Monday, December 31, 2007
Last week of 2007
Mon: 5 miles @ 7:37, easy run except for a small stretch being chased by a dog
Tue: 8.6 miles @ 7:39, nice Christmas morning run
Wed: 25 min. pool run followed by 30 min. of core work.
Thu: 7.2 miles @ 7:24, fartlek run, some sections at a 6:00 pace
Fri: off
Sat: ~5 miles, including an indoor mile race
Sun: 16.1 miles @ 7:38, tough long run along the Boston course, especially after indoor race Saturday.
Total: 41.9 miles
The highlight was the indoor mile I raced on Saturday, courtesy of some encouragement from Flash. Just to give you a little background, the mile was my first love in high school and early on I had grandiose dreams of running the mile for Stanford. I didn't ever reach those lofty heights, but a 4:27 in high school wasn't too shabby. I haven't run a competitive mile since then, so this was going to be an interesting race on so many levels. I'm not exactly in the greatest shape either, having averaged maybe 20-25 miles in the last month. I had no idea what I could run, so I entered a seed time 5:00 flat. This put me as the 1st seed in section 6... I didn't like having the 1st seed, but I felt pretty relaxed at the start. Wow, its so strange being in a track race again. I knew I couldn't just settle into a pace and cruise, especially with the tight corners indoors. I would also have to dose my efforts. Generally in short races, you need to be in striking distance at the 3/4 point (lap 6 out 8), otherwise you have no chance. However, if you expend all your energy just getting into position, you'll have nothing left for the final kick. Clearly too much to keep track.... this was going to be interesting.
The gun went off and I put in just enough effort to keep my position through the 1st turn. I probably positioned myself too close to the inside and found myself boxed in by beginning of the 2nd lap. Soon, I was getting passed on the outside and knew I had to make a move to preserve my position. Fortunately, I was getting some good race direction from the Flash, who kept encouraging me to maintain my position. I remember passing through the halfway point at around 2:34 and in 6-7th place. Breathing was starting to get labored, but my legs felt reasonably good. I made a decisive move at lap 5, swinging into lane 2 so I could get myself into 4th or 5th place. I knew it wasn't the most efficient move, but I just couldn't afford to get boxed in. By the end of lap 6, I was in 5th place but really starting to feel it. I put in a burst to get back in contact with 3rd place and then tried to drop the hammer on the bell lap. I passed the third place runner and was gaining on the top two guys but just ran out of track. I had probably made my move to late. Here are the results. There were some serious elite runners in the mix in section 1! I still can't believe I broke 5:00 and I think with a little better race tactics, I can see myself getting down to the high 4:40s. This was a real cool experience and I've forgotten how much race strategy goes into track racing. I think I'll revisit this race a couple more times this winter just to add some spice to the training.
Off to NYC for the New Year's festivities!
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Philadelphia Marathon Race Report 2007 - Chasing a Sub Three
1. Drive from
2. A load of laundry, washed, dried, and folded
3. Average length of a meal at French Laundry
4. Roasting a 9 pound leg of lamb
5. Run a marathon?
The final week
Hard to believe this day is finally here. This sub-3 hour goal has been my singular motivation since early summer. Unlike any other race, running a quality marathon requires the convergence of many positive factors (consistent training, cool weather, good health, and a fair course), factors that are often out of control. As a result, this pre-marathon build-up is and has felt long. I have felt ready for this marathon for about a month and hearing others’ success stories has only added to my anxiety. I know this all sounds fatalistic, but my training has gone so well over the last 3 months that I’ve been waiting for the house of cards to come down.
The build-up
And so… Friday dawned full of anxiety. The cold had largely cleared, but I was still achy and very nervous. My wife came to pick me up and then we headed out to pick up my friend Chris, who was doing his 1st ever marathon. He had come down with something on Monday, and I was trying to pump him up with my experience from
Now comes the part that still stresses me out. Since it’s a long rant, I’ve included it in a separate blog entry, entitled Philly Marathon review. Check it after you read this, as its kind of a spoiler. It starts from when we left for the expo up at the
Race Day
I was up at
As I made my way to the start line, I mulled my race strategy. My time goals again came in threes. At a minimum, I wanted to go sub-3, which I thought was doable even though I had gotten sick. A more reasonable goal was to shoot for a
Miles 0-7
I squeezed into the front of the pack and spent the next 10-15 minutes watching the elites warm-up. I even took a loosen-up jog just to see what it feels like. I was waiting to get booted from the area, but it never happened. Meanwhile, the PA guy was still rambling away. He mentioned something about the delayed start because they were still towing away cars that were illegally parked on the course. What a fiasco. Next thing I knew, he was counting down to the start in English, French, German, and Spanish. Where was the national anthem? I settled into a comfortable pace. About 200m in, I heard my name and turned around to see Brian from my running club. We had talked about running together, but from what he was saying, it sounded like he wanted to match wits with a friend further ahead. We stayed together for about mile and a half, but soon eased back as I realized the pace was getting too fast. As we made the turn onto
Miles 7-14
I was mentally preparing for the hills ahead as we made the right turn on
Miles 14-21
I took another GU at the top of the hill and then went down what felt like the steepest downhill of the course. I began to wonder about the “fast and flat” course. We were now back on
Me: “Did you run the Boston Firefighter 10K?”
Pat: “Yeah, I assume you ran it, too?”
Me: “Yeah, I remember you passing me at mile 2.”
Pat: (sudden hint of recognition) “Yeah, but you passed me when it counted.”
Me: (slightly embarrassed) “So what time are you shooting for?”
Pat: “Not sure, this is my first one.”
Me: “Well, I’m hoping for a
Pat: (no response)
Spectator: “Stop chatting, you’re running a marathon!”
Me: “good luck!”
Pat: (pulls away)
OK, so he wasn’t the friendliest guy… or maybe I should have listened to the spectator and just kept my mouth shut. I settled into a comfortable rhythm and tailed a pair of guys that were sharing one water bottle. My next couple miles slowed from a
Miles 21-26.2
At this point, I was running for the 22 mile marker and familiar territory. My legs were getting tired, but I was still able to hold a reasonable cadence. My mile splits had slipped to
Pat: “You got me again.”
Me: “C’mon, work with me, less than two miles to go.”
I didn’t even have energy to turn around to see if he would keep up. Chris came running the other way shortly before mile 25 and looked pretty good. I flashed him a thumbs up and kept on trudging. Mile 25 was one of the slowest (
Mile | Split | Lap | Avg | Max | Comments | Avg Lap |
1 | 6:49 | 6:49.5 | 147 | 160 | 6:49.5 | |
2 | 13:16 | 6:26.6 | 162 | 165 | 6:38.1 | |
3 | 19:43 | 6:27.2 | 163 | 172 | 6:34.4 | |
4 | 26:29 | 6:45.2 | 160 | 164 | 6:37.1 | |
5 | 33:09 | 6:40.1 | 162 | 166 | 6:37.7 | |
6 | 39:50 | 6:41.6 | 162 | 165 | 6:38.4 | |
7 | 46:26 | 6:36.2 | 156 | 169 | 6:38.1 | |
8 | 53:07 | 6:41.0 | 165 | 170 | hill | 6:38.4 |
9 | 59:35 | 6:27.4 | 160 | 166 | 6:37.2 | |
10 | 1:06:25 | 6:50.3 | 163 | 168 | hill | 6:38.5 |
11 | 1:13:18 | 6:53.2 | 155 | 163 | pit stop | 6:39.8 |
12 | 1:19:50 | 6:31.5 | 160 | 164 | 6:39.2 | |
13 | 1:26:21 | 6:31.2 | 163 | 166 | 6:38.5 | |
14 | 1:32:59 | 6:37.9 | 162 | 165 | hill | 6:38.5 |
15 | 1:39:39 | 6:39.7 | 162 | 167 | 6:38.6 | |
16 | 1:46:19 | 6:40.2 | 161 | 164 | 6:38.7 | |
17 | 1:53:02 | 6:42.8 | 162 | 164 | 6:38.9 | |
18 | 1:59:44 | 6:42.5 | 163 | 166 | 6:39.1 | |
19 | 2:06:29 | 6:45.1 | 163 | 166 | overpass | 6:39.4 |
20 | 2:13:16 | 6:47.3 | 162 | 166 | 6:39.8 | |
21 | 2:20:02 | 6:45.7 | 161 | 165 | 6:40.1 | |
22 | 2:26:48 | 6:45.3 | 162 | 166 | 6:40.3 | |
23 | 2:33:34 | 6:46.4 | 161 | 165 | 6:40.6 | |
24 | 2:40:22 | 6:48.2 | 161 | 163 | 6:40.9 | |
25 | 2:47:12 | 6:50.0 | 162 | 165 | 6:41.3 | |
26 | 2:54:03 | 6:50.6 | 163 | 165 | 6:41.6 | |
26.2 | 2:55:31 | 1:28.3 | 164 | 165 | 6:41.9 | |
Total | 2:55:31 | 6:41.6 | 161 | 172 | ||
1st | 1:27:06 | 6:38.6 | 160 | 172 | ||
2nd | 1:28:25 | 6:44.7 | 162 | 167 |
Post-race
I waited at the finish line for Pat to cross and gave him a quick congratulatory word for breaking 3 hours on his first attempt…. then made a beeline for the bus area to find my wife. Miraculously we ran into each other; she was racing back from the car after finishing the half, camera in hand, trying to catch a finishing shot of me. We grabbed some food from the finisher’s tent (never thought hot chicken broth would ever taste this good) and took advantage of the short line at the massage tent. We then made the round trip back to the car to get some warm clothes so we could catch Chris on the finish hill. After some tense moments thinking that he’d already finished, he finally appeared around the bend looking pretty ragged. My wife and I were screaming like crazy, but he was completely oblivious. Still, he ran a 5 minute negative split and a
In the moments after the finish, the perfectionist in me was lamenting my lack of finishing spirit. In the last 7 miles or so, I settled instead of battling. As a result, my mile splits slipped about 5-10 seconds per mile, which meant I gave up about 50-55 seconds. Part of me wonders if the motivation would have been there if I hadn’t already run a qualifying time for
Now I can take a couple weeks off and re-evaluate my running goals for 2008.
Monday, November 19, 2007
Marathon Guide Race Review
CONS:
Pre-race organization was passable at best. The worst offender was the expo. The venue itself was a poor choice. In previous years, it was held at the Eakins Oval in front of the start line, which makes sense. This year, they moved it to The Liacouras Center at Temple University. Traffic getting there was heavy, and that was just the beginning. Once inside, we were greeted with a line that extended halfway around the interior of the stadium. It was ~45 minute wait for number pick up; I have never waited that long. We were also handed a photocopy of the course, but not told what it was. Only after running the race did I realize they had made significant changes to the course (more on this later). After getting our numbers, there was yet another line to pick up our T-shirts. The number pick-up gauntlet left me with little desire to peruse the expo. The whole process, including the round trip from downtown Philly was ~2.5 hours. We arrived at around 2:30, and it looked even worse on our way out.
The only other pre-race snafu that comes to mind was the sheer gridlock at the port-a-potties. We arrived at 6:15 a.m. and waited almost 40 min. Also, not sure why a late fall marathon needs to start 7 a.m.
PROS:
I loved the race T-shirts. Probably the highest quality wicking shirt I've received from a race with the entire course printed on the back. Very cool.
I personally liked the course. The 1st 7 miles take you through the historic part of the city and allows you to enjoy the sights while you're still fresh. The next 7-8 take you through the zoo and other parks. This is the hilliest part of the course and the steep declines were a surprise for me. The final 11-12 are out and back along Schuykill river to Manayunk, with great views of the foliage. Although it's not truly flat, my most consistent splits of the day were here. After you make the turnaround in Manayunk, you know exactly how far you have to go and how to dose your effort to the finish.
Spectators were great, even though the weather was lousy. There were a couple dead spots (16-18, 22-24) where the crowd support was spotty but overall, spectators were very enthusiastic.
COURSE CHANGE:
This I would rate as needing improvement, but neither a pro or con. When I was running, I had no idea they had changed the course. The only thing I remember was being surprised by the hill between 13.5-14.5 mile. As it turns out, the race officials knocked off a huge section of the course in the zoo, especially the Japanese Gardens. So they had make up distance by adding an extra section after 13.5 miles. Presumably this was to standardize the route for the marathon and half-marathon. In 2006, the half marathon split off at 9.5 miles and rejoined later, which confused some people. I'm ambivalent about this because I didn't run the old course, but it does seem odd that the newly added half marathon would dictate a change in the marathon course... tail wagging the dog?
