Paul Petersen
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« Reply #3 on: November 06, 2007, 11:17:57 am » |
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Interesting analysis. Thanks for putting the time into it. BTW, you forgot Friscone for St. George. He would be a big-time outlier. BTW, some people do qualify on bad days. If you are a 2:14 guy and run 2:19, that is a bad day. There were actually quite few people like that. For instance, Josh Cox basically qualified with a solo tempo run. Dan Browne didn't have a marathon time to qualify with. Yuot ran is B qualifier a couple days after XC Nationals. etc.
But you have laid out way too many numbers and done too much work to qualify this as "Sasha Science". :-) This is closer to statistics. But the problem with both are the same: there are just way too many variables to consider. It is fun to speculate, but that's all it is: speculation and shooting from the hip. Here is one big variable: The St. George qualifiers (except for Lander and Friscone) only had 4 weeks to recover. Except for Cox, all the Chicago qualifiers had 13 months to focus solely on training and the Trials. I think this is HUGE, and alone skews things. I feel like I recovered from St. George quite well, but in reality 13 months of uninterrupted, focused training would have been much better. Just look at Lander. The dude had fresh legs with 5 miles left. And due to all my tapering and recovery periods, I have not gained any fitness in almost 2 months. Note to self: qualify earlier next time.
On that note, Chicago runners had 13 months to gain fitness. You can do a lot in 13 months. For instance, 13 months ago, I was only able to run 3 miles/day. My marathon PR was 2:26:30, and my Half PR was 1:12:50. And 13 months before that, my marathon PR was 2:35:25 and my half marathon PR was 1:14:00. The point is: people improve over time, sometimes by a lot. Many people that PR'ed at Trials were simply "due", and no course could stop them. It's that dreaded "human and time variable", that messes up both stats and Sasha 'Science'.
The pack running dynamic and intense competition was also something unique to Trials. Even at a big race, there is no way I would be in 90th place at the Half with 1:10:00. People run faster in a pack. I think the pack and the competition was enough to overcome the course and accommodate PR's. Great competition always brings out great performances; I have seen it on the track, grass, and roads. The course was not slow enough to stop this. I do agree that the course was not nearly as slow as some people thought it would be. The course was challenging, but not too bad, and I was able to find good rhythms the whole race. But it was also pretty dang hilly.
However, Dallen, after all my criticisms, I think your net conclusion is basically right: St. George is roughly 4 minutes faster than Chicago. Maybe more, maybe less depending on the person, but somewhere in that ballpark. It's definitely more than 2 minutes and definitely less than 10 minutes. :-)
Personally, just shooting from the hip, I think the Trials course itself may be 2 minutes slower than a flat sea level course. Perhaps more. Most commentary I've read and talked to are saying something similar.
A good question might be: How fast could have Ryan Hall ran if he were racing Geb at Berlin? I think he would have at least had an American Record, but I don't want to put limits on him. He looked fantastic on Saturday, a definite gold medal threat.
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