I Surprised Myself!

This morning I ran the Brooklyn Half-Marathon. I ran it in 1:35:50, amounting to running 7:19s. That’s considerably better than I thought I’d do today!

Here are my Unofficial Garmin Stats:

I didn’t really realize the weather for today’s run until after I finished. It was gorgeous! The temperature was unnoticeable–somewhere in the upper 50s to low 60s–and the skies were clear and cloudless. While I tend to run better in temperatures about 5 to 10 degrees cooler than this, there was nothing to complain about because the weather didn’t seem to play a factor in my race.

I set out this morning thinking I’d hope to do 1:38, or at least a sub-1:40. Not that fast for me but it seemed about where my training was right now. Actually, I was a little slower in training but I figured the race would by its nature pick up my pace, which it did. But also what picked it up was the downhills! A lot of this race was slightly downhill or even explicitly downhill, and I told myself early on in this race to capitalize on the downhills …

Actually, that’s not entirely true. I started this race with a low-expectations mindset. I was doing it more for the fun of it, maybe even the obligation for 9+1, so it was a low-pressure situation. I realized soon after I started I had to pee, and while I could have held it, at the first mile I saw toilets and thought, what the heck. I did the same in the Surf City Marathon at the first mile, and it only consumed about a minute of time. Sure enough, it took me maybe a minute or two.

It was after then that I thought, Heck, let’s see if I can capitalize on the downhills. I used the first time as a way to catch up on some of the time I lost, and it wasn’t long before my average pace was something that was still ahead of what I thought I could do. I told myself to keep a steady pace, but these slight downhills were telling me, Go ahead, push it while you have it.

When I entered Prospect Park, I knew that this was an unknown territory for me. I’d never run it, only biked it, and while I remembered hills, I didn’t know where they’d be and I couldn’t recall how they’d be. It was the first half of my time in the park that was the toughest–and by “toughest” I mean that it wasn’t really that tough. Most of the hills at that point were unsurprising and very low grade. The second half was awesomely downhill.

Up this this point (that is, up to the 10K mark), I’d been running with a pins-and-needles sensation in my left foot. I figured this was because my shoe was probably tied too tightly, though nothing about it seemed extraordinarily tight. Whatever the case, my foot was presumably inflamed in the shoe and it felt as if I had a thick pancake underneath the ball of my foot on top of having the sensation. Just after the 10K mark I pulled over to loosen the laces on my shoe. I set out again only to pull off again because it hadn’t seemed to help, and I loosened the laces some more. It still didn’t seem to work, and I just carried on. I ran some wonderful downhills then and really picked up my pace while I was rolling down the hills.

It wasn’t until around mile 11 that the pins-and-needles sensation cleared. I could even feel it clearly suddenly! I had forgotten about it since the 10K. We were on Ocean Parkway now, a very long stretch of flat, generally slightly downhill roadway that takes you about 5.5 miles to Coney Island. I used numerous stoplights there as motivation to pick up my pace from one to another–nothing too much, but just something to keep me engaged. I was really measuring my breathing, trying to keep up with a guy in Vibrams just ahead of me whom I didn’t want to beat me. I was doing a pretty good job, though I didn’t pass him until about mile 12.

Fortunately I looked at the course map ahead of time, so I knew not to spaz when I hit the 13th mile marker. Usually .1 mile doesn’t seem like a lot, but the map had a couple turns and I knew there would probably be a ramp uphill. There was. I got up it, and the finish was just ahead, only so far away that I could basically do the kind of sprinting I tend to do on the 72nd Street Transverse in Central Park for races that finish there. When a challenger looked as if he was trying to finish in a sprint, I kicked it up another notch and was able to finish in a clearance with no other finishers. I remember slowing down minutely just before the mat, which if I could do over I would just for the sake of discipline. I was relieved that I did so well in this race, both timewise and pacewise, not to mention given my health in the last few days, which has felt dismal in light of what I’ve consumed while I stare at a computer screen doing the copyedit of my book. I have to say, it was nice to get out, even if I was up at 4:15am on 5 hours of sleep!

I consumed 2, 1x caffeine chocolate PowerGels about 10-15 minutes before the race, then had 1, 2x caffeine tangerine PowerGel at mile 9. I had some pretty great splits in this race, and my first mile could have been one of those but I intentionally held myself back after seeing how fast I was going. That was the last time I really held myself back this race!

P.S. I saw Ming!

Better than Last Year!

Today I ran the Queens Half-Marathon in Flushing Meadow, Queens, NY. I ran it in 1:36:45 (7:24s), an accomplishment I felt good about. My Age Grade Percentage was up to 61.67%, but more importantly, I managed to generally increase my speed over the course of the race after a slow start. I didn’t catch up to Elizabeth, though, who pulled off a finish about a minute earlier than me (1:35:44, or 7:19s). She placed 17th among women–again, running on an injured leg!

My slow start was partly because of a delayed race start (police hadn’t cleared the roadway just yet), which meant I felt a bit queasy, intestinal, and urinary. The feeling stayed on my mind in the first couple miles or so, when I started to convince myself to take my mind off the sensations so that I could dedicate the mental energy to running. It worked, and I distracted myself from the thoughts and feelings.

Around when Elizabeth hit the 6-mile marker, she was on a turnaround and shouted my name; I eventually got to that point and roughly calculated being about 2 minutes behind her. I figured it would take about 4 miles to catch her if I shaved off about 30 second per mile (I had been averaging about 7:40s up to about then), and fortunately my body performed, giving me splits between 7:08 and 7:14 regularly. That was an awesome feeling. However, I never saw Elizabeth after she shouted my name. That surprised me given her level of training: She’d basically not run in two weeks except for last week’s race, and her last long run was 12 miles around a 7:40 pace in heat. I was expecting she’d tank at some higher mile and I’d catch her in my faster pace, but it never happened. She’s really gotten fantastic.

When it got to the finish, I set my sights on passing a person about 90 feet ahead of me. In the last stretch, I was right next to him, and I still had juice in my body. I wasn’t going to really sprint until the last turn, and then I did. I had to squeeze between two side-by-side runners (narrowly missing an accident!) and charged toward the finish, just after hearing my name called.

I was so impressed by my run in this race. I started slow but I believed I could get faster, and I did get faster … and I was able to sustain faster. And when it came to the end, I was able to get fast again (even though I started to fade a bit around mile 10). I beat my time from last year (which admittedly was much hotter), and I managed a respectable pace.

This new course was much better than last year’s. Last year’s had us out for a bit on the parkway, which wasn’t fun for me. This year was all within the park, and while we covered some of the same ground twice, there were turns to keep it pretty interesting, and enough of the race had a slight downhill (which I used strategically to go faster). The only real uphills were the overpasses, which were short and quickly mounted.

Here are my unofficial Garmin stats (you can see the course is like spaghetti!):

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! 🙂