A Charming Third Time

This morning I ran the Philadelphia Marathon 2012. It was my fourth running of this decidedly fun race. I completed the marathon in 3:16:02 (7:29s). While not a PR in this fast, flat course, the race was the end of my feat to run three marathons in four weeks. I did it!

Here are my unofficial results per my Garmin:

I really wasn’t sure what would happen in today’s race. Four weeks ago I ran the Atlantic City Marathon in 3:15:14, a time about 10 minutes faster than I had expected. Two weeks ago, I ran the NYC Replacement Marathon in 3:38 — it was actually an ultramarathon of 26.6 miles. Between then and today’s race, I did only two runs — a half-marathon training run and a 10k training run. Based on some prior history of running NYC then Philly with little training between them, I thought there was a good chance that my Philly would end up really slow. I surprised myself.

With the hope of pulling off a 3:25, I relaxed in the beginning of the race. I only had to run 7:49s to pull off that goal, so when I shot out of the gate running around a 6:40-6:50 without much effort, I was a bit surprised and knew I needed to calm down. I remembered seeing some portajohns Saturday and the course ran past them, so I hopped off the course and into a portable toilet. I lost maybe 30-45 seconds, managing a 7:28 first mile according to Garmin (I thought it was a 7:49??). Now without the urge to pee, I was comfortable and running, without pushing myself to go too fast. I remembered the course fairly well and knew there were places I could speed up, but I decided not to.

Instead, I thought I’d hold back until the hill around Mile 8 to turn it on and work. Just before then, I’d been stalking a City Coach runner, whom I’d picked out because of his singlet. Elizabeth trains with the City Coach team so their shirts are distinctive to me. I don’t know the team but I eventually caught him and introduced myself as a friend of Elizabeth’s. His name was Jeff. We chatted a bit (he was running with a guy named Jerry, so we became “Ben and Jerry”!) and I learned he was aiming for a 3:08. I knew I wasn’t going to achieve that today but he dismissed my statement as a lack of confidence. (It wasn’t a lack of confidence; it was a realistic estimate based on my training and history … a 3:08 would have been close to my PR and I wasn’t in that kind of shape.) I ran with Jeff and Jerry before charging up the hill around Mile 8, and I weathered it really well. Around Mile 10 or 11 (near the gel station) Jeff showed up in front of me out of nowhere! I caught up to him then went past him on one of my favorite downhills of the course. It wasn’t until near the half-marathon mark that Jeff passed me then I caught him and we talked as we tried to help Elizabeth (who was in town to watch her boyfriend also race) make ourselves more visible. She wasn’t where I had expected but Jeff and I stayed running together until eventually Elizabeth emerged near the cool old stone underpass on Kelly Drive, cheering us both on.

I ran with Jeff for a bit more. We were doing sub-7:00s at this point, which made me really happy yet I didn’t know how long I’d be able to sustain it. Another guy joined us, too, given our clip. However, inside the 17th mile, something changed for me. I was right there with Jeff when I decided it would be a good time to get some gel in me. Reaching into my pocket meant that I slowed just enough for Jeff to pull in front of me, and as I wrestled a bit with getting the gel into my mouth, Jeff was 90 feet or more ahead of me. My body wasn’t responding as much now to my impulses to catch Jeff, and sure enough I managed a whopping 7:22 in this mile. Whoa! I went from running about a 7:00 to a 7:22! I figured here was the shift in my race and maybe that I’d hit the wall.

Sure enough, my body was starting to slow in the 17th mile. My times started to climb but I knew I could get all the way out to Manayunk. I was pretty confident I could get out of Manayunk. I was even confident I could finish this race, though I wasn’t sure how much I would end up slowing. I remembered that the going out on Kelly Drive is long. Did it feel as long going back toward the finish line? I couldn’t remember but I figured it would feel long. Fortunately, it wasn’t that bad.

With about 4 miles to go, I had a caffeinated gel. In fact, I had two — one 2x-caffeine Tangerine PowerGel and one raspberry Clif Shot of unknown caffeine level. I’ve avoided running with much of any caffeine since a hot summer run left me with a racing heart, which made me feel really weird and knocked me out of the training run. However, I was curious if I’d get a needed boost to the finish line with the caffeine. I didn’t have the heart palpitations, yet I did have some increase in speed. Or rather, when I wanted to turn it on a bit more and get to the finish line, my body output some increase in speed.

With 2 miles to go, I talked to a guy named John. John told me a secret about his race (he was running with a buddy’s number, I believe), and he said that people were calling him by the name on his bib rather than his name. We connected a bit and encouraged each other in keeping it going to the finish. Eventually I pulled ahead of him and he wished me well. And then the speed really started to pick up for me.

A girl in fluorescent running clothes rivaled me. She sped up much too soon for the finish, which is really hard to gauge in this race. I think I caught her, only to have her eventually pull ahead of me. I was really starting to charge to find the finish, with tears welling up in my eyes in a fit of emotion. Eventually I saw the 26-mile marker, which I wasn’t confident I’d see. I knew that after seeing that, it’s about 2 minutes until the finish. I found the finish and charged ahead. And then I finished. 3:16:02 — just shy of running a 3:15. If I didn’t have the pee break, I might have run in the 3:15 range, but honestly, the having-to-pee would have drained my concentration, and that early break from running actually may have helped me out a bit.

