I didn't taper for this race (78 mile week), but I felt fairly fresh going into it. I figured that I was in shape to run about 1:24 on the hilly course, but initially my main goals were to be competitive and to negative split (having fun is a given!). However, the day before the race I read my 2018 race recap, which reminded me that I'd set a Missouri state record for females age 37 in the race last year, which quickly turned into me looking up the record for age 38. It was 1:24:58, so my secret goal because to beat the record. I thought it would be pretty close, because I was pretty confident I was in 1:24 shape, and perhaps a little arrogant about the accuracy of my race predictions after I'd predicted my marathon pace exactly and also remembered the time I made a marathon pace band that was 2 seconds off my actual finishing time. I knew I wasn't in PR form, but I felt confident I was going to have a good race for my current fitness level, although I don't really know why. My realist husband thought that a 1:25 would be a really good day, but I didn't let that sway my 1:24 feeling.
Preview, because I wanted this to be the featured photo |
On the starting line, I saw two fast women who I knew could currently beat me, Pasca and Raquel. I also knew that Jessi was much more fit than me, but I didn't see anyone else I knew would be faster. I hoped I could take 4th. After the gun, I was immediately in 4th behind those three. There were several men around and in front of me, but no one to settle in with.
I made the start photos |
This is why you shouldn't run even pace in this race |
This race always makes me a little nervous during miles 6-7, because I can tell there is a lot more downhill than uphill as it rolls through some neighborhoods and by one side of a park. I enjoy the downs, but I know I'll have to run back up them in the next couple of miles. There is a climb in mile 8, and it's funny how that hill seems so much worse some years than others! This year it did not seem too bad, and I continued to pursue and pass men who were ahead of me. Really, the course as a whole seems much more hilly some years than others, and this year it felt less hilly (in 2017 it felt mountainous).
Cruising along solo + tucked my gloves into my sports bra around mile 4 |
Around mile 10, I caught up with a man and encouraged him to push ahead with me. He'd been running pretty steady and it had taken me many miles to gradually pull him in, so I figured we could help each other to a stronger finish. We ran side by side for about 1.5 miles, which was nice after having no one to run with for most of the race. He then fell back a little bit, and I pressed on, feeling strong and frequently thinking, "I feel better here than I ever have at this point", "That hill was much worse 2 years ago", etc.
When I hit the mile 12 sign, I took a look at my watch, and I knew I was going to get the record and probably run in the 1:23s, so I pushed to finish it up at fast as I could. I had a side ache during the last mile, which made it seem longer than any other mile of the race, but it's also a fast mile (downhill). It was my first sub-6:00 mile post-injury, in 5:55! Grade adjusted it was only 6:09, but I'm still counting it (although I have since run a sub-6:00 mile in training, at the end of a tempo workout). Miles 11 and 12 were also faster than I'd run any other miles post-injury, at 6:09 and 6:07. My final 5K was 18:48, which I was ecstatic about because I wouldn't have even thought I could run an open 5K in that time right now (and maybe I can't, I need 10 miles at tempo to warm up!). I finished in 1:23:35 with a smile on my face that was even caught in some finishing pictures!
Run happy! |
I am smiling & not stopping my watch, but I still managed a weird photo with my mittens tucked under my sports bra strap & weird arm swing...future goals to correct! |
Splits |
Splits on left/grade-adjusted splits on right |
While I ran faster on this course in 2017 and 2018 (1:23:15 and 1:22:42), my time wasn't drastically slower this year, and my final 5K this year was the fastest final 5K I've ever run here! Although I've run several halves faster than this (I'm not even going to count how many, probably 8+), this almost felt like a PR because it was by far my best performance thus far post-injury. A couple of months ago I couldn't even run a 3 mile tempo in 6:23 pace! The post-injury break-throughs are really sweet. I felt the same way after the Chisholm Trail Marathon (nowhere near a PR but celebration for a post-injury best). I guess that although I've run these paces before, I certainly don't take for granted that I will ever do them again, or even that I'll train or compete again. Throughout the race I thanked God that I was out there racing so many times!
Official results are here. My new state record can be seen here.
Jessi & I waiting for the awards |
I ran into my college friend Codi after the race - I hadn't seen her in over 10 years & was so pumped! |
Poorly attended awards ceremony |
"Their trust should be in God, who richly gives all we need for our enjoyment." - 1 Timothy 6:17b
When I saw your first picture before I read what you'd written I thought there was a bow on your singlet, then I realized I was seeing your gloves. So funny!
ReplyDeleteSuch an awesome come back race and that's not an easy course!
It looks exactly like a bad bridesmaid dress bow, haha!
DeleteHaha, I must be around kids too much because it reminded me of Mickey Mouse!
DeleteThat's hilarious and sounds like something a preschool teacher would say! :-)
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