4:30 or Bust: A Quest for Marathon Mediocrity

Archive for February 2010

February 2010 in Review

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Running – 82.8 miles over 12 runs.  185.3 miles YTD is most ever through Feb.  80’s is right in my sweet spot when marathon training.  Now that I’m adding long runs, along with speed workouts, I need more off days in between.  Given that, 12 runs in 28 days is not bad, almost every other day.  Amazingly, I got 3 runs in on a 6 day vacation in San Francisco.  Never ran so much on a vacation before!

Races – 1 (Cherry Tree 10 Mile – 1:29:19 PR)

Biking – none.  Meant to get 1 or 2 in, but we had lots of snow this month, making outdoor biking difficult.  March Madness (12 miles on bike in Central Park) is in a month, so need to get on the bike PRONTO!

Swims – 1 – NOT ENOUGH!

Gym workouts – 3 – pathetic

Injuries – 0 (on a roll still with no new injuries since November!  I do have nagging general groin/hip pain, but it does not hurt at all when I run)

Sicknesses – 0

Weight – Gained almost 2 pounds this month, based on averages.  They all came while on vacation and I haven’t been able to lose it since.  Good news is that my average fat percentage was down.

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Written by SCL

February 28, 2010 at 9:56 pm

Posted in Month End Summary

Cherry Tree 10 Mile Race Report

with 3 comments

Yesterday was the Cherry Tree 10 mile race, 3 loops around Prospect Park, organized by the Prospect Park Track Club.  This was originally not on my radar, because I’m deep in marathon training, and I knew this race was at the tail end of a vacation I was taking in California.  However, once I realized the race was Sunday, and I was flying in on Friday night, I convinced myself that the 10 mile race is a perfect opportunity to practice race conditions and signed right up.  The race also offers a relay option, which looked like a lot of fun – teams of three where each person runs 1 loop of the park.

First off, in terms of goal, I fully expected to PR this race.  I had only ever run 3 races at the 10 mile distance, and my PR was set way back in 2002, at 1:31:54.  Considering that time is 9:15 pace, and I just recently completed the Manhattan Half Marathon in 9:05 pace, I would have been upset if I didn’t PR.  Considering this race was 3 miles shorter, and an easier course (besides the big hill heading up to Grand Army Plaza, Prospect Park is really not that bad), I wanted to get my pace under 9:00, and finish sub 1:30.

Few really nice things about this race.  First, the 10am start time.  Most NYRR races these days start at 8am, or earlier for some of the long ones, so I really appreciated the extra time to get out there.  Also, number pickup, bag check, and post race spread, was indoors at Bishop Ford HS, a 10 minute walk from the start.  Plenty of parking at the school.  This made for a very relaxing, and WARM, time in getting ready for the race and unwinding at the end.  They even offered massages afterwards.  The final nice thing about this race is the small field.  There were less than 1000 participants, much smaller than any NYRR event, most of which fill out at 5000 people.  The Haiti run this weekend had no cap, and over 9000 finishers.  OMG, holy traffic jam!  So, overall, this was a fantastic experience.  Having a school to go to after the race for bagels and hot chocolate reminded me of the good ole days when NYRR used to do this for all of the winter races.  Those days are long gone, so this is a great throwback.

Pre race, I was having flashbacks to October, when I ran the Nike Human Race.  It had a similar start position in the park, and so the first 6 miles would be a great approximation of how much improvement I’ve had since then.  On that day, I went out way too fast in the first mile, suffered shin splits, and had a rough race, finishing in 58:52, or 9:26 pace.  I was clearly not looking for a repeat performance.

On to the race itself.  I was able to get pretty close up to the front and so had ZERO congestion at the start of the race.  Again, I found myself running a very strong first mile, TOO strong.  Mile 1 was 8:34.  I know full well that I cannot sustain that pace over 9 miles and so tried to dial it back.  Once I came around to the start area again, I realized that the start line is on a downhill.  That probably explains why mile 1, twice in a row, was too fast.

This time, luckily, my shins cooperated and did not flare up.  Slowed the pace to 8:54 and 9:00 in the next 2 miles.  I really wanted to keep the miles in the 9:00-9:10 range, hoping that I’d be able to run a couple of stronger miles at the end to get me in under 1:30.  It did work out that way.  You can see that mile 5, 6, and 7 were very consistent.  Mile 9 was the slowest, but this included the 3rd time up the big hill, so perfectly understandable. At mile 9, I was at 1:21, so knew I had 1:30 in the bag, only needing a 9:00 final mile.  The last mile had lots of downhill, and with a little pushing, pulled off a strong 8:23, my fastest mile.  Finishing time was 1:29:19, a 8:56 pace.

  • Mile 1 – 8:34
  • Mile 2 – 8:54
  • Mile 3 – 9:00
  • Mile 4 – 8:45
  • Mile 5 – 9:06
  • Mile 6 – 9:11
  • Mile 7 – 9:11
  • Mile 8 – 8:56
  • Mile 9 – 9:16
  • Mile 10 – 8:23

My time of 1:29:19 was good enough for 385 out of 736 finishers, so close to 50th percentile!

Happy to add another PR to the record book, my first since Coogan’s 5K, almost a year ago.

On another note, patiently awaiting my Daily Mile tech tee shirt!  There were a few DailyMilers out there, and if we had shirts to wear, would make it easier to spot each other!  Maybe it will show before Coogan’s in 2 weeks.  One can dream…

Written by SCL

February 22, 2010 at 10:15 pm

Posted in Race Report

Tagged with , ,