After the race, I saw Elizabeth’s boyfriend Chris, who pulled off his first ever sub-4:00 marathon, running about a 3:57. I saw Elizabeth, too, but then I was on my way back to my hotel. I noticed a limp in my right knee had started to develop, most likely delayed onset inflammation of some sort. At worst I feared it was a cartilage tear but I’m thinking that’s not it for now, and that the inflammation will go down soon enough. My guess right now is that it’s a bit of inflammation of the IT band since the pain is a bit on the lateral (“outside”) part of the knee.

I slept a lot of the train ride back to NYC. I’m pretty happy with my accomplishment of three marathons in four weeks, even if I didn’t do them as quickly as I had originally hoped. Training for them was extremely tough for me this year. I didn’t have the luck this year of consistent stand-in gigs, so I was hacking together a work schedule among different productions, meaning my sleep was erratic and my runs couldn’t always work out. Many times I just didn’t run, too defeated by the stress of early calltimes and extremely early risings, and too wiped out at the end of the day to do anything about it. This goal makes me long a bit more for training for a single marathon again, though quite honestly I need a bit of a break from running after this experience. Running was enjoyable to an extent, but I would do whatever I could at times to delay my going for a run. I think it was my body rebelling against the goals I’d set forth for myself. I also had a book come out in this time, and the erratic nature of promoting it also wore on me, as did general life pursuits. This huge running goal is largely behind me now, thank goodness.

And I did it!

The NYC Marathon Was a No-Go, But I Wasn’t!

Today I was supposed to run the NYC Marathon 2012. However, Hurricane Sandy devastated the region including Staten Island, the island where the race begins. After the city’s saying the marathon would go on, on Friday the city and the New York Road Runners reversed and said that the NYC Marathon was canceled.

So, after a quick amount of publicity mostly via Twitter, I ran the NYC Replacement Marathon, a marathon I put together to begin and run in Central Park. Actually, it was more of an ultramarathon if you ran the course I advised. I ran my longest race ever today, running 26.65 miles in 3:38:07 (8:11s). If I go by when I finished 26.2 miles, I ran a marathon in about 3:34 (8:10s).

Here are my results per my Garmin watch:

There are two parts to this story: the organization of it, and the actual race. As for the organization of it, I blogged pretty extensively about it on my news blog, where I put the primary information:

Click here to read the organizational information for the race.
Click here to read the wrap-up for the race.

The wrap-up link contains articles that came out in the Huffington Post and Associated Press, from which the story of the NYC Replacement Marathon was picked up by countless other media outlets. I even had a documentary shot of the experience that is on YouTube, and I did an internet radio interview on the experience. Whoa! Click the wrap-up link to watch and listen.

Here I’ll talk about the race. As we started we knew there would be a lot of runners in the park. However, probably none of us knew just how many would be in the park. So many people, including so many legions of foreigners stuck in town to run the marathon, flooded Central Park and were running in both directions. Basically, there was no room for bikes as runners took up the entire expanse of the roadway.

Very quickly I realized this would be tough, not so much for the large amount of people, but for the lack of runner support. No water stations or Gatorade in particular. I ran with a couple of my NYC Replacement Marathon starters until I could tell they were going to be faster than me and I couldn’t keep up, then I caught them to tell them where the restrooms were and headed off to that building. But then I saw some portajohns and went for them.

After I was done, I was by myself in the mass of people. I ran shirtless with “NYC Replacement Marathon” written in permanent marker on my chest, and that got some verbal attention which motivated me. What demotivated me was finding that quite a few of the park’s water fountains had little pressure or no water at all! There was no way I’d manage this marathon with no water; I knew of just one that worked after having tested it the prior day, but one water fountain would mean a miserable go.

So I used part of my race to chase down water fountains and drink when I got some water from them. As my race went on, lines developed at many of these fountains, which slowed me down a bit. Also what slowed me down — quite a bit — was the finish line area of the park, which was packed with people taking photos and congregating. I passed through that area five times today, and I was brought to a near standstill as I tried to get through the people.

I finished in 3:38, and I wasn’t really sure why I’d run this “race” so slowly. I wasn’t disappointed really — just curious why it took me so long, especially after having run the Atlantic City Marathon two weeks ago in 3:15:14. Here are some factors that I believe figured into my slower time today:

1. I ran 26.65 miles, not 26.2, so the 3:38 is not a marathon time but an ultramarathon time! Remember that, Ben!

2. I had to stop at water fountains to get water rather than run through water stations. This added minutes to my time as I stood in line at times to get what turned out to be only a trickle of water.

3. The finish line area was packed with so many people, sometimes I had to stop or walk to get through the people. I couldn’t maintain a faster pace.

4. I was underhydrated over the course of this race, and had I brought Gatorade, I would probably have been better hydrated and more energized.

5. I stopped for a quick bathroom break once.

6. There were a lot of people in the park running, though I don’t recall that really interfering with my stride or time.

7. I wasn’t really out to PR, and when I realized I wasn’t running superfast, I didn’t push myself to go faster.

8. I ran a 3:15 marathon two weeks prior!

9. The Central Park course of 4 loops plus a lower loop is pretty tough considering!

Those are some of the many factors that went into my race today. Running a 3:38 makes me wonder what I’ll run in Philadelphia. I did four runs between Atlantic City and NYC, and I want to run more than that between now in Philly. However, my body took a bit of a beating today so I don’t know when I’ll want to get back out to run!