12.08.2015

CIM - That sweet ain't so sweet without some bitter.

I returned from Moscow not necessarily disappointed with my marathon- but more unfulfilled. I knew I had more in me than a 2:39. 2015 has become my biggest running year ever, though I didn't get the opportunity to really show it in the marathon.

In the weeks after returning from Russia, I was basically focused on closing out the CARA season. I ran enough miles to do well in the final two races, and finished the season with a very pleasing 5th overall and 2nd 35-39 age group. The thoughts of CIM entered my mind back in September, as I found myself in the predicament of not hitting my goal in Moscow.

So why CIM? Well for starters, I ran it in 2011. The course has some sharp downs in the early going, followed by constant and steady rolling hills that last until 23 miles, then a flat final 5K. It certainly is not easy, but it is net downhill and can reward patient runners. However, it can be extremely evil for those that go out too fast or haven't trained for those hills! Add to this, Sacramento weather in early-December tends to be very favorable.

In recent years, CIM has become a playground for fast men and women trying to qualify for the Olympic Trials or Boston. For example: in this year's field of about 5600 people, 500 ran sub-3:05 (men's BQ), and in all 1,400 ran sub-3:35 (women's BQ). There were at least 30-40 men and 30-40 women trying for their OTQ. Those are huge percentages!!! The only other race in America that might come close to those numbers is Grandma's (even Boston doesn't do that well!!).

Most of all, this is a true runner's race ... It's a small, extremely well organize, competitive event with go gimmicks. Just fast runners looking for fast times.

I was on the fence until I ran Naperville in 1:14:07. I did it with a solid negative split and felt great about that race. That was a big surprise and a long overdue PR. On a comparable basis, Naperville's time was ironically similar to my SF10 @ 55:31. Per McMillan, both races predicted that I had a sub-236 in me. That gave me the confidence I needed to gut out a few bigger weeks of training and gun for CIM. It was risky considering I was attempting two fast marathons in roughly a two months, and I wasn't doing a typical ramp or even any hill work. I was concerned about my chances, as I mentioned in last week's post. Regardless, 2:35:59 became my "A" goal.

Unlike some prior marathon trips, this weekend was a strictly business trip. I didn't want to screw anything up. Everything revolved around the race. I was doing things by the book as much as possible. Including wearing compression socks on the flight and the days before, cleaning up my diet the week of the race, taking a few key days off, hydrating like mad, driving the course, and staying off my feet as much as possible on Saturday. I even tried beet juice! Disgusting... but I was willing to try it so I could give myself an edge.

A couple of other Chicago guys were also on the trip, as well as Dan McDowell and a few of his friends from Portland. Everyone was serious about their races. Dan's friend, Matt stayed with me for the night before the race. Conveniently, Matt and I had very similar race goals.

He and I thought we could go sub 2:36, though tackling it a little differently. He admittedly wanted to be more aggressive in the early going so he could keep his options open at the end. I preferred a mid-1:18's first half, then come back negative. Regardless, we decided that we'd start easier and hang through 10K together.

On marathon morning, it was raining on-and-off. Wind was calm, temps were chilly and would eventually make their way into the mid-50s. The rain eventually let up after about an hour of running. I really couldn't ask for much better. The only downside was having to run the race wet. My feet were squishing right from the beginning and I eventually did get some chafing from my sopping wet singlet. It certainly could've been worse though!

So as expected, this year's race was stacked with higher quality runners. Matt and I took off from the starting line, and we found ourselves easily with about 500 runners ahead of us at the 1/2 mile. It was as if we were in Boston with the number of runners around us, but from a much smaller field. Runners were pretty much falling all over one another until things thinned out.

We eased into things with low 6's for the first couple miles. We were somewhat frustrated as we had to weave our way around herds, including the women's OTQ-244 pack.

Wanting to shed the masses had us losing our patience. Add a sizable downhill in the third and fourth miles, and things got a little hot quicker than I wanted. We rolled 5:47 then 5:42 for those two miles. I cringed. This was not my plan!! It didn't seem to hurt, but I was truly afraid of what that might've done to my race. I didn't want that coming back to haunt me.

At about four miles, a few other guys finally assembled with us and a loose pack of 5-6 runners formed. As a group, we calmed down and dialed it back as the course became more rolling instead of down. We went back into the 5:50's. This early pace was still faster than I've ever attempted so early in a marathon. Importantly, the effort didn't feel unreasonable.

Miles 1-5: 29:41.9, 5:56.4 avg

Matt pulled away from me shortly after the 10K, and he continued to work with the other runners that were in our small pack. They gained distance on me on the downhills. On the ups, I recovered some that distance and yo-yoed them. In general I let myself run more comfortably in those rollers... pressing a little on the ups and recovering on the downs, as I typically do. We were still passing random runners, but those were becoming fewer and far between. With the exception of one other guy, the pack eventually pulled away. I was in the 5:50's for 6-10. Still a fast pace, but I started to concern myself less with the clock and worried more about the effort. Took my 1st Gu at about 7 miles.

