Something about Emi's running habits
Posted: Tue Sep 08, 2015 9:52 pm
I was thinking back to her training recently, and something struck me that has struck me before, and I feel the need to resolve it. It's said that she does sprints as her specialty, but her training mostly seems to consist of doing decently long runs.
Problem is, every sprinter I've ever met who does well at meets has the endurance of a... person without much endurance, and when training on a track team with them, they never seem to do more than a few miles on their longest days, instead doing quick, intense workouts on hard days and nothing but starts/lifting mostly on easier days.
How, then, is Emi so fast that she's used to winning her sprinting events, yet she also has the endurance to run miles and miles every day? I've considered the fact that running longer is just a thing she does with Hisao and she only seems to do that so long because of Hisao being easily impressed and the game taking place from his POV, but she factually does at least 5K on some days, and that's considered super long for a lot of really good sprinters, but she doesn't seem that tired. That would be fine since even then it could be separate from her actual training, but she does that even when Hisao isn't around, and then still has the energy for practice.
Her running addiction could explain that to an extent, but the muscles she'd be developing wouldn't be for sprinting in that case, which again brings up the issue of how she can move that fast- enough to win the 200m, a very short event where even partial seconds are huge. Usually when you learn to run even moderately long distances, that cuts down on your speed. Cross country runners oftentimes struggle at sprinting even at full energy levels not due to being tired, but just because they don't have the rapidity for that sort of thing. Their strength lies in their ability to be steady with lesser surges.
Am I missing something that she says or does anywhere that could fix this, or is this just one of those things where the reader needs to accept that she's just got a crazy battery in her and can go cross country long and sprinter fast because of that without questioning it too deeply?
Problem is, every sprinter I've ever met who does well at meets has the endurance of a... person without much endurance, and when training on a track team with them, they never seem to do more than a few miles on their longest days, instead doing quick, intense workouts on hard days and nothing but starts/lifting mostly on easier days.
How, then, is Emi so fast that she's used to winning her sprinting events, yet she also has the endurance to run miles and miles every day? I've considered the fact that running longer is just a thing she does with Hisao and she only seems to do that so long because of Hisao being easily impressed and the game taking place from his POV, but she factually does at least 5K on some days, and that's considered super long for a lot of really good sprinters, but she doesn't seem that tired. That would be fine since even then it could be separate from her actual training, but she does that even when Hisao isn't around, and then still has the energy for practice.
Her running addiction could explain that to an extent, but the muscles she'd be developing wouldn't be for sprinting in that case, which again brings up the issue of how she can move that fast- enough to win the 200m, a very short event where even partial seconds are huge. Usually when you learn to run even moderately long distances, that cuts down on your speed. Cross country runners oftentimes struggle at sprinting even at full energy levels not due to being tired, but just because they don't have the rapidity for that sort of thing. Their strength lies in their ability to be steady with lesser surges.
Am I missing something that she says or does anywhere that could fix this, or is this just one of those things where the reader needs to accept that she's just got a crazy battery in her and can go cross country long and sprinter fast because of that without questioning it too deeply?