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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: Phoenix Marathon (26.2 Miles) 02:23:55, Place overall: 1
Running MilesSwimming YardsBike Miles
26.000.000.00

My blog has probably read like a whine-fest over the past month, but it hasn't been an exaggeration. I have been feeling "off" since the PF Chang's 1/2. Some minor injuries, consistent (very) elevated resting heart rate, so-so workouts, etc. Andrea (my guardian angel!) asked me a few weeks ago what this race was worth to me, and what I wanted to get out of it. The answer was simple, I wanted to win a marathon in front of my parents this year. Its just something on my running "bucket list" that was very important to me... and I knew this was probably going to be my only shot for a while, as there's a good chance this will be my only marathon this year. So we decided to throw time goals out the window (and I say "we" because this truly was a team effort) and focus on what was my best strategy to win the race and not blow up any of the little nagging injuries. The strategy was to go very conservative from the start, then evaluate at 16-18 miles and decide when to make a break for the tape. I ended up waiting until very late to make a move, but it made for an exciting finish and I was relieved and very happy to have won the race today!

The race started nice and slow as we ran down from Usery Park in the dark. A guy in green took the lead after the first mile, but we caught him by mile 2 and it was pretty clear that it was a 3 man race (Riley, Peter Omae, and me). In the first half of the race we basically ran side by side by side, at what I'd consider a comfortable effort. My achilles didn't bother me at all, which was a huge relief.

Andrea and my Dad were out on the course and they were the best support team ever. My Mom was running the half marathon (my Dad was planning to as well, but he jacked up his hamstring a couple weeks ago). Every 3-4 miles they would hand me a drink bottle and a cold sponge. I'd take a few sips of my drink, then hand the bottle to Peter, who would hand the bottle to Riley. Then we'd pass around the sponge as well. Great way to share germs, but it kept everyone hydrated and cool.

The splits for the first half were: 5:39, 5:19, 5:26, 5:22, 5:45, 5:44, 5:08, 5:24, 5:20, 5:21, 5:25, 5:18, 5:21 and we came through in 1:11:20.

Miles 14-16 were 5:22, 5:24, 5:26. Nothing really changed. Then (if I remember correctly) Riley started to drop back a bit around 16.5 miles, so I tried to increase the pace just a bit when I noticed his shadow slipping away. My right hamstring was feeling weaker than my left, but not as bad as at TOU last fall. Miles 17-18 were 5:22, 5:26 and I got the sense it was down to two. Once Riley fell back, Peter got right in my slipstream and ran a stride behind me for the next 9 miles. I slowed down from 19-20 (5:37, 5:40) to see if he would take the lead, and he didn't take the bait...

Now it was decision time. Normally this is when I would want to throw it down and make it a 10K race / long suffer-fest. But for some reason I wasn't feeling confident in my ability to push it from that far out. If Riley had still been in the mix, with his closing speed, I think I would have had no choice but to lay the hammer down from 5-6 miles out. But against Peter, who seemed to be breathing harder than me, I felt like I might have a stronger kick, so I just kept running around 5:40 pace and waiting to see if he would make a move. Miles 21-25 were 5:39, 5:39, 5:45, 5:41, 5:42. He made a mini-surge at 24.5 but I covered it easily. That being said, these miles were nerve-wracking... I'm not a kicker, and I was starting to worry that I had shot myself in the foot by waiting too long. 

Even when we hit mile 25, we just kept running the same pace. I was thinking that it was going to come down to the last couple hundred meters. Then, at ~25.5 miles, Andrea appeared and told me to GO. So that's when I finally picked it up, and I was surprised at how quickly I opened up a huge gap. It was over... 5:18 for the 26th mile and 69 seconds for the last 0.2 with my Dad sprinting along (and nearly keeping up) for a hundred yards! I ended up winning by 45 seconds, which is a lot of time considering we were still locked together at 25.5. My Mom was right there at the finish line (she ran great!) and Andrea/Dad appeared shortly after... I'm so lucky to have them there for me!

Final time was 2:23:55. Peter was second, then Riley and Dave took 3rd-4th. Our Utah crew dominated the race!

Not really an impressive time on this course, but I'm OK with that. My body held up, and I won the race... accomplishing my 2 primary goals, so no complaints here! I should also add that I was well aware that I had lost 6 races in a row (all 2nd place finishes) since the TOU Marathon, and was very pleased to break that streak.

