tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12203664830416114722024-03-13T03:31:30.896-07:00Running ItalianNickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.comBlogger23125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-49116253296805829212013-02-11T12:21:00.000-08:002013-02-11T12:36:46.258-08:00Rocky Raccoon 100 Mile<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">I took a whole new approach in training for this race
this year. Last year I did typical Ultra trail run training and I just got so
slow. My weekly mileage was hard to hit running 5 days a week, and I didn't
enjoy it. On top of that, I was very slow in all other races relative to my
past performances. I decided I would go back to typical marathon training: 7 days
a week with 2 speed days, and limit myself to 22 mile long runs. I would trust
that I could use my nutrition and overall volume leg strength to pull me through
100 miles. I was concerned, but I had run Cactus really well and a 3:02
marathon in Houston in January, indicating that I was in good shape. Basically
I was flipping a coin, and if this race went badly, I was just going to be a
slow trail runner that was much better on the roads. <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>If this race went well, then maybe I had a
breakthrough on trail training. As a side note, I am now seriously thinking of
writing an Ultra Trail Training book – just based off of my trial/error and
what’s worked for me. The best I’ve found out there is Relentless Forward
Progress, but it is a little outdated. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">While I was pleased with my general training leading up
to race weekend, the actual week before the race ended up being pretty tough
personally.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>Sunny got really sick and
was in bed and unable to take care of the kids, so my evenings were much busier
than I would’ve otherwise planned.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>I
also realized Friday when I was packing that I had booked my hotel in
Huntsville, AL instead of Texas…there was $200 down the drain. I quickly booked
a room for Friday night and figured I would run all night Saturday so I didn't
need a room Saturday – I would just roll out my sleeping bag. After driving to
Huntsville, I got to bed at 8:30 after a good meal at the Olive Garden. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight: normal;"><u>Loop 1 - 3:12
(9:37 pace)</u></b> <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>I took off the first
lap with Edgar and about 20 other friends. The first lap was so super easy. I
was running as slow as possible and just talking with friends the whole way. I
was taking a gel every 20 minutes (which I would continue to do all day and night).
I dropped my light off with Suann at DamNation once the sun was up and kept
going. <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>Around there I had caught up to
Matt Crownover and I figured I was running too fast as I knew he was going sub
19. But I knew the day would heat up and I was going to start crying and
walking after mile 60. I just can't run that far. I have never made it through
a 100 running the whole way. The wheels always come off at around mile 80. By
the end of this first loop, Shaheen and Edgar were just a minute behind me and
I know they were thinking I had taken it out too fast. I knew they would come
by me on the second loop, but I was so happy to feel so strong. Last year I was
holding on to their pace on the first lap and it was 20 min slower.<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight: normal;"><u>Loop 2 - 3:42
(11:07 pace)</u></b><span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>I took my first Ensure
(350cal) and that took a minute to settle. This year I switched from all
Gatorade to all water. It was a positive change. The first loop was all gels (maybe
8 or 9). I would add more table food on the second lap. Many of the big dogs passed
me the first 3-5 miles of this loop but my goal was 12 min miles for this loop in
order to break 22 hours, so I was running that. By the time we got to DamNation
it really started to heat up. My pace still held good. At mile 30 I was alone
so I put on my music. I did run out of water with only one bottle on the 6 mile
DamNation loop (I would bring a second bottle for loop 3). Ultra running is
about adjustments… Mile 34 was 9:53 so I guess I was still rolling. <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>Maybe it was a mistake but these races are not
won and lost on single miles or handfuls of minutes. <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>My motto today was no matter how bad it got, I
would regroup and get it going again.<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight: normal;"><u>Loop 3 - 4:04
(12:12 pace)</u></b> Another Ensure and another quick barf/burp in the mouth
and I was off again. I was about 40 minutes ahead of pace and I wanted to go as
slow as I needed this loop to save something for the night. I knew after this
loop the temps would start coming down. I decided to start an 8 minute run /2
minute walk pattern. That would allow me to eat every other walk break. Timing
is so important in these races for me. I needed to keep the food coming. Last
year I shut it down (eating) and it shut me down. Even with the walk breaks I
was holding close to the12 minute pace. The goal this lap was a 13 minute pace.
Great - sub 22 hours was still on the table! This lap felt a bit cooler than
lap 2 as the sun was a little lower and I was getting some shade. I kept
thinking this whole loop: <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>What if I get
there too soon and my pacer isn't there yet. I was about to be 1 hour ahead of
pace. I really started to kill time the last 5 miles…<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight: normal;"><u>Loop 4 - 4:41
(14:05 pace)</u></b><span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>I got my pacer
Michael Bordelon, my old-person-Ensure (Buuuuuuuurp) and off we went. <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>I grabbed my handheld flashlight but I didn't
need it yet. We could make it to DamNation (mile 66) before I would need it. I
would grab my headlamp there as well. I had asked Mike to push me harder this
year and he was the best pacer. I would fight to back off the gas, but he kept
us running. <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>We basically took no walk
breaks longer than 2 min except at an aid station to drink soup - but even that
was quick. We covered all my emotional BS and insecurities that night. What was
my role in my local running community? We would talk about how I was a slave to
the watch and looking at it during walk breaks was making me think I was giving
all the time I had made during the day back. We would move from a 6-2 run walk
pattern down to a 4-2 pattern by the end of the loop. We still nailed the goal
of 14 min pace for this loop and held the 1 hour lead on our goal. We knew we
had 6 hours to get thru the last loop. I was sure that I would stop running at
any minute...<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight: normal;"><u>Loop 5 – 4:57
(14:51 pace)</u></b> One more long sleeve, no Ensure as I was sick of throwing
up in my mouth, but took a 5 hr. Energy instead. Suann, Scott and Amy helped me
keep my head on at the turn around. I switched out my watch even though my 910
would have made the last loop. My XT310 never found a satellite so it was just
a time-of-the-night watch. Mike would do my run/walk splits even though I was
sure he was forgetting to watch the time and letting me run long. Funny how 4
minutes of running takes FOREVER after 80 or 90 miles (especially when Mike
wouldn’t call it for five or six minutes…) The whole loop I was complaining
about sore legs and being tired, but Mike just kept saying how my running pace
was still 11-12 min pace so we were still clicking off sub 15 min miles. I was
just so sure that everything was going to shut down. I kept eating and I kept
hitting new mileage milestones - I had never run past 80 miles before. Then 85,
then 90, and even 95 (when I died last year). <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>I was so mean to Mike. I would bark if he ran alongside
me. I would tell him to get behind me. He would trip on a rock and then stumble
past me. I just knew he was going to trip me as he fell down. We would pass
girls and he would try to get me to flirt with them. I didn't want to talk
about girls. After we would pass them I would say something grumpy like they
probably weren't very good looking. He also kept saying we could break 21 hours
and I told him it was too much pressure. There was no way I could hold this
pace. I was just sure the wheels would come off. We finally had 1:20 to run the
last 4.4 miles and I knew we had a good shot. It got funny the last 4 miles. A
guy past us and I knew that I was still in the game because I decided I would
hunt this guy for one mile and then I was going to fly by him and his pacer and
destroy his spirit. I would lay down the 97 mile hammer and never let him catch
me. We passed him back on a downhill at mile 3 right before the trails merged
and we kept going. I started to play with Mike here. There was 3 miles and 1
hour to go. I told Mike it was going to be tough. Then it was 2 miles and 46
minutes to go, this is going to be real tight. The last mile felt amazing. I
felt like I could keep going another 20 miles. We started to run faster and
faster and when he stopped me for my last walk break, I said give me one
minute. He said there is the finish, let's go. So we took off. Turns out he
pointed out some other building – not the finish - but we were really close, so
we flew down the finish chute. <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Total<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>20:38<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>27<span style="font-size: small;"><sup>th</sup>/229 finished - 340
started<o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><b style="mso-bidi-font-weight: normal;"><u>Post wrap up:</u></b>
I had the race of my life. It gives me hope that maybe I can run 100 miles. At
one point, back when I first started running, I thought 13 miles seemed like a
ridiculously long distance. Everything in life is relative, I guess. Like when
I use to think raising one kid was so hard - then I had three. I am so thankful
for all my friends that were out here supporting me. To my wife and kids, who
get my whole Ultra obsession. <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>To Neil
for always being there to support me. He let me crash at his hotel and get a
shower. To Michael Bordelon that has paced me here 2 years in a row. For
someone that has run very few Ultras, he really gets how to pace, and he understands
me. It takes a strong friendship to survive the stuff that is said from mile 80
-100. Hell, I am not even sure what I said from 95-100 these last two years but
I am sure it is not nice or well thought out...<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-46313395840852577112012-11-13T15:08:00.004-08:002012-11-13T15:08:30.882-08:00Rockledge Rumble 50K 2012
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">With a tough race schedule leading up to
this race I planned to use this as a training run. I would go off feel and if I
felt good go after my time for last year. (5:27) It was a bit warmer this year.
Around 65 at the start and probably around 75 at the end. The course was a
little different this year as we didn't have to climb the stairs after the
first loop.<o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 1-5 Murrel (46 min/9:20 pace) Ran
this section nice and easy. This first 5 miles is very runnable. I was maybe
around 20th place. I had plenty of runners around and it takes this first 5
miles for the runners to find their position in the race. <span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 6-10 Twin Coves (1:39/10:30 pace)
This was the toughest section. This is where the rocks are located. Some areas
have to be walked. I also stopped for a potty break where I cut my ankle on
some vines. A little blood is good in a trail race. <span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 11-13 Twin Coves (2:04/8:30 pace)
Once I hit this aid station I knew I was getting close to the turn around and I
would have a chance to see the front runners. Once I saw them they looked very
worn out. I think the front pack took off way too fast for a warm day. I was
glad I made it to the last mile before I saw them so they went more than 20 min
ahead so far.<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span><span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span> <o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 14-18 Murrel (2:51/9:30 pace) I finally
caught back up to some friends at this aid station. I was running very strong
and my nutrition was working well. One gel every 20 min and water. One salt tab
every hour starting a 2 hours.<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span> <o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 19-22.5 Jackson (3:37/10:00 pace) I
got back to the turn around and I thought I was running well. I had passed a
few 30K runners and even caught up with Laz close to the beach. My GPS was
useless because it kept losing signal so I was just estimating 45 min between
aid stations. Total time was still good to work off of.<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 23.5-27.5 Murrel (4:28/10:00 pace) As
I took off I passed Josh and he said I was just out of 10<sup>th</sup> place
and I just had to run some people down. I felt confident I could run strong and
catch anyone that had slowed. It is hard to know if you are passing a 30K or
50K runner especially if they are walking at the time which many people were
doing at this point. I was thinking if I could make it to Murrel by 4:20 I
would have a shot to break 5 hours. After a few side stiches I got there at
4:28 and figured my sub 5 was out.<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span> <o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 28.5-32 Jackson (5:16/10:20 pace) I
felt better after leaving the last aid station. The pressure was off to break 5
and I figured I would be done around 5:15. I am pretty sure this section is a
little longer than advertised at 4.4M. Just before I got to the beach I caught
up to Paul Smith. I figured this would turn the last mile into real hard work.
I was pretty sure he was hurting worse than me so I picked it up. He latched on
to my tail so I just kept picking it up. Once on the beach we were running a
tempo run. I decided to let him latch on and then once we hit the road I would
lay down a 6 min pace if I had to. I started to accelerate on the road and within
100 yards I could tell he was going to let me go. I kept a strong pace till the
end and even attacked the stairs as best I can. <span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Total:<span style="mso-tab-count: 2;"> </span>5:16:32<o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Distance:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>50K<o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Place:<span style="mso-tab-count: 2;"> </span>9/59<span style="mso-tab-count: 2;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">After I finished I had a couple of
drinks and visited with all the other runners. We shared our experience with
the bikes on the trail. The bikes were tough as they were all over the course.
I got frustrated a couple of times as I was trying to keep going and pulling
over for the bikes was cause me to have to get started all over again. <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-30413167756471937872012-11-01T11:39:00.002-07:002012-11-01T11:39:36.204-07:00Cactus Rose 50 Mile 2012
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">The last few months I have been training
on the roads. I had run almost no trail miles. With no long runs longer than 22
miles. My concentration was on long tempos 5-6 miles, track workouts to a lesser
extent and some faster log runs with 20 miles at 7:30 average pace. I felt
going into this race I was in top shape but my doubt was on distance and I was
taking my Ultra skills for granted. I drove down on Friday afternoon and met some
friends for pasta in Bandera. I camped out the night before the race. <o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">On race morning we had perfect weather.
Mid 40s and the wind had died down. I had a drop bag at the start and the
Equestrian aid station. I would stop at miles 15/25/35 for supplies. <o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-RzOVSuZhEeY/UJLBnCiXsTI/AAAAAAAAAJo/Fb2eVxYz8p0/s1600/Nick_Jorge_start.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="214" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-RzOVSuZhEeY/UJLBnCiXsTI/AAAAAAAAAJo/Fb2eVxYz8p0/s320/Nick_Jorge_start.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 1-5 (50 min)<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>I ran easy with Jorge and Shaheen was just behind us. I
stopped at Equestrian at mile 5 to drop off a shirt. I was over dressed. Mile 2
has a big climb but the rest of the first 5 miles was very runnable. I had a
headlamp and handheld flashlight. This really helped me the trail. I also had
one handheld for hydration. <o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 6-10 (1:46)<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>This was the most runnable section of the race. I still
didn't need to stop for water at this aid station. My nutrition plan was to eat
a gel every 30 min. I have no idea why I didn't realize till the end of the
race that this was 100 cal per hour short. I wore compression socks to protect
my legs from the sotol. It was not a good call because my left calf was tight
and hurt the entire race. <o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 11-15 (2:42)<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>This section was tougher than I was told it would be. Lots of
sotol cactus so I had my first run thru that. We also started climbing up and
down hills and rocks. When we got back to Equestrian I dropped off my lights
and long sleeve shirt. Then picked up 4 gels I think. But maybe I missed a
couple because I ran the last hour back to the start without nutrition. I
refilled my handheld and took off feeling great. <span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 16-20 (3:53)<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>These last 10 miles of the loop is supposed to be hiller and
rocky section. I felt pretty strong running up the hills. I was able to hold
around a 12 min pace thru these miles. <o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
<br />
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 21-25 (4:52)<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>I felt strong in this section but I was starting to get the
feeling that my nutrition was really messed up. I was stretching the gels I had
to 3 and 4 miles which was 35-50 min. That means I was getting less than 200
calories per hour. This was going to cost me later in the race. I reloaded my
gels at the turn around and ate a waffle. I also got my music to listen to on
the second loop. <span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 26-30 (5:55)<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>I got out of the aid station about 20 seconds behind Shaheen
so I figured I wouldn't see her again. I started running hard and before I knew
what happened I tripped and went down hard. I was lucky there were no rocks and
because I was going so fast I rolled over. I was a little shaken up by the fall
so I took it easy for a min to get my breath back. I started working hard again
pushing up the hills and after a couple of miles I caught back up to Shaheen.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 31-35 (7:15)<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>I left this aid station feeling good but I was
starting to go thru my handheld a lot faster as the temperature started to
climb. I drank as much as I could before I left the aid station and hoped it
would last. I would add a second handheld at Equestrian at mile 35. At mile 32
I really started to go thru a low point energy wise so I told Shaheen she had a
shot at 10 hours and she needed to go ahead of me. It was like all of a sudden
I went from 12 min pace to 13-14 min pace. It was like I was standing still. I
knew I need to hammer the calories, catch-up and then get off the pity bus fast
and see what I could do the last 15 miles. <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 36-40 (8:20) <span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>Equestrian had out food so I grabbed a
couple of PB&Js I drank a whole can of Mountain Dew, got 2 handhelds. As I
left I was determined to not just throw in the towel and prove that I could run
tough and smart. I was a couple of min behind a couple of other runners and I
was determined to run them down. I started to click off a better pace and I was
really starting to sweat. I kept drinking and pouring water on my head. <o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 41-45 (9:20)<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>Here is the section that gets runnable so I was going as fast
as I could on the flat parts. I caught one of the guys on this section. I
figured sub 11 hours was now in the bag and I was going to hit my goal.<o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Mile 46-50 (10:17)<span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>I met Olga at Equestrian for the first
time. She didn't seem so mean but I wasn't trying to rest or whine. After
another mile I caught up to the other runner Mike. I run into him at so many
trail runs. We were holding together great until the big climb with 2 miles to
go. He was able to go down it much faster than I could. It flattened back out
with 1 mile to go and I decided I would give all I had and see what I could do.
