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USA Half Marathon Championships

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Apr 28, 2011

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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)

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Race: USA Half Marathon Championships (13.1 Miles) 01:06:02, Place overall: 27
Running MilesSwimming YardsBike Miles
17.000.000.00

I simply didn't have a sub 1:05 half-marathon in me today. I'm not disappointed in my race, although a few seconds faster would have been awfully nice (more on that later). In terms of time/performance, this was probably the second best race of my life (after last fall's Long Beach Half Marathon). My 30:03 10K last week would have predicted that I should run in the high 1:06s, so I beat that by quite a bit... although I expected that I would. Here's how it played out...

Bus left our hotel at 4:45am. Weather was good - calm winds and cool (but definitely very humid, 90-100%). There were basically 4 separate races - the Men's National Championship at 6:15, Women at 6:25, the Gerry Bjorkland Half Marathon at 6:45, then the Grandma's Marathon at 7:45. Quite a lineup - its amazing that the race pulled this off without any hiccups at all. I'm incredibly impressed by everything Grandmas/Duluth has done this weekend - they put on a world class event.

Warmed up 2 miles + strides. Then we were on the line and ready to roll. I positioned myself a row or two back - I didn't want to get sucked out too fast. Gun went off and I held back... there was immediate separation of ~40 guys in front of me. I let that pack go - it wasn't where I needed to be. A big gap formed within the first mile between the gigantic lead pack and my pack, which was 12-15 guys strong. We hit the mile in 4:54 - perfect. The next two miles were 5:00 and 4:55. Still right where I wanted to be. Due to the rolling nature of this course, even effort does not result in even splits. Its a deceptive course - fair, but definitely not super-fast unless you have a tailwind. Its point to point, but the starting and finishing elevation are the same (make sense, it goes along the lake, and lakes don't have a "lower" end).

 

Miles 4-6 were 5:04, 5:04, 4:56. Still running well, but already falling off that sub 1:05 pace I wanted to target. Our pack was down to about 7-8 guys and we were working together pretty well. When the pace would start to lag, I'd move to the front and try to inject some speed. I did that several times throughout the middle 10 miles of the race. I recognized a few of the guys in the group - Fred Joslyn and Kevin Castille (who recently set USA Master's records of 14:00 and 28:57). Kevin and I pretty much ran stride for stride the entire race (he ended up beating me by a fraction of a second). Super fast for an "old" guy! :-)

I'm getting off topic... back to the race. This is where is started to get tough. Miles 7-10 were 5:05, 5:10, 5:04, 5:10. Ouch. Those 5:10s really hurt, mentally. We were all still in a pack and no one really took the incentive to stretch it out - I tried to on the downward side of Lemon Drop Hill (~15K), but I just couldn't get my legs to go any faster than low 5-minute pace.

After 10 miles you start to come into Duluth and the crowds get a lot bigger. Its a fun place to be running. Our pack splintered at some point during miles 11-12, it went down to 3 guys, and we were starting to pick off guys who had been out ahead of us and were falling back. I missed the 11 mile marker but the split for 2 miles was 10:10. Not terrible but this should have been faster since its gradually downhill at this point. I started to find some faster rhythm in the final 1.1 miles 5:25, so ~4:50/mile pace). There were about 5 of us all running together in the final stretch. I didn't quite have enough kick. Official time was 1:06:02 and I was 27th place overall.

It wasn't a long wait before Erik came in (PR!), and then we watched Andrea bring it home. Very exciting to see her duking it out w/ Dot McMahon in the final straightaway! 1:17:21 was a very, very good race for her. I was happy, relieved, and proud to see her run great (and that her injuries held up). We cooled down 2 miles along the lake with Allison D (who ran a huge PR and finished one place after Andrea). Then back to the hotel for a shower before watching Derek D finish up a very good run in the marathon.

Full results are here.

Analysis / Thoughts...

There was a $500 bonus for sub 1:06:00... so missing that by 2 seconds totally stinks. But I can't complain too much because its my fault for not sprinting harder at the end - I cut it too close. Plus the race paid my way out here and covered our hotel, food, etc. The hospitality here has been world class - I've never been treated like such a rock star... Grandma's even outdoes Boston. I already have this one on my calendar for next June.

I gave it a good shot today. It was clear by mile 4 or 5 that I wasn't breaking 1:05. Really, the times across the board weren't super fast. If you look at the guys who finished ahead of me, pretty much all of them are Olympic Trials qualifiers, so its not like I'm getting beat by a bunch of scrubs. It was an elite, deep race, and going into it, I figured a Top 25-30 finish would be a good outcome. My prediction was spot on. I'm competing well against good competition, and I want to keep racing and testing myself against the best runners. I want to be in the Top 15 in races like this, and that is what I'll keep working towards.

