I had several pre-race thoughts that came to fruition:
- "I think I can get 3rd overall, behind Kim and her [an unknown girl I pegged as fast]"
- "I'm still tired from that 10,000 m last week; I don't think I'm going to have the strongest race"
- "In this wind, if I can run faster than my second half of the Phoenix Marathon, I'll be doing good"
- "The slow miles will be: 1-3, 8-9, and 11"
- "The fast miles will be: 4, 6-7, and 13"
Official race results are here, and you can scroll down to see a finishing video and several pictures (including a screenshot of my splits that I predicted well based on the elevation).
The wind rocked the parkway, I tried to rock it, & I was wearing shorts! |
Rock the Parkway is a large competitive race, and I put it on my spring schedule for that reason. The timing of it wasn't wonderful, but I could never figure out an ideal mid-March to mid-May schedule that included every event and distance I wanted to include, so eventually I stopped trying to make things perfect and committed to my current plan. In the week leading up to this race, I struggled with gearing up for race-day, because I was tired all week. My 10,000 m race on March 31 that was followed by a sleepless night and a power-packed weekend, which rolled straight into a busy work week that concluded with my monthly visit to our Kansas City division, did not leave as much as I would have liked in the reserves. I didn't get excited about the race until the day before it, which is unlike me.
I'd been eyeing the race morning forecast, and it looked a little warm (50-60*), but good enough. I didn't look at the wind forecast until I asked my coach a couple of strategy questions about the course and he mentioned that we were supposed to have quite the headwind during the second half of the race. I'd been wavering back and forth between a couple of time goals for the race, but when I saw the wind speed I decided to throw out time goals and mainly aim to place as high as I could -- always a vague goal since it all depends on who shows up. I knew a win was out, as my super fast friend/coach's wife Kim was entered and had historically run 1:16s there, but I hoped to nab a top 5 spot to finish in the prize money. Not pushing for a time goal was disappointing, but I had perfect weather when I ran my half PR so I was under no delusion of having any chance of beating it with a 20+ mph headwind for half the race!
Race morning came, and I was feeling pretty "meh". I was tired during my warm up, but I've had every combination of good/bad warm up and good/bad race, so I tried to not worry about it as I went through my normal pre-race routines. I was in the elite starting wave, and either personally knew or knew of most of the other women in the wave. Based on my knowledge of their recent performances, I thought I had a good chance at 3rd overall, behind Kim and a girl I didn't know but who looked faster than me (through this story she will be called "the brunette", but I will point out that she looked like she was Kenyan to back up why I thought she looked super fast).
I looked tired before the start (Jon says I looked tired all week) |
I was happy with my newfound goal of running next to the blond until towards the end, and I felt confident that I could outlast her because I knew she'd run 3:00 at Phoenix 6 weeks ago (how was that only 6 weeks ago?!). I almost breathed a sigh of relief thinking that I could possibly run a 1:25-1:26 and get third, as I just wasn't sure what my legs had to give.
Just as I got comfortable with this plan, it changed; as race plans that depend on other people often do (also why I prefer time and split goals!). I saw the brunette up ahead of us, and we were gaining rapidly. I could tell we weren't running that fast, so I was surprised she was coming back to us, and quickly. I knew mile 4 would be fast with more downhill than up, and around the end of that mile we caught the brunette. I assumed she must have gone out too fast, because she was running much slower than us as we came up on her and (I thought) went by. I would later look back at this point as a mistake, but I don't know how I possibly could have avoided it given the knowledge I had at the time; she was probably running 7:30 pace when we came up on her (after starting around 6:00 pace).
I continued on with what I assumed was the blond right on my heels. I eased up at times thinking she'd come up beside me, as she had been good with running side by side earlier on, but she didn't so I just assumed she was barely holding on. I could feel someone right on me, and I also kept hearing spectators yell "go ladies" and "2nd and 3rd female", so I knew she was right there. I tried to work off the men around me, and told myself to stay close to a tall man who I'd been running around so that maybe I could draft off of him when we got into the headwind.
My spectators rocking the parkway |
Mile 8 of this course is hard, and with the headwind it was brutal. A man ahead of me walked up part of the hill -- not something you see a whole lot from runners doing 6:20 pace! I started doubting myself, but I also reminded myself of the climbs on the Rock 'n' Roll Arizona course in miles 8-9, and how I didn't feel good on those but was able to re-group afterward for a strong finish. The race was becoming a mind game for me too, as I realized what the brunette was doing: she was doing the least she could to get second, and I wasn't sure there was anything I could do about it.
After I survived the climbs in miles 8-9, I knew I needed to do more to try to get her off my tail, because leading is always harder than following. I tried surging but she went right with me. I tried slowing down -- at one point I bet I slowed to 8:30 pace -- but she would not go around. I weaved back and forth across the road. During the 2016 Olympic triathlon in Rio, Gwen Jorgensen and Nicola Spirig had a similar battle, and I remember watching and thinking how frustrating that must be for the leader. Now I was living it! She weaved with me, she sped up with me, she slowed down with me, but she would not come up beside me or go around me. I'd of course had the "do the least I can to get third" thought early in the race, but I ran beside the blond and did not sit on her like this girl was doing to me.
This was the situation |
At mile 10 I looked at my watch for the third time in the race, to see my split of about 1:03:40. In my other recent halves, I've taken on the final 5K with abandon, challenging myself to run around or under 19:00, but all I could think was, "I hope I can pull off a 20:00 final 5K to finish under 1:24". My legs felt completely empty at that point, and I saw another guy walking uphill (what?!). I started thinking, "What if I have to drop out? How pathetic will that be? And which would be worse, finishing in 1:26 or dropping out?" I had no idea how far back fourth and fifth place were, but I started worrying not only that the brunette would soon be over-taking me, but also that everyone else was coming for me. My form fell apart as I battled the wind on dead legs. In hindsight, I actually ran pretty even splits for the two halves of the race, since my 10K was 6:20 pace and my finishing time was 6:21 pace, but it didn't feel like it!
I cropped this one so it's just me ;-) |
At the mile 12 sign, she did just that. I willed my legs to pick up and go with her, to sit on her, and the tall man encouraged me, "You can do it, you can go with her", but I didn't have it. I pushed with all I could, but she pulled further and further away, and step by step I knew it was over. Spectators were yelling at me to "Go get her, you can catch her!" since we were close, and I kept thinking, "You don't understand, you don't understand what's happening here, she just got me." The last mile seemed so very long. I ran a 6:04 final mile (and 5:40 final 0.1), but she ran a 5:48ish last mile to beat me by 16 seconds - she ran 1:22:59 to my 1:23:15. There was nothing I could do. So ends my streak of out-kicking 20-somethings!
Clock shot, with 5Kers on the left (the road was divided by cones at least) |
Admittedly, the experience has a tinge of disappointment hanging on it from that piece of it, and also because I feel like if I want to run a 2:45 marathon (which I do!), I should be able to hit a 1:22:30 half even in crappy conditions. And I guess I should be able to when I get to that fitness point, but I'm under no delusion that I'm to that point right now. Other elites in the race were 2-5 minutes off their usual times/PRs (the blond would go on to finish in 1:28:58), so being 1:49 off of my PR isn't the end of the world and may actually be normal. Sometimes I like to think that I'm different and should be able to power through no matter what; but I would never tell any of my friends to expect their best time running half of a race into a 20 mph headwind, so why should I expect that of myself?
So I choose gratefulness! Gratefulness for third, gratefulness that I did not totally bonk despite racing on tired legs, gratefulness for a half time that only 6 month ago was my dream time, gratefulness for my amazing family members who came to cheer, gratefulness for so many awesome fellow runner friends, and most of all gratefulness that I am healthy enough to travel to races and run 13.1 miles, period. And a little more perspective: in 2015 I ran this event as my season goal race, aiming for a 1:26 (at that time my PR was 1:27:17). We had perfect weather that day, and although I didn't run the course strategically as I should have based on the elevation, I came away with a bittersweet PR of 1:27:08 that was also pretty painful via a positive split. What I wouldn't have given for a 1:23 that day! I'm grateful.
Now onto the next!
These girls brightened my day, and Lauriel ran an amazing race! |
Bling |
Splits - please reference these with the elevation chart, haha! |
Results |
My dad is an amazing race videographer! The 5K was finishing on the left and the road was divided by cones, which I am also grateful for.
I would hate how that went down as well. I'm like you, I'd never just sit on someone like that. At the very least, I would run beside, if not offering to switch out leading to block the wind for each other. I had a teammate in college who suggested we take turns leading laps during a really windy 5k at a track meet. I took off for the first lap and she ended up sitting on me the whole race, letting me do all the work into the wind and then outkicked me in the last 100 meters. It's just a shitty feeling!
ReplyDeleteDon't forget that not only did you run into ridiculous headwind, you were also a week off a huge 10k PR and a busy, tiring week. I'm amazed you ran as fast as you did. It sounds like it was a very gutsy performance!
I can't believe your own teammate did that to you -- definitely worse than my experience! Wow.
DeleteThat 10K really wiped me out; obviously not sleeping much afterward didn't do me any favors, but I think I'm not as well-trained to run at that pace and it was harder on me than half/full pace even though it was shorter. I'm so thankful I got that race in before the weather warmed up though! Per Jon, "It's getting too warm to PR now; just forget about times until fall." Hah!
I'm going to take Jon's advice!
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