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the morning shakeout podcast

Episode 8 | Lou Serafini

the morning shakeout podcast

the morning shakeout podcast

Coaching, Marathons, Sports, Olympics, Running, Ultrarunning

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 6 March 2018

⏱️ 57 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“Running is all relative, you know? Everyone has their own goals and is trying to accomplish their own thing, whether it’s to break 4 in the mile, or to qualify for Boston, or just to simply finish their first marathon. Those runners gave me more support than I’ve ever gotten in my life. Having 30 people show up to a random hill workout on a Wednesday night and ask me about my training and what I’m training for and what I’m doing, and having that many random people interested, definitely got me motivated to train hard. And then hearing about their successes, and having people come to me and say that they PR’d in the 5K by two minutes or something like that, or that they were training for their first marathon, really inspired me to kind of take it to the next level.”Super excited to welcome Lou Serafini to the podcast. Two weekends ago, Serafini became the 514th American to break 4 minutes in the mile, running 3:59.33 at the Boston University Last Chance meet. The self-described blue-collar runner works full-time as the community manager at Boston-based Tracksmith and has established himself as one of the most recognizable figures on the local scene. The 26-year-old Serafini isn’t just known for his wheels, however; he has an infectious enthusiasm for the sport and has demonstrated an uncanny knack for connecting with runners of all levels. In this episode we discuss his most recent breakthrough and why he decided to get back on the track this past winter after pursuing the marathon for a few years post collegiately. We also get into the reasons why his relationship with running soured toward the end of his college career, what helped rekindle it, and how adopting a more relaxed approach toward training and racing has helped take his performances to the next level. “I think it’s really frustrating for a lot of people when they feel like they’re doing all that they can and they’re not seeing the times come down,” Serafini told me. “As runners, we’ve all been there, where you hit that plateau, and it’s frustrating, and you don’t know why. And for me, this indoor season, it’s been about kind of taking a step back from all of that and just having a really relaxed attitude toward everything, and just having fun with it.”We also talk about experimenting with high-mileage training, being coached by Randy Thomas after coaching himself to a marathon personal best of 2:17, the competitive running scene in Boston, which Serafini and friends half-jokingly call “The New Flagstaff,” how he got into running, dropping out of the 2016 Olympic Trials Marathon, the importance of connecting with and being more relatable to the average runner, and much, much more.This episode of the morning shakeout podcast was edited by John Isaac at BaresRecords.com.Complete show notes: https://www.themorningshakeout.com/podcast-episode-8-lou-serafini/Sign up here to get the morning shakeout email newsletter delivered to your inbox every Tuesday morning: https://www.themorningshakeout.com/subscribe/Support the morning shakeout on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/themorningshakeout

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Lu Cerfini, welcome to the Morning Shakeout Podcast.

0:03.0

Thanks for having me.

0:05.0

Now, your name isn't one that a lot of my listeners are going to

0:10.0

recognize right off the bat.

0:12.0

So in your own words, who is Lou Serafini?

0:15.6

I don't know. I think I'm probably a little better known locally in Boston, but I'd like to think of myself as just a blue-collar

0:26.1

runner in the Boston area that also works full-time and just kind of has fun with it in the community here.

0:36.6

And I'm sure you have plenty of fun with it, but you also run pretty fast.

0:38.4

And most recently, you just broke four minutes in the mile at the Boston University

0:44.9

last chance meet personal best for you. Let's talk about that race first of all.

0:51.1

You know you got back to the track this indoor season after taking a little bit of a

0:56.8

hiatus focusing on the marathon for a while. What was the impetus behind getting back on the

1:01.5

track this winter and pursuing the mile specifically?

1:05.0

Well it's definitely not something that I thought I would do when I graduated

1:11.0

from Boston College in 2013 and I had like a really rough last track season and

1:20.0

the last thing that I wanted to do was get back on the track when I graduated and to be honest I wasn't even really

1:27.9

running a time when I first graduated and didn't think I would ever really run competitively again, but I'm sure we'll get into it a little bit more, but I did eventually pick it up competitively.

1:39.0

I've done a few workouts that indicated that I thought maybe I could run a pretty good mile or at the very least run a PR and I grew up a mile or I think you did too so we can definitely relate to just loving the mile and loving that distance and

1:56.8

now it was a mile or in high school.

1:58.4

So, you know, there's, like I said, a couple workouts that I did and a few marathon build-ups that made me think that

2:04.4

maybe I could run close to four minutes. So this past fall was the first time really since

2:10.9

I graduated that I wasn't training for a marathon. I was

...

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