I'm going to shut it down in terms of hard workout and races for a while now. Its been an overall successful first half of the year. I was in the best shape of my life in the month before Boston, and while the marathon was a bit of a disaster, I was able to move forward from there and race well in May and June. Other than Boston I've raced consistently well for 5-6 months now. But I feel like I'm on a bit of a plateau at this point, or at least about to hit one - its hard to hold a high fitness level for months and months - so backing it off for a while (while I am still feeling good and like I have a few more races in my legs) will pay off later this year and beyond.

Today was a fun race. Its fun to be a part of a national championship event and perform at a level that shows you deserve to be there. What makes it even more special is that Andrea and I both had good races today... its awesome to be able to share these kinds of experiences!

A few pics... will post more when we get back. We have lots of post-race parties to attend now! :-)


Comments
From Jake K on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 08:16:28 from 71.216.136.158

Full report later... I'm happy... Andrea ran really well too. Good day for us!

From Jon on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 08:23:29 from 74.177.123.81

Holy crapper-oly, batman! 1:05!!!

From Susannah on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 10:14:26 from 50.73.105.170

I hope its the website time so you can get that bonus too! Great job, I'm excited to read a full report later!

From Rob Murphy on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 10:29:38 from 64.134.146.198

I was following and the website had you at 1:05. Here's what you need to do. If they try and give you the $500, you should argue with them and tell them you only ran a 1:06.

Did you eat at Grandma's Saloon????? Best post-race fat and grease fest ever!

From Jake K on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 11:19:05 from 71.216.136.158

Looks like the official time was 1:06:02... $250 per second!!! Ahhhh! Times were not super fast across the board and I beat a handful of OTQ guys, so I can't let those 2 seconds get to me.

From Holt on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 11:31:58 from 67.2.241.91

Great job jake. Excited to read about the race!

From James on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 11:35:11 from 97.117.85.3

Still a very good time and race. $250 a second is a bummer to think about, so go get some of that greasy spoon stuff that Rob is talking about as a consolation.

From Jake K on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 14:06:06 from 71.216.136.158

Thanks guys! Full report (ie. novel) is up now :-)

From Fritz on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 15:31:09 from 65.100.192.74

Nice job Jake. A minute off the OTQ on an honest course is incredible. You have put in some massive miles and quality workouts so a break, relatively speaking of course, or "shutting it down" is very well deserved. Enjoy the rest of the festivities and at least 2 or 3 visits to the DQ.

From Scott Ensign on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 15:55:58 from 70.58.47.132

awesome!!! what a great experience. congrats! have a fun time and safe trip back

From Sasha Pachev on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 16:47:06 from 67.222.225.187

Jake:

A nice pattern of good races that end up bummers by a few seconds. In our sport seconds are expensive. Those races are good learning experiences, though.

For a break, how would you like to pace me in a 3 mile uphill tempo run followed by breakfast at our house in two weeks? Maybe Andrea could do a part the tempo as well. In fact, seeing how far she can go at that pace and where the failure happens (if it does at all) could provide some ideas for training.

I also have some ideas on how you can get out of the plateau, but they are now very rough and raw. They might ripen up after an on-the-run conversation.

I was looking at the picture of your bibs and with the first official blog wedding coming up next week could not help but wonder when those bibs will be Krong/Krong (step 1), and then not getting ahead of ourselves, but with a positive outlook for the future for step 2 maybe a few years down the road Krong/Krong/Krong/Krong/Krong/...

From JD on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 19:03:16 from 65.130.183.190

incredible performance today! you have a great long term perspective.

From Jake K on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 19:22:32 from 71.216.136.158

Fritz - you know that "shutting it down" for me will not involve a lot of video games and sitting around :-) Oh and we are at 2 DQ trips so far with about 24 hrs left in Duluth, so right on pace!

Scott - I'm already thinking that we'll extend this trip out by a few extra days next year and head up to the Boundary Waters... my Dad wants to come up and check that area out.

Sasha - Sounds good, let's chat at the wedding bells relay next week. You know I don't really feel like I'm necessarily struggling, but the timing to take a little break from racing is just good right now - there aren't really many good races in Utah over the next month, and we have 2 vacations planned, so its a good time to just reduce the intensity for a bit. I did that for a month after Philly last fall, and felt like I really came back into training ready to take it to a new level at the beginning of the winter. Hoping I can do that again and break down some of the new barriers in front of me. I'll be interested in hearing some of your ideas next weekend.

Oh and we need to get past the Krong/North/Dog step before anything else! :-)

From RAD on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 23:12:25 from 98.202.23.178

Excellent race Jake! I'm always impressed with your analysis and positive attitude about the future when things don't quite pan out the way you'd like. Not that anyone (including you) complains about a 1:06 half!!! Congrats on an amazing race and the wonderful inspiration you always seem to provide.

