Home
Greg's Running Journal
Recent Entries 
13th-Nov-2009 12:25 pm - NYC Marathon
Racing
New York City Marathon
Start time: 11/1/09, 10:00am
Location: Staten Island, Brooklyn, Queens, The Bronx, Manhattan
Distance: 26.2 miles
Average pace: 11:08min/mile
Total Miles For November: 26 miles
Total Miles For 2009: 732 miles

Still need to write this one up, but my log book has entries since then that which need to be entered, so... a placeholder.
3rd-May-2009 07:52 pm - Potomac River Run Marathon
Racing
Start time: 5/3/09, 5:45am
Location: Mount Vernon Trail
Distance: 26.2 miles
Average pace: 10:48min/mile
Total Miles For May: 26 miles
Total Miles For 2009: 287 miles

Cross-posted in main journal )
13th-Nov-2007 07:32 pm - Outer Banks Marathon
Racing

Outer Banks Marathon
Start time: 11/11/07, 7:20am
Location: Outer Banks, North Carolina
Distance: 26.2 miles
Finishing time: 4:29:06
Average pace: 10:16min/mile

I've joked in the past that with every marathon I learn something new, and that I'm really sick of having to keep learning things! But true to form, I learned an important lesson in this year's marathon, even as I think I approached my race the smartest yet. The idea was to use the "10/10/10" approach; miles 1-10 at a 10min/mile, miles 11-20 at a 9min/mile, and then (if I was feeling it) the last 10k (miles 21-26.2) at an 8:30min/mile. This would have been absolutely perfect on a completely flat course. What I didn't take into account, though, was the elevation profile for the Outer Banks Marathon.

The first ten miles were fantastic. I ran the first mile with Butch and Chris, which was a real joy, and I felt a tiny bit bad when I left them towards the end of that mile but they had a different pace plan (and were also doing a run/walk, which I wasn't) so when they stopped to stretch I took it as a sign to keep going. Running through woods, along the water, and then around the Wright Brothers Monument? Fantastic. I felt bad for anyone who ran the half marathon if only because they missed all of this amazing scenery, the best part of the course by far.

Miles 11-13 run through the Nags Head Woods Nature Preserve; the first two miles on a packed dirt road, the third mile on a narrow off-road trail, and all three of these miles are extremely hilly. I should have shifted my planned paces around a bit to compensate for this; planning on not pushing here and expending the strength elsewhere. (As crazy as that section was, though, I must admit that I really liked it. It was gorgeous.) As it is, looking at my splits below, you can see a huge dip on speed for that off-road mile in particular. Additionally, miles 14-19 are at a slight uphill grade and along a highway, which is less than fun and also sapped my strength more than I'd have imagined.

Of course, some things you can't compensate for. Around mile 14.5, a car tried to pull out onto the course and only stopped when I screamed at it—all of about a foot and a half from me. Shaken, I continued on, but a minute later my right calf seized up and never really let go. Now I'm not saying that me having tensed up from the near-miss from the car made the calf tense up, but I do think that it contributed. I stretched as best I could for a solid minute and then continued on. I must admit I was sad that my parents, Suzanne, and Charlie never saw me up until that point in the race because I was definitely not looking my best from that moment on!

I pushed on as best I could, stretching a tiny bit every mile or two, and starting at mile 20 taking little 30-second walk-breaks because my knees were starting to ache as well. When I started the 25th mile, I was aching so much that I just had to walk the vast majority of it. I couldn't even face the "just 2.2 more miles!" that I kept telling myself, finally making a deal that when I finished mile 25, I would start running again and not stop until I was done. And sure enough, that's what happened. I didn't get the sub-4:22 finish I was hoping for (I'm fairly convinced if it hadn't been for the calf problem I would've hit that), but I did the best I could, and this was the first marathon for which I didn't enter it with a run/walk plan.

Next year? I'm going to tackle my race the same way, but will pay more attention to the course map when doing so; if necessary I'll shift some of the planned paces around to better compensate for what's ahead. Little by little, I'm getting there.

A mile-by-mile breakdown in terms of pace. )

Oh yes, and... statistics! For my age group (M 30-34), I came in 47th out of 74, for a 63rd percentile. Eh.

4th-Dec-2006 04:48 pm - A week later...
AIDS Marathon Logo
Start time: 11/26/05, 9:00am
Location: Firenze Marathon
Distance: 26.2 miles
Finishing time: 4:46:48
Run:Walk ratio: 6:1 through mile 20, then... not so much
Average pace: 10:57min/mile

I unfortunately don't have lots of mile splits like last year, thanks to the GPS having a minor fit somewhere along the way (apparently I ran a 25.5 mile marathon), which probably was in no small part thanks to narrow windy alleys and streets winding through parts of Florence. I do, however, have some splits available.

