“Achilles Tendonopathy” Test Run

This morning was my first run back from the Atlantic City Half-Marathon. That was Sunday, and Monday morning I continued to have stiff calves and delicate ankles. Some ibuprofen was my main course of remedy, but by Monday evening I compared my ankles and noticed that my left ankle was considerably swollen. Well, not so much the ankle, but just under the Achilles tendon, just above the ankle. Palpating the tendon didn’t seem to hurt. I first thought this was some kind of capsule inflammation, but a little research suggests to me it’s what was called Achilles tendonitis (“Achilles inflammation”) and now more properly called Achilles tendonopathy (“Achilles degeneration”). (Apparently the shift in verbiage was a result of microscopic investigation of purported inflammation, which ended up being degeneration. I may have my facts a bit off, keep in mind.)

As a result, I was comfortable not running Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday. My work schedule made it hard, but talking to a dancer friend yesterday led me to feel a bit rosier about the condition, maybe even something I should continue running through. Granted, that sounds counterintuitive and quite possibly contraindicated, but it felt good to be out to do 10.25 miles this morning over the Queensboro Bridge and around Central Park, shirtlessly in 52-degree cloudy weather. I felt alive and my ankle was pretty solid throughout the run. Here are the deets:

I thought my Garmin was fried after I was on the subway ride home–it suddenly shut down and started to start up but would keep shutting down and beeping. When I got home, I found out it had run out of battery! I had thought I charged it fully but maybe a contact didn’t happen and the battery drained. It seems to be charging now, and the results transferred fine.

I ran 7:27s but that’s a bit misleading. I had traffic again in Manhattan, though not nearly as badly as some days. That slowed me down to an 8:21 in that area, which is oddly a consistent pace for that trafficky leg. I also did a 7:41 just after that, also because I had to pause for some Central Park morning traffic crossing in front of me. Aside from that, my laps seem pretty solid, and I even sped up at the end of the run. The end of the run was a bit more reliable terrain–no hills, no traffic, no bridges.

I focused a bit on my quads during this run and it seemed to help. I imagined my quads as the most important part to think of during my run. That imaging flew a bit out the window when a faster runner moved effortlessly in front of me; I focused instead on seeing if I could outpace him but it didn’t happen. But overall, the imaging was pretty helpful and even seemed familiar. It made me wonder how my pace would be if I worked more on my quads in this lead-up to the NYC Marathon.

The lower parts of both calves are still a bit sore, but it’s something I think I am okay to deal with. This run came on about 7 hours of sleep. I haven’t been able to get much more than 6 hours a night the last few nights which isn’t ideal. Nor have I iced my inflammation, which also would be good. Hopefully I can stay healthy and just bang out a great marathon very soon!

Reserved a Spot in the Boston Marathon!

“Holy Shoot!”

That’s what I said when I went online to the Boston Marathon website. Today registration opened at 9am, and at 5:03pm, it was CLOSED! Last time, it closed in 2 MONTHS. Today, um, it closed in 8 hours, 3 minutes?

Fortunately I got in very early this morning while on set. If I waited until tonight, I would have been most disappointed. And I’m guessing there are a number of very disappointed people out there, having simply forgotten to sign up today and thinking they could sign up later. If you’re reading this, I feel for ya.

But I’ve reserved my spot! I am only now awaitin verification, which is in the form of validating my qualifying time. So it’s just a formality as I wait for validation, since I qualified in last year’s Philadelphia Marathon with 3:07:32.

So here we go! The next “leg” of my running story will soon begin!

Encouraging!

This morning I ran the Atlantic City Half-Marathon in 1:32:43 (7:05s). I came in 54th place overall, 39th place of 408 males, and 10th place of 119 people in my age group! 10th place! Woo-hoo! I ran the race with Elizabeth Corkum, who invited me to the race. She did impressively herself, running the 13.1 miles in 1:39:39 (a PR for her!), equating to 7:37s. She came in 95th place, 28th place of 492 females, and 10th place of 139 people in her age group!

We both were 10th place in our respective age groups!

Here are the overall Half-Marathon results. And here are the Garmin deets from my race:

Unofficial Race Results:

For this race, the starting temperature was around 50 degrees with mostly clear blue skies. It really was a fantastic weather to start in. My first mile on the Boardwalk was a swift and painless 6:28. From there, I was slower in my miles but not very slow. According to Garmin I did 7:04s and a lot of my times hovered below 7:04 through 8 miles. After then I started to lose a little steam, heading back on the Boardwalk but for a monotonously long distance (well, 3 miles), slowing to hover around 7:15s. Still not bad, but I had a 2x Caffeine Tangerine PowerGel around Mile 10 or so to give me some oomph.

As I took the turnaround just around 11.05 miles and headed back, I saw Elizabeth and put out my hand to high-five her and give her a cheer of support. Yea! My run to the finish was supposed to be the steepest part of the run, but I didn’t notice any kind of incline. I was pretty taxed though, and while I saw the finish from quite a ways away, I didn’t muster up that much of a finishing sprint. I did get a little sprint on … well, maybe just a little of my “showy” robot arms.

How did my body do? No pains to report! I took an ArginMax, quercetine, and ibuprofen, and a green tea complex was also in me. I also had one of the aforementioned PowerGels about an hour before the race as food. About the worst injury I got was chapped lips from windburn–the course was generally windy, though the winds were calm at times. My calves are pretty sore, though, and it’s a little tough getting up from a seated position.

Overall, I’m pretty encouraged by this finish time. It’s not a personal record, though it is 7:05s. 7:05s is somewhere around where I want to be for marathon pace. While I wouldn’t be able to carry that speed today over 26.2 miles, I’m positioned in a place to know how I can perform in race conditions up to the distance of 13.1 miles.

It was a great trip! Thanks for inviting me, Elizabeth! 🙂