Overall, I would do this marathon again just for the course. The actual race organization (splits, water stations) was excellent and having the hills at the beginning makes for relatively easy cruising at the end of the race. I ran a huge PR, so that in itself made the experience worthwhile. However, race officials really need to take a close look at the expo, which was a huge mess. If I were a first-time marathoner, I think it would be very nerve-racking.
Monday, November 5, 2007
Let the taper begin! Week of 10/29-11/4
Coming off of a great training week, I was really looking forward to tapering. I've felt generally tired, but not overtrained, for the last month or so and I think I was riding the edge last week. However, this first taper week has made a world of difference and I feel the pop returning in my legs. Did about a 20% mileage cut.
Mon: off
Tue: AM - 6.1 miles @ 7:21, PM - 5.3 miles @ 10:00
Wed: AM - 30 min. pool run and core workout
Thu: 10.9 miles @ 7:31; great run, half on trails
Fri: off
Sat: 17.5 miles @ 7:17 with last 7 miles @ 6:37
Sun: 7 miles @ 7:33
Total: 47 miles
Overall, a very good tapering week. I've noticed with the weather cooling that the pace of my runs have dropped about 15 sec./mile. I was especially happy with the fast finish run on Saturday. This has become a regular tune-up workout for me two weeks out from the marathon. I do the reverse of the Boston Marathon out to Wellesley and once I pass the Newton Lower Falls Wine Co., I pick it up to MP for 7 miles. The last 10 miles were in the middle of the Noel Nor'easter, so it was fairly windy going through the Newton Hills. I was able to hold MP the whole way, so I am more confident that I can hold a 6:40 the whole way.
Plan for next weekMon: pool run & core work
Tue: 8 miles easy
Wed: AM - pool run & core, PM - 5 mile
Thu: 7 miles including 3x1600m @ 6:20, jog 200m between
Fri: off
Sat: 12-13 miles easy
Sun: 5-6 miles easy
Total: 37-39 miles
Thursday, November 1, 2007
October mileage summary
Weekly Distance Totals (miles) Oct 1, 2007, to Nov 4, 2007 Sport: Running Workout: all Route: all | ||||||
Week of | 39.49 | | 44.49 | | 49.49 | | 54.49 | | 59.49 | | 64.49 | |
Oct 1, 2007 | 52.18 | |||||
Oct 8, 2007 | 56.68 | |||||
Oct 15, 2007 | 39.49 | |||||
Oct 22, 2007 | 59.45 | |||||
Oct 29, 2007 | 46.80 |
This is my fourth consecutive month over 200 miles a month! The running gurus always talk about building a long consistent base over a couple of months; I'm hoping this qualifies.
Monthly Distance Totals (miles) May 1, 2007, to Oct 31, 2007 Sport: Running Workout: all Route: all | ||||||
Month | 134.83 | | 160.83 | | 186.83 | | 212.83 | | 238.83 | | 264.83 | |
May, 2007 | 134.83 | |||||
Jun, 2007 | 152.13 | |||||
Jul, 2007 | 207.24 | |||||
Aug, 2007 | 223.12 | |||||
Sep, 2007 | 236.12 | |||||
Oct, 2007 | 219.20 |
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Best week of training - Week of 10/22-28
Summary of 10/22-28
Mon: 6 miles @ 7:40; invigorating trail run
Tue: 11.2 miles including 2x2 miles @ 6:17, comfortable track workout
Wed: 6 miles @ 10:00, easy recovery run with wife; 30 min. core work
Thu: 11 miles including 10 @ 6:33, great tempo run
Fri: off
Sat: 22.5 miles @ 7:45, nice long trail run with great scenery
Sun: 3 miles @ 8:00, easy shake out run
Total: 59.7 miles
The recent climate change has brought about some decidedly unfall-like weather. This was the first consistently cool week, and its reflected in the faster paces of my runs. I was pretty tired and not looking forward to the tempo run on Thursday. In fact, I usually have the hardest time motivating for these runs. I don't know why... Funny thing is once I get going, they don't feel so bad. I ended up dropping 3 or 4 6:20s and by the end, I had averaged a 6:33 mile for the 10 miler, including a warm-up mile. I was a little surprised I had gone that fast, and I could have comfortably run another 3 miles on my way to a 1:25 half. Things are coming together! The 22 miler started out with the sky dropping buckets, which gave me flashbacks of the Boston Marathon Nor'easter. I met up with Ramses and we ran down to Millenium Park. From there, he split off to go back home and I ran through the gorgeous trails of Cutler Park. The trails of Cutler Park are truly a hidden gem and have made my long runs infinitely more interesting. In fact, I find time flies by when I'm doing trails. I threw in one hard hill interval at the end and finished comfortably. Overall, this week has really given me confidence that i can run a sub-3:00 at Philly.