I was working on the math and I figured I could break :25 but once I hit the ½ mile
mark with the out and back I thought I have a shot at sub 10:20 so I broke into
my finishing kick. I could see Mike ahead and I figured I could catch him. We
ended up finishing with the same time. <o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p><span style="font-family: Calibri;"> </span></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Total:<span style="mso-tab-count: 2;"> </span>10:17<o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<div class="MsoNormal" style="line-height: normal; margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">
<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Distance:<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><span style="mso-tab-count: 1;"> </span>50<o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">Place:<span style="mso-tab-count: 2;"> </span>18/158<span style="mso-tab-count: 2;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><o:p><span style="font-family: Calibri;"> </span></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;"><span style="font-family: Calibri;">I really enjoyed the trails out in
Bandera. They have a great mix of rocks that I have been getting better on and
hills. I made a bunch of mistakes and still had a great race. The camping was
great and the town had some good restaurants to eat at. After the race Jorge
and I hung out and then later we grabbed Elysa and went in town for pizza. The
2 downsides to that was the stairs and they didn't sell beer. FYI BYOB next
time. <o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-14217811596013861492012-06-27T15:44:00.001-07:002012-06-27T15:44:12.426-07:00Western States 100We flew out to Reno on Thursday and drove in to Squaw Valley. We stayed at a condo in the village. After a couple days of race meetings and medical checks I was ready to go. I got to the starting line Saturday morning at 5 AM. It was around 38 degrees and very windy.
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Squaw Valley (5 AM) – 0
The first 4 miles was a power walk up 2000' to the Escarpment. It was a winding dirt and rock road. There was no need for a headlamp as the sun was coming up. Once we got to the top it began to hail and we had very strong 30-40 MPH winds. I always have to remember when things get tough in a race that I signed up for this. At Western States you also have to qualify and get lucky in the lottery.
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Escarpment – 3.5
Single track trails and very wet. Some sections were very technical and I had to let some slower climbers that I had beat up the hill pass me as we were now going downhill. I was really working on my rhythm and finding a group to latch on to. I got some rocks in my right shoe so I stopped at Lyons Ridge at mile 10 to remove the rocks.
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Lyons Ridge (7:28 AM) – 10.5
It was still raining but I was feeling better and I locked in with a big group. I always seem to end up on the front end of the group which is good because I can set the pace and have a good view of the trail. It made me feel slow but when I asked if anyone wanted to pass they all said no. I was eating just a little fruit off the tables and taking a gel every 20 min. I did get a little frustrated on Lyons Ridge as I wanted my hydration vest filled with Brew GU, but I couldn’t figure out what they were doing so I ended up just going with water.
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Red Star Ridge (8:45 AM) – 16
By mile 16 I was up to 200th place and starting to pick up the pace a little. Still this was 2+ min per mile slower than I ran at RR. That tells you just how much tougher this course is than RR. I was doing salt every hour which was too much in the cold. My elbows were very sore so I didn't think I could hold a handheld until I got better electrolyte balance. I started backing off the salt. This was my fastest run section of the entire race.
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Duncan Canyon (10:30 AM) – 23.8
This next section felt like 6 miles of uphill. My pace fell way off and I had no energy. I knew that the first medical check was coming up at the next aid station and I didn't know if I was too high or low on my weight.
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Robinson Flat (12:11 PM) – 29.7
I was up 4 pounds at medical. I felt pretty bad and thought I was lucky to get thru without more questions. I saw my crew here for the first time. I got a dry shirt, drank my Endurox, got my music and had too many calories. The next 2-3 miles were very runnable but my stomach was so full it hurt to run. I was peeing every 5 miles all day but had to go every mile here until I emptied my stomach. I got marginally stronger thru this section. There is a fine balance and I broke the rule here. Too many calories at one time is not going to sit well in your stomach. You also need to know your course. You can load up before a walking section but not before a section that is runnable. They warned us in one of the pre-race briefings and I didn't make good enough notes. The best lessons are the ones that hurt like a punch to the gut. I got it.
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Miller's Defeat (1:37 PM) – 34.4
At this point, I was really only concentrating on getting to the next aid station. I would struggle when I would think about 20 miles until I see my crew again. My hydration vest was too much and with the cool weather I realize I could have gotten by with 2 handhelds like the big boys.
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Dusty Corners – 38
This is a short leg and I am really starting to feel good again. I am starting to see some strong splits again.
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Last Chance (3:42 PM) – 43.3
This next section was a real challenge but I was finally strong again. It was 2 miles down a very steep drop to the bottom of the canyon. Very rocky and technical. I wish I had this section to run once a month at home -- it would make me twice the runner I am. I went down as fast as I could without cracking my head open on the rocks. I can't believe I made the entire 100 miles without ever going down. The last 1.8 miles after the bridge over the water at the bottom was straight up Devil's Thumb. I was catching a bunch of people power climbing up. This is where all the climbs at Jemez got me ready.
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Devil's Thumb (5:01 PM) – 47.8
I forgot to ask for a Popsicle at the aid station. Actually I yelled for one as soon as I saw volunteers but they weren't the right people to ask... I am sure that Popsicle or lack thereof cost me an hour.
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El Dorado Creek (6:21 PM) – 52.9
I am picking the pace back up as I will see my crew at 55.7. The last 2 miles was a good power hike with another guy. We had a really good visit.
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Michigan Bluff (7:20 PM) – 55.7
I came into Michigan Bluff feeling real strong. My crew was glad I had gotten myself back together after looking like I was done at 30. As I left this aid station I knew that sub 24 was over but I felt pretty good. I was behind a large pack of guys. I just power hiked behind them for the first mile till the trail leveled off. Then I started cranking out 12 min miles and flew by them. For a second I thought if I can keep this up I can chase 24 hours. But I quickly came to my senses and just stayed with the mile at hand.
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Bath Road – 60.6
I picked up my pacer Carolyn here. I let her know I felt good and she kept my spirits upbeat. We ran very strong getting into Foresthill.
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Foresthill School – 62
We got into Foresthill and we were flying. There were some flat roads so we were running sub-10’s which, at this point of the race, felt like tempo. We got what we needed from Sunny (The best crew leader) and took off. She said Kim and Christopher were across the street eating and thinking about singing some Karaoke. I should have grabbed my Timex as my Garmin died in the next few miles. I turned on my headlamp and we started on the trails running strong. I was having a problem with the trails looking very blurry. I have been told so many times to use a handheld flashlight but I just keep buying more headlamps. So Carolyn gave me her flashlight and all off a sudden I could see so much better. I would give her a pace and she would lay it down. I am going to start working on running races without pace -- maybe just display the mileage and time of day without pace.
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Peachstone (11:20 PM) – 70.7
Everything kind of ran together in the dark, so I skipped a few aid stations during the night. We would get to each aid station and see how far ahead of the 30 hr. pace we were. I was only around 45 min ahead of 30 earlier in the day (around the time I picked up Carolyn). By Green Gate I had over a 2 ½ hrs cushion. This area was very hilly. I kept waiting for the very runnable section after 62 that everyone kept telling me about. It never got very runnable in my eyes.
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Rucky Chucky (1:39 AM) (near) – 78
I grabbed some food and adjusted my equipment to cross the river. It was like being in a dream. I have heard about this river crossing for years. Of course in the movies the elites are always crossing in the light of day... Once I got in the water it felt good. Really helped refresh my legs. The rocks on the bottom were so slick. It was so shallow I had to bend over to grab the rope. The current was very strong. Without the rope I would have definitely been carried downstream. Carolyn got across the river in about 30 seconds. I ran into Libby in the river - she was volunteering in a wetsuit in the water. I have no idea how those people were not freezing as it was about 2:30 AM and in the 50's.
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Rucky Chucky (farside)
Kim was there with a jacket for me. Carolyn, Kim and I then power hiked up to Green Gate where Sunny and Christopher were waiting for us. I had thought I would probably change shoes/socks after the river crossing, but opted not to once I got up the hill. Carolyn stayed with Sunny and Christopher and Kim joined me for the last 20.
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Green Gate (2:18 AM) – 79.8
This was not a good section. I really needed to run some sections here and there but I just couldn't get going. This is where I needed my 5 hr energy. It was basically 20 min miles from here on to the finish. With better focus I could have cut off a couple of hours. We didn't have a GPS at this point, and I really struggled with that. I will need to practice some more races without GPS. I got so confused not knowing how far I had to go to get to the next aid station.
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Brown's Bar (6:07 AM) – 89.9
You could hear this aid station for a mile or more. They had such loud music. I had some chaffing issues I was dealing with. I was applying Vaseline almost every aid station. I continued to eat gels every 30 min.
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No Hands Bridge – 96.8
I started to run some downhills at this point. I was having problems calculating my pace without a watch and I didn’t know if I was going to finish in under 30 hours. After I got rolling again my legs felt better and I could have pushed more if I needed too. The bridge had the most amazing views. I wish I still had my camera here. The sun was up and it was starting to get hot. After crossing the bridge we had two tough miles of climbs to get to Robie Point.
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Robie Point (9:21 AM) – 98.9
Sunny was here to run me in. This is on roads and the first ½ mile is up hill. I was so happy to be done but still I had no ability to calculate anything. I kept asking Sunny if we could get to the stadium before 10 AM. Once we got to the stadium, we ran around the track as fast as I could. Finishing time was 28:47:36.
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Overall, I had such a great time. The course was much tougher than I thought it would be. We were always going up or downhill. I needed a lot more muscles in my legs to run this entire course. I struggled early-on with nutrition, but I got it down by the end. I still had areas where my energy faded but it would always come back. I learned so much during this race that will help me down the road. Hopefully I will get another shot one day. Two days after, my legs feel much better and they should be good in a couple of weeks. For now I will enjoy sleeping in. I was so overwhelmed by all the support from my running friends, non-running friends and family. My pacers and crew did a great job and I really appreciate their work. I ran the entire race in my Montrail Bajada, Injinji socks and Nathan hydration vest. I took mostly Gus, probably more than 50.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-70647602109698138512012-02-07T10:53:00.000-08:002012-02-07T11:27:43.953-08:00Rocky Raccoon 100 MileWe (Wife Sunny and oldest son Christopher) headed out of Dallas at noon on Friday. We drove to Huntsville and checked into our motel. Then we headed over to the park for packet pickup and race meeting. After that group got together and headed over to Chili’s for some dinner. Then it was back to our room and asleep by 9 PM. I got up at 4:15 AM and it wasn’t raining. It looked like we had caught a break and would start on a dry course. I started to get dressed and eat/drink my breakfast. (Endurox and a bar) I had planned to eat a bagel later on the drive over with peanut butter but my nerves had my stomach feeling full. Soon I heard thunder and I could hear the rain coming down pretty hard. I put on my 88¢ poncho and headed to the lobby to meet up with Edgar, Steve and Shaheen. My feet got soaked just running up to the motel lobby. We took off and picked up Neil and headed to the start. One quick bathroom break and I was then under the tent at the starting line.<br /><br /><br /><a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-dKWGdg4-XKM/TzF280iJWII/AAAAAAAAAHE/hKUOV7Xp__E/s1600/Neil_Nick.jpg"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 200px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 133px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5706472990121220226" border="0" alt="" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-dKWGdg4-XKM/TzF280iJWII/AAAAAAAAAHE/hKUOV7Xp__E/s200/Neil_Nick.jpg" /></a><br />Loop 1 - 3:35 (10:50 pace) Neil and I lined up together and got started. The first 3 miles were runnable with lots of roots. It was still raining hard. We reached the first aid station (Nature Center) in 33 min. (11 min pace) I was feeling good. The next 3 miles were about the same with fewer roots but more wet spots. We arrived at the second aid station Dam Nation at the same pace. It was starting to get light so I dropped off my light in my drop bag. The next 6 miles was a loop out and back to Dam Nation. This was a runnable section. Each time I ran this section it felt more hilly and wet each time. By now Edgar and Shaheen had caught up to us and even passed us up by a min or two. The next 3.5 miles led to Park Road aid station. At some point Neil and I asked about the first time I would go down. I said loop 3. I ended up falling twice on loop 2 and once on loop 3 but never in the mud. The last 4.4 miles back to the starting line was the fastest section. We were knocking down sub 11 min pace back. I kept thinking all along that this first loop was 30 min too fast and I would have to back off from my fast friends soon. Apparently all of their talk of just wanting to break 24 hours was just sand bagging. When we all got back to the start our bags were still in Steve’s car since no one expected us to be back this early. I didn’t think it was a big deal. I would just grab food from the aid station and I was good to go. This is the first place I saw my crew (Sunny and Christopher). They were wet but very excited to see me come thru and it lifted my spirits. After a couple min at the aid station the bags showed up. I drank a quick Endurox drink and reloaded my Endurolites.<br /><br /><br /><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-mZW-v4oEby0/TzF3XbZw74I/AAAAAAAAAHQ/bcgscxuaU0c/s1600/NickMile20.jpg"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 200px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 133px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5706473447231647618" border="0" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-mZW-v4oEby0/TzF3XbZw74I/AAAAAAAAAHQ/bcgscxuaU0c/s200/NickMile20.jpg" /></a>Loop 2 - 4:02 (12:05 pace) Neil took off first as his bag was there. Neil was always very fast out of aid stations. I will need to learn from him. As I passed runners or my crew on this lap they would tell me Neil said to tell you he is just ahead and I needed to catch up. Could someone tell him to slow down for me? I finally caught up to everyone at mile 26 at Dam Nation. After we left DN I just couldn’t keep up with them. This was the hardest mental part of the race for me. I had to check my ego and come to grips with the fact that I could not run as fast as everyone else. My ego didn’t like being the slowest but my goal was sub 24 and I knew this loop needed to be 4:15 and not sub 4 hours. I remember thinking at mile 30 that I was tired and if I doubled this distance I will still only be at mile 60 with 40 to go. You can’t think about everything in a 100 mile race. You have to work on the mile at hand. By mile 36 I had come to peace with myself and I was trying to run conservative and smart. I saw my crew and they thought I looked good. I had come thru my toughest mental battle of the race all on my own.<br /><br /><br /><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-NlfRAE1nExA/TzF4IBEZiyI/AAAAAAAAAHo/QZ9E0nh94CQ/s1600/NickMile37.jpg"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 200px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 134px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5706474281976302370" border="0" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-NlfRAE1nExA/TzF4IBEZiyI/AAAAAAAAAHo/QZ9E0nh94CQ/s200/NickMile37.jpg" /></a>Loop 3 - 4:17 (12:50 pace) I got my music for this lap and God and I were going to run this loop together. I started to feel I could do this but I still had this fear of legs going dead later on. I was still running strong. I noticed a new very large tree down on the Dam Nation loop. I guess it had fallen during our race. My right knee was starting to hurt. I could also feel my wet sock folding in my shoe. I decided I would get back around to the start and get some new socks. At Mile 52 at Dam Nation I ran into Shaheen. Her ankle was in bad shape and she was icing it. I thought it was time for her to drop but I wasn’t going to put that in her head. She would have to come to grips with that on her own. We walked for a few min and I told her to manage mile by mile and decide what she could do. She could not really walk so she started to run. My 13 min pace was too slow for her and she took off like a shot. I finished the loop in the light so that was good.<br /><br /><br /><a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-C4GdAFyim-M/TzF4W3M5cCI/AAAAAAAAAH0/T5L_LZtxAoI/s1600/NickMile43.jpg"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 200px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 134px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5706474537025630242" border="0" alt="" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-C4GdAFyim-M/TzF4W3M5cCI/AAAAAAAAAH0/T5L_LZtxAoI/s200/NickMile43.jpg" /></a>Loop 4 - 5:21 (16:00 pace) I got rid of my music. Changed my socks and pick up my pacer Mike B. I let him know that the last two loops were going to be slow and the goal was to get us in Sub 24 hours. It felt like we ran around half the time but the pace indicates we were not running too fast. The mud pits were growing and getting worse each loop. Each time we would hit a mud pit runners were on both sides trying to find a dry path. I would be the one guy that would just walk right thru the middle. I think the water had run off and flooded more of the course. I let Mike know I didn’t want to hear anything negative so no complaining about the mud. I was starting to get cold. I think my body was not working as hard and, thus, not creating heat.