Sneaky Breathing

It's fair to say that if something is going to go wrong with your stroke technique, it will probably go wrong whilst you are breathing. One very common problem you might have in your own stroke without realising it is over-rotation whilst breathing.

On a normal stroke you might rotate your shoulders and hips to around 45-60 degrees, which is the correct amount:

When you breathe you tend to rotate a little more on that stroke and if this goes much beyond 60 degrees you are over-rotating. In fact it's common to see swimmers rotating to 80 or 90 degrees at this point in their stroke:

Over-rotation is a problem because it causes you to lose balance in the water, the result being a scissoring of the legs to regain your stability, creating a lot of drag:

Over-rotation can be caused by problems such as the lead arm collapsing whilst breathing (a classic Bambino problem) or a crossover in front of the head (a classic Arnie problem) and of course you should work on correcting those faults directly (we suggest you use the fault fixer processes in our new web-app coaching system to do that). However, even when you've corrected your stroke, over-rotation may remain in place as a bit of habit. To help overcome that, try the 'sneaky breathing' visualisation:

Sneaky Breathing

What you are trying to achieve is less rotation of the body when you breathe, you don't want to remain completely flat but there is little risk of this happening as we all feel a strong urge to rotate to breathe when swimming freestyle.

Moving from over-rotation to normal rotation will mean that the breath happens a little quicker than normal, feeling like you are taking quick or 'sneaky' breath in without interrupting the overall rhythm of your stroke.

To make this happen, ensure you are keeping your head low in the water as you breath, looking across the pool and angling your mouth like Popeye chews his spinach:

You've already exhaled into the water so you simply turn your head to the side as your body rotates, quickly inhale and then return the head back to the water. The whole process should happen quite quickly - in fact when you watch elite swimmers like Jono Van Hazel if you blink you might miss them breathing altogether:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3HhNlysFDs

So try using sneaky breathing the next time you swim. The result you are looking for is for your stroke to feel much more rhythmical and flowing with much less interruption from the process of breathing. Give it a try!

Swim Smooth!

ARTICLE FOUND: ON SWIM SMOOTH'S BLOG 

 

BIKE
Important Announcement:



RUNNING DEPARTMENT 
Save the Date!

Ache Around the Lake 8K & The Ouch 2-miler
Landrum SC/Tryon NC (2 state run)
September 19th 2015
8 AM Start
Early registration $25 per person
$20 for a group/family of 3 registering together


COUPONS    
   


 
  Remember to use the code CO-MALONE to get your HUGE discount!

GREAT DEAL ON GARMIN:

Where to go? 
Greenville Custom Bicycles
 
What the deal is:
Garmin 920xt with heart rate for $449.00
 
Our contact: Tom Haedrich 
Greenville Custom Bicycles 
30 Orchard Park Dr #16,
Greenville, SC 29615
Just reference the GHS/GCM deal upon checkout.


Supercuts Locations
Visit a Supercuts near you!

Pelham Commons - Greenville

215 Pelham Road

Greenville

242-1490

 

Hudson Corners - Greer

2115 Old Spartanburg Road

Greer

322-5903

 

Taylors Square - Taylors

3023 Wade Hampton Boulevard

Taylors

268-2268

 

Easley Town Center - Easley

128 Rolling Hills Circle

Easley

855-4800

 

Dorman Centre - Spartanburg

120 Dorman Commerce Drive

Spartanburg

595-3558

 

Hillcrest Shopping Center - Spartanburg

1931 A East Main Street

Spartanburg

585-2300

 

 

(Coupon only valid at these locations)  

 

NUTRITION




FOR SALE

GARMIN: 

CONTACT Peter directly:

[email protected]

 

Garmin 910XT (w/ premium HRM)
$275
purchased Jun 2013


______________________________________________________________________________

2011 Trek Lexa SL
$800
Size 54
Located in Easley
Contact Kim McKinney
864-915-4889



Katie Malone  
864-415-5804