Alright, taper time!
Monday, October 22, 2007
Race Report - Boston Firefighter 10K
Summary week of 10/15-21:
Mon: 30 min. pool run, 30 min. core work; legs feeling much better after Hartford
Tue: 12.7 miles - 2.7 mile w/u; 1600, 4x800, 1600 @ 5:38; feeling sharp today with cooler weather. Pace felt comfortable. Had a nice long cool down.
Wed: 30 min. pool run, 30 min. core
Thu: 11 miles @ 7:50, comfortable fall run on the trails of the Arboretum.
Fri: off
Sat: 5.6 miles @ 8:38; easy run around Jamaica Pond, last Boston Fit run of the season
Sun: 10.2 miles including Boston Firefighter 10K.
Total: 39.5 miles
There were a couple factors that convinced me to run a race this weekend. For one, I was coming off a cutback week, so I would be well rested. I also wanted one last test of my fitness, and with 4 weeks to go until Philly, this was the perfect time. So I set out looking for a local race, anything from 5-8 miles. I came across the Boston Firefighter 10K on the Racer's Resource, but there was no website. After some targeted web surfing, I found last year's results and the course. The course starts just south of Neponset circle, goes straight up Route 203, does a loop around the UMass Boston campus, and then comes back. I haven't raced a 10K since the James Joyce Ramble. It was 2 weeks after Boston and predictably slow (38:41). The clincher for me was the winning time of 36:55, which I thought was well within my range. Wow, I would actually have a chance of winning a race.
Race day arrived and it was sunny, but a little on the warm side (high 60s). I didn't have a specific race strategy today other than to start out behind the leaders and then try to finish strong on the way back, starting around mile 4. I had no idea about the competition, but figured it would be similar to last year's race. My wife drove me down to the start line, which was very easy to find, and I got changed with plenty of time to spare. I was more nervous than usual before a race and during my warm-up jog (which was definitely slower than an 8 min/mile), my HR was up to 155. I scouted out the last mile and didn't notice anything worth noting. After getting back to the car and changing into my racing flats, I did a quick series of strides, thanked Christina for coming with me and headed off for the start line. By the time I got there, the bagpipes were playing and they were making pre-race announcements.
After winding my way to the front, I spent the next 5 minutes just trying to stay loose. I got an intense staredown from a fast looking guy in a long sleeve shirt and figured he was competition. I looked at the flashing LED display up ahead and saw 65 degrees; warm, but not too bad. The gun went off (5 minutes early) and I went with the leaders. The front runner, whom I saw during the warm-ups, looked really comfortable. The guy in second was none other than the staredown dude. To my right was a guy who already looked like he was struggling, so I focused on Staredown as my main rival. As we rounded Neponset Circle, I felt like I was already going too fast and I let Staredown pull away. He was already starting to look less fluid, but I didn't want to blow it on the 1st mile. Still, it was way to fast for me (5:37) and I had already broken my pre-race mantra of going out slow. I found a good rhythm by the 2nd mile (5:59) and Staredown had a good 100m lead on me. Oh well, I thought, podium placing ain't bad. Shortly after mile 2, another guy wearing a blue jersey came up on me and shortly thereafter passed me. He looked pretty comfortable and it was still too early to go with him, so I also let him go by. Crap, now I'm in 4th! We made a sharp right turn on the UMass Boston campus, and I was quickly falling into no-man's land. I wasn't sure if I was paying for the fast start, but I just didn't feel comfortable (not that anyone does during a 10K). When I went by the 3rd mile marker in 6:05, I knew I was slowing down. I tried to hold it together coming out of the campus and just limit my losses. My legs felt ok, but I was breathing pretty heavily and just didn't feel like I was in a groove.