<br /><br /><br />Loop 5 - 6:15 (18:45 pace) Mostly walking. By the time I got to mile 86 my knee was real sore and I was afraid of pulling something. We calculated what we needed to do to get to sub 24 and did that. I would skip aid stations and let Mike catch up to me. I wasn’t drinking much and I was peeing every 2 miles. On the Dam Nation loop Mike gave me his shirt because I was so cold. I had heard that hypothermia would sometimes get runners on these long races. We grabbed every shirt we could find out of my Dam Nation drop bad. I had on 4 shirts and gloves and still I was cold. I remember early in the race running for 10-15 min and it was so easy. Now every couple of miles I would say let’s run for 30 seconds and see how far I could go. Many times we would turn a corner and I would say this is uphill let’s stop running. It became a joke like washing your car and it started to rain. I saw my crew for what would be the last time until the finish at mile 95. Sunny gave me a jacket and she will tell me later that I looked done. I was struggling to hold a 20 min pace walk the last 5 miles. At one point we hit one of the boardwalks and I didn’t make it up the ramp, but instead slid backwards. I jogged just a few steps so I could make it up the ramp. I would also moan as I would fast walk/jog down off the boardwalks. We were walking a 21 min pace and I was breathing heavy like I was on a tempo run. I felt I could finish but Mike and I talked a few times that if I needed 2 more miles I wouldn’t break 24. I told him if this was 3 miles longer I wouldn’t finish at all.<br /><br />Total 23:31 They are going to have to mail me my Belt Buckle. They ran out of sub-24 buckles 5 people before me. I sat down after the finish and Sunny took off my shoes and socks. We got in the car pretty fast and drove back to the motel. After a quick geriatric bath I was off to bed.<br /><br />Post wrap up: Knees are very sore and my abs as always. My feet took a beating. I had a few blood blisters. I am not sleeping very well but I hope that will get better as my legs come back. I took an Endurasoak bath Monday night and it helped my legs a ton. I can walk again. Just don’t tell Sunny cause this laying around the house and watching TV and having her fetch my meals is great. I have to give a big thanks to Sunny for being there for me. She had everything ready for me everywhere I needed it. It meant the world to me to have her and Christopher out there cheering me on. Also a big thanks to all my friends for running with me and cheering for me even hours after you could have gone to bed. Thank you to Mike B for pacing me the last 40 miles. He did a great job.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-24985716971113055692011-10-17T14:59:00.000-07:002011-10-19T10:38:28.141-07:00Palo Duro 50 Mile - 2011<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-PsQ2ijEx_MY/Tp8K_sgOsNI/AAAAAAAAAGg/cNognpweGaY/s1600/Nick_PaloDuro.jpg"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 267px; height: 400px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-PsQ2ijEx_MY/Tp8K_sgOsNI/AAAAAAAAAGg/cNognpweGaY/s400/Nick_PaloDuro.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5665258945649750226" /></a><br />I drove down Friday afternoon with Neil and Edgar. We got to the park around 8 PM and the gates were closed. So we camped outside the park in a little side camp ground. We got up at 5:30, broke camp and drove into the park. By the time we got parked it was 6:30 so we only had 30 min till the race starts. We picked up our packets, got out bags setup at bag drop and got to the starting line right as the race started. In such a rush I didn’t have a t-shirt with me so I had to run in the race shirt. At the start it was 50 degrees. <br /><br />Miles 1-3 10:56 Ave. We started out on a single track trail so we got caught in traffic. Probably a good thing as it felt super easy. It was dark for the first 4 miles. At about mile 3.4 we hit the first aid station and the 50K runners split off from us and we had room to move. <br /><br />Miles 4-6 9:39 Ave. I felt good and no more traffic from 1st and 2nd aid station. I took my first gel at mile 6. The mile 6 aid station would yell when they would see anyone and you could hear them from a mile away.<br /><br />Miles 7-9 10:21 Ave. The sun had come up enough to turn the light off. Right before the mile 9 aid station I tripped on a rock sticking out of the ground and I went down. This was right before we had to go down the stairs. For the rest of the race every time I passed someone they would comment because my shirt was dirty. They would ask if I went down. I didn’t understand this question. It’s a trail race of course I went down. If you don’t go down then you aren’t running hard enough. <br /><br />Miles 10-12.5 9:36 Ave. This is the most runnable section of the course. I picked it up here and the overall female winner caught me here and we would go back and forth over the next 2 loops. <br /><br />First Loop 2:07<br /><br />Miles 13-15 10:05 Ave. I had planned to slow down a little each loop as the temps rise. I was planning on 11 min pace on this loop so I am very happy with this pace. I am starting to pass some of the 50K runners as they ran a 6 mile loop first. <br /><br />Miles 16-18 10:06 Ave. Still happy with how I feel and my pace. We are running in more sun but the temps are still OK.<br /><br />Miles 19-21 10:40 Ave. I keep stopping at each aid station and grab a couple of items to eat. I am still doing 2 gels per loop.<br /><br />Miles 22-25 9:52 Ave. Again the last section is the most runnable. Good pace and the overall female winner is pushing me a little from behind. Every time she passes me as I stop at an aid station I figure she is either going to leave me or she is going to wear out and I will catch her. It is always a little push for me to beat the overall female winner. <br /><br />Second Loop 2:09 - 4:16 Overall<br /><br />Miles 26-28 11:32 Ave. It is all out hot now. I hope to hold 11:30 pace on this loop. Good luck as I can feel I am starting to cook. The legs still have plenty left in them.<br /><br />Miles 29-31 11:36 Ave. I am holding on and pouring water on my head at each aid station. I am taking one Endurolyte every hour. My handheld lasted 15 miles before I had to refill it the first time. I am refilling it at each water stop now. I have it filled with Gatorade and ice. <br /><br />Miles 32-34 12:02 Ave. I slowed down a little at this point. This is where the 50K sounds like a good idea. It would be nice to be sitting around with a burger and a beer right now.<br /><br />Miles 35-37.5 11:40 Ave. A little better here but this is the easy section with a little bit of shade. I did catch back up with the overall female and passed her for the last time. As I finished the third loop I felt good and I knew if I ran smart a sub 10 hr. was mine. I figured a sub 10 was a tough goal for me all along. I figured I was more likely to run sub 11. Enough for a Western States qualifier.<br /><br />Third Loop 2:26 - 6:42 Overall<br /><br />Miles 38-40 11:37 Ave. My goal this loop is to run sub 13 min pace and even if I run 15 min I will still hit my goal. I find it is hard to make it 3+ miles between aid stations with my one handheld.<br /><br />Miles 41-43 13:11 Ave. Drinking all I can at aid stations to get me from one to the next. <br /><br />Miles 44-46 13:24 Ave. At some point I am doing all the funny math in my head and thinking I can go sub 9:20 for the race but after the last 6 miles it looks out of the question. But it looks like I have a shot at sub 9:30 if I hold it together. The last mile here I am being chased down by a guy in a red shirt. He is closing fast and all bets are off once my ego joins the race.<br /><br />Miles 47-50 10:15 Ave. So I hit the last aid station behind a guy in a black shirt and the red shirt guy comes in behind me. We all go thru the shower to cool down and both of these guys get out of the aid station right in front of me. Black shirt goes easy but red shirt guy is moving and has a pacer wearing jeans. I get behind red shirt guy and see if I can hold on. Once I get going I feel like I can redline at this point and figure if a fly by him with 3+ miles to go he will either go with me and blow up. I figure if all else fails if I can stay close I can out kick him the last ¼ mile which is on the street. After a ½ mile I dropped him and got out of his site so he wouldn’t chase. I kept pushing the whole way to see what I could do.<br /><br />Fourth Loop 2:37 - 9:19 Overall<br /><br />Total - 9:19:12 <br />I finished 3rd Masters and 10th overall.<br /><br />This race went much better than I expected. This was supposed to be a training run for Cactus Rose 50. After how well this went I will probably skip Cactus Rose and work on my speed for some shorter road races. I am still sore 2 days later but that is what they call DOMS. I think my lower mileage training for Lakefront caused my legs to be a little undertrained for this distance. Edgar, Neil and I had a great time. Edgar ran 7:43 and third overall and Neil ran 10:0x and finished with a beer in his hand. That would have made my run better. We drove back that night and I will be back next year. I am still learning not to race Ultras and just enjoy them. I will let the time and place sort itself out. My real talent still probably lies on the road but time will tell. I am still a little scared of running 100 miles.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-12098104785172001122011-10-06T08:51:00.000-07:002011-10-06T09:21:42.378-07:00Lakefront Marathon<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-x38tB85mISw/To3OqT_8WdI/AAAAAAAAAGY/1VAFNvaQWkE/s1600/Nick_Lakefront2011.jpg"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 267px; height: 400px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-x38tB85mISw/To3OqT_8WdI/AAAAAAAAAGY/1VAFNvaQWkE/s400/Nick_Lakefront2011.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5660407532992879058" /></a><br /><br />This was my first small marathon. (3000 runners) Hardly anyone in town even knew there was a marathon going on. We were walking to the host hotel to catch the buses to the start and the streets were empty. We looked at each other and asked if we got the date wrong. It was 5:30 AM in downtown Milwaukee and we did not see another person for the first ½ mile of our walk. I always have a Gatorade in the morning to sip on till the race starts and to wash down my first pre-race GEL. I forgot it in the hotel. We rode the bus to the start and when we got off it was in the mid-30s at Grafton High School. We went in the school and got to hang out and use the bathrooms in the school. About 20 min before the start we went outside and walked to the starting line a couple of blocks away. I lined up about 10 feet from the start. Although small the race officials at this race take the rules very seriously. One walked up to me and asked what time I was shooting for. I told him 2:56 which is maybe top 30 the previous year. He told me if I was going to be top 10 I would need to turn off the GPS on my watch. I could have HR and time but no GPS, headphones or pacers. I figured I was good as I would have to have a great day and the top 20+ racers would have to DNF. <br /><br />Mile 1 - 6:40 First mile is downhill. Any traffic was done after a ¼ mile. <br />Mile 2 - 6:32 another downhill mile. I realized I forgot to take a GEL before the race started. Another mistake that probably didn’t amount to much.<br />Mile 3 - 6:50 this mile was uphill. I took my first GEL at 3.75.<br />Mile 4 - 6:43 this is where the course just started to roll. Front here to the end the course was consistently going up or down. <br />Mile 5 - 6:34 First funny mental moment here. I am thinking like I do in all marathons how I am going to write my race report. How I am going to describe how I knew it just wasn’t my day and I just never felt good. Then I looked at my watch and realized that I was a few seconds ahead of pace. I instantly started re-writing my RR in my head. How I started out too fast and crashed later in the race. I giggled at myself and thought, could we just run this race all out and right the race report later. Just too many negative thoughts. <br />Mile 6 - 6:42 <br />Mile 7 - 6:49 this mile was going thru Concordia University. We had some crowd support but it was very hilly. I think I cussed one of the streets. <br />Mile 8 - 6:45 this is the first time I started to struggle. I was a third on the way thru but it felt like my legs were already starting to take a beating with all the hills. I made a huge training mistake with this race. I had abandoned my weekly hill runs for more speed and social runs. I was about to pay the price. <br />Mile 9 - 6:47 <br />Mile 10 - 6:40 at most marathons mile 10 is tough for me. I was mentally prepared and probably overcompensated here. This mile is uphill and still I ran a fast mile. <br />Mile 11 - 6:43 took my second GEL here. Started to get a side stick soon after that. <br />Mile 12 - 6:48 I knew I was about 20 seconds behind pace. I was hoping to hold on for now and make it up on some down hills later. <br />Mile 13 - 6:52 this was not a good split. I hit the halfway point at 1:28:36 about 30 seconds off pace. I figured I could still salvage a 2:57 with a nice 1 min PR. <br />Mile 14 - 6:44 Pretty close to pace. I just needed to hold this till 20 and then pick it up. <br />Mile 15 - 6:42 another good mile. Could I hold this for 11 miles? Sounds easy enough. <br />Mile 16 - 6:38 Wow, this is a good sign. Just 10 more miles of this.<br />Mile 17 - 6:50 this mile was uphill or my legs were done? I was thinking just a loop around the lake. I meant to teak my GEL this mile and just lost focus and ran thru the water stop with the GEL in my hand. Another mistake.<br />Mile 18 - 7:00 I really lost it here. I know it was uphill but this was easily 10 seconds too slow. I took a huge mental hit when I saw this split. A mile starting with a 7. (ugggg)<br />Mile 19 - 6:57 not much better. I thought I always run a couple of 7:0x miles in Boston on the hills. I could pick it back up. <br />Mile 20 - 6:42 I took my 3rd and final GEL. Somehow I had picked the pace back up. I was not looking at my watch and just going on feel. The problem is I need to press with all I had and instead I think I was jogging. <br />Mile 21 - 6:47 <br />Mile 22 - 7:11 obviously jogged out this mile. Just a bad job of holding focus. The last 10K is a fight and I just wasn’t able to fight back for whatever reason. I think the legs were too beat up from the hills. <br />Mile 23 - 7:05 I had kept hearing about a big downhill at 23. I couldn’t find it. It finally showed up at the end of the mile. Since my auto splits were ahead of the mile markers it probably showed up in the next mile. <br />Mile 24 - 6:53 by now I knew it was just about breaking 3 hrs. <br />Mile 25 - 7:16 I was pretty well jogging it in and trying my best at math. This is where we hit the beach at the lake and it was starting to get warm. Around 52 degrees I guess. <br />Mile 26 - 6:56 I figured I was going to have to pick it up a bit to go sub 3. Funny how sub 3 was my ‘C’ goal. How things have changed. <br />Mile 26.2 - 6:19 I started picking people off the last half mile as I knew I was close. Passed the 4th overall female in the last 200 yards and tried to pull her but she was done. <br />Total - 2:59:40 Not a PR <br /><br />Finished 50/1202 overall 5th in Age Group<br /><br />I had a great time with my friends over the weekend and loved how they all had big PRs. I was probably in 2:58 shape but went for a PR and made too many mistakes. The biggest was my loss of focus over the final 6 miles. I underestimated the course and trained poorly. Too much trail running and slow long runs. And the biggest mistake was not doing my 12-15 mile MLR on my hill route. Because of the summer heat my long runs were too easy and slow. I think Texas runners are much better off to shoot for a marathon a little later in the year so their last two months of training can be in the fall.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-84629240032723238472011-08-30T09:30:00.000-07:002011-08-30T09:33:41.097-07:00The Shoe 60K Trail RaceI got up on Saturday and drove 200+ miles to Marble Falls. I got there about 11:30 AM and checked into my room at the Quality inn. I was the only person at the motel so I wondered if the place was closed down. The room was clean so it would do. Edgar, Shaheen and Steve showed up over the next hour. We grabbed some lunch and went back to the room for a nap. Steve and I were sharing a room and we both feel asleep. Three alarms went off at 4:40 and we both just want to stay asleep. We loaded up the cars and drove to the race.
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<br />At 7 we were off. It was at least 100 degrees but I was glad to get started. I was hoping for a 4 degree drop in temperature per lap. All though it was light out I knew that we would not be back in time for sun down so we all wore our headlamps. First we ran a little .82 of a mile out and back to get the correct distance. After that we would run 4 x 9.09 mile loops.
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<br />Out and back took 7:20 and that would be most of the crowd support for the night.
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<br />1st loop – 1:35 it felt very relaxed and we got a feel for the course. I started with two hand held water bottles. One with Sustained and the other with Gatorade. That is almost 500 calories. I skipped both of the aid stations on the course. About midway we hit a ½ mile section that was all rock and I knew this was going to take its toll over 4 loops. Some sections of the course were very runnable but overall it was the rockiest course I had ever run. Minimus shoes had no place on this course. I took a gel at mile 4 and 7 right before the aid stations so I could throw away the nasty gel packet. Back in the main aid station I re-filled my two water bottles with Gatorade and ate a few of chips and I was back on the course in 2 ½ min.
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<br />2nd loop – 1:59 this loop started off pretty good. I figured I was in 15-20th place but I really didn’t know as so many people are faster thru the aid stations. I was also being passed by some of the 30K runners so it was hard to know what place I was in. I still have work to do on my aid-station stops. I spend too much time deciding what to eat and drinking from the little cups. It would be much better to drink on the run. I stopped at both aid-stations on this loop to top off my water bottle. I should have limited myself to just one of them. Once I hit the middle rock section things really started to fall apart. My hip started bothering me going over the rocks and I slowed down to a crawl. By the mile 16 aid-station I was sure I was going to DNF and sit back at the finish line enjoying a few beers. Only running 19 miles would allow me to recover faster for my next race. I took gels at mile 13 and 16. I spent the next 3 miles pushing the pace back up and looking forward to being done. I was trying to come to grips why I am a strong road racer but when I get on the trails I seem to be a mid-packer with no killer instinct. I was just going to have to face it that I am not fast on trails and I don’t run well at night with my old eyes. I started to question all of my training as I seem to be trying to balance between fast marathon training and Ultra Trail endurance training. Do I need to learn how to train for one and just enjoy the other one? Do I need to pick a sport? Man it sucks to be normal. I’m just not use to that. I have always lived by the motto. If you want to be better at something then work harder. If you aren’t willing to work hard then live with being average. I then noticed how so many of these Ultra runners were trying so hard to keep going even if they were sick or injured. My hip was no longer bothering me so I figured I would go out for another loop. That would just be 28 miles. That’s barely a marathon. I had run that far already 11 times this year. Why not make it an even 12. I took 4 ½ min in the main aid station.
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<br />3rd loop – 1:53 this loop was one of my best I felt good and I was just running and not over thinking every step. About half way around this loop the overall winner caught me. I pushed for a half mile to hold him off but decided I could not hold his 10 min pace the whole way so I let him go. The next thing on my mind was Edgar and Steve were right behind him and ready to lap me. How embarrassing it would be for them to lap me on a 9 mile loop. I pushed the pace the rest of the lap as the ghost of Edgar and Steve chased me. Man do I have one hell of an ego. How my wife and kids put up with me I will never know. Sunny must be super human. Anyway I made it back to the main aid-station and no one else caught me. It took me 3 ½ min at the last aid station. I had a little run in with Nikki D and Teddi F as came in. Teddi had fallen down and they didn’t know I was a friend and I was going to run them down.
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<br />4th loop – 2:03 Yeah, this was my slowest loop but I was a little tired. The next few miles I kept trying to keep the pace up but not worry about what the watch said. Just run off feel. Funny how my good effort at this point was a 12:xx pace. I had another 60K runner catch me early on but his pace was too strong. I kept hearing a women and man talking so that was like a ghost chasing me. The funny thing is on trails like this with switch backs it often sounds like someone is real close but they might be a mile behind or for all I know a 30K racer on their second loop. At the first aid station a group of 3 or 4 guys caught up to me and the first thing one of them said was “there he is”. Like I had done something wrong. I took off and figured I would do my usual dropping of the hammer and show them. But a mile later I could hear them talking behind me. I just didn’t have the ability to drop them. I kept making them work over the next mile but they eventually caught up to me. We hung together over the next mile but once we hit that nasty rock section again I decided to walk it. I just had a vision of me pushing thru the rocks and tripping and breaking open my head. After that I picked it back up and decided I would skip the last water stop and chase them back down. I was giving it all I had and it just felt like I was never going to finish. Just over a mile out I went down. I caught myself with my water bottles and my back bent up big time. I was just sure I had done it. The old Nick would have been locked up like a drum. I think all the yoga and weights really allowed my back to handle that kind of a shock. In usual trail fashion the women next to me that I was passing asked if I was OK. I said yes but I needed someone to put me out of my misery. She said I was doing great so I hopped right back on my feet and took off with all I had again. I passed a couple more guys and I could hear the guys ahead. I kept getting faster and faster as we hit the last ¼ mile. I couldn’t see a thing as my light had faded and I thought I was going to give it my all and if I went down I could live with that. I sprinted down the shoot and caught one guy 50 yards from the finish line. Turns out he still had another lap to go. The two guys in front of him finished 20 seconds ahead of me.
<br />I sat down for a few min and then had a beer, hamburger and shot of tequila. Visited with friends over the next hour and was so happy I pressed thru and finished the whole race. I went thru so many emotions on the course and learned to run hard when I could and take it easy when I needed to. Yeah, I could trim a few minutes getting thru aid stations a little faster but I would rather learn to enjoy these races then race them with every second on my mind. My time was 7:49:55 and 17th overall.
<br />Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-73190561803701515902011-05-25T10:58:00.000-07:002011-05-25T11:49:38.170-07:00Jemez 50 Mile 2011I had been talked into running this 50 mile trail race months ago by my 320 friends Steve and Amy. At the time they sold it as a non-competitive easy stroll where we would all stay together and just have a good time. I knew once the race started it would be every man, women and child for themselves. We (Amy, Steve, Jayna, Shaheen and I) rented a condo in Santa Fe. Jayna, Shaheen and I would be running our first 50 mile race on the most brutal course you could imagine. Later on Edgar ended up moving up to the 50 mile race and Steve came out to just run 31 miles in the mountains. We all had the best time together and after seeing how we were so relaxed the day before the race compared to a marathon it is going to be hard to go back to that (marathon) type of racing. We got up at 3 AM race morning and were on the road by 3:45. We got to the race by 4:30 and it was real close getting to the starting line in time.<br /><a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-D0M9vM2YmxQ/Td1E3LfbGCI/AAAAAAAAAE0/3BGVqXsDlA0/s1600/Jemez%2B031.JPG"><img style="WIDTH: 400px; HEIGHT: 300px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610716425541589026" border="0" alt="" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-D0M9vM2YmxQ/Td1E3LfbGCI/AAAAAAAAAE0/3BGVqXsDlA0/s320/Jemez%2B031.JPG" /></a><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-N3oUyyiESI0/Td1EqGHB_TI/AAAAAAAAAEs/XUDpTPnc1pg/s1600/Jemez%2B033.JPG"></a> <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-d-g7CuJuQnQ/Td1FQRG5DeI/AAAAAAAAAE8/ONea0dyXiDk/s1600/Jemez%2B033.JPG"><img style="WIDTH: 400px; HEIGHT: 300px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610716856546037218" border="0" alt="" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-d-g7CuJuQnQ/Td1FQRG5DeI/AAAAAAAAAE8/ONea0dyXiDk/s320/Jemez%2B033.JPG" /></a><br /><a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-p3AKATdnM4Y/Td1EgbLHvTI/AAAAAAAAAEk/RE3n_r5NQPE/s1600/Jemez%2B031.JPG"></a><br />Mile 1 - 11:39 we started out on a road in a big group. At a 1/2 mile we hit a single track trail and it created a large bottleneck. We were standing still for 30 seconds. After we got on the trail we were walking the trail when we could have been running a better pace.<br />Mile 2 - 10:24 I continued real slow till about 1.5 miles when we started to pass people. At this point we were still with our whole group. Steve B, Amy, Edgar, Shaheen, Jayna and myself. At this point the trails were still easy and only about 130’ ascent.<br />Mile 3 - 10:55 it was still dark and Amy and Steve got a little more aggressive passing people. The rest of the group hung back a little.<br />Mile 4 - 11:41 we started to climb a little (189’ ascent) so the pace started to slow. We were starting to see light.<br />Mile 5 - 11:29 287’ Ascent so we were walking more uphill’s.<br /><br /><br /><a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-cStVLoHYXk8/Td1Ft9S0zNI/AAAAAAAAAFE/CQP_B1hlON4/s1600/Jemez2%2B014.JPG"><img style="WIDTH: 400px; HEIGHT: 300px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610717366623456466" border="0" alt="" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-cStVLoHYXk8/Td1Ft9S0zNI/AAAAAAAAAFE/CQP_B1hlON4/s320/Jemez2%2B014.JPG" /></a><br /><br /><br />Mile 6 - 13:47 we hit the first aid station here and as we approached we talked about a game plan for the stop. Although we weren’t racing we didn’t want to get stuck at the stop too long. We dropped off our headlamps here.<br />Mile 7 - 17:01 (643’ Ascent) A lot of slow climbs on switchbacks.<br />Mile 8 - 16:51 plenty of switchbacks both up and down. I was getting use to the narrow trails and I was probably overly conserving energy at this point. Our group was also still behind lots of slower runners holding down our pace.<br />Mile 9 - 15:45 another mile as I think back I could have run a bit faster. I have to learn that when the terrain turns downhill you need to pick up the pace. This mile was mostly downhill.<br />Mile 10 - 13:43 in my head I was always thinking a 15 min pace average would be a good goal. This was actually a pretty good mile considering it had its fair share of ups.<br />Mile 11 - 19:21 we hit an aid station (Caballo Base) here and started to climb Caballo Mountain. This was going to be 2 miles up (1800’ ascent) and the same 2 miles back down. It was mostly a walk up the mountain. At the time it seemed so difficult. I could feel my breathing getting very heavy. In retrospect this is another section I could have handled a little better going up.<br />Mile 12 - 26:57 this was one of my slower miles still going straight up the mountain. I was having a lot of problems with my left leg. It had gone dead almost to the point where I was limping on it. Here is where I had my first doubts because of a bad patch. I though the rest of the group would need to drop me as I was going too slow. Here is where the leaders started to come back down the mountain on the same single track. We would step off the track and give the downhill runners the right of way.<br />Mile 13 – 18:21 we reached the top of Caballo Mountain at 10,500’ elevation. It was beautiful as we turned around a tree to head back down the mountain. We stopped and took some pictures with the group. This is the first scary descent as we headed back down going against all runners coming up hill.<br /><a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-czn-CgLMHKk/Td1Gn-f92aI/AAAAAAAAAFM/fG3oryMD7_o/s1600/DSC_0165.JPG"><img style="WIDTH: 400px; HEIGHT: 268px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610718363379423650" border="0" alt="" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-czn-CgLMHKk/Td1Gn-f92aI/AAAAAAAAAFM/fG3oryMD7_o/s320/DSC_0165.JPG" /></a><br /><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-r2RaRt4XsLo/Td1HYrfX4xI/AAAAAAAAAFU/8TEEIbdJafw/s1600/Jemez2%2B039.JPG"><img style="WIDTH: 400px; HEIGHT: 300px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610719200090252050" border="0" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-r2RaRt4XsLo/Td1HYrfX4xI/AAAAAAAAAFU/8TEEIbdJafw/s320/Jemez2%2B039.JPG" /></a><br /><br />Mile 14 - 13:03 this mile was all downhill and although it felt very fast I was obviously going pretty careful as Edgar and Shaheen were pulling away from me very quickly. Most of the runners coming up hill were very good about yielding to the downhill runners. We ran into a few runners that would just stop the middle of the track. I caught up to Shaheen and Edgar. SS is covered in dirt and doubled over. She had tripped and gone down pretty hard. She said her calve was really sore but after a few miles she was running strong again.<br />Mile 15 - 17:40 we got to the bottom of the hill and stopped at the aid station. As usual we spent too much time at aid stations waiting for all 5 of us to get together, eat and fill our water bottles.<br />Mile 16 - 23:44 (881’ Ascent) we crossed a bunch of streams. All of them were small enough for us to jump over and not get our feet wet. We ran into a ladder and stopped for pictures as well as there was a line to get up the ladder.<br /><a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-pLPBqSi4U8k/Td1IzTd_opI/AAAAAAAAAFk/-zlyqedQv8c/s1600/Jemez2%2B031.JPG"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-pLPBqSi4U8k/Td1IzTd_opI/AAAAAAAAAFk/-zlyqedQv8c/s400/Jemez2%2B031.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610720757010113170" /></a><br /><a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-Yh-ZORMDY_o/Td1M7VSm6MI/AAAAAAAAAFs/1trTONnmwZ8/s1600/Jemez2%2B032.JPG"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-Yh-ZORMDY_o/Td1M7VSm6MI/AAAAAAAAAFs/1trTONnmwZ8/s400/Jemez2%2B032.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610725292984690882" /></a><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Mile 17 - 13:10 fairly flat mile<br />Mile 18 - 19:55 we hit the pipeline aid station and spent a long time here. This is our first bag drop. I left my gloves here and got some brew GU for my handheld and filled it with water. I ate cookies and chips. I waited around for the rest of the group to get all their stuff taken care of. Jayna came in a little behind us with her nose bleeding and she told us to go on and she would keep plowing along. She seemed in good spirits so after a got a few pictures we headed out. As soon as you leave the aid station you hit this ski slope going down loose dirt/Scree. (500’ ascent) This was my favorite part of the race. As most people were going down real slow and holding onto everything they could find I just skied down the slope. The dirt was loose but soft. I was down to the bottom in about a min. I pulled my camera back out and took pictures of Edgar and Shaheen as they came down 4 min later.<br />Mile 19 - 10:37 the next 3 miles were the easiest of the race. Mostly jeep trails with a slight decent.<br />Mile 20 - 9:53<br />Mile 21 - 9:21<br />Mile 22 - 13:06 we hit the next aid station. (Valle Grande) We had the longest gap between these stations at over 7 miles and some massive climbs. With only one water bottle I was concerned I might run out of water.<br />Mile 23 - 25:04 (760’ ascent) I was heading across fields with no real trail. I would walk for 30 seconds and then run for 30 seconds. It was hard to run very fast in the clumps of grass. We hit the rock field here.<br /><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-DKEUrKr9dDE/Td1ORGdqJ_I/AAAAAAAAAF0/qL272obePio/s1600/Jemez2%2B059.JPG"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-DKEUrKr9dDE/Td1ORGdqJ_I/AAAAAAAAAF0/qL272obePio/s400/Jemez2%2B059.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610726766473258994" /></a><br /><br />Mile 24 - 27:47 (770’ ascent) after the rocks it was 2 miles straight up Cerro Grande. Here is where I had to drop back and Shaheen and Edgar went on. They were able to climb faster than me. In the back of my mind I figured I might catch them by the end.<br />Mile 25 - 15:20 (740’ descent) once we got to the top of Cerro Grande there was a nice downhill. This mile however was a case of too rocky and steep as well as I was recovering from climbing the mountain.<br /><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-UzRwmdxY_go/Td1OiDTJOrI/AAAAAAAAAF8/2BjueFXsQRw/s1600/nick.jpg"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 264px; height: 400px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-UzRwmdxY_go/Td1OiDTJOrI/AAAAAAAAAF8/2BjueFXsQRw/s400/nick.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610727057681627826" /></a><br /><br />Mile 26 - 10:29 (580’ descent) I was rolling down the Caᾖon de Valle pretty good now. I had to slow down a little cause every time I would get below a 10 min pace my ribs were starting to hurt. It felt like I had been in a prize fight. I guess it was all the descending and ascending had used a lot of new muscles. I will need to kick up my core work a bit before my next trail Ultra. For the first time in years I am going to stop worrying about my weight and try to build some muscle. Maybe I can stop looking like a skinny runner.<br />Mile 27 - 10:41 the next two miles were more of the same. I only saw a few runners as the field had spread out. I kept wondering if I would see my friends at the next aid station.<br />Mile 28 - 12:20 I was starting to feel some bad chafing on my right thigh.<br />Mile 29 - 11:56<br />Mile 30 - 19:57 I reached the Pajarito Canyon aid station where our second drop bag was located. A young boy brought my bag as soon as I got to the station. They would see our number from off in the distance and call it out so they were ready for us. As much as I tried to have a game plan going into these stations I was not getting everything I needed. I got my body glide and GU Brew drink done and trash disposed as well as reloaded with gels. I probably should have dropped my camera as I was no longer taking pictures. I could have loaded up on drink mix for the next couple of stations. At each stop I would grab a cup of coke and chips and cookies.<br />Mile 31 - 18:14 (400’ ascent) It was 4 miles to the next aid station and it was getting hot and each mile was uphill. Each mile I kept saying to myself. “Make this mile the best it can be.” I was trying to stay as close to a 15 min pace as possible. At this point my overall pace was still below a 15 min pace overall but some real tough miles laid ahead.<br />Mile 32 - 15:17 (200’ ascent) I did a good job of picking off some runners as others were starting to struggle in the heat. I ran by one guy that looked like he was dressed for Badwater with full white long sleeve and hat with flaps to cover his neck. It was probably 60 degrees so I didn’t find it all that hot.<br />Mile 33 - 18:38 (400’ ascent)<br />Mile 34 - 22:33 here I hit the Townsite Lift aid station. Filled my water and ate some cookies and took a gel. Once I left the station I was talking to a guy that had run this race many times and he was sure I was not ready for this race as a road racer and he was surprised I was doing this well. When I explained that my friends were ahead he said I would see them again because they were going too fast. I wasn’t paying attention and just following him and three other people. He said we had gone too far so we yelled at the people in front of us and turned around. I was very mentally defeated at this point. I just started walking back as everyone else in the group ran. This was the start of the worst patch in the race for me.<br />Mile 35 - 27:11 we found the trail again and we started to climb up Pajarito Mountain. It was a big ski slope with some switchbacks and lots of straight up climbing. There was almost no running the next few miles.<br />Mile 36 - 24:40 this area was very hard to navigate. There were plenty of tree covered areas were marking were hard to locate. I would have to stop and look around for orange flags. A couple times I had to go back 50 yards as I missed the trail. This could have been marked a little better. I noticed that I was going uphill so slow and yet I was breathing very heavy and sweating. To top it off I would see snow on the ground so it couldn’t have been too hot. I thought about dropping out so many times going up this mountain. I kept thinking that my body was in trouble and running out of gas. I reached the top of Pajarito Mountain at the end of this mile.<br />Mile 37 - 25:21 (1000’ descent) Here is where I had to go straight down a ski slope. It was so steep that I was not able to go all that fast. Here is where the good trail runners separate themselves. That is a skill and confidence I will have to develop. At the bottom I reached the Ski Lodge aid station. Edgar and Steve B were just leaving. Amy had already bombed down the hill and taken off by herself. Shaheen was in a chair with her ankle wrapped up. She would have to drop here. I would find out later that Jayna would arrive just after I left and would be forced to drop here as well. I ate a brownie, filled my water bottle and took off. I had a huge since of relief that I had passed the last cut off station and all I had to do was walk it in from here and I would finish. I started to feel better each mile.<br />Mile 38 - 14:30 finally a flat mile and I was able to get in a decent pace. I was running with another man that was real nice and he too was surprised I was where I was with almost no trail or altitude experience.<br />Mile 39 - 16:21 another mile with only a little uphill. I knew I was getting close to the pipeline station so I continued to push a little more.<br /><a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-Li0PZWHlbw8/Td1OyXw-FxI/AAAAAAAAAGE/VrNxChC6wdI/s1600/IMG_4181.JPG"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-Li0PZWHlbw8/Td1OyXw-FxI/AAAAAAAAAGE/VrNxChC6wdI/s400/IMG_4181.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610727338053342994" /></a><br /><a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-jK7u-LQ7zTU/Td1O-lzJeQI/AAAAAAAAAGM/yF91oCqkK5g/s1600/Jemez2%2B065.JPG"><img style="cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 300px; height: 400px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-jK7u-LQ7zTU/Td1O-lzJeQI/AAAAAAAAAGM/yF91oCqkK5g/s400/Jemez2%2B065.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5610727547979004162" /></a><br /><br />Mile 40 - 20:19 I finally reached the Pipeline aid station. This would be the last time I would see my drop bag. I dropped off my camera after I had one of the people take a couple of pictures of me. They were laughing at me because every time they would offer me anything I told them that would be awesome. I also left my t-shirt in the bag and just ran with my singlet. I had a root beer Popsicle. As soon as I got out of there I had a long climb the next mile. This was the last hard miles. I realized after I left the station that I didn’t fully restock my fuel belt and all I had for the next 11 miles was 3 gels. As long as I didn’t bonk I would be fine. I was also wearing a fuel belt with nothing in it.<br />Mile 41 - 14:44 A flat mile along a mountain ridge and I was able to pick up the pace. For about a 1/2mile I didn’t see anyone of markings and I was a little worried I had missed a turn.<br />Mile 42 - 13:22 (300’ descent) this was a nice downhill mile. I could see some runners and I was starting to pick them off.<br />Mile 43 - 14:28 I passed a woman in sandals before the Guaje Ridge aid station. She skipped the station and passed me back. After the station I ran her back down. She would stay on my tail the rest of the race and push me thru the finish.<br />Mile 44 - 15:07 from here to the end was my best miles of the race. I felt in control and plenty of energy.<br />Mile 45 - 12:14<br />Mile 46 - 12:29 all these miles were out in the open with lots of sun light. Runners were pretty spread out. I would pass about one person every half mile.<br />Mile 47 - 12:37 thru all of these last few miles I could feel the women in the sandals right behind me. I kept pushing because I didn’t want anyone to catch me. She must have also been a big deal cause when we got to the last aid station they had a birthday cake for her. I told her to eat a piece while I took a small lead.<br />Mile 48 - 13:58<br />Mile 49 - 16:19 last aid station. Before I got there I saw all these signs advertising last chance for beer, whine, whisky and pie. I stopped and had a cup of beer. As soon as I left the aid station I ran into David Hanenburg. We exchanged a few quick words and I kept moving up the hill as best I could. I decided it was time to start running the up hills as best I could.<br />Mile 50 - 11:41 Overall these last miles were relatively flat I and I am very happy I could still move this good.<br />Mile 51 – 12:37 because of some missed turns my race was 50:68 miles long. I kept pushing the pace and waiting for the finish. Finally I got to a big rock formation that went up hill so I had to walk it a few seconds.<br /><br />Total - 13:30:59.<br />I finished 68 out of 118 finishers<br />162 started, 31 DNF, 13 switched to the 50K<br /><br />It is so hard to put in to words what I felt after this race. I was the last to finish of the group but I still felt such a huge since of accomplishment. So many emotions came over me during this race. So many times I questioned if I could run 50 miles. I am so proud of the other runners in my group. Amy finished in 12:21 and was the 5th overall female. Steve B finished in 12:58 and Edgar right behind him in 12:59. Jayna and Shaheen had foot and ankle injuries that forced them to drop out at mile 36. As I walked into the shack I had the biggest smile on my face. I hope to come back next year and go sub 12 hours. The reality is because of where I live I will need to predominantly train on the roads but I will race on the trails. I came out of the race feeling pretty good.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-1022901842937361722011-04-21T13:20:00.000-07:002011-04-21T13:22:51.935-07:00Boston Marathon 2011<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-3J7doDFK_Zg/TbCR_SjNkXI/AAAAAAAAAEM/rdXaTngfBgg/s1600/Boston2011%2B083.JPG"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-3J7doDFK_Zg/TbCR_SjNkXI/AAAAAAAAAEM/rdXaTngfBgg/s320/Boston2011%2B083.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5598134853318840690" /></a><br /><br />This whole marathon was a last minute thing and I only got a bib in the last week. There was no real taper as I ran 81 miles the previous week. I hadn’t done any speed since Houston due to a small injury 4 weeks ago. I was going to have to run this whole thing on aerobic fitness/endurance. I flew down Saturday morning and went to the Expo. Sunday morning I did my Aussie carb load run and felt great. 800 was at 5:40 pace. Had the usual struggles of getting into a breakfast place fast enough and we saw the 5K first. We had some bagels in hand so we were able to get something in us. The rest of the day we walked too much but had a great meal and got to bed on time. I have been eating a lot less meat the last 10 days and I wasn’t sure what that would mean for me on race day. I was able to hold my weight down for the first time ever in the taper. We took a charter bus so we didn’t have to be on it till 7:30 gave us time to wake up later and have a good breakfast. The charter was much larger than the school bus from the year before. This is how the Damn King rolls. On the bus I listened to music to set my mood and wrote some splits on my arm because I forgot my pace band. I realized 3 miles into the race that I wrote them all as faster than MP so I made an error and so I had no idea which ones were correct. I had studied this course so much that I knew what I needed to do. Planned MP was 6:47. I was fine with a 5 sec swing either way. I took my first GU 10 min before the start.<br />Mile 1 - 6:50 (Hopkinton) Controlled first mile as I ran with the crowd. I started in corral 2.<br />Mile 2 - 6:28 easy downhill mile and I felt great but I was 10+ seconds fast here<br />Mile 3 - 6:35 (Ashland) This mile is a fast so I was right on pace. Honestly I am not use to the idea that a 6:35 is a good pace for a marathon. It sounds a lot faster than it feels.<br />Mile 4 - 6:25 This mile was also 10 seconds fast. I have never had such fresh legs for a marathon. <br />Mile 5 - 6:41 First mile with net uphill but just barely. I was still a little fast but not too bad. This is where my mind started to think of 2:56. Too early to lay down the hammer and I probably need to get back on pace before I blow my race. I am usually much better about sticking to my plan. <br />Mile 6 - 6:47 more rolling hills but this was a net down. I was back on pace although this should have been a faster mile. I knew 6 was a fast mile but I was just running real easy and going off feel. Took my second GU. I was also mixing Gatorade between GUs. I was trying to hydrate early so I would have a full tank thru the hills and after them. <br />Mile 7 - 6:46 Ran this mile on pace.<br />Mile 8 - 6:51 This mile was a little slow but still in my 5 second window. <br />Mile 9 - 6:52 I was 13 seconds slow on this one and I was starting to wonder if I was starting to feel the lack of a taper. In the back of my mind I knew many people doubted me for not tapering for 2-3 weeks. It put a chip on my shoulder and that is how I like it. <br />Mile 10 - 6:54 This is supposed to be a slow mile but I still didn’t like seeing a plus 3 hour pace. <br />Mile 11 - 6:52 This mile was right on pace but I had seen too many of these in a row. I was wondering if I would be holding on for a sub 3 or even dropping back and picking up a friend.<br />Mile 12 - 6:31 I hit Wellesley here. I moved over to the left to avoid the girls but this year instead of looking down like a shy boy I looked over to see the girls and all the signs. I saw guys stopping for hugs and kisses. I instantly thought of my wife and all the sacrifices she makes for me to run all these miles and races. I decided I was going to give everything I had for the next 1:30+ and see what happened. <br />Mile 13 - 6:36 I hit the halfway point at 1:28:19. About 15 seconds behind my original plan. I felt very strong at this point. I took my third GU. <br />Mile 14 - 6:43 I knew I needed to conserve energy the next 3 miles before the hills. <br />Mile 15 - 6:50 Another mile right on pace.<br />Mile 16 - 6:34 This mile was supposed to be even a little faster but I wasn’t going to press as the hills were up next.<br />Mile 17 - 7:00 First Newton hill which was very long. I thought about pressing just a little thru the hill so I wouldn’t have a single mile in the 7s. I decided to let my ego suffer and try to run a smart race.<br />Mile 18 - 7:02 Second Newton at fire station. I was having trouble finding which was the second hill.<br />Mile 19 - 6:56 This mile was a little downhill and should have been a lot faster. I was just thinking survive the hills. By the 30K mark I felt good but I was already just over marathon pace and I was going to have to get past 2 more hills and really pick up the pace. I felt 2:58 was slipping. Took my 4th GU and thought would it be enough.<br />Mile 20 - 6:58 john Kelly Statue, hill #3. Good pace on this mile and I felt ready to finish off the hills. This year I didn’t seem to pass as many people on the hills as last year. <br />Mile 21 - 7:09 Heartbreak hill. I felt strong going up and I didn’t think I would need to recover long. Told a guy going up that we were done with the hills and ready to race. I was about to leave so many people I had run around for the whole race. This was the only mile all day that I could hear my breathing.<br />Mile 22 - 6:29 My plan was to recover for ¼ mile and then hit the gas. I didn’t need to recover as after a ¼ mile my pace was 6:10 and I was hitting the breaks. In hindsight I should have just laid the hammer all the way down. I was afraid at low 6 pace I would flame out by the end. This mile tells the story in this race. If you have legs and can hit pace then you are good. If not then just hope you can run fast enough that the BC students don’t yell at you. <br />Mile 23 - 6:49 I really thought I ran this mile much faster. Now that I look at splits it is just kind of average. I know I had planned for a fade the last 3 miles so I didn’t need too much but I needed to make up some ground.<br />Mile 24 - 6:51 Another mile that I thought I ran faster. Starting to pass tons of runners and now I was seeing all new people from the rest of the race. <br />Mile 25 - 6:45 Still feeling strong and I probably need to go now.<br />Mile 26 - 6:31 I am not sure if I am going to run a 2:57 or :58. Math doesn’t work this late in the race. I am feeling real strong here and storming by everyone. I was wishing I knew were my group was cheering out. I wanted to go by them, flex my muscles and yell “You thought I would fade”.<br />Mile 26.2 - 5:44 I felt so strong down the stretch. I was passing tons of runners, pumping my fist and even point up to God. I was so thankful he gave me the strength to be there and run a good race.<br />Total - 2:58:00 PR (9 marathon PRs in a row)<br />5k-20:40 / 10K-41:30 / 15k-1:02:48 / 20K-1:23:56 / Half-1:28:19 / 25K-1:44:51 / 30K-2:06:30 / <br />35K-2:27:59 / 40K-2:49:16<br />Finished 1228 up 800 spots from last year.<br /><br />So this was not really a text book preparation for a race. I think with another week of taper and some sharpening I could have shaved another 1-2 min off. I don’t think the hard 20 mile run the week before was a typical run 8 days out. On the other hand I took a week off 4 weeks ago so I had a chance to freshen up and I had strong legs and confidence coming in to the race. I did a lot more core work and added yoga once a week the last two months and I think that helped me get a lot stronger in my mid-section. Trail running has also made me stronger. I like to think I am a smart runner and mentally strong. I want to thank all of Dallas Running Project for making me stronger. I really am on the lower half of this group in speed and I am motivated by so many of these runners to get faster. A special thanks go out to Joe, Michael, Jen, Jayna and Shaheen for running with me and encouraging me to run Boston when I was not sure I could swing it. You all support me emotionally, physically and financially. As always a big thanks to my wife Sunny and my boys. You support and inspire me daily to train and reach for new levels.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-56466407425591518832011-03-21T13:23:00.000-07:002011-03-21T13:25:43.181-07:00Grasslands Marathon 2011<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-i6MXGXMGIsg/TYe0GM5UTFI/AAAAAAAAAEE/lkNwycUytt4/s1600/nick_shaheen.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-i6MXGXMGIsg/TYe0GM5UTFI/AAAAAAAAAEE/lkNwycUytt4/s320/nick_shaheen.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5586631881410235474" /></a><br /><br />This race was to be a long training run. This is not supposed to be a technical trail and a chance to build more trail experience and muscles. I would love to find a way to do a long trail run every Saturday. After I spoke with a lot of friends that have run this course I decided to go with a road shoe. I went with the Brooks T6. I think the launce might have been a better option but no real problems to speak of. At the last minute Shaheen got a bib so she could ride down with me and run with me. This made the day 1000 times better. I had someone to talk to both during the drive and for most of the race we ran together. These trail races are so awesome. It is so relaxed everyone is so cool. Before the race I saw Libby, Mike K, Tim, Mike (Pedro) and finally met Kim Gray. She is a nut running two marathons this week. What a great idea. I will put it on my list.<br /><br />Mile 1 - 8:57. The goal was to go out at a 9 min pace or whatever felt real comfortable. We started out a little too far back in the pack we passed all but maybe 10 people the first 2 miles. It was a pretty easy pace. <br />Mile 2 - 8:25. We picked up the pace this mile as we worked our way around more people.<br />Mile 3 - 8:37. This would end up being about our average pace for the entire race including stops at aid stations. <br />Mile 4 - 8:04. By now we had broken away from the pack and we were positioned perfectly between two runners. One ahead to open the cattle gates and one behind us to close them. <br />Mile 5 - 8:04. We are starting to learn that you need to really watch all the trail marking and not just blindly follow the runner in front of you. We never got off course but we had to call out some turns to the guy in front. <br />Mile 6 - 8:22. The sand is getting deep and we are learning to deal with it. When I hear another runner struggling with something it makes me stronger. If I hear them complain about temperature, wind or the trail I know that it is bothering them and I can deal with it. <br />Mile 7 - 8:16. A couple of runners (orange shirt and blue shirt guy) pull away from us and we back off and let them go. I figure there are 3-5 guys up in the front that we will never see and about 5 that will fade and we will run down by the end. <br />Mile 8 - 8:34. We pass the second aid station and we only stop for a second to dispose of our GEL trash. We still have 10 oz. of water left each and we can make it another 4/5 miles to the main aid station. The next two miles are the toughest with the deep sand. I get the feeling Shaheen has not spent too much time at the beach. But she is tough as nails and learns to adapt. <br />Mile 9 - 8:51. It is interesting in the sand how you try to go side to side looking for the firmest path to avoid the soft sand. I see some people moving off trail to try to avoid it but I don’t feel it is slowing me down too much and I figure if I run in it I well get stronger. Shaheen follows me like I have some secret. Little does she know that I am trying to work harder. We also have to open and close a cattle gate this mile which is about a 15-20 second delay.<br />Mile 10 - 8:08. The sand lets up a little and the pace picks up. <br />Mile 11 - 8:26. <br />Mile 12 - 8:17. <br />Mile 13 - 9:42. We hit the main aid station here. We had about 1 ½ min stop. Bathroom, refilled handhelds with water and I grabbed a couple cookies for the road. So the pace was pretty good. Loved having Mike K there at the aid station for me. He refilled our water, told us we weren’t too far back from the leaders and told me the Blue trail (second half) had a lot less sand. He said we looked good and Shaheen was the first female. I told him I would be back in 20 min. (joke) <br />Mile 14 - 8:40. We had a couple of spots where I had to make a judgment call on what direction to go. Each time we would run 200 yards nervous we had missed a marking and then we would see the trail. There was a lot of stress if I made a wrong turn because Shaheen and another guy Steve was following us. <br />Mile 15 - 8:37. We start running into some of the half runners. I am a little surprised we are seeing them so soon but these must be the walkers. About ½ of them know to move to the right and the others don’t. Headphones are not a good idea on a trail race. Some of these people couldn’t hear us calling out as we were coming. <br />Mile 16 - 8:55. We also hit another gate this mile. Somewhere around here Steven caught us and passed us. I made a mental note of what he looked like. White shirt and Camelbak. <br />Mile 17 - 9:13. We hit an aid station here. We were there about 40 seconds. Shaheen topped off her water and I disposed of my second gel and got another cookie. I was getting my money back on these fignewtons. <br />Mile 18 - 8:23. We are passing tons of half marathoners. But other than the other runners the trail is very easy. The white trail which was the first half of the race was a much more difficult trail than the Blue trail which is the second half of the course. <br />Mile 19 - 8:36. Shaheen starts to fall back just a few feet at this point. I can see some marathoners that I hadn’t seen since the starting line. <br />Mile 20 - 8:52. Here was the hard mental part of the race. I had plenty left in my tank but this was a training run. We had a vote with racing Nick and training Nick if we should slow down to a 9 min pace or continue with the current pace and catch some of the marathoners. <br />Mile 21 - 8:23. As you can see my ego and racing Nick won so we kept a good pace and passed a couple of marathon runners. I figured I was about 7th or 8th place by now but that is just a guess. <br />Mile 22 - 8:45. <br />Mile 23 - 10:23. This is the last aid station. Took my third gel, refilled my water and ate a cookie. I spent about 2 min at this aid station. I waited for Shaheen and when she got to this station I could tell the heat was getting to her and she needed to eat and drink. Ego Nick was having a tough time because when I first got to the station I saw a couple more marathon runners. I felt real bad leaving Shaheen but I figured she needed a few more min. She was either going to have to walk the last 3+ miles or run them. There was no ride home from here. <br />Mile 24 - 8:14 I figured those 2 marathoners had 2 min on me and I could get one min per mile and run them down by the end. <br />Mile 25 - 8:17. I had picked up the pace a little but I felt very strong. I caught the one marathon runner (blue shirt) this mile. We talked for a few seconds and he told someone we passed that he was going to hang on to me to the end. We had a good climb along the lake and I hammered out the next ¼ mile to drop him. I know, not very trail like. <br />Mile 26 - 7:54. I could see the next marathoner (Orange Shirt) as I caught him he had slowed quite a bit. I flew by him and said hi. I wasn’t sure if I would see Camelbak guy but I was giving all I had to run him down. I could see the cars and figured he was too strong to catch. With less than ¼ mile to go I finally saw him and I caught him. He sounded disappointed when I flew by but congratulated me on looking strong.<br /> <br />Total: 3:42:31.<br />Distance: 25:82<br />Pace: 8:37<br /><br />I was very happy with my race. I had taken it somewhat easy and had a lot left in the tank in the end. I think I ended up around 5th place overall but I don’t know. Trail races don’t spit out the results right away. But as I am learning trail races is not about the time or even about the place unless you are top three. It is about enjoying the race and finishing. I have a lot to learn. I have never had more fun in a race and I need to give a special thanks to Shaheen for coming out and running with me. She was only a few min behind me and she recovered, ran a strong last 3 miles and caught a couple of those guys as well. She appeared to be the first female by 15 or so min. running next to her always makes you a rock star. Now I need to go find another trail race. I am addicted. As always a big special thanks to my amazing wife Sunny for holding down the fort and letting me spend my Saturday out of town racing.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-18908215540375442882011-02-21T08:37:00.000-08:002011-02-21T08:52:57.469-08:00Cross Timbers ½ Marathon Trail RaceI have never run on a technical trail but always wanted too. I never seem to figure out how to get on one. All the trails are a good 45+ min from my house and I never seem to have the time to add that time to my run. Last December I decided to find a short race and sign up. I signed up for the Half and I signed up Christopher my 12 year old for the 5 mile. I picked up Christopher after school on Friday and we drove out to Lake Texoma. We went to pick up our packets and have the pre-race meal. Went back to our cabin were we watched Simpsons on the laptop and fell asleep before 9 PM. We got up at 6 AM and got ready to go. I put a bagel in the oven but I forgot about it and burned it. I threw it out and put in another bagel and timed this one for 3 min. It was too long and it burned too. I put in a third bagel and finally got this one right. We drove to the start were we saw some friends Neil and Jennifer that were running the full. After they took off at 7:00 AM we got ready for our start at 7:30 AM. Christopher legs were very sore from running track all week at school and after he warmed up he couldn’t get his legs loose so he decided to sit this one out. Because of the size of the field 120+ people they were going to have us run 3 loops (1/4 mile each) around the roads till we hit the trail.<br /><br />Mile 1 - 7:38 ¾ mile was on the roads. We went out at a 7:15 pace. I wanted to go a little faster but I wanted to keep some people with me. I didn’t want to be the first person on the trail. I hit the trail around 3rd place. After a couple hundred yards 4 or 5 guys coming flying past my little group. They were running our same pace on flat ground and uphill but they were much faster on the technical decents.<br /><br />Mile 2 - 9:08 I was still trailing two other guys and just trying to learn how they handled the trails.<br /><br />Mile 3 - 11:03 I hit some more technical areas so I stayed behind these two guys. They were slowing me down on flat parts but I had no idea how my legs would hold out over the long haul so decided to hold back.<br /><br />Mile 4 - 10:12 I hit the first water station and took one very small cup of water and took off. After the stop I was in the second position as one of the guys took a little longer at the rest station. This mile started off pretty easy and I could hear another guy coming up on us fast. We hit a road for 100 yards and the front guy let me pass and the fast guy behind us came by me. I jumped on his tail and let him pull me along.<br /><br />Mile 5 - 9:53 This guy was the real deal. I was starting to form an opinion and some of the routes he would take I would second guess after we got there. This is where the people of the race started to show how different they were. At one point he told me we were on the tougher path and needed to drop down. We are also catching some of the marathon runners and they step off the trail to let us pass and they say words of encouragement.<br /><br />Mile 6 - 9:52 By the end of this mile the fast guy starts to pull away from me. I knew the winning pace from last year was 9:50 so I didn’t see a reason to push and harder that this pace.<br /><br />Mile 7 - 11:12 There were some really tough technical sections in this mile. We hit one section were we had to climb with our hands up a rock face. Saw the three lead guys coming back here. The leader Tim had introduced himself to me before the race and encourage me as he went by.<br /><br />Mile 8 - 12:45 Hit the turnaround water station. The 4th guy left shortly after I got there. I had 2 cups at drink and I looked around in amazement for another min at all the candy and treats. I was in candy heaven but I was afraid to eat that stuff. I thanked the volunteers and then took off.<br /><br />Mile 9 - 10:32 I was passing all the half and full runners still heading out. They were so nice. If the trail was narrow they would step off the trail for me to pass.<br /><br />Mile 10 - 11:06 I was getting tired here and I think I hear someone behind me and I look back at switchbacks. I find it hard to look at my watch or look back on the trails. It takes everything when I am running alone to watch my step and keep finding the tape markings on the trail.<br /><br />Mile 11 - 10:39 I start to see the guy in front of me but then he disappears and I think I am imagining things. Am I this tired? I fear I will get too tired and fall. I continue to focus on my steps. As I see the other runner more often I start to pick up my pace. By the end of this mile I have caught him.<br /><br />Mile 12 - 11:18 We get to the last water stop and the guy there tells us we are 6 min behind the #3 guy so it is up to the two of us to battle it out for 4th and 5th place. I look at the other runner and say let’s go. I take off pretty strong and I gap him pretty fast.<br /><br />Mile 13 - 9:59 I keep saying to myself “I want 4th place”. So I keep pressing and just hope this guy doesn’t have a big kick. Not sure where you would kick on a trail.<br /><br />Mile 14 - 12:01 pace Just when I think I have it in the bag. I run up on two young teens. The girl is down and she hit her head on a tree. She appears fine and she is with this other teen so I figure she is fine so I move on. Going up the last big climb I trip on a root and fall on my hands. As I get back up I am breathing very hard so I walk up this hill and then I start to run again when I get to the top of the hill. A couple more turns and I see the finish.<br /><br />Total was 2:20:05 for 4th place overall<br /><br />I really enjoyed the race and I had to adjust my mindset. It’s not about time and more about placement and for most of the runners just finishing. I had a good time at the finish line visiting with other runners. I already signed up for my next trail run. I am running the Jemez 50 mile trail race in May.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-74903543887609226872011-01-31T11:09:00.000-08:002011-01-31T11:15:07.308-08:00Houston Marathon 2011After Chicago I decided to kick up my training a bit. Mileage would still be in the 70-85 range with very hard Track, Hills and Tempo runs each week. I was going to run the hills and long runs faster. I was going to eliminate the need for good weather for a marathon PR and sub3. Training went great and I put up PRs in the Half, 5K and 10k twice. The week before the marathon I made the mistake of working too hard in the yard and pulled my back a bit. Not something I couldn’t manage as my weak back gets like this now and then. I flew down to Houston on Friday for work. I went to the Expo during the day and spend the night with my Uncle Nickey. I got up Saturday and got in my 3 mile Aussie carb load run. Met up with the crew and we all watched Dawn PR at the Half Championships. When I got up the next morning for the race I was well rested but my back was very tight. I was very angry about the weather and I was talking to Sunny and praying to God to calm me down and go run my race. Both of my marathons this fall and winter were very warm. I run much better in the 40s. Got to GRB convention center by 6:15 and got out to the starting line by 6:45. It was 63 degrees, 100% humidity<br /><br />Mile 1 - 6:58. This was one of the toughest miles of the day. My back was killing me and I thought about quitting. The pain was shooting down my left leg. I remembered all the tough track workouts and how everyone in DRP and 320 were tracking me. Pain I can live with.<br />Mile 2 - 6:47. Back was starting to loosen up a little but my stride was still very bad. We were coming back off the bridge we climbed the first mile so I made up the lost time.<br />Mile 3 - 6:53. I take my first gel here. I am just trying to find 6:52 pace without pushing too hard.<br />Mile 4 - 6:50. I hear some Christian rock music and it lifts my spirits.<br />Mile 5 - 6:43. I am starting to think I need to hit the 10K on pace cause everyone tracking me will get that split.<br />Mile 6 - 6:48. A few rolling hills around here and the rain picks up a little.<br />Mile 7 - 6:49. I figured by now if I feel it I can pick up the pace a little and keep it up till 18. I plan to bank 30 seconds by mile 18 and run even splits thru the last 8 miles. This is a change due to the warmer weather.<br />Mile 8 - 6:47. I see the family for the first time here. This is the first time my 5 year old twins have come out to see me race. Wow, did that ever give me a boost. I instantly went from sad and no confidence in myself to thinking I am a pretty big deal to these two little boys. I raced by and tried to give them a high five but I guess I stepped in a hole and turned my ankle and almost went down. I think I heard Luke say out loud that high fives while running was dangerous. I was fine.<br />Mile 9 - 6:52. Heading into Rice University. I lived in this area till I was 5 years old. I take my second Roctane gel here. Followed by a belch ¼ mile later.<br />Mile 10 - 6:54. I had problems in this mile the year before. I don’t think it is up hill.<br />Mile 11 - 6:44. The 3 hour pace group comes flying past me in this mile. As you can see my pace picks up but they are going even faster. I finally tell myself that I am just under 3 hr pace and they are banking time. I know that I will catch and pass them before the finish.<br />Mile 12 - 6:49. I feel pretty good here even with the pace group a couple hundred yards ahead.<br />Mile 13 - 6:47. So they have a clock at 13 mile mark and not at the half. I cross the half at 1:29:36. Now if I could just run another 1:30 half.<br />Mile 14 - 6:52. This is the big hill and I am starting to feel even better. All those hill runs pay off and I catch up a lot of ground on the 3 hr pace group.<br />Mile 15 - 6:43. See the family for the second time here and again you can see the pace really pick-up. High fives go much better this time. I take my third Roctane gel here.<br />Mile 16 - 6:49. I am caught up to the 3 hr pace group and I figure I can run with them for a while. Surly they will finish with time to spare.<br />Mile 17 - 6:54. Last mile till we turn toward the finish. I am confused why the pace group would slow here.<br />Mile 18 - 6:59. Another slow mile. We still have 20 seconds in the bank. My goal from here on out is nothing slower than 6:52.<br />Mile 19 - 6:54. I pull to the front of the pace group as people are falling off right and left.<br />Mile 20 - 6:50. The hills are starting to roll but I feel very strong and confident.<br />Mile 21 - 6:52. I take my 4th Roctane gel here. No more food or water from here on out.<br />Mile 22 - 6:59. I see the family for the last time here. About a 1/3 into the mile I pull away from the pace group as we are doing a 7:15 pace. What are they doing? Why is the pacer letting it die like this?<br />Mile 23 - 6:58. I look back and wonder why I let those 6 seconds a mile slip away here. I am sure at the time I am giving all I had.<br />Mile 24 - 7:00. I remember pushing in this part and still pace is not good. Lots of bridges in the last 4 miles till the last mile in downtown.<br />Mile 25 - 7:01. I see the clock and I am 6 seconds behind on pace. I figure with the difference between gun and chip time I am probably even I just have to cash in all my chips now. I am still ahead of the pace group by 10 seconds so I must be OK.<br />Mile 26 - 6:34. This tells me I had I little left in the tank. We hit a spot we had cheered for Dawn the day before and I figure this should be flat and fast. We hit a big head wind and I am all alone so no one to tuck behind.<br />Mile 26.2 - 6:10. For the last .35 mile. Yeah, Garmin’s are not exact but I was taking my overall time off the mile markers so I figured I had a shot. I sprint with all I have down the finish. We hit the first mat before the clock hits 3 hrs but it is 100 yards before the big finish line. I was hoping that was the line but I guess not.<br />Total - 3:00:11. PR by 5:37. A few seconds off my goal but I am very happy with my performance and effort.<br />I finished 111 out of 6899 finishers; 13th in my age group<br /><br />I am very satisfied with this result. My training was perfect with my only error was manual labor one week out. I can’t control the weather and my pacing was pretty good. I have come to the realization that I will always have a little fade unless the course ends downhill. Houston is not a flat course but it is fair. That is eight marathon PR’s in a row: Chicago 2008 (3:28); White Rock 2008 (3:25); Austin 2009 (3:23); St George 2009 (3:11 - first BQ); Houston 2010 (3:09); Boston 2010 (3:06); Chicago 2010 (3:05) and Houston2011 (3:00). Next goal will be sub 2:56. I am not sure if that will be this spring or next fall. As I get older I will only get faster. A special thanks go out to my wife Sunny who makes a lot of sacrifices so I can train so hard.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-43165390252375089532010-10-14T07:31:00.000-07:002010-10-14T07:51:35.826-07:00Chicago Marathon 2010We flew up late Thursday night and took a cab over to my friend’s house. I got up Friday and had an easy 5 mile run with 3 - ¼ mile surges at marathon pace. I got back to the house and went off to breakfast. After that, we took a cab to the Expo. Sunny, Christopher and I met up with both on-line forum friends from all over the country and local friends from Dallas. I purchased my gels, Body Glide and race-day socks (I often do the big “no-no” and purchase a pair of socks at the Expo and wear them for the first time in the marathon). Once done at the Expo, we went to lunch, back to the house to relax, and then to dinner. Basically all weekend was eating and commuting to the next meal. On Saturday I got up and went out for my Aussie Carb Loading run. 2 mile warm-up and it was really bad; my left glute was pretty painful. I kept stopping and stretching it and still it hurt. Once I got to the last 3 min all out, everything felt good, so with a lot of concern I was ready to move on to the carb load. Another three meals and an easy day lying around the house and I was ready. I got to bed by 9:30 Saturday night. I usually sleep well before a marathon and I got 7 ½ hours Saturday night. Got up Sunday morning at 5, and took a cab to the start. Ran into several friends, took my stuff to bag check and got into the corral.<br /><br /><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 320px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 179px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5527912669253336674" border="0" alt="" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/TLcXSNg5_mI/AAAAAAAAACo/MD_NyT4ZYLI/s320/IMG_4361.JPG" /><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 320px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 179px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5527912792637234898" border="0" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/TLcXZZJ63tI/AAAAAAAAACw/jwVxwxY1q5Q/s320/IMG_4363.JPG" /><br /><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 320px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 240px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5527911922372964002" border="0" alt="" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/TLcWmvKv7qI/AAAAAAAAACg/IwUJ7PdcEz4/s320/PA080085.JPG" /><br />Mile 1 - 6:53. The first two miles were crowded and the GPS is useless under all the bridges and tall buildings. I missed the first mile marker so I averaged the first 2 miles. It was around 62 degrees at the start.<br />Mile 2 - 6:53. I see Sunny, Christopher and John for the first time here.<br />Mile 3 - 7:03. Steve and Shaheen take off in front of me but I am taking a very conservative shot at sub 3. I know with the temps, a PR is the more likely outcome. I take my first gel here.<br />Mile 4 - 6:56. I am running with Paul and Chad at this point. The pace is easy and these guys are very funny. Paul knows this course like the back of his hand, so he is coaching me where we are turning ahead of time.<br />Mile 5 - 6:50. I am starting to feel good and I figure it is time to get on pace if I want a shot at my ‘A’ goal.<br />Mile 6 - 6:52. We are moving nice and easy and each mile feels better than the last. Still I know the shade and cooler temps will not last much longer.<br />Mile 7 - 6:52. Our pace is very consistent. We probably run past Wrigley somewhere around here, but I am terrible at noticing things as I pass them.<br />Mile 8 - 6:53.<br />Mile 9 - 6:47. Somewhere along here we lost Chad. I take my second gel.<br />Mile 10 - 6:53. Paul and I catch-up and pass Shaheen. This mile is about the best I feel all day. I am thinking I can hold this pace another 10 miles and then see what I have.<br />Mile 11 - 6:53.<br />Mile 12 - 6:56. Paul starts to pick up the pace and I am holding steady.<br />Mile 13 - 7:08. Oh, I seem to be slow for some reason. I should have pressed a little more here, but that is the challenge of the marathon… You should just run what feels good because when you start pressing at mile 13, you are going to be mentally worn out by the finish. I see Sunny, Christopher and John here and I throw my shirt to Sunny. The people around her thought she was a groupie picking up my shirt.<br />Mile 14 - 7:05. Now I am thinking sub 3 is not going to happen but if I can hold around this pace I can have a good PR.<br />Mile 15 - 7:08. I take my third gel here.<br />Mile 16 - 6:59. I am happy I am able to break 7 min pace if only so slightly. I see the family here for the third time.<br />Mile 17 - 7:15. There goes the pace again… Why can I not press a little harder at this point? It’s like I am scared of the heat, but the legs feel fine.<br />Mile 18 - 7:08. This is where I pass Steve. I try to keep up the pace so he doesn’t pass me right back. I don’t look back, but I figure he is right there.<br />Mile 19 - 7:15.<br />Mile 20 - 7:21.<br />Mile 21 - 7:29. Wow, how slow am I going to go? I remember when this pace was good in a marathon.<br />Mile 22 - 7:26. I now start to do the math: If I can drop it back down to 7 min pace, maybe a can get a 3:03.<br />Mile 23 - 7:33. Down the stretch I notice relative to everyone else I am pretty consistent. I am passing a lot of people. There are some people that will run fast for a ½ mile and then walk.<br />Mile 24 - 7:28.<br />Mile 25 - 7:24. I feel OK and the legs feel good, but still this is my pace. The sun is pretty hot by this point. I am really struggling with the math. I think I might need a 6 min mile to pull off a PR.<br />Mile 26 - 7:08. I get to the 25.2 sign, and I realize I only need a 7 min mile for a PR. I see the family here for the 4th and last time. I am pushing the pace pretty good here relative to mile 26. I pass about a dozen people going up the last (and only) hill.<br />Mile 26.2 - 1:34. It was in the upper 70’s and sunny by the finish.<br /><br />Total - 3:05:48. PR by 28 seconds.<br /><br />I finished 923 out of 36,159 runners; 106th in my age group<br /><br />This was more like my ‘C’ goal, but considering the weather, I am happy with my time. I still think I can push a little harder, but it is always hard to know when to pull off the gas and preserve yourself for the last 10K. That is seven marathon PR’s in a row: Chicago 2008 (3:28); White Rock 2008 (3:25); Austin 2009 (3:23); St George 2009 (3:11 - first BQ); Houston 2010 (3:09); Boston 2010 (3:06); and Chicago 2010 (3:05). Currently, the ultimate goal is to break 2:50 -- The Berrones Line. I like to shoot high.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-62136250542633041962010-09-07T08:57:00.000-07:002010-09-07T09:08:04.743-07:00Blackland Triathlon Race Report<a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/TIZjOITj7nI/AAAAAAAAACI/LVS5sIjR4N0/s1600/BlacklandTri.gif"><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 320px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 236px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5514203888160599666" border="0" alt="" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/TIZjOITj7nI/AAAAAAAAACI/LVS5sIjR4N0/s320/BlacklandTri.gif" /></a><br /><div><a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/TIZiu7C8wuI/AAAAAAAAACA/SRcodHR89m0/s1600/BlacklandTri.gif"></a><br /><br /><div>600 meter swim, 15 mile bike ride and 5K run<br />My Place is 132/420<br />Swim rank 107 / Time 5:53<br />Transition 1 3:03<br />Bike rank 231 / time 55:42 / pace 16.2<br />Transition 2 2:11<br />Run rank 24 / time 21:17 / pace 6:52<br />Total time 1:28:09<br /><br /></div><br /><div></div><br /><div>So this was my first Tri. I have been saying for the last couple of years that I wanted to try one. This one fit my schedule so I got a bunch of my friends to sign up with me. I did not train for this event other than to run. I am in the middle of training for Chicago and I was not willing to cut back on any of my miles to get in any swimming or riding. I figured I am a strong swimmer and I should be able to ride a bike good enough. First mistake I made was running a strong 20 mile run the day before the race. This gave me dead legs and very little energy for an endurance event. I was very nervous for this event. I was not sure what all I needed and how to set it all up. Once I got my bike setup in the transition area I could tell I had already over estimated myself. I was number 42 and with all the top swimmers as they put us in order of our estimated swim. I ended up 1 minute slower than I estimated. It did make me feel good when most of these guys said they would run a 9 min pace. After a lot of visiting we headed into the pool area to swim. Once in the water I felt really good and it even felt like I was catching the person in front of me. After 100 meters I really started to slow down. I just went as fast as I could and got past by two swimmers. By the time I got out of the water I was exhausted.<br /><br />Next mistake was I put on my helmet before my shirt so I had to redo that. After I got my shoes on I headed out with the bike. I had a little problem getting my left foot clipped in. The pedal was upside down. Took me a couple of miles to get going but I felt pretty good for the next 8 miles as I usually kept it in the 18 MPH pace. It was a hilly course and my legs were dead from the start. The last 5 miles were not as strong as I was on my second loop. Next time I will not worry about my watch and just ride. Oh, and some training runs would have helped.<br /><br />Got my shoes traded out and headed out on the run. Once I was running I was passing everyone and never got passed. I thought I felt pretty good but looking at my splits (7:32, 7:08, 6:47) It took me a while to get warmed up. I kept thinking while I was passing people. This is what all you bike riders get for passing me at 24+MPH. It was again a very hilly course and the last .1 was down hill but they had this terrible winding path right before the finish line. I ran the last part at 5:20 pace and almost went off course and into the trees.<br /><br />Since I started with all the fast swimmers I was one of the first in our group to finish except for Chris W. but most of them still beat me overall because everyone was faster on the bike. They had a decent post race so we all hung around for a little to get some pictures. This was a very humbling experience for me. I am use to placing a lot higher at races (running) and I was very average at this event. I find it just about impossible for me to enter a race and just have fun. I learned a lot and I will try another one next summer with a little more well rounded training.</div></div>Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-79618292381337315292010-07-27T08:14:00.000-07:002010-07-30T06:53:58.930-07:00El Scorcho 50K 2010El Scorcho is a 50K race that is run at midnight in the middle of July in Ft. Worth. It is run in this park on this 5K loop. The course is flat and most of it is on this crushed rock trail. It is mostly dark but the footing is good and I decided to run it this year without a light. It is usually about 85 degrees at the start and it cools to around 80 by the end. This year it was maybe 1 or 2 degrees cooler than that. I ran it last year and after 7 loops and 21 miles I quit. I came in this year with a different mindset of finishing was my first goal even if I had to run 9 min miles. I end up with a few of those but I am very happy with the results. I have so many friends that run this race although most run the 25K. I even had some amazing friends that come out there to cheer us on and miss a whole night’s sleep. I didn’t taper much for this race as Chicago is still my goal race. Still had 78 miles for the week and I felt somewhat fresh for the race. The 25K starts 10 min after the 50K so at the start we know anyone passing us is a 50K runner.<br />10 Nick Polito M/41 10 8:38/M 4:28:05<br />5K 25:32 8:13/M 3.1 25:32<br />Started the first lap with Jayna, Shaheen and Chris Wong. The plan was to start out at 8:30 pace and hold it as long as possible. I was the constant nag the first 3 loops telling everyone to slow down and save for the later miles. We had 20 or so people take off past us right at the start. I knew we were all top 10 finishers and I told the group they would not hold that pace. The bigger problem was when 3 females past us in the first mile. The two women running with us had won the 25k (Shaheen) and 50K (Jayna) last year and they are use to chasing down any women that passes them. Two of the girls that past us I knew from last year and I knew that they would fade. One was an unknown.<br />10K 25:52 8:20/M 6.2 51:25<br />Still easy running and we were working to find a good moderate pace. We were already running into walkers on the second lap around. We had to get into a single file line to get past some of the large groups of people. For the most part people were good about getting to the right side of the trail. It was 10’ wide in most places and you could usually run off in the grass to pass if you wanted. After the second loop at 6.2 miles I took a GU from our pit crew. A special thanks to our wonderful pit crew. Namely Brian, Jayna’s husband that got my Gels and refilled my handheld with Gatorade.<br />15K 25:46 8:18/M 9.3 1:17:11<br />Still going strong. I always have been one to speed up when I go thru areas with lots of support but Chris and I was getting left in the dust every time we got to the start where all the people were staged. The two girls were almost sprinting thru this area.<br />20K 27:48 8:57/M 12.4 1:45:00<br />About halfway around this lap I let the group know that I need to drop back and run 8:30 or I would be dead at the end. After mile 12 my stomach really started to hurt and I had to make a bathroom stop. That’s why my pace on this loop looks so slow. After a 1½ min stop I felt fine again but from here on out I was going to be on my own.<br />25K 26:22 8:29/M 15.5 2:11:23<br />Back to another solid loop. Just had to keep telling myself not to worry about all the miles ahead and just keep as close to 8:30 pace as I could. I could see all my 25K friends that had finished as I came around. I took my second and last GU at the halfway point. At this point I stopped using Gatorade and just stuck to water from here on out. I was afraid that it was too much for my stomach.<br />30K 26:37 8:34/M 18.6 2:38:01<br />Dan a friend of mine had won the 25K and he ran this loop with me for a cool down. Unfortunately I was going too fast when he joined me as my friend Josh who finished 5th in the 25K join us but his legs had tightened up too much from the wait and he had to peel off after a ½ mile or so. For the record they are both faster runners than me. It was nice to have someone to talk to. It is really hard for me to run for 3 hours with no one to talk to.<br />35K 27:04 8:43/M 21.7 3:05:05<br />I am running by myself again but by this time no one is going to pass me and the crowds are starting to clear out as the fast 25K runners are all done. Pace is slipping a little but I am OK as I mentally know that I am trying to save something for the end. Turns out I could have pushed a little harder but in the end it didn’t matter. There is one part on the course where there is a turn around and I could see that I was about 5 to 6 minutes behind Chris and Jayna. I thought about kicking in a tempo pace to catch up to them but once I did the math doing 3 miles at 6:30 at this point would have taken a miracle. I got smart and just stayed within myself.<br />40K 27:37 8:53/M 24.8 3:32:42<br />This is where I stopped last year so this was a large mental barrier.<br />45K 27:56 8:59/M 27.9 4:00:39<br />This is the last time I was passed. The winner of the 50K looped me around mile 27. He said something nice to me and I tried to hang with him but he was still doing an 8:15 pace and I was around a 9 min pace. Here is where I was having trouble concentrating on pushing the pace. I had the physical energy but I was mentally drained from the entire time running.<br />50K 27:25 8:49/M 31.0 4:28:05<br />The last lap felt so good. I was not really struggling although the legs would only turn over so fast. After half way around I kept thinking I was probably out of the top 10 but if a few people had DNF I had a chance. I would find the next person that was running and run them down. It felt like a tempo run but it was more in the 8:40 range. Once I would catch them I would ask them if this was their last lap and they would say they had 1 or 2 more laps to go. I don’t think I passed any 50K runners on their last lap. Finally, my watch said 31 miles and I was still a ½ mile out and I slowly started to get faster. By the time I got to all my friends I was in a full sprint or at least it felt like a sprint. I was probably the only 50K runner with a kick. It was a blast and I crossed the finish line with in my “A” goal of 4:30. A race guy asked me if I finished the 50K and he told me I was top 10 and handed me 2 medals and a really cool backpack.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-35513171049351101742010-04-21T11:09:00.000-07:002010-04-21T11:55:49.937-07:00Boston Marathon 2010<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/S89Jg61IhRI/AAAAAAAAABw/uF5-PGSC6EQ/s1600/BostonMarathon2010Balls.JPG"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 0px 10px 10px; WIDTH: 320px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 178px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5462665702920455442" border="0" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/S89Jg61IhRI/AAAAAAAAABw/uF5-PGSC6EQ/s320/BostonMarathon2010Balls.JPG" /></a><br /><div><br /><br /><div><br /><br /><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/S89Io4VVjUI/AAAAAAAAABo/S22aw6oBsCg/s1600/BostonMarathon2010Limo.JPG"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 320px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 245px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5462664740177546562" border="0" alt="" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/S89Io4VVjUI/AAAAAAAAABo/S22aw6oBsCg/s320/BostonMarathon2010Limo.JPG" /></a><br />I flew down Saturday afternoon, went to the Expo on Sunday and had a great afternoon. We took a Limo out to a friend’s (ESG) house and had a great pre-race lunch. The Limo then brought us back to Boston. I was staying with a good friend that let me stay in his rent house the whole time I was there. We made dinner and got all of our stuff ready for the next morning. We got up early and TTM, ESG, Kfox and I drove to the buses at the finish line. We caught a bus to the athlete’s village. We setup our spot where all our friends could come join us. Before you knew it we were getting on our shoes (Brooks Green Silence), loading up our GUs’ and putting Body Glide on. We then started walking to the starting line. We dropped off our bags at bag check and made the .7 mile walk to the start. People were running off left and right to hit the port-a-pottys one last time. I was just staying as calm as possible as I made my way up to corral #5. Ten minutes before the start I removed all of my throw away shirts as it was 48 degrees, very little wind and sunny.<br /><br />Mile 1 - 7:03 (Hopkinton) I was right on pace. I stayed on the left side of the road as this side did not have a guard rail (Thanks for the heads up Jayna) and a little more room. This mile is downhill and very easy to get a fast start. If not for the crowd I could have easily ran .20 sec faster. After about a half mile on the left side of the road there were tons of guys peeing in the trees.<br />Mile 2 - 6:55 another easy downhill mile but still real crowded.<br />Mile 3 - 6:50 (Ashland) there was a split in the road and I stayed on the left hand side which was a mistake as the road curved right. This added some distance to my race but it allowed me to pass tons of slow people. I took my first GU at 3.5 miles.<br />Mile 4 - 6:54<br />Mile 5 - 6:58 First mile with net uphill but just barely. These miles were rolling and would take their toll by the end.<br />Mile 6 - 6:55 more rolling hills but this was a net down.<br />Mile 7 - 6:59 still felt like I was holding back and this was very easy. In this mile my friend Steve Henderson came up behind me and then ran with me for a while. I knew he was shooting for sub 3 so I told him to have a great race. We stayed together for about a mile but then I let him go. He really helped to keep my pace up.