Athletics Administrator Completes Boston Marathon

Shannon Singletary offers insights on training with the Center for Health and Sports Performance

Shannon Singletary (center) celebrates completing the Boston Marathon in April with daughter Jane Anne Singletary (left) and his wife, Molly Singletary. Singletary credits a friend and staff members at the UM Center for Health and Sports Performance and the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics for helping him refine his training for the race. Submitted photo

OXFORD, Miss. – Life’s a marathon, not a sprint.

That motto, a little help from a friend and guidance from the University of Mississippi Center for Health and Sports Performance gave Ole Miss athletics administrator Shannon Singletary the tools he needed to complete the Boston Marathon this spring.

Singletary serves as co-director of the Center for Health and Sports Performance, along with his duties in the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics, where he is senior associate athletics director for health and sports performance. He is also the sport administrator for Ole Miss track and field.

While he has run four marathons in his lifetime, Singletary has not always considered himself a runner.

“I’ve always been into weightlifting and some endurance, but I was never into marathon training,” he said. “Long story short, I ran the Double Decker 10K here, and a buddy of mine, Bret Beauchamp, who has ran the Boston Marathon 12 years in a row, looked at my times and said to me, ‘You give me two years and I’ll have you qualified for the Boston Marathon.’

“And I told him, ‘I’ll give you two years, but there is no way you’ll get me there.'”

To Singletary’s surprise, he not only accomplished this, but he found himself enjoying it.

“It’s a whole different concept than what I was used to,” he explained. “Brett laid it out for me. I knew what goals I had, what times I had to get. I knew what the workouts consisted of, and I just kind of fell in love with it.”

Singletary’s marathon training consisted of lots of running, but he emphasized the importance of focusing on completing three intense workouts a week.

“The first workout is going to be a track workout where you do a lot of interval training,” he said. “You run sprints – 400s, 800s or 1,600s. You try to keep a fast pace that doesn’t get you so tired that you can’t continue the workout but certainly still pushes you.

Shannon Singletary (right) cheers on Ole Miss cross country athletes at the 2016 SEC Championships in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Photo by Petre Thomas/Department of Intercollegiate Athletics

Singletary explained that the goal is to increase anaerobic threshold to delay extreme fatigue and avoid building up lactic acid in the muscles that causes the body to to shut down from exhaustion.

“The next hard workout of the week is a tempo run, where you are trying to run a consistent pace for 8, 10 or 12 miles. Then on the weekend, you are going to do a long run – maybe 15 miles, 20 miles or 22 miles.

“The other days, you’re just doing nice and slow recovery runs just to try to recover and build up mileage.”

For those interested in running a marathon, Singletary recommends going into training with a purpose and a clear mindset.

“Don’t look at it like you have to go out and run a bunch of miles,” he said. “Every time you go out to run, you want to run with a purpose and it needs to be a workout.

“So, have a speed day where you are doing short, faster workouts, a tempo day where it can be 3, 4, 5 or whatever miles, and then you have a longer day, but that longer day can be as slow as you want it to be until you build yourself up.”

Before runners even start working on marathon training, they need to be able to run 5-6 miles three or four days a week for at least a month, Singletary said. A certain level of training is required to prepare, but it is equally important not to overtrain, he said. Overtraining can lead to stress fractures and other overuse injuries.

“If you are overtraining, you are going to have symptoms like you are very tired but don’t sleep well,” Singletary said. “Your appetite may or may not change; you have general body ache; and if your resting heart rate is 10 or 15 beats per minute more than it usually is, it’s probably because your body is not recovering between workouts.”

Rest days are equally as important as training days, he said.

“Sometimes, less training is actually more beneficial,” Singletary said. “You have to have at least one full day of recovering or relaxing. You can’t continually break the body down without proper recovery.

Singletary credits trainers at the Center of Health and Sports Performance with helping him throughout his preparation. Besides trainers, the center includes dieticians and strength coaches.

“I went to them for advice on how many calories I should be eating, what I should be eating and what time of the day I should be eating,” he said. “All the way up until the day before the race, they laid out exactly what I should be eating.”

Shannon Singletary congratulates Ole Miss cross country athlete Waleed Suliman after a race at the 2018 SEC Championships in Auburn, Alabama, in October 2018. Photo by Petre Thomas/Department of Intercollegiate Athletics

Melinda Valliant, UM associate professor of nutrition, a registered dietitian and co-director of Center of Health and Sports Performance, oversaw Singletary’s nutrition throughout his training.

“Often, individuals who transition to endurance sports – like the marathon – are not aware of the fueling adjustments needed to support training demands and day-of-event needs,” Valliant said. “The nutrient that surprises most athletes is carbohydrate, as needs fluctuate with increases in running intensity and mileage.

Singletary was no exception, she said.

“His pre-marathon training diet was adequate for his training schedule that included shorter runs and weight training; however, as he started marathon training, it was apparent that he needed to increase his carbohydrate – and overall calorie – intake particularly around his training sessions that included higher intensities and longer durations,” Valliant explained.

“We worked to add to what he was currently eating and drinking to assure he was receiving adequate nutrients that would support his training and competition.”

Strength coaches in the athletics department helped balance Singletary’s workouts.

“They taught me that if I’m going to be running all those miles, I could probably be lifting weights just twice a week, and when I am lifting weights, make sure I am lifting heavy, but only lift two or three repetitions per set,” he said. “This would allow me to continue to build my strength but not have so much volume that it would make my runs bad.”

For Singletary, the work put into the marathon paid off with him finishing the race successfully. It also has encouraged him to continue running marathons.

“I’m 46 years old, and I had to run 3 hours and 25 minutes or better to qualify for the Boston Marathon, and because of the Center for Health and Sports Performance and my colleagues here, I qualified for the Boston Marathon with a time of 3 hours and 17 minutes,” he said.

“When I ran the 2019 Boston Marathon, I was able to cross the finish line in 3 hours, 15 minutes and 53 seconds, which was good enough to be requalified for the Boston Marathon next year.”

The Center for Health and Sports Performance in the School of Applied Sciences provides performance nutrition services, sports medicine cost containment, consulting to small colleges and high schools, concussion baseline testing and performance training while creating applied experiences for students to explore career fields within a comprehensive athletic health and sport performance environment.

For more information about the center or its services, email umchsp@olemiss.edu.