Distance Segment Time Segment Pace Overall Time Overall Pace
5K 30:39 9:53 30:39 9:53
10K 30:27 9:49 1:01:06 9:51
15K 30:57 9:59 1:32:03 9:53
13.1mi 37:28 9:52 2:09:31 9:53
25K 25:40 10:42 2:35:11 10:00
30K 35:22 11:25 3:10:33 10:13
35K 39:25 12:43 3:49:58 10:35
40K 39:38 12:47 4:29:36 10:51
26.2mi 17:12 12:44 4:46:48 10:57

Notes:
Between 15K and 13.1mi is a 3.8 mile segment.
Between 13.1mi and 25K is a 2.4 mile segment
Between 40K and 26.2mi is a 1.35 mile segment

It should be a surprise to no one at all that it was around the 25K mark that Susan and I fell behind Tod and Dana. It is always interesting to see where some places where I felt I was still decreasing in speed was in fact consistent) if slow, essentially everything past the 30K mark (or 18.64 miles). Ah well, it's always good to know where everything went wrong, as well as where one was pretty darn on the ball. There's a lot I need to work on for next year. But hey, still a PR. So that's definitely something. But it is frustrating to look at, say, my 20-miler from earlier this year and know that I did the entire thing at a solid 10min/mile pace that I could've done even faster towards the end of if necessary!
1st-Nov-2005 08:21 pm - MCM2005
AIDS Marathon Logo
Start time: 10/30/05, 8:45am
Location: The Marine Corps Marathon
Distance: 26.2 miles
Finishing time: 4:57:34
Run:Walk ratio: 5:1 through mile 19, then... 4:1 if I was doing well
Average pace: 11:21min/mile

Ok... and now, the moment of truth (or perhaps wincing at part)... my mile splits. See if you can see exactly where everything went south!

I know this is boring to most people. )

Mile 08: Mark took the lead of the group there and I was running with Julie. This is, frustratingly in hindsight, exactly where we lost each other. The group was starting to pull away, Julie said not to hang back... and I caught up with Mark and the front of the group in time to hit the marker and realize that we'd gone much faster than planned.

Miles 11-14: Everything was going perfectly to our plan, here. And then... suddenly... Oof.

Mile 20: I'd already switched to the 4:1 here and for a mile, almost nothing had changed. I hadn't picked up any speed but I wasn't losing any ground either.

Mile 21: And then the forever uphill stretch of the 14th Street Bridge hit. And then some. I felt like I was face-plowing into the pavement and I never recovered.

Mile 24: Funny story here. I had to go to the bathroom as soon as the race started. Finally, I couldn't take it anymore and I used an empty port-a-potty. I remember looking at the time when I entered and left and noted that it was exactly 40 seconds. I was then fairly convinced that my finishing time would be somewhere between 5:00:01 and 5:00:39 and this bathroom stop would've been the reason why. Well, it wasn't... but if you subtract those 40 seconds? It would've been 12:37. This makes me laugh only because I was convinced each mile was slower and slower.

Mile 25: And this is where, going up a ramp, my legs started cramping like mad and I suddenly had a brief horrible thought of, "I don't think I can run anymore." (I could, thankfully. It passed.)

Last but not least, keeping in mind that "did not finish" runners are not in the list (and by all reports that's quite a few) my statistics were overall #11280 out of 19122, and for men 30-34 #1201 out of 1749. STILL the bottom third of my age bracket. Bah!

On the brighter side, October was officially my highest mileage month ever: 103.2 miles. That just makes me smile.
1st-Oct-2005 10:21 pm - 26 down, change to go
AIDS Marathon Logo
Start time: 10/01/05, 7:00am
Location: W&OD Trail
Distance: 26 miles
Run:Walk ratio: 3:1
Average pace: 12:45min/mile

Ta da! The last long run of the season was today... aka the big 26-miler. Like any distance over 14 miles, we ran at a slower pace than our normal training pace, in order to keep from hurting yourself. We were supposed to hit a 13:00min/mile pace, but I think everyone was just too amped up (and it's hard, to be honest, to slow yourself down two minutes per mile) and our average (not including very long water stops and several bathroom breaks for the group) was really closer to a 12:45min/mile.

We had a lot of people out on the trail, both in our group and out there in general. It's always fun to see familiar faces: [info]grok was coaching, [info]jhim was running, and [info]threegoldfish was water volunteering. All of them brought big smiles to my face every time I saw them; it makes such a huge difference out there.

Our group did a great job of staying together; we had one person stop after 6 miles because they were suffering from a cold and belatedly realized that discretion was the better part of valor, and two runners zoomed off into the distance with about three miles to go, but no real incidents were going on. Everyone was looking good and strong, and I was proud to be both leading the group as well as running with them.

Best of all? Despite being at a deliberately slower pace than what's planned for race day, and with some hugely long stops for people to use the restrooms and such, both Julie and I beat our finishing time for the 2004 Marine Corps Marathon. (Generally speaking, the rule of thumb is that the practice marathon will be about an hour longer than your real marathon.) Quite honestly, barring disaster I think we're going to have a tremendous race on the big day itself. 29 days and counting!
This page was loaded Jan 8th 2010, 11:47 pm GMT.