<br />Mile 8 - 7:03<br />Mile 9 - 7:03 Took second GU and second drink of water. I was hoping to hydrate just enough but not too much in this race. I was grabbing two cups with my GUs.<br />Mile 10 - 7:02<br />Mile 11 - 7:06 these miles were flat and still rolling. Not too many true flat miles on this course. I was now starting to learn how technical this course is. You need to go easy on the up hills and fast on the down hills without trashing your quads.<br />Mile 12 - 6:50 we hit Wellesley here. I have always heard of the girls of Wellesley and how they will kiss you if you stop. They were on the right and I stayed to the left to stay out of the crowd. It lasted maybe a 1/3 of a mile or more. They were screaming so loud with tons of great “Kiss ME” signs. I was very overwhelmed by so many women yelling for us runners. After we got thru them and it got silent again I turned to some guys and said “I feel like I should smoke a cigarette now”. I got no reaction. I guess it was just funny to me. So I sped off to get away from their bad personalities.<br />Mile 13 - 6:49 I hit the halfway point at 1:31:06. 13 seconds ahead of my plan. I felt very strong at this point. I kept thinking every mile that I felt better than I did at the same place of my last marathon. I was thinking the first half put sub 3 out of your mind and run your race. This is a positive split course and I knew what kind of shape I was in.<br />Mile 14 - 7:06<br />Mile 15 - 7:09 took my 3rd GU and drink of water here<br />Mile 16 - 6:51 this was the last downhill mile before the hills. I was thinking light on my feet and recover for the hills. I kept thinking of all the hill work I had done every Wednesday morning.<br />Mile 17 - 7:14 First Newton hill which was very long but nothing I wasn’t prepared to run. My pace was just a few seconds fast on this hill so I felt good.<br />Mile 18 - 7:23 Second Newton at fire station and I was a little tired on this one but just about right on pace for the first 2 hills.<br />Mile 19 - 7:10 this mile was a little downhill and should have been a little faster but I was just recovering from the first 2 hills.<br />Mile 20 - 7:22 john Kelly Statue, hill #3. I lost about 10 seconds here but still felt ok.<br />Mile 21 - 7:32 Heartbreak hill and I was only about 5 sec slow here. I felt very strong and I past a hundred+ people on this hill. This hill seamed shorter than the others but it is probably more known for being the last hill. Took my 4th GU and drink of water here<br />Mile 22 - 7:10 here is where I was suppose to hit the gas and get fast again. My energy level was very good but my legs were sore and hard to turn over. I lost another 20 seconds this mile.<br />Mile 23 - 7:30 this should have been a much faster mile as it was downhill. Somehow I lost 30 seconds here.<br />Mile 24 - 7:11 Recovered a little here. Still passing tons of people each mile. This mile seemed very quiet. Where did the crowd go?<br />Mile 25 - 7:18 so tons of people here yelling like crazy. I didn’t realize it at the time but I learned later that there are tons of hecklers on the course. They were yelling at people walking. The hills and the competition of this race will claim a lot of runners.<br />Mile 26 - 7:24 the last two miles I spent too much time doing bad math trying to figure out where I would finish in this race. My calculation had me anywhere from 3:06-:10 and no PR.<br />Mile 26.2 - 6:35 saw the finish line and started to sprint. Passing tons of people. Once I saw my watch hit 3:06 I let off the gas just a little and enjoyed the finish.<br />Total - 3:06:16 PR<br />Finished 2052 out of 22,500 runners. 280th in my age group<br /><br />This was probably closer to my “B” goal time but I knew on this course that was a strong possibility. I am super excited to get a 3:20 PR on a course that is probably 90 seconds tougher than Houston. It was nice to have energy the last 5 miles and not feel like I was going to die down the stretch. My legs were very sore down the stretch and I just had to keep pushing it and telling myself ‘How much pain can you handle”. I was also a little careful because I didn’t want to pull something. I was passing many people walking with tight muscles. My training for this marathon was similar in mileage, 70 mile weeks and 85 mile peek week as in the past but the quality was a little higher. I had lots of MP miles in the long runs. I plan to continue that in future cycles as well as adding more core, stretching and strength work. </div></div>Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-36051947808642195982010-01-18T09:58:00.000-08:002010-01-18T10:17:19.242-08:00Houston Marathon<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/S1SiHH5D8PI/AAAAAAAAABY/fMQd7DN41LE/s1600-h/nick_Hou_Marathon2010.jpg"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 200px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 150px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5428141694149456114" border="0" alt="" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/S1SiHH5D8PI/AAAAAAAAABY/fMQd7DN41LE/s200/nick_Hou_Marathon2010.jpg" /></a><br />Houston Marathon 2010<br />Family drove me into town that morning and dropped me off. Dropped off my bag at bag check and met up with Dan. We went to the restroom and then headed to the starting line. Stood around there and talked to my friends. Found Shaheen as we planned to start the race together with the 3:10 pace team. We got setup right by the starting line and we still had a slightly slow first mile. The plan was to go out with the 3:10 pace group for the first three miles and then pick up the pace.<br /><br />Mile 1 - 7:34 Elysian<br />Mile 2 - 7:05 Quitman<br />After mile 1 we were running with the 3:10 pace group and they were trying to make up all lost time from the first slow mile. But it felt easy so no problem.<br />Mile 3 - 7:06 White Oak Dr.<br />During mile 3 I got an 8 oz water bottle and a GU from my wife. As I tried to take the GU it fell out of my hands because I still had my gloves on. I had a backup GU (Roctane) in my shorts so I took that instead after I tossed my gloves. This was my first of 4 GUs’. I also only drank the 4-8 oz bottles of water during the race. I drank nothing from the aid/water stations. So with spillage and throwing bottles away I probably only drank 20 oz of water the entire race. Never felt dehydrated and only had mild cramps after the race.<br />Mile 4 - 7:00 Michaux<br />During mile 4 Shaheen pulled away from me but I was feeling good with my pace and I knew she was faster than me. My pace was pretty strong thru mile 11.<br />Mile 5 - 7:03 11th street<br />Mile 6 - 6:50 Studemont<br />Mile 7 - 6:58<br />Mile 8 - 7:08 Montrose<br />Mile 9 - 7:05<br />Around mile 9 the half turns around so the traffic was all gone and we could run good tangents when we needed to.<br />Mile 10 - 7:06 Main St<br />At mile 10 I got my second GU and water from my wife. She said I looked very labored after the race at this point. I was probably pushing the pace a little too much thru these miles but it felt very easy.<br />Mile 11 - 7:06<br />Mile 12 - 7:13 University Blvd.<br />Miles started to get harder at this point. I was coughing pretty badly at this point. To the point that my ribs were getting sore. I did my best to stay close to the 7:10 planned pace. I felt like I was working from here to the end of the race. 1hr 50 min of hard work. I was hoping the hard work section would only be an hour long but the course was covered with supporters and I was going to give them all I had.<br />Mile 13 - 7:17 Weslayan<br />Started to hear rumors of a big hill ahead from the spectators. Really, I thought Houston was a flat race.<br />Mile 14 - 7:12 Westpark<br />Oh, hell. We hit a huge bridge and as soon as we hit it I was passing tons of people. I do my fair share of hill work so it was not too bad. Probably a little over a ¼ mile uphill. Maybe it took a little out of me over the next 2 miles but we were past the half way point.<br />Mile 15 - 7:14 Feeder off 59<br />Got my 3rd GU and water from my family. Wife said I looked stronger at this point. It was so easy to find them at each stop because we had more signs than anyone else. Not sure I could have run this race without all the support.<br />Mile 16 - 7:21 Post Oak Blvd.<br />More coughing. Please go away.<br />Mile 17 - 7:06 San Felipe<br />Somewhere around here I hit a big group of friends from Dallas that came down just to cheer for their friends. They really got me going again. For a second I thought if I could hold a 7:05 pace from here on out I could get the 3:08. I think I can, well not so much.<br />Mile 18 - 7:13 Woodway<br />Mile 19 - 7:11<br />Mile 20 - 7:13 Memorial Park<br />Mile 21 - 7:20<br />Got my 4th GU & water from my cousin. I was so tired I made him come to me. Felt like from here to the finish there were a lot of rolling hills. We kept going under all these overpasses. I felt very strong and even smiled at different friends and spectators as I passed them. When the race pictures come out we will see how fresh I looked. This is the first marathon where I didn’t feel my eyes roll to the back of my head. The pace dipped a little and I gave away a couple of minutes over the last 6 miles but no 8 min miles so I held on strong.<br />Mile 22 - 7:20<br />My ribs and back were starting to hurt during the next couple of miles. This is probably from all the coughing and a weak core. I need to work on my core and upper body more so I am not as worn down in these last miles.<br />Mile 23 - 7:17<br />Mile 24 - 7:25 Allen Parkway<br />Mile 25 - 7:34 Louisiana<br />Mile 26 - 7:30<br />Mile 26.2 - 6:46<br />Total - 3:09:38<br />1st half 1:33:50/ 2nd half 1:35:48 almost 2 min positive split so not perfect exacution but I was ok with the race as a whole. It is hard to know what kind of shape, health and day you will have till you run the race.<br />This race was within a min of my goal so I am very happy with that. It was a PR by 2 min 14 seconds on a course that is probably a few min tougher than St. George. Hopefully I can work hard and shave off a few more min by Boston. Houston Marathon was run very well, second only to St. George. I love having the convention center right there so you can go right in after the race and stay warm.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-6218214105703933832009-12-14T09:47:00.000-08:002009-12-14T09:53:24.680-08:00White Rock Half Marathon 2009My goal for the White Rock Half Marathon was 1:27.(6:38 pace) It was an aggressive goal but I had run this pace in an 8 mile race a few weeks ago so it seemed possible on a good day. Met Jayna & Brittany at Jayna’s apartment only a few blocks away from the race at 7 AM. We walked over to the start dropped off my bag and made a stop at the port-a-lets. Then we moved to the starting corral. I felt great at the starting line.<br />At the start I took off right on pace and soon found Shaheen as I was going to run with her. We stayed together for the first 3 miles. During mile 4 she started to pull away. I had my watch on autolap and my mile markers were not on with the course. I will do manual lap in future races. I was a little frustrated as my first 3 miles were below goal pace and I was still 6 seconds back. Gotta love all the mental crap we go thru during a race.<br /><br />Mile 1 - 6:37 +23 ft<br />Mile 2 - 6:33 +64 ft<br />Mile 3 - 6:19 -32 ft (downhill)<br />Mile 4 - 6:38 -4<br /><br />I started to really slow down during mile 5. It was a little uphill but not enough to cause such a slow down. I think this mile really broke my spirit and I need to attack and handle things better than that. For some reason I never really recaptured my energy level I had earlier in the race. I was also starting to feel thirsty even though I had no plans to drink during this race. I took a cup of Gatorade at mile 7. Just one of those days when I could not get my legs to go any faster and my energy level was low.<br /><br />Mile 5 - 7:03 +91 ft (uphill)<br />Mile 6 - 6:43 +47<br />Mile 7 - 6:55 +15<br />Mile 8 - 6:56 -92<br />Mile 9 - 6:54 +52<br />Mile 10 - 6:45 -18<br /><br />At mile 11 I was on the Katy trail and I heard the person tell me I was on 6:48 pace. I knew I would need just a little time to get a PR as I was probably right on my old PR’s pace. Mark K. was there telling me to go and pass those guys so I got on my horse and decided to go. So while I passed 6 or 7 people in the next mile I was not able to hold it. Got a little side stitch in mile 12 and I was giving all I had to hold a good pace at that point. Once I hit the last quarter mile I got on my toes and started to sprint.<br /><br />Mile 11 - 6:31 -26<br />Mile 12 - 6:45 -54<br />Mile 13 - 6:48 -60<br /><br />Final time was 1:28:52 for a 15 second PR. I am not at all satisfied with that. I have worked too hard to be happy with a 15 second PR. I think my training is fine other than I could go a little slower on some days and keep working on the speed work. The biggest change I need is in my diet. I eat way too many sweets, sodas and fast food. I need to cut that out and lose at least 6 lbs. I put on 4 lbs at Thanksgiving and it is hanging around.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-46058315461338100302009-10-03T12:39:00.000-07:002009-10-03T12:40:13.058-07:00St. George Marathon 2009We caught a bus at the finish line at 4:45 AM in St. George and it was 55 degrees. We got to the starting line at 5:30 and it was 40 degrees there. We sat around bonfires until right before the start. This is the smoothest run marathon I have ever raced.<br />Mile 1 – 7:53 I started with the 3:20 pace group. Traffic caused this to start a little slow.<br />Mile 2 – 7:28 By now it was opened up and I was going very easy.<br />Mile 3 – 7:13<br />Mile 4 – 6:59<br />Mile 5 – 7:06 GU 1<br />Mile 6 – 6:48<br />Mile 7 – 6:40 Miles 2-7 were downhill and I was still going easy.<br />Mile 8 – 7:33 This was the biggest hill. ¾ mile long and all that hill training paid off.<br />Mile 9 – 7:38 More up hills. Miles 9-12 were rollers.<br />Mile 10 – 7:29 I could feel my toes taking a beating. Both second toes are now purple.<br />Mile 11 – 7:52 GU 2<br />Mile 12 – 7:26<br />Mile 13 – 7:06 Going downhill again<br />Mile 13.1 – First half 1:35:45<br />Mile 14 – 7:27 This is the first mile where we started to get in the sun. Great weather.<br />Mile 15 – 6:57 Downhill<br />Mile 16 – 6:51<br />Mile 17 – 7:11 GU 3<br />Mile 18 – 7:16 Got a side stitch and it hung around for 3 miles.<br />Mile 19 – 7:39<br />Mile 20 – 7:20 Last water stop for me. No more water needed.<br />Mile 21 – 7:11<br />Mile 22 – 7:35 Each mile from here on I got more confidence I could finish strong.<br />Mile 23 – 7:30 I still fear the flameout the last few miles.<br />Mile 24 – 7:21<br />Mile 25 – 7:21<br />Mile 26 – 7:16 Broke my heart seeing so many people collapse this late. Just people pushing too hard.<br />Mile 26.2–6:44 High fiving kids till someone passed me then I turned on the jets and passed then back..<br />Total – 3:11:49<br /><br />So this was a very tough marathon on the legs. Both uphill and down. The big jump in mileage was the big difference. 11 min PR. Still have another 12 minutes to shave off to go sub-3. Dream BIG. Post race was awesome. Fruit, cokes, Bomb pops and bread. Bag check was the fastest ever. Then you go to results booth and they see your number and instantly hand you a paper with your official finish time.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-31518477142194290182009-07-19T12:43:00.000-07:002009-07-19T13:13:17.611-07:00<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/SmN-M6sU7iI/AAAAAAAAABQ/GpPuktslnQI/s1600-h/ElScorcho.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5360266741879729698" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 400px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 300px" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/SmN-M6sU7iI/AAAAAAAAABQ/GpPuktslnQI/s400/ElScorcho.jpg" border="0" /></a><br /><div><strong>El Scorcho Race Report</strong> – I signed up for the 50K and it started at midnight. It is 10 loops around a 5K trail. Night time is not my thing and it showed. The weather was very nice for this time of year. It was around 83 degrees at the start. Jayna and I ran it together. We ran the first 6 laps (18.5 miles) together at a sub 8:30 pace. By the 7th lap I was really tired. My legs felt great but my energy was very low. After about 19 miles I let Jayna go ahead and my pace slowed down to a 9 min pace. By the time I finished the 7th lap (21.8 miles) I decided it was time to stop as I was running a 10 min pace. My goal race is the St. George Marathon October 4th. I decided if I stopped now I could recover much faster and resume training again in a few days. Jayna finished as the first women in 4:25. Running in the middle of the night was a lot more difficult then I imagined.</div><br /><div><a id="myphotolink" href="http://www.new.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=2693853&id=631711441"></a></div>Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-8464106910728983372009-05-19T12:10:00.001-07:002009-05-19T12:27:58.984-07:00St George Training Plan<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/ShMIOfD2HHI/AAAAAAAAABI/TVnNIJctmkc/s1600-h/stgeorge.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5337619028312988786" style="WIDTH: 400px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 243px" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/ShMIOfD2HHI/AAAAAAAAABI/TVnNIJctmkc/s400/stgeorge.jpg" border="0" /></a><br /><div><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Ph-ZsLDt0RM/ShMEI3oNn8I/AAAAAAAAABA/weQ4nM5he8o/s1600-h/stgeorge_Page_1.jpg"></a><br /><br /><div></div></div>Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1220366483041611472.post-56701083270596764312009-05-18T13:13:00.000-07:002009-05-18T13:19:01.586-07:00The StartSo I guess I will jump into the <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_0">blogging</span> world. Mostly about my passion which is running. I am still relatively new to running but I am a fast learner and I have found it to be very rewarding. I started running in January 2007. I have learned from my running group, reading books and largely from the RWOL forum and specifically the 3:20 group.Nickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16125192001092010640noreply@blogger.com0