Miles 6-10: 29:34.1, 5:54.8 avg

After 10 miles, we entered an area called San Juan hills. There's a series of long rollers over a 3 mile stretch until the half. Matt and his pack were nearly out of sight by now. I continued to use a guy near me as a guide post. We weren't running with one another, as much as we were constantly checking one another. I stayed strong on the ups, and he was stronger on the downs. When it was flat, we were even or he was two stepping me. I let him do the work.

Interestingly, people kept cheering "McFarland" for this guy. It turns out he is Galvin Gonzalez... He wasn't portrayed in the movie "Mcfarland", but his team was three time CA-XC champs in the 1990's and he actually won the individual champ two years in a row. The movie was a great, feel-good story that came out earlier in 2015. Anyhow, he and I kept up our back and forth going for nearly 15 miles. (He initially joined that pack back at 4 or 5 miles, and stayed with me until about 19 miles).

Took my second Gu at about 13 miles.

I went through the split at about 1:17:38. All I could think was, "Holy shit, this is fast!!" I've never tried anything this aggressive before and it was significantly more so some than my target. I wasn't sure if it was stupid, suicidal, or warranted given the effort.

Was it easy up until then? No. But it wasn't crushing. I certainly felt like I was working and my legs were definitely tired as I went through the half. I was locked in though and that effort was glued to me. Everything was telling me to just keep running hard and stay with this guy.

After 13, McFarland and I started to slowly eat other runners. Mile 14 was a 5:49. We were clearly pulling the trigger a bit. Mile 15 had a climb.

Miles 11-15: 29:29.0, 5:53.8

A fire was then lit. I decided to commit to a new race plan. I became significantly more aggressive. McFarland was no longer two stepping me. I started to drive. We were gaining on Matt. Ups and downs alike, it all became pressing. Mile 16: 5:45, 17: 5:41. These were risky and blistering miles. It was net down in here, but still chalk full of rollers. My legs actually appreciated the up more than the down! Quads and glutes were getting tired. It was not longer easy as we were approaching 20mi. Regardless, we hammered. I took my final Gu at about 18 miles. 16-19 were all in the 5:40's.

We caught Matt, briefly ran with him, and then I pulled away from both him and McFarland at the same time.

Miles 16-20: 28:59.0, 5:47.8 avg

I knew those miles were expensive. But I also knew that soon enough, the course would flatten out and I'd be allowed to relax from those rollers. It couldn't get flat soon enough though! I had 10K to go. I couldn't help but think about how I felt in Moscow during the final 8-10K. How quickly things changed for me there. I tried to tell myself that it was a completely different race and different conditions. I didn't want an excuse to hit the wall... But I knew that ridiculous 5:40 shit couldn't continue.

I ran though 20 miles in 1:57:44. I simply realized that if I held 6's for the final 10K, then I'd run right around 2:35 flat. (doing the math, that's actually an accurate assumption).
Mile 21- 5:56. I felt somewhat relieved. I was happy to see some self control now that I was alone. I was still passing guys, but there weren't many left within reach of me. I passed the third placed woman. I had no one to work with now... Just myself.

Mile 22- 6:02.9. This was the beginning of a nasty hill/bridge that crossed over a river that stretched into the 23rd mile. The climb felt like it took forever. It became a huge mental hurdle. I just wanted to get across it, because I knew the course was supposed to level out after that.

Mile 23- 6:11.6. Fuck. It had the bridge though, so I was ok giving a little back. My legs were getting really heavy at that point. Quads were on fire. Passed the marker and it said "2:15:5X". 3.2 miles to go. The real battle was to begin now. I knew I needed to do that in under 20 minutes. That's all I cared. What pace was that? 6:10? I had trouble thinking about it.

Mile 24- 6:07.7. Well now that was a relief! Better than 23, but still fugly as far as I was concerned. I looked at the street numbers... it was 50th something street... then 40th something. I had to go to 9th, I think. That was a looong way away. No more sub-6's, and they're hurting at a rapidly increasing rate!! I was in quick sand. My legs were done. I passed one guy that was total road kill. I did everything to convince myself that I wasn't going to be that guy. I nearly passed another guy, only to have him promptly drop me and pick it up. I couldn't believe where that came from. I wanted to do that! I questioned my sanity. I questioned everything about the last several months of my life. The maps would suggest the course was leveling out at this point. All I could see was a mountain of concrete in front of me.

Why the fuck did I push so hard?! I wanted to quit. This was becoming excruciating. My legs didn't want to continue. This was not Berlin. This was not SF10. It wasn't Naperville. Those were works of art. I closed them like a thoroughbred champ. This was drunken mess... Stumbling all over... I only hoped I could get through it before I did something stupid, like convince myself it was OK to walk. I wanted to walk.