As I neared mile 4, I noticed that I hadn't lost any ground to the kid in the blue jersey and this was my first positive thought since the start of the race. When I passed the mile marker (6:13), I just decided to pick it up. I was a little worried that I wouldn't be able to hold it, but I reasoned that I'm in marathon shape now and should have plenty left in the tank. I slowly reeled in the kid in the blue jersey and passed him on the crest of small hill, almost at the same spot where he had passed me earlier, but on the opposite side of the road. He tried to hang with me for a bit, motivated also by the thought of a podium placing, but I could tell his breathing was getting ragged and he lasted for about 400m before fading back. I was trying to maintain enough pressure to make him work, but not wear myself out. Staredown was also back in sight, but he was a good 200m ahead of me by now, and catching him was going to require some work. I was still maintaining the same pace, and although it didn't feel good, I thought I could hold it for another mile and a half. When I reached mile 5 (5:59), I had cut the deficit in half. By now, I could tell that he was laboring as well. His stride was choppier than before, and he was carrying some tension in his shoulders. That was all the motivation I needed to just keep pounding. I don't think he realized I was catching up. Even when I was within 10m or so, I don't think he realized I was coming because of the crowds near the finish. I passed Staredown with about half a mile to go, on a curving right bend heading into Neponset Circle. I don't think he made an attempt to stay with me, but at this point, I was just focused on keeping a high cadence. I was feeling pretty lousy by now (see pic on left) and just wanted to get to the finish line. The finishing straight was mercifully short, but I felt like I was going to dry heave. I slowed briefly for a partial dry heave, and then made the last push to the finish line.
25th Annual Boston Firefighters 10k Road RaceWow... I came in 2nd! I couldn't believe it. Even though I hadn't won the race, I was extremely happy with my effort today. Besides, 1st place was so far ahead of me that even if I had tried harder... I just wasn't in the same class as him. Although I
PLC Time Pace PLC/Group PLC/Sex Bib# Name Town, State
1 35:39 5:45 Age? 1 M 753 Paul Hughes Scituate,MA
2 36:58 5:58 Age? 2 M 604 Wayne Chan Brookline,MA
3 37:04 5:59 Age? 3 M 509 Frederic Baillif Saint Louis,UN
had gone out a little fast, I didn't panic when I fell into 4th place. I was confident in my training and I pushed through the pain. After being disappointed with my finishing fortitude at the BAA Half, I told myself during this race that I wasn't going to do that again. The only crtique I have is I think I could have gone out slower. This was the first time I stuck around for the awards ceremony... so cool to get a trophy. All in all a very satisfying day of racing.Boston Firefighter 10K by the numbers:
Mile | Split | Lap | Avg. HR | Max HR | Average |
1 | 5:37 | 5:36.9 | 173 | 180 | 5:36.9 |
2 | 11:35 | 5:58.6 | 177 | 179 | 5:47.8 |
3 | 17:41 | 6:05.3 | 176 | 179 | 5:53.6 |
4 | 23:54 | 6:13.2 | 177 | 179 | 5:58.5 |
5 | 29:53 | 5:59.2 | 180 | 183 | 5:58.6 |
6 | 35:46 | 5:53.0 | 183 | 184 | 5:57.7 |
6.2 | 36:58 | 1:11.8 | 184 | 185 | 5:57.7 |
This next week will be my last hard week of training before the marathon. It will be tough, but I think with the cut back, I should be able to handle it.
Plan for next week:
Mon: 6 miles EZ, core work
Tue: 10 miles including 2x2 miles at half-marathon pace
Wed: 6 miles EZ, core work
Thu: 10 miles @ marathon pace
Fri: off
Sat: 22 miles at a comfortable pace
Sun: 4 miles recovery run
Total: 59 miles