From Kory on Sat, Jun 16, 2012 at 23:51:43 from 184.155.135.194

Nice race. I think your smart about setting back a bit now. When you do peak you have that small window where your legs are on fire and excel. Then its time to shutdown a bit before the fatigue factor kicks in. I think maintaining a good level of fitness for a while will get you ready to excel again later in the year.

What a talent and inspiration you are. Your hard work has paid off and will continue.

From SlowJoe on Sun, Jun 17, 2012 at 10:57:09 from 69.131.141.92

That's a great placing for a race called "USA Championships." You beat a lot of awesome runners, I'm sure. I love how 5:10 is a bad mile! Congrats on another strong race.

From Redd on Sun, Jun 17, 2012 at 13:10:50 from 67.182.222.77

Nice job man, and I have a Ragnar sticker to trade for that 13.1 sticker so we can both be cool.

From Rachelle on Sun, Jun 17, 2012 at 13:40:53 from 66.7.127.115

Awesome race Jake! I always really appreciate your raw and honest analysis. You are always so consistent and never cease to amaze me.

I definitely think taking a few weeks off to regroup and enjoy some fun running without the added stress is a very wise choice.

From Brandon on Sun, Jun 17, 2012 at 16:10:31 from 67.199.164.200

Congrats on another great race Jake! Love the write up as always. You have certainly earned a break.

From Hamdog Alum on Sun, Jun 17, 2012 at 16:27:05 from 24.118.88.170

Nice job proving why you belong in that race Jake! The humidity was a factor out there and I think if it wasn't so muggy you would have been closer to breaking 1:05 on a very honest course. Like you said all the times across the board were a little slow.

From Paul on Sun, Jun 17, 2012 at 16:40:45 from 71.208.133.240

Nice job. Extremely solid string of race this past several weeks. Grandma's sounds like a great experience. I love it when races go above and beyond for their runners. You've almost inspired me to train again.

From Lulu Walls on Sun, Jun 17, 2012 at 19:28:27 from 166.70.240.95

What?!? I was tracking although half asleep, but thought you came in under 1:06. I am convinced that humidity is as huge of deal to us desert folk as altitude is to flatlanders. So amazing job and I am sure you will crush even harder next year :)

From RileyCook on Sun, Jun 17, 2012 at 22:51:34 from 65.130.93.245

Great race Jake. You have really put together some excellent races lately. I think you are on the verge of a new level of racing. Keep up the good work.

From jtshad on Mon, Jun 18, 2012 at 08:10:16 from 204.134.132.225

Yet another solid race! Great time, too bad about the 2 seconds...

You deserve a bit of a break to help you come back strong this fall.

From Tom Slick on Mon, Jun 18, 2012 at 08:53:27 from 168.179.157.58

King Krong, your an animal! 27th place overall, thats great!

From MarkP on Mon, Jun 18, 2012 at 11:20:09 from 65.130.204.16

Great job, way to go for it early!

From Bret on Mon, Jun 18, 2012 at 11:35:17 from 64.128.133.66

Nice race Jake - also good insight to take a break from racing for a little bit as you will come back rested and more energized. Congrats on a great racing season so far.

From Scott Wesemann on Mon, Jun 18, 2012 at 12:17:35 from 66.232.64.4

It has been impressive and fun to watch you so far this year. Nice race Jake!

From Jake K on Mon, Jun 18, 2012 at 16:03:08 from 67.177.11.154

Paul - you'd love this race. Its like mixing the olympic trials w/ a really organized small-town race. If you decide to un-retire, you should put this on the list for next year. They are VERY generous in what they offer guys like you for travel money, etc.

Thanks again for all the encouragement everyone!!

From Oreo on Tue, Jun 19, 2012 at 09:05:54 from 206.81.136.61

Awesome. Glad you let the common folk go along for the ride. Great job!

From Superfly on Tue, Jun 19, 2012 at 16:30:11 from 74.211.21.81

Great race Jake and love the pic's and report too. Man that's fast. Sucks about the 2 seconds. A free trip and $500 bucks in your pocket would have been nice. But you ran a great race. I've looked at doing that full for a few years... maybe next year I'll just go do it:)

Congrats to Andrea too. Wow so awesome to overcome the injury!

From Steve on Tue, Jun 19, 2012 at 23:11:39 from 66.87.66.225

What an incredible race. That Kevin is amazing. Gives us old guys some hope!

From Burt on Wed, Jun 20, 2012 at 00:20:20 from 72.223.80.161

Great job. I like how the top 3 were from AZ.

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