Mile 25-6:14.4. Indeed it was ugly! Fuck you though, one mile to go!
Miles 21-25: 30:33.0, 6:06.6 avg with three ugly miles

Ugh. Please don't slow down any more! I put in surges to keep myself going, but each one was short lived. There were a few guys 100M in front of me. I couldn't close them. That game was over. I just threw my lifeline at them and hoped they could tow me in. I was only minutes away. I could deal with minutes of pain. It felt like an eternity.

I just had to hang on. I'd PR if I just hung on. I'd be damned if I was going to hammer the way I did, only to trash the end of this thing.

Mile 26- 6:16.1

Just get to the goddamned finish line!!!!

Left hand turn onto 9th street, then again in front of the capitol building. I saw the clock ticking 2:35:4X. I just leaned in all I could without falling over.

I crossed the finish line and wanted collapse. Holy Jesus, 2:35:52. I did it. Holy shit, I did it!! It wasn't pretty, and I threw everything I had at those first 22 miles... Only to fight like never before in those final-four.

It wasn't a total death march since I was still running an OK pace, nor a failure because I simply wouldn't give up. I certainly wanted to though!! To my feeble credit at the end, I paid attention to the clock and said this is what I need to do to keep that aggressive "A" goal of sub 2:36. And I did it.

Wow!!! I was fried. It hurt A LOT! More than any marathon in the last few years.

Matt finished about 15 seconds behind me. McFarland was another minute+ back.

Just looking at the 1:17:38 out and 1:18:14 back... or 2:35:52 = 5:56.7 pace... it doesn't look that exciting, volatile, or even bad. It was only about a half minute positive split. Not quite the conservative race I was thinking and certainly every single one of those fast miles came back to haunt me at the end. I can't give a single complaint about the results though. I decided mid-race to toss my original negative split goal, and I swung for the fences. Between 3 and 22, every single mile was decidedly sub-6. I ran those 20 in 1:57:28; a 5:52.4 average!! I got it in my head that I was going to crush those miles. They were stupid fast, but I had to give it shot.

I think I'm actually more impressed with myself for those 20 miles than the overall marathon.

On the flip side, 23-26.2 were some of my slower and more painful marathon miles in a long time... Whatever. I don't give a shit, so long as I PRd and gutted out that sub 2:36 goal. The end became a calculated crash landing. Had I truly busted and run 2:26:27, I would have a completely different view on life.

Could've I run faster? I don't know. Maybe if I didn't press so hard in the middle. Frankly, after such a huge season, I don't care. The job got done. I PRd by 33 seconds. Before the race, I would've flipped out if someone told me that I'd PR by 33 seconds.

And as for anyone counting... that McMillan calculator is absolutelyfugginaccurate... The 55:31 and the 1:14:07 predicted a 2:35:5X. I ran it.

What now? My year is over. Thank God too! I'm cashed. I'm fried. I'm sore. I've raced more than I ever have before, put in a shit ton of miles, and had four big PRs this year (including a fractional 5K PR). I'm done. Through today, I have 2,905 miles. I suppose I'll gut out what I can over the next 3+ weeks to cross 3,000 miles. Why not.

2016 will be a new year and different goals. For the moment, I'd just like to relish these large accomplishments and recollect myself.

(Raising my hands, dropping the mic, and limping away).


Split recap:
1- 6:12.3
2- 6:02.6
3- 5:47.2
4- 5:42.4
5- 5:57.5 (29:41.9, 5:56.4 avg)
6- 5:52.9
7- 5:52.1
8- 5:58.8
9- 5:59.3
10- 5:51.1 (59:16, 29:34.1, 5:54.8 avg)
11- 5:55.2
12- 5:57.6
13- 5:53.6
14- 5:49.0
15- 5:53.9 (1:28:45, 29:29.0, 5:53.8 avg)
16- 5:45.1
17- 5:41.8
18- 5:46.3
19- 5:48.2
20- 5:57.0 (1:57:44, 28:59.0, 5:47.8 avg)
21- 5:56.2
22- 6:02.9
23- 6:11.6
24- 6:07.7
25- 6:14.4 (2:28:17, 30:33.0, 6:06.6 avg)
26- 6:16.1
.2- 1:18.8 (5:59.8 pace)
Out- 1:17:38 (5:55.3 avg)
Back- 1:18:14 (5:58.0 avg)
Total- 2:35:52 (5:56.7 avg)

12.03.2015

Pre CIM Jitters

So the last couple months have been interesting to say the least. Life has taken over and updating my fun little runner's blog has not been a high priority. Yet again, I'm finding myself back dating a few key posts just to bring things up to speed.

Fortunately I've kept up my running... and training has come together for CIM ...or I at least I hope it has! Like it or not, the race is this weekend.

I wound up cramming in five good weeks of running, three of which were in the mid/upper 80's. Among them, I had a 7-day stretch that got me to 99 miles, and another that pushed to 106 miles. I'm really just trying to piggy back off my training from Moscow. This session was much shorter and easier than I usually put myself through. It's hard to compare my fitness level to September. However, the one thing I have going for me is the Naperville Half. And I'd like to believe I'm in better shape since then. 1:14:07 suggests I should have a good chance to PR CIM.

