Like the canyon

Red Hot 55k

Recent EntriesHomeJoin Fast Running Blog Community!PredictorHealthy RecipesBryce's RacesFind BlogsMileage BoardTop Ten Excuses for Missing a RunTop Ten Training MistakesDiscussion ForumRace Reports Send A Private MessageWeek ViewMonth ViewYear View
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
20092010201120122013201420152016
15% off for Fast Running Blog members at St. George Running Center!

Location:

Ogden,UT,

Member Since:

Nov 21, 2009

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

Finished my first 100 miler in '10, the Bear 100 in 26:05. 

55K 5:13

50 mile 7:47

Big Horn 100 Mile 24:54

 Squaw Peak 50:

2009: 13:48 (140th OA)

2010: 11:06 (26th OA)

2011: 10:01 (7th OA)

 

Short-Term Running Goals:

2012 schedule:

Red Hot 50K+  (5:23)

Buffalo Run 50 mile (7:47, 1st AG, 7th OA)

R2R2R

Squaw Peak 50 mile (11:40)

Big Horn 100 Mile (DNS)

Loco

Bear 100

Chimera 100

Zion Travers (Done)

Long-Term Running Goals:

God created skis and surfboards to keep the truly gifted from ruling the world.

I've finally let go of my preconceived notions of what it's supposed to feel like to run. - Geoff Roes

 

"If I had eight hours to chop down a tree; I'd spend six of them sharpening the axe." Abe Lincoln

 

Personal:

 

Favorite Blogs:

Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Race: Red Hot 55k (34 Miles) 05:23:00, Place overall: 33, Place in age division: 8

Half way through a ten day course of antibiotics, an injury with a 5 month recovery and the resulting inconsistent training left me with very low expectations going into this year’s Red Hot 55K. But, a race is a race, and when the gun went off, I planned to give it 100% of whatever might happen to be in me, and I really had no idea what might be there. So I lined up with no splits and no plan beyond having a fun day in the sun out on the red rock and see how far I could crawl into the pain cave.

Which is where I quickly found myself as the first 4 miles or so we were clipping along at a low to mid 7 minute pace. I don’t run that fast often, and, other than one sea-level jaunt on vacation over a month ago, haven’t run that fast since some pre-injury running late last summer. I felt comfortable, but odd, to be moving rapidly along the flat, smooth dirt roads. I could tell my slow legs wouldn’t tolerate a pace any faster and probably wouldn’t last 34 miles at this pace. Crazy thing is, I was going backward. I was 30-40 places off the front and falling back as people were motoring past like I was walking.

It was tempting to turn it up a couple of notches and stop the bleeding, but I told myself to hang on to this pace and save some strength for the last half. After a fair bit of climbing and a fun section of technical running I came into the mile 13 aid station at 1:39, not bad if the mileage is correct, and hit mile 17 at 2:20. At that point, I knew there were just a couple more miles of dread and we would hit some terrain that is a bit more comfortable for me.

About 19 miles in, the course makes a dramatic change, going from mostly smooth dirt road to technical steep slickrock with lots of climbing and descending. Once on terrain that suits me, I started turning up the effort a bit more. I kept telling myself to roll another log on the fire and let it burn. I was running hard through these miles and really digging deep. I was relieved to find some reserves and be able to push the pace in the late miles. As soon as I hit the rougher ground and turned it up a little, I started catching people. I passed 3-4 people on the big climb up to mile 23 and just kept reeling people in. I think I moved up 10 or so spots through the 6 mile slickrock section, getting passed once myself by a motoring Greg Norrander.