I'm going to take this upcoming recovery period a lot more seriously than I have in the past. My two big races this spring/summer will be the USA 25K and Half-Marathon Championships in May/June. I have plenty of time to get in really good shape for those races, but I need to "re-build" some of my broken parts first.

Pictures...

Early miles... 

Dad w/ the perfect handoff...

This was mile 16.5 to 25.5... Peter right behind me the whole way...

With my Mom at the finish... this was her first race in about 5 years!


I love this team!

Utah crew...

Comments
From Jake K on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 10:45:15 from 174.235.194.188

Sit and kick race. Ran with Riley and Peter (Kenyan guy) for about 16 miles, then Riley fell back and Peter just sat on my shoulder the rest of the way. It was kind of nerve-wracking letting it come down to the wire, but I made a big surge at 25.5 and put 45 seconds on him in the last 0.7! I guess I have some finishing speed after all. Different way to run the race, but I accomplished my #1 goal: win the race!

From runmehappy on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 10:49:59 from 98.202.96.224

Congrats Jake! Just saw the results on the Phoenix Marathon website. Great race.

From Kendall on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 10:52:37 from 208.54.4.163

Congrats Jake!! Big win! Hooray for the local boys (Riley 3rd).

From Christie on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 10:53:02 from 74.213.202.246

Woohoo!!!! :):) Congrats.

From ScottC on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 11:15:39 from 160.7.232.104

Great job, nice kick at the end! How's your achilles feeling?

From JD on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 11:23:41 from 70.96.78.188

awesome! congratulations on the win!

From SlowJoe on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 11:27:53 from 69.131.141.92

I don't think you can do any better than 1st place. Congrats!

From ACorn on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 11:29:11 from 70.196.197.48

Big congrats! Way to drop the hammer at the end!

From Lynn on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 11:31:16 from 199.192.100.252

Congratulations! You deserve the win with all your hard work.

From allie on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 11:33:40 from 64.134.146.227

hi-yah. way to go, jake.

From Matt Schreiber on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 11:35:02 from 66.17.102.185

Congrats, Jake! Looks like a perfectly executed race. Enough left at the end for a solid finish.

From Bam on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 11:35:23 from 89.126.28.24

Congrats on a nail-biting win. Must have been exciting:)

From Lulu Walls on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 11:36:25 from 166.70.240.95

Surge-a-riffic job there Jake!

From C James on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 11:59:46 from 74.46.118.174

Congratulations! Nice Kick!

From JulieC on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 12:09:25 from 63.224.117.221

Sweet!! you mean the guy on the results that is written as first in 3:24 didn't pass you? HEE HEE. Kind of funny to see. But so glad to hear YOU are actually the winner!! I m sure they will correct that soon. Well done!!

From runningafterbabies on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 13:56:04 from 206.29.182.145

So incredibly proud if you. 2 wins in 6 months? Awesome.

From Jake K on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 14:24:02 from 98.165.233.14

Thanks everyone! Report and some photos are up now!

From Derek D on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 14:47:54 from 68.109.132.154

I'm glad I got to see you at 25. Very cool to see someone you know battling it out for a marathon win. Congrats, great job accomplishing your goals. Winning a marathon is huge and doing so with your family support right there is even better!

From Matt Poulsen on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 15:29:33 from 98.202.242.213

Awesome job, Jake! I agree, it's nerve-wracking having it come down to the wire, but there is nothing in this world more fun than smashing someone's face in by out-kicking them. Even more fun that you did it to someone who leeched off of you for all those miles. Congrats on the win!

From bdase on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 15:46:59 from 70.196.203.53

Congratulations Jake! Typically in those situations it's the guy who has been sitting on the shoulder of the leader that wins. That you lead for that long, and won by that far of a gap shows how tough you are. Just plain awesome. Inspiring on so many levels.

From Carina on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 15:59:06 from 204.15.86.83

Great win Jake!! I love what a smart racer you are, and I love that you accomplished what you set out to accomplish!! Conagratulations!!!

From prlman on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 16:01:52 from 184.63.215.14

Nice win Jake. Sounds like you ran it just the way you needed to

From jtshad on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 16:15:56 from 69.20.183.178

Congrats on the win and smart racing!

From AngieB on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 16:16:06 from 65.130.79.107

Congrats Jake! Way to dig down deep and hold off that guy. Impressive!

From Bret on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 17:06:07 from 96.228.167.228

Awesome stuff Jake. Really happy for you and very much enjoyed reading the race report.

From mike⇒nelson on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 18:06:55 from 98.202.247.25

Wow. Great job. Great race. Great win.

From SpencerSimpson on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 18:48:34 from 166.137.116.24

Jake great job. You were a fantastic champ today. You ran confident and I was glad to see that you could win in front of your family. Great goal accomplished. It was awesome see Utah represent so well. very cool pics of you, Riley and Peter. Two out of three Utahns on the podium. What a day for the talent in Utah. There are some amazing female/male runners in Utah right now. It's awesome!

From Little Bad Legs on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 19:28:42 from 68.228.196.179

Awesome job Jake. Very smart race on your part! I chuckled to myself each time I saw a bottle with yellow drink and straw, knowing that it was from you. I also saw the sponges but didn't know that was from you as well. That's quite a support crew you've got! Once again, great job.

From Fritz on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 19:42:54 from 67.177.4.64

Great job getting the "W" Jake. Leaving it to the last .7 takes some guts and I am sure this experience will be helpful in future races. The Utah crew definitely showed up today.

From Jon on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 20:12:51 from 107.203.52.135

Holy C-R-A-Ptacular race. You won, Jake! Congrats- that's awesome, especially in front of the family. Glad your tactics paid off. Good job and enjoy it.

From Jason D on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 21:48:35 from 24.1.80.94

Everything came together at the right time, Jake. Can't say it better than Dr. Poulsen, but I would add, in the phrasing of the Bamster "Nice, cheeky little 5:18 at mile 26." Would have paid to see the break.

From JamesH on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 21:57:53 from 208.117.127.7

Two big thumbs up!

From PRE on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 22:09:43 from 99.50.213.11

Jake,

Hi. Congratulations on the first place win and with your parents present! Also, Congrats on breaking the streak. Very happy the injury not problematic this race. As always, great report and great pics. Be well.

From Russ on Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 22:39:02 from 24.72.194.70

Congrats! Smart race, glad the body held up and no niggles. Really excited for you.

From Dan Varga on Sun, Mar 03, 2013 at 06:58:08 from 71.219.29.5

Congrats on a great race and win!!

From Rob on Sun, Mar 03, 2013 at 07:33:30 from 72.254.31.187

Oh man, for some reason I thought your race was today. I got online to see if there was a way to track it and found out you already won. I thought, WOW, this guy is fast!

Great job. Way to make the parents proud. And Utah.

From Tom K on Sun, Mar 03, 2013 at 07:35:49 from 108.9.33.153

Great Job, Jake! Does your effort at the end make you think you could become a "kicker"? Great report.

From Penny on Sun, Mar 03, 2013 at 08:02:34 from 66.65.105.62

Amazing race, Jake, congratulations on the win. Now rest up good!

From Burt on Sun, Mar 03, 2013 at 09:22:21 from 72.223.80.89

Congratulations. I hope you met some cool people down there. One of my favorite parts was talking to the reporter before he talked to you. He was like, "Would you consider this one of the top 10 elite marathons in the world?" "No, I wouldn't. This is the first year they've had this marathon." "What marathons would you say are the elite marathons?" "Well, there's New York, Boston, Chicago, London, the Rock n' Roll series are usually quite popular." "Did Jake qualify for Boston?" "Oh yeah. Easily." "How many marathons has Jake won?" "I'm not sure. I think this was his first. He has a running blog you can check out." So, hopefully he sees this. LOL!

From SlowJoe on Sun, Mar 03, 2013 at 12:02:53 from 69.131.141.92

Great report and pictures - congrats again! I'm glad you managed to catch up and beat the bearded fella with the black shirt in that one picture. Must have nipped him at the line.

From JPark on Sun, Mar 03, 2013 at 15:12:30 from 174.52.34.169

Congratulations on another fine race Jake! No surprise that you pulled-off the win, it's well deserved. You ran very smart. Great pictures. Thank you for continuing to be such an awesome inspiration to me and everyone else on the blog and elsewhere.

From RileyCook on Sun, Mar 03, 2013 at 19:47:03 from 65.130.90.139

Jake congrats on a well-deserved victory. You looked strong and smooth the whole time (Peter on the other hand looked smooth but man that guy breathes hard!)

It was great running with you.

From MichelleL on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 05:47:23 from 42.3.119.247

Great job Jake. I think that would have been mentally grueling to have him draft off you and have it come down to the last 1k. So what did you win?

Burt--you only listed US marathons! Ha! That is so American :D

From Burt on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 07:04:10 from 72.223.80.89

Michelle - that is so American of you to think London is in the U.S. Do you think Canadians, Mexicans, Brazilians, Chileans, Guatemalans, and Colombians would do that? Because they're Americans too.

From scottkeate on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 08:45:51 from 192.150.9.200

Great race, Jake! Love the report and the strategy to get the win. Congrats!

From Rachelle on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 09:07:01 from 159.212.71.173

Congratulations Jake! Great race and great report. Very special that you were able to do this in front of your parents. What a cool moment that no one can ever take away from you. I love it!

How did your Mom do in the half? Holy smokes it must be said that your parents look so young! You have good genes and will be winning marathons into your 60s I think. :)

From Steve on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 10:11:00 from 67.40.118.46

Awesome race! That was such a smart run!

From Burt on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 10:33:53 from 71.216.109.214

More pictures up on my blog: http://burt-mccumber.fastrunningblog.com/blog--I-had-fun-time-Saturday-watching-my-/03-03-2013.html

From Jake K on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 12:16:51 from 155.100.226.191

Thank you everyone!

Afterwards, Andrea and my Dad both said that I was driving them nuts - the anticipation was killing them. My Dad said anytime he's seen that situation, the guy in 2nd almost always wins the race. So I kind of feel bad for making them so nervous! But I did warn them both the day before that I wasn't going to try and make any type of break until late in the race. They weren't expecting it to be after 25 (neither did I!).

Tom - my effort at the end makes me think I can be a kicker when everyone is worn out after 2 hours of running. The next step is figuring out how to do that in a shorter race!

Joe - it took some work to get by that bearded fella. But he was at such a disadvantage, with all that hair, in the heat. I didn't envy him.

Burt - great job educating that reporter. And calling out Michelle on her blunder :-)

Riley - I know, I could not believe how hard Peter was breathing! I felt like I was running a 5K. Kudos to him, he really pushes himself hard. He basically just went as long as he possibly could, even if that meant risking really blowing up. Courageous racing on his part. Seems like a really nice guy too.

My Mom did good - she ran 2 hours flat which was exactly what she was hoping for. Her main goal was to make sure she beat me to the finish and could watch me come in.

From Sasha Pachev on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 13:17:04 from 69.28.149.29

Congratulations on the win! Sit and kick can actually work quite well for somebody with low top-end speed. I've had a few half-marathon/20K races where I was able to outkick guys that have been putting a good 3-5 seconds on me that same year when things came down to the kick in the last 400. The secret is actually counter-intuitive - drop the pace to where it is very comfortable, almost a jog in the last mile, then kick with 100 meters to go. It amazed me how this levels the playing field at first, but after some thought it made sense. A good kicker has a good amount of fast twitch fibers that are useless in a long race, so they end resting until the kick. The bad kicker does not. The reason he is a bad kicker is that his faster-twitch range fibers are aerobically capable, so he is using them throughout the race and when it is time to kick they are too fatigued. Slowing down the pace in the last mile allows the bad kicker to prepare his weapon while the good kicker does not gain much advantage - he has nothing that rests significantly when the pace drops by 10-15 seconds per mile.

From CollinAnderson on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 13:29:58 from 155.98.15.142

Congrats again! Phenomenal race!

From MichelleL on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 16:20:25 from 42.3.119.247

Skimming--so USAmerican.

From MarkP on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 16:47:32 from 75.169.10.39

Congrats. Kudos on your Dad's hydration hand-off form!

From josse on Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 20:13:53 from 174.253.182.148

Congrats on the win, rest up and get that achellies better so you can have an awesome summer/fall racing season.

From Superfly on Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 09:49:36 from 74.211.21.81

Awesome race man. My favorite of all is the pictures with the Dew. Recover fast and well.

From RAD on Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 12:40:24 from 76.27.82.202

Excellent race Jake! Honestly, I think it very classy of you to share your family support with Riley and Peter. Some of us aren't quite as lucky as you to have that! But, that seems to be your nature. Loved the pics, especially the family one with Andrea holding the rolling stick :) PT time!!

Congrats on a Win! Way to represent...and show us what hard work can do.

From Seth on Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 20:41:08 from 67.177.36.131

Congrats on a great race! You ran smart as usual

From Kassi on Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 20:54:17 from 98.202.223.143

Jake, I just wanted to add my two bits and say Way to GO!! Such a smart race. And so unselfish of you to share your drink/food/sponge/etc with your competitors.

From Flo on Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 02:10:12 from 65.130.155.41

Congratulations on the win in front of your parents Jake! Seems like an awesome way to do it. Nicely written race report as well. People like you inspire people like me!

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