This doesn't come without worry though. I've run back-to-backs before, but I've never crammed in two fast marathons like this before. I'm not sure what'll happen. I'm not sure if I'm under trained or over trained. Specifically here's where I'm either lacking or over done things:

1) I haven't had a ton of really fast workouts lately. Like I said, the quality was OK. I had solid workouts before Moscow. But in the last couple weeks, I've had a few intervals but no monster/staple 20x400 or 10x800. No huge tempos (aside from the half). I have raced a lot though, that's for sure. Otherwise, I'm in the dark with my top end speed at the moment.

2) I also haven't had many/any hills recently. I've done a little light work on Cricket Hill, but that doesn't really count. You should actually be laughing at that comment. And again, there was Naperville, which was a hilly effort. Maybe a few of the uber-windy training runs could count has being simulated-hills? Aside from that, no major hills really since the end of the summer.
I say this because CIM is a hilly course. It's net down, but it's a challenging and strategic net down... in a sense, like Boston. It goes down sharp initially, followed by a lot of rollers and uphills. Guys go out fast, and then die when they have to run uphill later in the race. Hopefully I have enough strength in my legs.

3) On the complete flip side... and it be any more opposite from those two comments!.... I'm also extremely worried that I'm over trained and over raced for the year. As of this moment, I can say I feel flat. Plain and simple. Maybe that's my taper talking? (Or even lack of taper??)
I've had a huge year in running and I'm worried that I've over done it. I ran 17 races this year! That's big by anyone's standard. Since Moscow, I've raced four more times: Halloween, Naperville, IL XC 5K, and Turkey Day 8K... all very hard or even all in efforts. The XC race especially sapped me... I suck at XC! Total mileage for the year will likely be above 3,000... easily my biggest year ever.

Long story short... I feel tired! I realize that's what everyone says when they taper, but I really do feel tired. And my taper has been short due to cramming this abbreviated ramp. I can only hope these are pre-race jitters; I worry about doing an aggressive back-to-back that I've never tried before. I still have a couple more days to calm down.


Where does this leave me? I'm flying to California tomorrow. This will be my second time running CIM. I know the course, and I know how to run it. The weather looks decent at the moment. I had a great race there back in 2011. If I can chill out, relax, and rejuvenate myself over the next 60 hours... then it's mine for the taking and I'll throw everything I have at it.

It'll end in one of two ways: I eat the bear, or the bear eats me.

11.19.2015

Post Moscow: CARA + Naperville Half Marathon + CIM Ramp

After Moscow, I didn't take too much time to figure out what I wanted to do with the balance of this year's running.

After two weeks of travel and chilling out, I then needed to quickly pull myself back together. I was committed to the CARA Circuit, which meant I needed to gut out two final races of the season: Halloween Hustle 5K and the Naperville Half Marathon. Furthermore, I had a twinkle in my eye...... I was left somewhat unfulfilled from Moscow and wondering what I should do about it.

Ramping back up wasn't easy. I had some medial left-knee pain that was caused by doing too much walking / stairs in the days following the marathon. Ironically it was very similar to some pain that I had after last year's Berlin. Last year it took a few months to heal. This year, I decided to run through it for the circuit races. It took about three weeks to calm down and become runnable without any discomfort. With a bunch of stretching, foam rolling, and some simple exercises... it's totally fine now.

My initial push back into running was some pacing during the Chicago Marathon for a few friends. It required me to build for a week. I then towed Anu to the finish line for the last 8 miles. The 6:00-6:10 effort wasn't too bad. I started setting my sights on the CARA races.

Halloween Hustle was easy. It was just a 5K. It score points and helped to test some speed. It wasn't super fast because the conditions were less than ideal (rainy / windy / cold), but it gave me more comfort and the knee was no longer bothering me. It wasn't a fast Circuit 5K since many people had just run the marathon... but I did have to race to get 3rd. I dropped a guy that placed 4th, and briefly was in 2nd place before getting kicked myself in the final 400m. I was happy with 3rd and 16:46 in those conditions was satisfying nonetheless. That secured my season with CARA as 2nd 35-39 AG, and 5th OA).

At that point, I had a few weeks of 50+ miles back underneath me. The thoughts were creeping into my head....

If was going to go for a redemption marathon, it had to be CIM (Dec 6th). I felt good. If I was going to do it though, I'd have to quickly ramp my mileage. So I signed up with the option to defer the registration. I'd have to make the ultimate commitment/decision by Nov 16th.... conveniently the day after Naperville Half Marathon.

My focus immediately shifted towards building mileage. I didn't think I'd need a blast into the hundreds, but I knew I'd need a handful of 75-90 miles weeks and a little more speed.

That said, the next two weeks popped up to 72 and 85 miles. The second week at 85 miles was key, as I had 3 large workouts:
- 7 mile rust buster tempo (avg'd 5:54 with conservative start and low 5:40's in second half).
- 8x800 @ 2:34.7 on the lakefront w/ 90 recovery (alternating 4 in wind @ 2:38avg, 4 w/ wind @ 2:31avg).
- 18 miles with 12 at progressing from 6:30 down to 6:15

What happened next was not planned by any means, but inked my commitment to CIM.