The last three miles or so revert to dreaded road with some techy stuff here and there. I tried to hang on and keep turning my legs over. I was pretty cooked at this point and my legs were screaming from the hard effort and lack of miles. There were a couple of runners in front of me and I set a goal to pass them both before the finish. I got one easy and the second guy was moving pretty well and it took a good effort to get by with a mile or so left to run. I put a bit of distance between us and backed off a bit as the next runner was out of reach. I glanced back at the last corner and still had a good gap on the guy behind me so I just kinda cruised it down the last hill. Right before the finish, like 50 yards, I luckily took out my headphones just in time to hear the gap getting closed in a hurry. I glanced back and was about to get passed by the guy I had passed a mile ago. Into full sprint to the line and the guy didn’t back down at all, I had to sprint all the way over the line, with my him 6 inches off my back. Crazy finish.

I crossed the line in 5:23, ten minutes slower than last year but totally happy with the time. I put it all out there and didn’t leave anything in the tank. Tank just wasn’t as deep this year. Found Shane who was waiting for me with a cold Mtn Dew. Then had a great time watching the rest of the O-town crew come in. Tom finished about 1 minute behind me and I am glad I didn’t catch sight of him earlier. Finding another gear out of fear of the dreaded, and too often experienced, late race “Tom pass” would have hurt badly. Nick, Cory, Shane, Aric, Ryan, Melinda, Molly, Chad, Kasey, Phil, Jamie, and Ron all finished strong and happy. I think just about everyone set PR’s or finished their first Red Hot.

34 miles, 4000-5000 vert, 9:30 average pace

Couple Highlights and Lowlights for my own notes:

-Nutrition was perfect (other than prerace dinner)

-Crampy legs?? More Scaps and water, lack of miles and road specific miles?,

-Crampy at site of injury? a little concerning, feels ok now.

-Pace and effort was perfect for where I was at fitness wise. left it all out there

-Good mental race, stayed in my own race for the most part.

-Stomach was a little off (training?, electrolytes off?, pre race dinner?, heat (relative)

 

 

Comments
From Oreo on Mon, Feb 20, 2012 at 22:57:56 from 174.27.153.201

Yeah Buddy. You are Zen Master. Great job out there. Thanks for letting a rookie hang out with ya. I'm starting to believe in those Mystical Powers...

From Lulu Walls on Tue, Feb 21, 2012 at 08:43:43 from 155.100.212.98

Wow super speedy - awesome race! Bummed I didn't run into you down there. Next year :)

From Scott Wesemann on Tue, Feb 21, 2012 at 10:42:48 from 205.158.160.209

Awesome race Bryce! I loved the report and the finish made me laugh. Way to push a hard effort. I think you ran a smart race and did very well. Congrats. I think you are going to have a really good year.

From gdoc on Tue, Feb 21, 2012 at 20:29:44 from 98.202.193.212

Nice one Bryce...You guys inspiring me to put this one on the calendar next year. Stong race...

From jun on Wed, Feb 22, 2012 at 19:16:25 from 174.23.163.223

Super solid race overall man. Way to go out hard and get it. I hope you are fully back to normal soon.

From Cody on Wed, Feb 22, 2012 at 19:25:10 from 67.177.0.196

Nice Job Bryce! Sure it was a few mins slower than last year, but being sick takes a huge toll. Plus you were sidelined for a bit this winter too. Not bad all things considered.

From Bryce on Wed, Feb 22, 2012 at 21:11:05 from 76.27.58.194

Thanks all!! really appreciate the kind words.

G- you're in next year, might as well schedual it.

Lulu, too bad I missed you down there. Hope you had a good trip. Maybe Buffalo Run.

Add Your Comment.
  • Keep it family-safe. No vulgar or profane language. To discourage anonymous comments of cowardly nature, your IP address will be logged and posted next to your comment.
  • Do not respond to another person's comment out of context. If he made the original comment on another page/blog entry, go to that entry and respond there.
  • If all you want to do is contact the blogger and your comment is not connected with this entry and has no relevance to others, send a private message instead.
Only registered users with public blogs are allowed to post comments. Log in with your username and password or create an account and set up a blog.
Debt Reduction Calculator
Featured Announcements