Because, why not run a 3200 m on the track against a bunch of teenagers in ridiculous heat and humidity? Clearly I am getting crazier by the day, but this free Tuesday night track meet seemed like a great way to knock out another 2018 short race, and I ended up knocking out two! Who cares if I was old enough to be the mother of most of the other females in the races and ran approximately my half marathon pace?
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If you can't laugh at yourself, you're missing out |
When I mentioned running the 2 mile at this meet, my coach said to do it as a "legit workout" (even though I'm not starting back to real workouts until August), but to keep my typical training pattern up I ran a normal run the morning of the evening meet. Instead of doing an easy pace 4 mile double, I planned to run the race (2 miles hard along with a warm up and cool down) for my first double in 5 weeks. Now that I'm writing all of this out, it seems like a worse and worse idea...you know what they say about hindsight! But it was free and at a track only about 6 miles from my house, so it seemed like a crime not to do it. If I was truly being crazy I'd have run to and from the meet as well (goals for next time!).
We arrived at the track around the 7:00 p.m. meet start time. The website had the 2 mile (which was actually a 3200 m) listed as the second to last event in the approximately 1 hour meet, so I expected to start around 7:40 p.m. at the soonest, and thought I had plenty of time. Jon and Albani positioned themselves in the stands, and I went down to the track to talk to a friend who'd asked me to be on her 4 x 100 m relay (clearly they were desperate for a fourth person). She told me that they'd announced that the 2 mile was the second event; they were running things in the reverse order as they were listed on the website. So I had only the time that it would take to run the first event, the 400 m races, to warm up! I hoped there were a lot of people in the 400 m and took off!
I ended up having time to run 1.4 miles (although I had to sacrifice a pre-race pee stop for it), so it wasn't terrible - but I need at least 2 miles to warm up properly for anything fast, preferably 3; I always run the course before any 5K. I did not do any strides, drills, leg swings, etc., but I thought running with the time I had was the best way to maximize it. I ran until they called the 2 mile, and then jumped on the starting line dripping sweat. They ran men and women together, so it was a decent sized group. The announcer (who was also jumping into races between announcing the meet) said, "We've got a ringer in this one, Sara Ibbetson" and after asking him what that meant, I told him that my 2 mile pace was about the same as my marathon pace so not to expect much. Then he announced "Her 2 mile pace is her marathon pace, but it's fast, almost an Olympic Trials Qualifier marathon!", which was one of the highlights of the meet for me. Then we were off!
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3200 m start |
I got out pretty slow even for me (1:36 first lap) because I wasn't warmed up enough, but then I settled into right around 1:30 for each lap. I wore my Garmin for the data, but they were calling off the elapsed time each time we passed the finish line so I knew where I was at whether I wanted to or not. My elapsed times were 1:36, 3:06, 4:37, 6:07, 7:39, 9:11, (did not get lap 7), and 12:15 for my total. My 1600 m splits were 6:07 and 6:08 so I was very even. I turned off auto-lap on my Garmin since I knew it would be off on the track, and my Strava was definitely off.
The race itself was pretty anticlimactic; I took the female lead within the first 200 m and spent the first 800 m passing teenage boys. For most of the race I was pretty much in no man's land; there were 3 men in front of me but they were way ahead; the first male broke 10:00 and lapped me (hangs head in shame), and 2-3 were 11:10ish. It wasn't long before I started lapping people, and some I lapped twice, so I had to run in lanes 2-3 quite a bit. I got out-kicked in the final 20-30 m by the meet director/announcer/local Fleet Feet owner who I'd passed before the mile mark; I didn't realize he was close until it was too late and he went flying by me (although he probably ran a 1:15 last lap or something so may not have been close until then). I had fun, and knocked out my first 2 mile tempo of the season! Although I didn't have any performance expectations for this race for many reasons, running my half marathon pace for 3200 m seems pretty sad -- but I'd seen the post below from Kellyn Taylor a few hours before the event and it made me feel better that she'd run slower than her marathon pace for pushes on a 10 x 1 minute fartlek that same day!
Right after the 3200 m, I got Albani into the 200 m. They'd originally said you had to be in 7th grade to participate in the meet, but they let her in as a 5th grader. She beat the other youngster in her heat and ran a 0:42 200 m, which I thought was really good! She had fun but she didn't know that you were supposed to stay in your lane on the 200 m because she's only watched me run long track races where you don't stay in your lane, and I didn't think to tell her. Oops! She only moved over 1 lane (towards the outside, so she ran farther), but it might have been to cut off her competitor...
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Look at that stride! |
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Relay baton practice |
Shortly after, I got recruited to run a 1600 m on the distance medley relay at the last second. Nothing like - surprise, you're racing a mile starting in 30 seconds! I ran an honest effort, but it felt much easier than my 3200 m effort, so I was surprised to squeak in under 6:00 (5:59); I guess I was finally warmed up after the 3200! For anything short, I cannot make my legs go any faster, but I can keep going. I couldn't run any faster than 12:15 on that 3200 m, but I think I could have run 3-4 3200 m reps at that pace. I'm not sure if that's age or all of my marathon training or what, but I have
a goal to work on it! It's hard to judge too much by this event (or the summer 5Ks I've run), though, since the heat and humidity were so oppressive.
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DMR start |
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Albani's 4 x 100 team plus one |
Then Albani and I both ended the night by starting 4 x 100 m relays. I told my relay in advance that my 100 m pace, much like my 1600 m and 3200 m pace, was also my half marathon pace, so they were warned.
Albani enjoyed Zach and Shelby's dog just as much as the running and ice cream bars at the end!
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This dog stole the show |
All in all, this was a really neat event that our local Fleet Feet put on. It was great to see runners of all abilities out there enjoying themselves. Rumor has it that they might include a 5,000 m next year, and if so I will probably try to race it "for real" (e.g., not run a lot of miles that morning or work non-stop all day), although a July evening in Missouri is probably never going to be the time to run a fast time in anything, so I should probably just stick with the goal of running to and from the meet.
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Team Ibbetson |
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Jon was a great cheerleader but I couldn't get him to run! |
Sounds like fun. Last time we were home we were watching old family videos and Thomas cracked up over how badly I got beat in the 100m at the Ultimate Runner race challenge we did when I was in high school, so I feel you on the 4x100!
ReplyDeleteI think I remember that Ultimate Runner challenge - was it at the PSU track with a bunch of different race distances?
DeleteFree is free, after all. Sprinting is so weird, right?
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure about sprinting being weird; I was only running half marathon pace, haha!
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