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


I honestly didn't have high expectations for this race. I merely wanted to add to my CARA points and get a solid workout. My running in the week up to this half was all building blocks. I hit 99 miles in 7 days through that Friday, including the workouts mentioned above. I went easy/short on Saturday, then the half on Sunday. In other words - there was no taper, this was a run-through-race.

I expected something similar to the Lake Zurich Half, and that would've been ideal. I knew that a sub-1:17 would be enough to gain more CARA points, though it wouldn't necessarily change the standings... A sub-1:17 also would've easily satisfied my desire for some MGP miles + progressing a little faster towards the end of the race.

Sasha was running this as her debut half marathon, so we road out to Naperville at some ridiculously early hour. Without any significant expectations, I wasn't stressing myself out too much... (maybe this is what makes the best races??). Prior to the start, I took a quick glance at the course map. It showed a bunch of twisty roads and turns, with some rolling hills. Way too much for me to take in. It was what it was. I simply had no clue where I was gonna be running or what was ahead.

Weather was brisk, around 40 degrees at the start. No significant wind and plenty of sun... Ideal racing conditions for me.
I warmed up with Sean Clark, and we ducked into the front of the starting line with just enough time to run a few strides. I looked around and didn't see many recognizable faces, aside from a few New Balance and Dick Pond runners... some of which I expected to go faster than me. Surprisingly no bigger Fleet Feet guys.

After very early some turns and jockeying, at about 3/4ths mile I found myself running with only a handful of runners in front of me. Sean was shooting for 1:18, and I said I might hang with him for the first few miles. I kept checking back, and I was already gaining distance on him. Apparently so much for that plan! I still didn't think I would crush this thing. Everything felt very smooth though; the weather was cool, no wind, and I actually welcomed the sun. I just locked onto my pace and went with it. I passed a few more people before mile one, then breezed the marker at 5:45.

There were three guys solidly in front of me and gaining ground. One was Jeremy Rustin and in my AG. I figured if he had a bad day and I had a really good day, then I could catch him. He wasn't holding anything back in the early going though. The other two guys were New Balance and even gaining on him. Still no Fleet Feet in sight. I knew I would find myself in no-man's-land soon enough. Then I gradually heard a runner approaching from behind. Initially I wasn't sure what to do with that.

As he ran along side of me, and I latched on. He was a younger guy... maybe in his mid-20's. Seemed a little cumbersome, but certainly wasn't slow. We exchanged a couple quick comments, and he was clearly happy hanging onto this pace. I wasn't overly taxed, so I decided to stay with him. Besides, absolutely nobody else was near us at this point... he was my only hope for someone to run with. Mile 2: 5:44.

We turned off the main street into some neighborhoods. The course immediately then started climbing. We couldn't even see the guys in front of us any longer, nor anything behind. We climbed through that pig of a hill. Mile 3: 5:48. Neither one of us was letting go of the other. All I could think was, "Shit! What did I just get myself into?" I had no idea there would be hills like that out here.

The course then leveled off. We maintained our effort. Mile 4: 5:38. Yowza! At this point, I'd better not be thinking about a MGP run... because that would be a crash and burn! I laid the cards on the table and told the kid I'd try to run with him for as long as I could, but I didn't know what I had inside of me.

We kept twisting through the neighborhood and saw random crowds cheer on the streets. Mile 5: 5:39.

This was no joke now. I was committing myself to whatever this kid was going doing and he was looking solid. I didn't feel terrible, so I was still ok with it. The constant checking kept happening though... both of myself and of him. Neither of us broke for a second. There was rarely a point where I thought I could drop him... but interestingly, nor did I think I was going to be dropped. I started to use him. I wanted to match him as much as possible.

We hit a nasty uphill again in the 6th mile. We rounded some turns, more good sized crowds cheering, climbed and turned again. A couple people shouted my name. I had no clue who they were. Where did they come from?? I've never been to Naperville!? I was numb to the outside world. Tunnel vision. I just wanted to get up this hill without him dropping me. Mile 6: 5:46.
We then turned out of the neighborhoods and hit a wide, long, straight road, down hill road. I lit the fire! Mile 7: 5:30!

He stayed right with me too. I actually didn't want him to go either. At this point we were feeding one another.

We then snaked our way into downtown Naperville (whatever that is!!)... crowds were cheering again. Still, I had no clue what this course or town looked like, so I was somewhat shocked by everything that was going on. I had no idea people would be out here watching! And more people kept cheering for me too... HOW?!? I had no idea. (Spoiler alert: My name was on the bib!!)

We still couldn't see the other guys in front of us. God only knows how far back the field was. People kept cheering for us to "stay together" and "work together". They were right. Mile 8: another smoking 5:33.

