Old Man Still running

November 16, 2024

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Location:

Saratoga Springs,UT,

Member Since:

Jan 31, 2008

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

2016 Finished 12 100-milers during the year.  86 career 100-mile finishes, 9th in the world.   First person to do 6 consecutive summits of Mount Timpanogos.  Won Crooked Road 24-hour race. Achieved the 5th, 6th, and 8th fastest 100-mile times in the world for runners age 57+ for the year.

2013  First person to bag the six highest Wasatch peaks in one day. First and only person to do a Kings Peak double (highest peak in Utah).  I've now accomplished it four times. 

2010 - Overall first place Across the Years 48-hour run (187 miles), Overall first place Pony Express Traill 100.

2009 - Utah State Grand Masters 5K champion (Road Runners Club of America).  National 100-mile Grand Masters Champion (Road Runners Club of America). USATF 100-mile National Champion for age 50-54.

2006 - Set record of five consecutive Timpanogos Summits ("A record for the criminally insane")  See: http://www.crockettclan.org/blog/?p=42

2007 - Summited 7 Utah 13-ers in one day.  See: http://www.crockettclan.org/blog/?p=14 

Only person to have finished nine different 100-mile races in Utah: Wasatch, Bear, Moab, Pony Express Trail, Buffalo Run, Salt Flats, Bryce, Monument Valley, Capitol Reef.

PRs - all accomplished when over 50 years old

5K - 19:51 - 2010 Run to Walk 5K

10K - 42:04 - 2010 Smile Center

1/2 Marathon: 1:29:13 - 2011 Utah Valley

Marathon - 3:23:43 - 2010 Ogden Marathon

50K - 4:38 - 2010 Across the Years split

50-mile - 8:07 - 2010 Across the Years split

100K - 10:49 - 2010 Across The Years split

12-hours 67.1 miles - 2010 Across The Years split

100-mile 19:40 - 2011 Across the Years split

24-hours 117.8 miles - 2011 Across the Years split

48-hours 187.033 miles - 2010 Across the Years

Long-Term Running Goals:

I would like to keep running ultras into my 60s. 

Personal:

Details at: http://www.crockettclan.org/ultras/ultracrockett.pdf Married with six kids and six grandchildren.  Started running at the age of 46 in 2004.  My first race since Junior High days was a 50K. I skipped the shorter road stuff and went straight to ultramarathons.  I started as a back-of-the packer, but have progressed to a top-10-percent ultra finisher.  Wish I would have started running at a much earlier age.  Have had several articles published in national running magazines.  Check out my running adventure blog at www.crockettclan.org/blog

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I had very restless sleep last night with strange running dreams out on the Javelina course.  I published my race report and I guess included too many of my grouchy feelings that I kept to myself during the race.  Some runner I've never personally met from Idaho sent me a blasting email this morning.  He wasn't at the race but blasted me, telling me I should have got 1st place for rudeness that I discourage other runners, and am rude to pacers, volunteers, and other runners.  Wow, that was strange.  Despite all my grouchy internal feelings during those tough hours, I never said a rude thing to anyone, (unless you count the "shhh...I'm resting" when a runner wouldn't be quiet as I was trying to take a quick nap.)   Well, a good lesson.  You never know what people think when they read your stuff.   I don't like to sugar-coat my race reports.  I tell it as it happened and try to learn from it.  

I do constantly worry about being grouchy to my pacers.  I think I appologized ten times Saturday night for not being happy to be around.   But my pacers are always my friends, many times my closest friends in the world.  They know what to expect.  Good times and bad.   I try very hard to treat them well during the bad times.   But still, I will try to "drop then like a bad penny" if they turn their back to get a head start.  He, he.

The runner told me to get out of the sport if I didn't enjoy it.   Well, if it was easy and didn't have these tough times, I wouldn't enjoy it.   That is what life is about.  You learn from the tough times, make mistakes, evaluate behavior, and then try to do better next time.  So, I won't let it bug me, and move on. 

But....if you are working an aid station and run out of gels when I need one, watch out, I might not smile.

Comments
From Holt on Tue, Nov 03, 2009 at 19:04:05 from 204.113.55.41

I've had similar hard times when I have posted stuff on blogs and message boards. I think the problem is that it is hard to get a true feel across for the author and the reader when you are not face to face. I have learned that when it happens to me, just to pray for the strength to not worry about it. And move on. You are an awesome contributor to the sport and anyone that questions your love of it doesn't know the real you. And who cares about them anyway?! Keep on running and loving it!

From Jon on Tue, Nov 03, 2009 at 22:14:21 from 66.255.187.100

Davy- that's one hard part of blogs is how you lose the personal expressions from face to face conversations- I could picture your grumpy feelings as I read the report but was sure you kept them inside during the race for the most part. It is very typical for our feelings to come out more strongly when we have time to reflect and write them afterwards, and I'm sure that's what the Idaho reader picked up on. I know sometimes my posts come across as too negative or positive when my feelings are actually pretty mellow. No worries, and definitely don't drop out of the sport.

For the record, I did not think you were grumpy or rude during the Bear. Tired, yes, and experiencing the normal wide range of 100 mile emotions. But never mean. And I think many runners would get a bit grumpy when the things they expect and paid for at a race (i.e. gels at aid stations) are not available.

No worries, just keep on plugging. Sounds like what happened to Michelle Lowry after SGM last Oct, when someone blasted her for "whining" about her 2nd place finish. Based on the responses, that person was alone in viewing her as complaining.

From Maurine/Tarzan on Wed, Nov 04, 2009 at 08:25:52 from 63.255.172.2

Gee, I read your race report last night and didn't think anything like that other person. I think there are some people out there that just love to be negative and try and jerk people's chains.

Great job on the race and overcoming the emotions and physical issues that beset you.

From crockett on Wed, Nov 04, 2009 at 11:23:04 from 216.49.181.254

Thanks all, good thoughts. Ten years ago, I ran a listserv, publishing articles to 10,000 daily subscribers (LDS related) and used to get daily unjustified critical notes. I need to just get thicker skin again.

But, a good thought going around in my head is: I don't consider myself an elite in the sport, or even terribly good, but because of my articles, people do put me up on some sort of pedestal and expect a lot. I'm an introvert by default, and get so focused at races, so I just need to do a better job at socializing, encouraging, thanking, etc. at events.

Ultras are so social, and this is very important. Volunteers are sometime out there for over 24 hours on their own dime. I can see how someone can criticize grouchy feelings as ingratitude. I also need to be careful about writing my race reports while I still haven't recovered. The negative can outweigh the positive. But if the negative isn't experienced, you aren't pushing yourself hard enough.

From flatlander on Wed, Nov 04, 2009 at 11:25:44 from 198.207.244.102

Davy, I'm new to this blog but have been reading your reports for a while now. I have nothing but admiration for your efforts and accomplishments. I think it is admirable that after a very heavy 2008 race schedule you posted a number of important PRs this year despite some significant injuries. To run as far and often as you do requires an attitude, but I can't imagine anybody being put off by that. It's not as if you are celebrating in the end zone or anything. Runners as a group are pretty mellow. Congratulations on a great year.

From crockett on Wed, Nov 04, 2009 at 11:32:33 from 216.49.181.254

Thanks flatlander. Very kind. I wish I could do an end-zone dance after finishing a 100-miler. But usually instead someone needs to come by with a shovel and scape me off the trail. I still laugh when I think about a comment made by Steve Pero after I finished Bear 100 this year. "I think I did see a couple people who looked worse than you at the finish." Its been a fun year, I'm ready for a rest.

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