Sunday, January 30, 2011

Race review: Texas Half

ENOUGH WITH THE SMALL TALK. HOW'D IT GO?
I am really on a roll here. I ran a 1:30:06 to beat my PR by 36 seconds. That's the 5th straight race I've run a PR. My age-graded score of 79.2 is also a personal best.

DID YOU WIN?
I was in the money with a 2nd-place age-group finish (out of 50). Overall I was 19th of 737.

HOW'D THAT HAPPEN?
Coming off my great race last Sunday, I had a terrible week of training. I cut 2 of my 3 runs short because of headaches and amassed just 7.5 miles before today. My main goal, ahead of time or place, was just to get through without my head exploding.

I was worried early on that I had relapsed and gone out too fast like I did in the old days. My first 2 miles of 6:35 were a good 15-20 seconds faster than I'd wanted, although those miles each included downhill sections that accounted for the speed. I had hoped to check out some of the finally-finished trail by the spillway, but the course dumped us out onto Garland Road instead.

I passed the 5K mark in 20:47 or so and remained worried about the pace I was on. This was not your typical mostly-flat loop of White Rock; this was the first time I'd gone up the hill to the dam, run across, zigzagged down the ramp and climbed back up another hill right afterward. I knew I was ahead of PR pace, but without having a solid time goal in mind, I wasn't really sure where I needed to be.

The first half took 44:41, though I didn't give more than a fleeting thought to that big 1:30 milestone. I'd been keeping myself mentally occupied by figuring out where I was relative to 6:55 pace, and just staying on track with that was occupying all of my mathematical processing for the morning.

Each passing mile was a little more challenging, but I managed to keep my pace remarkably steady. By mile 10 I concluded that I pretty much had a PR in hand, which was a good thing because my energy was starting to tail off. I picked up my effort at the 11-mile mark, but my speed didn't follow along like it did at my last half. We got to the closing hill -- that same one we came down for the first eighth of a mile -- and I was just swinging my arms away and hyperventilating to get up the friggin' thing. That ordeal didn't last long, thankfully.

WHAT ELSE?
I might have been completely zoned out but I'm almost positive there was no water stop at mile 5 like there should have been. I think there was water more or less at all the odd mile markers starting with 3, but I don't remember one at 5. That would have been nice.

The internet community of 2011 came to life as I bumped into fellow dailymiler Lesley J., who'd seen me at three races before we finally crossed paths. She saved her best race for another day, but among those who'd run well enough to earn awards, turnout was shockingly low in the Winfrey Point clubhouse. Even though the awards were handed out only 45 minutes or less after most of those folks crossed the line and cooled down, most names were called to no response other than polite applause. I can understand not waiting around if the awards ceremony is overly late or the weather's bad or somesuch, but what prompted so many folks to skip out? It was disappointing.

SPLITS?
6:35
6:35
6:49
6:55
6:50
6:53
6:54
6:54
6:49
6:52
6:59
6:54
6:53
6:59 pace last 0.18

OK, WHAT ABOUT THE REAL REASON WE ALL RUN, THE STUFF?
There's not a whole lot of stuff to be had. There is no goody bag -- you get a shirt, period. Though it is a tech shirt, it's not an impressive one (put the sponsors on the back and make the race logo bigger on the front).

Also not really impressive, the medal:


But, the awards were nice. I got a glass trophy to match the one from the 2009 Tyler Half:


Post-race food and beverages were basic but ample. The massage tent looked inviting even though I really didn't need one.

WHAT'S NEXT?
Run the Line Half Marathon, Texarkana, TX/AR, Feb. 20.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Race preview: Texas Half

WHERE ARE WE GOING?
Dallas, TX

WHEN?
Saturday, Jan. 29

WHY?
The Texas Half

NO REALLY, WHY?
This is the first event of the Four Seasons Half Marathon Challenge... although I was already signed up when the challenge was announced. If I'm going to do 20 races a year I need to just keep on running.

WHO ELSE IS GOING?
I'd expect around 600 starters for the headline event. The challenge's Facebook page has 110 fans so that'll probably give this a little boost, assuming those fans are going to carry this out.

WHAT'S THE FORECAST?
Mid 40s at the start to low 50s at the finish. More clouds than sun in advance of rain later in the day. If the winds stay down -- a big if -- conditions will be ideal.

HOW DO WE WIN?
I'd like to be reasonably close to my PR of 1:30:42. Third place in my age group last year ran a 1:31:54, so I'll probably be in a very close race for one of the glass age-group trophies.

WHAT'S THE PLAN?
I was supposed to run 3 miles tonight but a colossal headache held me to half that. Hopefully I'll be in better shape to run 6 tomorrow and 3 Thursday before a day off Friday in advance of the race.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Race review: Too Cold to Hold 15K

ENOUGH WITH THE SMALL TALK. HOW'D IT GO?
Fantastic! I broke a PR for the 4th race in a row, posting a 1:02:57 to crush the old mark (set at this race last year) by 3:41. My age-graded score was 78.7, tying my best from the Boo!Run Half Marathon last October.

DID YOU WIN?
No, but probably more so than any race to date that I've left without a medal (for placing or finishing), I didn't care. I was 4th of 44 in my age group (2:30 out of the medals) and 28th of 657 overall.

HOW'D THAT HAPPEN?
It wasn't by choice, but I started a little off the line for a change, crossing about 5 seconds after the horn. This turned out to be a good thing, as the traffic in front of me kept my speed down and quashed the temptation to run out with the 5Kers. I settled into a good pace immediately as I covered the familiar White Rock terrain.

Coming up on the 2-mile mark I started to think the long-sleeve shirt was a bad idea, since the morning was a few degrees warmer than expected. I quickly chased that thought with another, stronger thought: No excuses. From there on out it was just a matter of keeping a steady pace until mile 7, when I'd kick it up a notch for a couple miles before turning everything up to 11 for the last third of a mile. I had been keeping tabs on my likely time as each mile put me further under my 1:05 goal, but when I saw the finish-line clock, I went into full-on ass-hauling mode to get in under 1:03.

WHAT ELSE?
I might need to tinker with my race schedule yet again. Not to spoil the splits you'll see in just a moment, but I ran the first 5K in 21:16, the middle 5K in 21:04 and the last 5K in 20:37. Math is hard, but I think that comes out to 41:41 for the last 10K -- and my 10K race PR is just 43:30. I need to do something about that, but the next 10K on my schedule is the Dublin Dr Pepper race in June, and by then it'll be warm enough to wipe out the gains I've made. I had the Tyler Azalea 10K on my calendar for 2012, but I'm thinking I should strike while the iron is hot and run that one this year and the Dr Pepper one next year. The Tyler race is the day before the Rock 'n' Roll Dallas Half Marathon so I might be spoiling the latter race, but it'll be worth it if I can slice a couple minutes off my 10K time.

SPLITS?
6:48
6:54
6:50
6:47
6:51
6:41
6:47
6:35
6:38
6:08 pace last .35

OK, WHAT ABOUT THE REAL REASON WE ALL RUN, THE STUFF?
Once again the Run On! folks put together a long-sleeve white T-shirt with a simple logo that I'll have no trouble working into the rotation. The beanie will replace the one I left in Tucson. Those who were fast enough to earn an age-group award took home a classy-looking silver medal in the shape of the familiar mitten logo.

The finish-line area drew quite a collection of vendors handing out things like bags of Community Coffee and cans of some green tea-derived energy drink called Celsius, but they all might as well have packed up and gone home at 10 when the beer taps were opened. That line was 100 deep in a blink.

WHAT'S NEXT?
Texas Half, Dallas, Saturday.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Schedule changes

As I alluded to earlier, if you're going to be a planner, you better be good at changing plans.

Due to schedule conflicts that came up this week, I've had to scratch out a couple races I was planning to do this year and replace them (fortunately registration hadn't opened yet for either, so I'm not out anything). The Wimberley 4 was an excuse to get the wife and baby down to the Hill Country for some quick R&R, and the El Scorcho 50K was supposed to be a good tune-up for my 50-mile debut this fall. Alas, neither of those will happen for me this year.

I would prefer to replace these events with ones that are an equal distance and relatively close on the calendar, but with the other races I've already locked in, I couldn't make this happen. I replaced the 50K with another 50K, but the only spot I could manage was New Year's Eve... which fouls up next year's plan by taking me out of the 2012 New Year's Day Half Marathon.

With the dust settling for now, here's the new lineup for this year and next (*-registered, bold-new):

 *1/23/11 Too Cold to Hold 15K, Dallas
*1/29/11 Texas Half, Dallas
2/20/11 Run the Line HM, Texarkana TX/AR
*2/26/11 Cowtown 5K, Ft. Worth
*2/27/11 Cowtown Ultra (50K), Ft. Worth
3/12/11 Dash Down Greenville (5K), Dallas
*3/27/11 Rock 'n' Roll Dallas HM
*4/10/11 Big D Texas Marathon
4/30/11 Wimberley 4
*5/7/11 White Rock Lake Centennial HM
6/11/11 Dublin Dr. Pepper 10K
*6/18/11 Grandma's Marathon, Duluth MN
7/10/11 Too Hot to Handle 15K, Dallas
7/17/11 El Scorcho 50K, Ft. Worth 
8/14/11 The Hottest Half, Dallas
9/17/11 (ish) Katy Trail 50, Boonville MO
10/9/11 Tyler Rose Marathon
*10/23/11 13.1 Dallas
11/13/11 Rock 'n' Roll San Antonio Marathon
12/4/11 White Rock Marathon, Dallas
12/31/11 Recover from the Holidays 50K, Huntsville AL
1/1/12 New Year's Day HM, Allen TX
1/29/12 Miracle Match Marathon, Waco TX
3/2/12 Rouge-Orleans (126.2 miles), Baton Rouge to New Orleans
3/17/12 Dash Down Greenville
3/24/12 Tyler Azalea 10K
4/16/12 Boston Marathon (or 4/14/12, Oz Marathon, Olathe KS)
5/13/12 North Trail HM, Dallas
5/28/12 Memorial Day 20K, Dallas
6/17/12 Dadfest (5K), Dallas
7/4/12 Liberty 10K, The Colony TX
7/14/12 Lady of the Lake Relays (18M solo), Dallas
8/4/12 Headlands Hundred, Sausalito CA
9/3/12 Labor Day 15K, Dallas
9/15/12 Tour des Fleurs 20K, Dallas
9/23/12 Heels & Hills & Him HM, Irving TX
10/6/12 Heartland 100, Cassoday KS
10/21/12 Waterworks 25K, Dallas
11/4/12 DRC Half, Dallas
11/18/12 Big D 30K
12/2/12 Rock 'n' Roll Las Vegas Marathon
12/15/12 Jog'r Egg Nog'r 15K, Dallas

Race preview: Too Cold to Hold 15K

WHERE ARE WE GOING?
Dallas, TX

WHEN?
Sunday, Jan. 23

WHY?
Too Cold to Hold 15K

NO REALLY, WHY?
This race sort of fits into my longer-term training for Cowtown. I'm supposed to run for 90 minutes; this won't take me that long so consider it a speed workout of sorts.

WHO ELSE IS GOING?
The race has had terrific growth over the last few years, and thanks to a big marketing push and great weather I expect that to continue this year with over 800 finishers in the 15K.

WHAT'S THE FORECAST?
Upper 30s, light winds, no rain. Just about as good as you're gonna get.

HOW DO WE WIN?
The goal here is pretty easily defined: PR. I set my 15K PR at the 2010 edition of this event, but 1:06:38 is pretty low-hanging fruit by now. Even with the course re-mapped (I think) to go up the hill at the Winfrey Point parking lot, I plan to break my PR at a minimum -- I'll be looking to go under 1:05 to consider myself pleased. (The age group awards will be gone in 60 minutes so that's not even on the radar.)

WHAT'S THE PLAN?
Very easy mileage all week: 2 Tuesday, 3 Wednesday, 4 Thursday, 6 Saturday. Then I'll lace up the racing shoes in competition for the first time and go kill this thing.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Race review: First Light Marathon

ENOUGH WITH THE SMALL TALK. HOW'D IT GO?
I thought I had mixed emotions after Tucson, but that was nothing compared to this. I ran a 3:16:30, a PR by 2:48... and as of today, exactly 31 seconds shy of qualifying for Boston.

DID YOU WIN?
Winning my age group tipped me more towards feeling good about the race than not. I was first of 29 in my age group and 20th of 471 overall. That was a true AG win, too; no one got pulled out for an overall award.

HOW'D THAT HAPPEN?
 Coming four weeks after Tucson, my expectations were tempered. I decided ahead well before race day that I'd follow the Galloway run-walk-run method (5 minutes run, 30 seconds walk for a 7:30 race pace), not because I thought it'd help my time but because of the promise of not feeling completely trashed at the end of the race. (Spoiler alert: I felt completely trashed. If I came up 31 seconds short of a BQ and still had something left in the tank, there wouldn't have been any mixed emotions.) I was sore for several days after Tucson, and even though I know that had more to do with all the downhill running than anything, I was receptive to doing something different.

The forecast called for bitter cold and gusty winds, so I headed out for my warm-up in all the cold-weather gear I brought: beanie, compression shirt under tech shirt, gloves, tights, compression knee socks. I hadn't bothered to check the current weather first, so I was surprised by mid-30s and manageable winds, with the wind chill about 15 degrees warmer than expected. A quick mile or so had me sweating, so I went back to my room and ditched the hat and tight shirt (but kept the gloves, since I had a Gu packet wedged into each).

It felt really awkward pulling over to walk 5 minutes into the race. It seemed like almost all of my walk breaks east of I-65 -- the first 10 miles -- began just as I was approaching a group of spectators. It's a weird feeling to know what you're doing, and know that it looks odd, with no time to explain it. I could've given a very succinct explanation to the woman who passed me about 7 miles in and shouted, "Don't give up now!", but I passed. She was hardly out of line compared to the spectators at the 4-mile mark who reminded us that we had more than 20 miles to go. For some folks, math is hard.

I knew I had gone out a little faster than anticipated, but I was pretty shocked to see a 6:57 first mile that included a walk break. Nevertheless, I went right back to what felt like a comfortable half marathon pace with each interval. Before I knew it, I was banking a bunch of time against a 3:15:59 finish -- 4:10 at the 10-mile mark. Sure, I'd covered totally flat terrain with the wind at my back and had much tougher sledding ahead, but it was somewhere around this time that I started to think that maybe this walking thing was going to propel me all the way to Boston. With 10 miles to go, I was more than 5 minutes ahead of BQ pace.

Mile 18 brought a pretty awful climb that prompted me to take an extra walk break. I figured it was worth withdrawing a few seconds from the bank in order to save some energy for later. We turned east for the last 6 miles back downtown, into the wind. I was fighting it, but 22 miles in, I was still 3:38 ahead. At mile 25, I still had 10 full minutes to finish.

But there was just nothing left in the tank. Even running as hard as I could, I could barely get my pace under 8:00. And by running as hard as I could, I had to take a couple extra breaks. I could see the finish line a few hundred yards away as the last few ticks of the 196th minute dissolved. There was nothing I could do.

As much as the race wore out my legs, it turned my brain into mush, too. Normally when I run, all I do is count my steps. Breathe in, breathe out, keep the slowest rhythm I can to conserve energy. Sometimes I'll mentally break the race into smaller pieces or encourage myself with "only xx far to go." This was great for running with a pacer in Tucson; the speed was set, the course had very few turns, and I could be on total auto-pilot.

None of that applied here. Just trying to remember when I was supposed to take my walk breaks was too much; I missed a couple and had to fumble around to get back on track. I had wanted to print something out and tape it to my sleeve, but that never happened, and because of it, I was too preoccupied for other tasks, like taking my gels (late on all but the 1st) or even staying on course (twice almost went straight when I was supposed to turn; special thanks to the policewoman who shouted to me around mile 18).

Afterward, my friends asked me if I was pissed about the near-miss. I did all I could. When a basketball team loses by a point, they can pore over details forever and drive themselves nuts trying to figure out what one play cost them the game. I could do the same. Maybe it was too warm for the tights, too. Maybe I should've banked more time early or skipped or shortened some walk breaks. Maybe I should've had more Gatorade instead of just water (more on this in a minute). There are as many facets to analyze as steps I took and yet hardly any of them would produce something constructive, if any at all. I'm not going to worry about it.

WHAT ELSE?
Right off the top I must point out that the phrase "Southern hospitality" isn't something someone constructed from a myth. Everyone involved with the race was incredibly pleasant and welcoming. I also highly recommend staying at the Candlewood Suites on Royal. If it's not the closest hotel to the finish line, the difference is negligible... and again, very hospitable folks there.

The race is not chip-timed, but even when you include the half-marathoners, it's not a very large event -- and the starting line stretches all the way across 6 lanes of Government Street, so anyone who cares about his/her time is over the line within seconds. By the time I went back to my room, showered, got dressed and walked back over to race HQ, some results were already posted.

I had read comments about the Gatorade-like product that was available along the route, so I stuck to water for every stop but one. Big mistake on that one. The taste, though familiar, is way too strong. It couldn't have been a bad mix because others had written about the same thing. Go with just the water and take an extra gel or two if you think you'll need them. There were 18 water stops along the course. I usually take water at every single stop but even I had to skip the last 2 or 3 because I'd just had too much.

SPLITS?
These are kind of weird with the walk breaks mixed in, but:
6:57
7:01
7:06
7:15
7:08
6:59
7:10
7:01
7:00
7:04
7:31
7:26
7:14
7:23
7:00
7:19
7:38
8:10
7:40
7:28
7:31
8:03
7:54
8:12
8:03
8:26
7:59 pace last 0.37

OK, WHAT ABOUT THE REAL REASON WE ALL RUN, THE STUFF?
This is not a race for the person who must have a shiny memento. The wooden medals are painted by the members of L'Arche Mobile, a local group that meets the needs of the developmentally disabled. They also design the plaques that go to the age group winners (as before, I'll post pictures eventually). The awards are simple and may not appeal to everyone, but they are certainly unique and memorable.

The goody bag is an actual drawstring sling sack, with a long-sleeve cotton event T. I chipped in a few extra bucks for a long-sleeve tech shirt with a 10th anniversary logo. That's all you get for stuff, but the draw is the free night-before pasta dinner and free post-race lunch. Granted, the food was very bland for my tastes, but I heard praise from others. The massive setup in the atrium of the government building encourages visiting with your fellow runners.

WHAT'S NEXT?
Too Cold to Hold 15K, Dallas, Jan. 23.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Race preview: First Light Marathon

WHERE ARE WE GOING?
Mobile, AL

WHEN?
Sunday, Jan. 9

WHY?
BankTrust First Light Marathon

NO REALLY, WHY?
After putting together my 2011 race schedule, I heard that the Marathon Maniacs had better candy, so I rearranged things to fit a 3rd marathon within a 90-day window -- the "easiest" way to qualify. This was the best fit.

WHO ELSE IS GOING?
The full marathon field should top out at just 500, though there's pretty good national representation in that small group. The field size is surely held down by the fact that there's another very much larger race the same day, not terribly far away. In a sense, this is the anti-Disney.

WHAT'S THE FORECAST?
Mid-30s start, mid-40s finish, gusty north winds, one-in-four chance of rain. This could be really, really rough.

HOW DO WE WIN?
It's probably not reasonable to think I can pull off a PR only 4 weeks after Tucson. I'm going to run this one by the Galloway method -- run 5 minutes, walk 30 seconds -- and see where it gets me. Third place in my age group has averaged 3:26:08 over the last 5 years, so that's certainly something to shoot for.

WHAT'S THE PLAN?
Core work Monday, Thursday and Friday -- this is going to be more of a priority now on days that I don't run. Couple easy miles Tuesday and 3 Wednesday to break in the shoes I'll be racing in (they'll come by UPS on Monday). Drive to Mobile on Saturday and loosen up with a couple more miles, and off we go Sunday morning.

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Runners are nice people

Every so often I'm spurred to repay some of my running debts by volunteering at a race. Such was the case today at the inaugural New Year's Day Half Marathon in Allen.

I was the course monitor at a somewhat tricky part of the course near the 2-/11-mile marker. With a wind chill in the low 20s, standing around for three hours was surely less desirable than actually running the race, but someone had to do it.

As a runner, I've always appreciated the volunteers for pretty much just this reason. Sometimes the weather's great and it's a short race and volunteering is just glamorized hanging-out. But most of the time, there's some level of work or discomfort, and to just get up early on a weekend and go do it is pretty remarkable.

But today I enjoyed seeing the relationship in reverse. No fewer than a dozen people gave me a whole "thanks for being out here this morning" (and this is in a race of 200 people, mind you), and many others gave a "thanks" or a wave or a smile. Probably fewer people didn't acknowledge me than did.

When I race, I am pretty much silent. Occasionally I'll say thanks to a police officer holding up traffic, or wave to an enthusiastic cheerer, but that's about it. Maybe it should be my resolution for 2011 to be more vocal toward the volunteers. All the cool kids are doing it.