Mile 9: 5:39

We were running like a metronome now... with only a slight ebb and flow around turns.

Mile 10: 5:38... We ran stride for stride with one another through 10 miles without either of us blinking an eye! But this was no longer us running together... It finally dawned on me that we were racing each other! I had completely forgotten all about my 1:17 goal. All I was worried about was two things: Eat or be eaten.

We went through a gatorade station and I grabbed another drink. It wasn't hot by any means, but I was sweating and I had taken a few gatorades before then to keep the fire lit. I noticed that he didn't take anything. He had actually skipped several by that point. I even thought about it... asking myself, was he drinking anything?? Why not?? Hmmm.

About 200m later, we rounded a corner and I noticed him taking it slightly slower than I did and not coming back.

Bingo!

After that point, I was two stepping him for another half mile. I could feel him getting ever so slightly weaker. I actually tried to egg him on and told him to stay with me. Mile 11: 5:37.

Another turn and we were back in a neighborhood and had a few more hills. I had no clue where the hell this course was taking us!! It kept turning. Neighborhoods. Straight-aways. What the hell!? I then pulled a trigger with a surge. I increased the lead ever so slightly. He didn't follow. I knew he was done. The question was now, what did I have left? I was redlining; I was locked in and didn't want to let go. I leaned in to what I could. His footsteps grew more faint. Mile 12: 5:38. The clock said 1:07:59 flat.

It took me a minute to think, but I recognized 1:08 + 6:30 if I blow up = still a PR.

Blow up was not an option. I was finishing this fucker as fast as I could!

Rounded a another turn. I put in another surge to gain as I crested a slight high spot on the road. From there was a long straight away in front of me, and it was all a gradual downhill. My eyes welled up. I couldn't see anyone in front of me. Rustin was out of the picture. All I worried about was keeping the pedal to the metal and not letting the kid kick me down. Mile 13: 5:34.

I was all in. I still couldn't see the finish line though. Where was it?

Boom! I heard loud speakers say the second placed runner finished. It was Jeremy. I waited to hear who was third. I heard nothing after that... It turns out that one of the original three guys dropped off the course/ took a wrong turn.

More downhill, then I rounded a final corner and kicked as hard as I could. The loud speaker then blared "And here comes 3rd place..."... I closed the last .11 in 33.8 seconds, or a 5:07 pace.

SPLIT RECAP:
1- 5:45.1
2- 5:44.1
3- 5:48.1
4- 5:38.4
5- 5:39.2
6- 5:46.4
7- 5:30.8
8- 5:33.5
9- 5:39.0
10- 5:38.6
11- 5:37.0
12- 5:38.7
13- 5:34.6
0.11- 33.8 (5:07 pace)
Tot- 1:14:07 / 5:39.2 Avg; 3rd OA.

Solid negative split and long overdue Half Marathon PR. In fact, it was one of my best races to date. Hilarious, considering I had no intentions of running hard in this race!! I put 12 seconds on the 26 year old "kid" in the last couple miles. I'm pretty sure I wouldn't have done it without that guy's help... So thank you, Kyle Julian... whoever you are.

Ironically, a 1:14:07 is somewhat inline with my 55:31 at SF10, per McMillan Running. It says I should gun for a 2:35:59.

With this, I'm officially committed to closing my season with CIM. Time to get to work!!


A special shout out to Sasha for running a fantastic Half Marathon debut: 1:43:53!! Fantastic!! XOXOXOX!!!!






10.31.2015

Moscow Marathon: From Chicago w/ Love

Another long over due marathon report.... What can I say, sometimes life gets in the way. In this case, work has been challenging and distracting to say the least, coupled with a few personal events and random running. I'll address those in other posts soon enough. In the meantime, here's my brief review of the Moscow Marathon and photo blast from the trip.


I boarded my flight for Moscow all hopped up, and thinking that I should be able gun for a PR. My training had been solid. I certainly had the endurance. I was hitting good speed workouts. And I was totally healthy without any lingering aches or pains.

All those things suggested that I should go for it.

Unfortunately, we can't always control everything, and when traveling internationally there will always be additional elements that stack up against us.

In the end, I didn't get a PR in Moscow simply because it just wasn't meant to be on that course and on that day. I pushed hard through 35K, and then didn't have enough in me to get aggressive at the end. I still ran a 2:39:12. About three minutes off from my PR.

Although the race was a disappointing from my original goals, I'm perfectly OK with how it went. I gave it a shot. I still ran well, and I left more in the tank for another day. It took me all of about five minutes after crossing the finish line to accept that.

This trip to Russia was about much more than just a race. The race was just a small part of a 2-1/2 week adventure to a new world for me. Hell, the race was a glorified tour of Moscow, which turns out is a beautiful and impressive city!

More importantly, I traveled with someone that I'm absolutely head over heels for, and together we explored places that I might not have gone otherwise. I was able to see where Sasha was from, learn more about the culture she grew up with, and met some of the people that are most dear to her. We had a blast!


So where to go with this marathon recap? There were some things that certainly effected my race and they're worth highlighting. I don't think any one singlehandedly was terrible, but all of them combined made the day more difficult than expected.

For starters, Moscow's not cold. Don't be fooled!! They have hot summers and their winters are warmer than Chicago's. In September, it generally starts to cool off but inconveniently they were in the midst of an Indian-Summer. Race day was easily 75 degrees, and very sunny. And since the course was on some extremely wide streets, the sun was soaked up by the blacktop and only made things seem much hotter. Luckily wind wasn't a factor.

Given the heat, hydration should've been key. Unfortunately, I went into the race already somewhat depleted. Reason being: on the flight over, I had some sort of freak migraine and massive kankle swelling... worse than anything I've experienced before. It took a few days to resolve this as my body literally wound up flushing itself. I also "broke my fever" in the two nights that lead up to the race (aka waking up in disgusting pools of sweat). By marathon morning, my hydration was already blown. It was frustrating and upsetting. To add insult to injury on a hot day, I didn't get any water or powerade until the 10K mark! Ugh.

The course itself made for some beautiful, scenic views. It was fun to start from the 1980 Olympic Village, which screamed a Soviet Era mini-city. I couldn't help but think about the 1980 USA team that was forced to boycott. The first 5K was along the Moscow River, then through Moscow City... which is an uber-modern business district with some wild architecture. A similar idea to La Defense in Paris, only bigger, Moscow City is growing rapidly and would put any American downtown to shame. After 10K, we snaked our way along several boulevards, ring-roads, the river, and old neighborhoods that lead to the Red Square. (Unfortunately, we didn't run through the Red Square - that would've been really impressive!) The final 10K passed the Bolshoi Theatre, former KGB headquarters and other old CCCP buildings, along the Kremlin wall, and then the river back to the Olympic Village.

Again, a very impressive tour of the city! After the weekend, I came away with a new found respect for Moscow. Unfortunately, it clearly doesn't receive enough much deserving, positive attention from the western world.

Moscow Marathon Course Map:

SO, a few other things about the course: Moscow's not flat. There were a series of hills from 9-11K, 22-26K, and 30-31K. It seemed like steps leading up to the Red Square, then 33-34K was a very fast downhill back to the river. The first uphill was over a couple K and Boston worthy, or worse. The 20-25KM stretch had a nasty bridge followed by a steady rise over a longer distance. By then, I was starting to push the pace. So if I averaged about 6:01/mi in there, then it was more like 5:50 effort.

The extremely wide streets made tangents difficult, especially when hydration was located on the outer edges of 6 to 10 lanes. Think trying to run on a Lake Shore Drive without any medians! There were four x 180 degree turns, of which the last was at 35K and appeared to be incorrectly marked. From that point on, those final 7-8K markers were very inaccurate and basically useless. I had no idea what pace I was actually running in there.

In summary, my sob story goes as follows: Hydration depleted from the get go, then it was hot, not enough water, somewhat hilly, and screwed up markers towards the end. Like I said, nothing singlehandedly was horrible... but collectively this became too much for my 2:36 expectation.

OK, all that said... Here are a few thoughts about my race itself.

Collectively, there was a marathon + a 10K race. I think both had about 12-15,000 runners. Maybe 5,000 were marathoners. The 10K hung with us through about 4K, then split and reconnected briefly at our 12K.

It seemed like a big field initially, but after the 10K race split off things got lonely. Fortunately, I was working with a guy early on, and we were very steady together... consistently hitting 3:43-46/K or ~6:00/mi, with the exception of the hill at the 10K mark. Things felt extremely smooth, and the only hiccup was missing that first water/powerade station at 5K.

I eventually dropped this other runner around the half way point. By then, we had already passed a most of the field in front of us. It became a solo effort from there. More often than not, I couldn't see anyone ahead. There were a few runners to chase down, but none willing to hang with me.

Looking back, I would say that my race went extremely well through the 34K mark. At 34K I was on pace for 2:37:40. There was a little volatility in my splits, but my effort was always constant or pressing. At times, I had to force myself to hold back. At 30K, I saw Sasha and her dad cheering for me. That sparked me to start pushing. It was hot, but I knew if I was going to run something solid, that's were it needed to happen. I wound up having some of my fastest splits from 31 to 34K, which averaged 3:40's. 34 was downhill and I blazed a 3:28 or 5:35/mi pace. It felt fantastic too!

I remember thinking that if I could hold 3:40's, then I come close to breaking 2:37. I already knew it was likely too hot for a PR, but up until I still thought I had a chance to go sub-6 min for the whole thing. I reached the river and Kremlin, and I had 8K to go.

