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USA Cross Country Championships 12K

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Location:

SLC,UT,

Member Since:

Apr 28, 2011

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

PR Table and Notable Races

Marathon:
2:21:12 (Chicago); 2:20:41 (CIM)

Half Marathon: 1:05:45 (Long Beach)
10K: 30:03 (Portland)

All race results:
2011 - 2012 - 2013 - 2014 - 2015 - 2016

Personal:

   

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Race: USA Cross Country Championships 12K (7.456 Miles) 00:40:42, Place overall: 48
Running MilesSwimming YardsBike Miles
15.000.000.00

2015 USA Cross Country Championships - 40:42, 48th place

The course was in excellent condition considering Boulder received significant snow last weekend, followed by warm and sunny weather (not to mentioned seven races before our race started at 1pm). The grass was a little spongy, but only muddy in a couple spots (including the ditch). There weren't any hills to speak of  (very nice) - the challenges were the altitude (5550') and the temperature (70s!).

I had a goal of breaking 41 minutes (6:50 per 2K lap). I knew the best strategy was to start at the back and just try and work my way up throughout the race. Passing people (opposed to being passed) builds momentum and positive energy. As you can see by the splits / place chart, I executed that plan about as well as I could have hoped to. There were 114 runners on the starting line, and almost all of them were ahead of me a few minutes into the race. On the first lap I just tried to avoid tripping, then kept moving up once it spread out a bit. I kept the effort very even for 11K, then picked it up and ran the last kilometer in 3:08. Maybe left a little too much left in the tank, but for my first race since Chicago, I wanted to err on the side of being conservative and be sure to finish strong.

I felt good about the effort and about running a smart race. Five weeks ago, I didn't think there was any way I'd even be in decent condition by now. I didn't get crazy, panic, or attempt to squeeze in a bunch of hard sessions to prepare specifically for this one. I just stuck to being sensible with my workouts (long-term vision) and let my body gradually adapt. I feel myself starting to come around now.

That will be the theme as I continue to build towards London. I'm not expecting (nor attempting) any fast tuneup races, and I'm not going to try and beat the big/benchmark workouts of prior training cycles. I believe that training accumulates over time and I've been at this for about four years now. If I stay consistent, healthy, and patient, I think I can time it right and be really fit in April... while continuing to have fun doing all the other things I love doing (ie. skiing a lot). 

I'm glad I decided to open up the season in Boulder. There's always something worthwhile in running in national championship events. And there's something to be said about getting outside of your comfort zone (lacing up the spikes instead of flats) once in a while. I'll definitely make an effort to get to Bend over the next couple years for the upcoming cross country championships.

Andrea took lots of fantastic photos. She was all over the course with our friends from Colorado, who came to watch. Catching up with my old housemates from Vail was a major incentive for making the trip, and we ending up having a great weekend.

Full Results. Major highlight was watching Conner dominate the Junior 8K race. 

More photos on Wasatch and Beyond.

AM - 3 miles.
PM - 12 miles. (3 up, Race, 2 down)

Comments
From MarkS on Sun, Feb 08, 2015 at 11:51:06 from 123.220.161.1

Congrats on a nice, smart race. Good luck in your training toward London.

Like to see you run the Tokyo Marathon some year. Then I could go and watch you run.

From Rob Murphy on Sun, Feb 08, 2015 at 15:32:38 from 24.10.247.181

Love your attitude these days Jake. It's going to work for you, I can feel it.

From Rob on Sun, Feb 08, 2015 at 23:57:36 from 69.94.197.42

Nice one Jake

From Jake K on Mon, Feb 09, 2015 at 09:20:37 from 159.212.71.199

Thanks guys. I expanded on my original one sentence summary.

Mark - I'd love to run Tokyo someday and then spend a week skiing powder in Hokkaido. On the bucket list.

From jtshad on Mon, Feb 09, 2015 at 09:29:40 from 141.221.191.225

Congrats on a strong and smartly run race. Good to see a runner can recover from hammy tendonitis and get back out there! Gives me some hope!

From Rob on Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 01:00:30 from 69.94.197.42

Dang dude, passing 40 people in a race with only 114 is pretty impressive. You got my fired up to want to get out a do a race now too!

From MarkS on Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 01:21:31 from 123.220.164.241

Jake, there is some great powder snow in Hokkaido, but if you are going to do some skiing in Japan, you have to try the Zao ski resort. There is nothing like it.

From Bret on Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 07:18:44 from 216.234.133.229

Nicely done Jake. Solid effort and a wise plan well executed.

From Amiee on Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 09:30:27 from 155.98.164.36

Nice work. Great hair. Sounds like a fun trip!

From Adam RW on Thu, Feb 12, 2015 at 10:51:43 from 138.26.42.154

Congrats on a great race and hitting your time goal. Your control is always so impressive.

From SlowJoe on Sat, Feb 14, 2015 at 03:46:48 from 107.72.164.16

Wow, nice work! 70s in Colorado in February is nuts. You are really clicking along well.

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