Nick is like a second coach for us all, sharing his golden experiences, to us, that we achieve more and more, and not to do anything wrong. Thank you Nick!
Nick, you said jokingly you didn’t have the patience to be a good coach, but this interview tells a different story. Your advice to this young man was excellent! Keep up the great mentoring of this next generation of runners!
Wise use of caffeine. Typical North American has a cup of joe when they wake up, one on the way to work, another at first break, one at lunch and so on all day. no wonder they are addicted and get that caffeine crash. I only have mine before a hard workout or race, make that boost count. Easy or rest days, no caffeine, flush it out of the system so you do not build a tolerance.
@@drew6927 whether it is run gum, coffee, energy drinks or just caffeine pills, only use it when you really need it, or your body will build up a tolerance, just like any stimulant drug. if you only use it when it really counts, that boost is much more effective.
Nick is like a second coach for us all, sharing his golden experiences, to us, that we achieve more and more, and not to do anything wrong. Thank you Nick!
the benefit of power naps, even if I do not feel tired, after any workout, a 20-30 min nap just does wonders.
Nick, you said jokingly you didn’t have the patience to be a good coach, but this interview tells a different story. Your advice to this young man was excellent! Keep up the great mentoring of this next generation of runners!
Exactly, waking up to an alarm clock is such a bad feeling that I don’t recover from it the whole day
Anybody can put in the miles and hard workouts, but the guys who do the little things separate themselves from the rest
Thanks for the tips
What kind of strenght training should you do? Should you focus on core or rather legs, for example plyometrics or deadlift?
Depends on what events you do
@@Mr._Reborn 800 meters
@@s1mon8ratt96 I would focus on core and plyos then, but you should still do the other stuff
Great vid.
I need to learn more about the functional training as a 40 year old office worker who runs before work so I need an alarm and take care of my kids
The thing about sleep is no matter how early I go to bed I wake up at the same time. But I think I get enough sleep which is 8-10 hours
Nice video! I also make running videos!
First great video
Me a teenager: 13 hours of sleep and still tired.
Thats over sleeping
It also can be genetic. My mom and I need 10 hours of sleep unlike most people who need 8.
@@doml3066 this doesn’t happen often, just when I go to bed too late
bad sleep
Wise use of caffeine. Typical North American has a cup of joe when they wake up, one on the way to work, another at first break, one at lunch and so on all day. no wonder they are addicted and get that caffeine crash. I only have mine before a hard workout or race, make that boost count. Easy or rest days, no caffeine, flush it out of the system so you do not build a tolerance.
Coffee? What about run gum?
@@drew6927 whether it is run gum, coffee, energy drinks or just caffeine pills, only use it when you really need it, or your body will build up a tolerance, just like any stimulant drug. if you only use it when it really counts, that boost is much more effective.