That's all ironic because after that uber-fast 34th K, things got shitty quickly! The 35th K had a 180 turn that seemed too long. I split 4:13. 36K was 4:52. I remember thinking, "What the fuck!?" I was running way too fast for those splits, and I was trusting what I ran in 34 given my effort on that downhill. Then a 2:33 at 37... I was starting to get frustrated, but the course seemed to be correcting itself. Then 3:58 at 38 (another WTF?), and finally back at 3:43 in 39. That's a huge variance in pace that I knew wasn't happeneing, so I had absolutely no clue what I was running! As far as I was concerned, I was still holding a decent effort and the 3:43 confirmed it at 39K... only praying that the final 3K would correct the error.

Then I hit the wall. The dehydration and frustration slammed into me. I started to mentally give up. No matter what the splits said, I knew I was slowing in this last 3.2K. I made it 24 miles deep and there wasn't anything I could do about it. My legs went into slow motion. I didn't completely cave, but I stopped fighting. Ironically I was still passing a couple dying runners. The end merely became a self-battle of attrition.

It turns out that the final 7.2K were about 3:53/KM or 6:15 pace. Was that actually the pace? Was the distance correct? I don't know. It's hard to say since the markers were so far off. I've tried to use Google Maps to study the course. As far as I can tell, through 34K looks accurate... then it gets dicey due to that 180 turn. Regardless of the overall distance that I ran... I know I slowed towards the end... and that makes a huge difference from what I ran last year in Berlin. I finished Moscow in 2:39:12. placed 21st OA, 18th male, 4th AG. The nearest person was a minute and a half in front of me.

So that's it. That's the race. Not quite the work of art I was originally expecting, but given my laundry list above, I was actually OK with it. It was what it was, and I readily accepted that soon after crossing the finish line. Honestly, after seeing Sasha and her dad at the finish made everything so much better. Yet another sub-2:40 to put in the spreadsheet.

International marathons are awesome trips, and I've done plenty at this point. Each time I go, I recognize the risks of not running good races. It's tough because you get your hopes up for them. Sometimes you get lucky and things fall into place. I PR'd at Rotterdam and twice in Berlin. Moscow just wasn't my day. Regardless, it was an amazing run and effort, and I'd recommend it to anyone. The race is still an infant compared to the majors, but with some time it'll grow into a fantastic event.

Split Recap:
K----- Time ----- Lap ---- /KM ---- /Mi
5K -- 0:18:39 -- 18:39 -- 3:43.8 -- 6:00.2 (Missed water at 5K)
10 -- 0:37:42 -- 19:03 -- 3:48.6 -- 6:07.9 (Included big hill!)
15 -- 0:56:17 -- 18:35 -- 3:43.0 -- 5:58.9 (Let it fly)
21.1 -- 1:18:59 -- 22:42 -- 3:43.4 -- 5:59.5 (Let it fly)
25 -- 1:33:35 -- 14:36 -- 3:44.5 -- 6:01.3 (All uphill)
30 -- 1:52:24 -- 18:49 -- 3:45.8 -- 6:03.4 (More hill)
35 -- 2:11:16 -- 18:52 -- 3:46.4 -- 6:04.4 (Avg'd 3:40s except 35K)
42.2 -- 2:39:12 -- 27:56 -- 3:52.9 -- 6:14.9 (This was all FUBAR)

Overall: 2:39:12 / 1:18:59 out, 1:20:13 back

The funny thing is, the course was covered with paparazzi! I swear, I've never been photographed so much while running. Those Russians really love their cameras!! Anyway, I scalped a few random ones that I found online, along with some of the fancy official race shots.

12K, with the only person willing to hang with me:

15K and passing these fools like they were standing still:

25K:

27K and melting in the sun:

Near 32K:

Blazing it near 34K, and completely alone:

No man's land, near 39K:

Sasha and I at the finish:

With Sasha and her dad at the finish:

Probably one of my favorite photo bombs ever!!!

Some of the media pics...
Start:

First 5K:

Moscow City, 8K:

One of the "Seven Sisters" buildings, 12K:

Hills, 20-something-K:

Red Square, 32-33K:

Kremlin, 36K:

Of course, the trip that followed the marathon is really why we were there! Sasha and I left Moscow the following day. We then went to St Petersburg for several days and toured many historical museums, palaces, and cathedrals. We then went to Voronezh to see her family and friends, and wrapped up on the Mediterranean coast in Antalya, Turkey. All in all, an amazing experience. Here are a few of the nearly 1,000 photos that we took:

Aleksander Sad, Moscow:

Kremlin, Moscow:

Kremlin Cathedral, Moscow:

St Basil in Red Square, Moscow:

Red Square, Moscow:

Cathedral top, looking at Winter Palace, St Petersburg:

Winter Palace, St Petersburg:

Cathedral on Spilled Blood, St Petersburg:

One of many St Petersburg Canals:

Entrance to Summer Palace, St Petersburg:

Voronezh:

Countryside near Voronezh:

Orlov Family at Dacha, near Voronezh:

Former noble castle, near Voronezh:

Voronezh Circus!!

Antalya Beach:

Antalya Harbor:

Mosque from hotel at Antalya:

Waterfall into Mediterranean, Antalya:

Roman Gate, Antalya:

Roman Ruins, Pamukkale:

Pamukkale: