Chris Rogers Training Log

St. George Marathon

Recent EntriesHomeJoin Fast Running Blog Community!PredictorHealthy RecipesCRog's RacesFind BlogsMileage BoardTop Ten Excuses for Missing a RunTop Ten Training MistakesDiscussion ForumRace Reports Send A Private MessageWeek ViewMonth ViewYear View
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
20072008
15% off for Fast Running Blog members at St. George Running Center!

Location:

Columbus,OH,

Member Since:

Apr 29, 2007

Gender:

Unknown

Goal Type:

Unknown

Running Accomplishments:

PR's Include:

5K - 15:26 (Northfield, MN 1998)

10K(CC) - 33:07 (Minneapolis, MN 1997)

10K Roads - 33:21 (SLC, UT 2006)

1/2 Marathon - 1:13:09 (Ogden, UT 2006)

Marathon - 2:41:30 (St. George, UT 2007)

Short-Term Running Goals:

Get in shape to run under 1:14 at the Columbus Distance Classic1/2 marathon on April 12.

Long-Term Running Goals:

Run sub-2:35 on a legit marathon course.

Personal:

I am an Assistant Athletics Director at The Ohio State University. Married to Nicolle. We have a son Lucas, who was born last summer and steals all of the attention from our black lab, Copa.

Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Race: St. George Marathon (26.2 Miles) 02:41:30, Place overall: 42, Place in age division: 15
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTrainer 1 MilesTrainer 2 MilesRacer MilesTotal Distance
3.0026.200.000.000.000.000.0029.20

AM... 10 minute warm-up from hotel to buses, then another 10 minutes with Mike Kirk at the start line. Met up with a good group at the start... Ted, Chad, Cody and teamed up as we all had similar time goals. Unfortunately for me, my poor training over the last month definitely showed and I tanked about halfway through. Here's a recap...

Mile 1 & 2 - 12:10 Starting out nice and easy--didn't want to get caught in the trap of going out too fast.

Mile 3 - 5:51 Let loose a little bit and dropped the pace. Trying to get into a groove to hit 1:17-1:18 pace at the 1/2 point.

Mile 4 - 5:51 Same pace, still working together as a group

Mile 5 - 5:56 Had to stop for a quick bathroom break at the mile 5 marker. Cost me about 40 seconds and the group got away from me.

Mile 6 - 5:50 This mile was blazing fast, considering my split included the bathroom break--probably around 5:10 actual running time. Looking back, it probably wasn't real smart to make up the gap on the group so quickly, this early on in the race.

Mile 7 & 8 - 11:51 Still working hard to get back up to Chad, Ted and Cody. I finally caught them about halfway up Veyo hill. Then I had to back off for a couple of minutes to recover from the effort the last 3 miles. Backed off, but stayed within contact of the group.

Mile 9 - 6:20 Good group pace going.

Mile 10 -6:05 Good group pace going.

Mile 11 - 6:26 The last real uphill section of the course. Chad kept us in check to make sure we weren't expending too much effort on the uphills.

Mile 12 - 6:02 Finally about to start down. The group started gapping Cody a little bit at this point. I wish I would have hung back with him!

Mile 13 - 6:07 The group started rolling a little bit as we went downhill. I couldn't go with them. The pace wasn't overly fast, but my legs just felt dead--especially my hamstrings.

Mile 13.1 - 1:19:25 Slower than what I wanted, but from what everyone had told me, this course can be negative split by 4 or 5 minutes if all goes well. I still had hopes of a solid sub 2:40 time at this point.

Mile 14 - 5:56 The group is walking away from me, but I'm still holding pace at where I want to be, so no worries yet.

Mile 15 - 5:58 Status quo, but legs starting to feel it a little bit.

Mile 16 - 5:55 Status quo, but legs hurting more.

Mile 17 - 5:58 My legs are really starting to feel like crap at this point. I was still able to keep pace, but was concerned because I knew the steepest downhill section was coming up. I'm not the greatest downhill runner in the world, so was a little worried.

Mile 18 & 19 - 12:13 Steve Olson and I went back and forth with each other on these miles. I would go a bit ahead on the uphills, he would get me back on the downhills. Legs were really not feeling good on the downhills.

Mile 20 - 6:44 Cody came flying by my like nobody's business. I was really wishing I would have backed off a few miles back with him instead of plowing ahead with the group. My right hamstring and calf hurt a lot at this point, and my IT Band hurt every step. Tried to open up my stride, but everytime I did could feel the cramping coming on.

Mile 21 - 6:34 Managed to keep scooting along, but not very fast.

Mile 22 - 6:51 Really hurting here.

Mile 23 - 6:56 Still hurting bad.

Mile 24 - 6:23 When I hit the last 5K I started feeling good again. If you look at the course map, its no real surprise--this is where the downhill sections of the course become less severe. Its interesting that I wasn't able to handle the severe downhills and couldn't run fast at all, but as we reached the more moderate hills, I was fine and was able to push my pace lower. Clearly, I'm better on a more gradual grade--maybe I would be better suited for Top of Utah?

Mile 25 - 6:17 Continue to feel better and started trying to push a little harder.

Mile 26 - 5:56 Felt great in the last mile. Started looking ahead to people who had blown by me on the bigger hills to see if I could catch them.

.2 - 69 Fairly strong finish on 300S.

TOTAL 2:41:30

The race was a PR, but I'm not overly excited about it. I really thought that with how I'd run some of my 1/2 marathons in the last 6 weeks I would be OK to run faster than I did on a course as notoriously fast as SGM--clearly not the case. Plus, I kind of treat a SGM PR separate from other PR's because of the downhill--thus I was hoping for a much faster time. Looking back at my training I know that the lack of mileage is what killed me between miles 19-23, so at least its easy to see what needs to be fixed. Quite honestly, for me the best part of the race was finishing and finding out the great results that so many people had... especially Paul Petersen who made the Olympic Trials 'A' Standard, as well as all of the fast running bloggers who had huge PR breakthroughs. Now I'm looking forward to a little bit of downtime and not having to worry about working running into the insane schedule I've been living as of late... GREAT JOB everyone!

Comments
From ArmyRunner on Sun, Oct 07, 2007 at 20:42:21

Chris,

It was good to have you running with our group and keeping things relaxed as well. Overall a PR but I know you can run faster as well so I understand your dissapointment. Amyway good job toughing it out and thanks for being part of the group.

From James on Mon, Oct 08, 2007 at 01:00:25

Any day that you PR is a good day! We all have our good and bad races, your good marathon is in the near future. Good job, and it was good to see you again.

From Cody on Mon, Oct 08, 2007 at 10:49:08

Chris-

I think you ran well and the PR proves it. It was an unfortuante injury that affected so much of your training. I am still amazed at your recovery and ability to run so well. I am glad you painted that big bulls-eye on the back of your head for me. I got to see it for so much of the race before I finally got past. You are one tough cookie!

From Paul Petersen on Mon, Oct 08, 2007 at 10:53:15

Chris, good job out there. I've always said a PR is a PR, no matter what course it is. Enjoy your period of rest. I think you can have a great year next year. Hopefully we'll bump into each other again soon. Maybe the Moab Half?

From Superfly on Mon, Oct 08, 2007 at 10:57:50

Good race Chris. Even with all the trials you've had this summer you stuck with it and ran a PR. So we should see some great things from you next year. By the way I think you have one of the best looking strides of anyone on the blog. You should market that thing.

From Logan on Mon, Oct 08, 2007 at 10:59:31

Nice race today. Congrats on the PR. Like others have said, with everything that has gone one this summer you did awesome.

From Jon on Mon, Oct 08, 2007 at 15:12:44

Nice run- maybe next year we will have a pacer for you instead of Cody, so you can kick his butt! And if you do decide to run TOU next year, you have plenty of places to stay. I think both marathons are great!

From Sasha Pachev on Tue, Oct 16, 2007 at 15:38:22

Congratulations on a PR. It does look like you might have been faster or at least gotten a better time after the adjustment at TOU. It takes a while to learn to run downhill. I think you'll get it by next year. I started racing in Utah in 1997, but it was not until 1999 that I started running on par on downhill courses with the people that I could beat on a flat or a rolling course. What helped me was doing my intervals and tempos almost exclusively downhill.

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
Recent Comments: