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Layton Marathon

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Location:

Bountiful,Ut,USA

Member Since:

Sep 22, 2009

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

 

5k  18:44  4 July 2012 C-ville 
10K  38:22  24 July 2012 DesNews
Half  1:22:30  18 Aug 2012  Hobble 
Full  3:00:35  29 Sep 2012 Huntsville

Short-Term Running Goals:

Sign up for a race > 5k, run well.

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

Keep on running. 

 

Click to donate
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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Trails Lifetime Miles: 551.40
Grass Lifetime Miles: 72.50
Pavement Lifetime Miles: 2225.20
Stroller Lifetime Miles: 438.80
Navy Crocs Lifetime Miles: 378.70
Nordic Track TM Lifetime Miles: 1015.77
Green Mirage 2 Lifetime Miles: 494.70
Orange Mirage 3 Lifetime Miles: 514.90
Glow In The Dark Mirage 3 Lifetime Miles: 461.25
Navy Blue Mirage Lifetime Miles: 216.90
Race: Layton Marathon (26.2 Miles) 03:29:58, Place overall: 20, Place in age division: 3
Slow milesFast milesTotal Distance
24.202.0026.20

Well, it's in the books.

The 6 a.m. start moved to about 6:20.  They didn't have a gun, they didn't even get on the loudspeaker to announce they were starting the race.  I was just hanging out around the back by the loudspeakers, and looked ahead and there were only about 50 people milling around, down from 400.  So I got a late start.  I figured no big deal, since the race was chip timed. 

The first 6 miles were dark.  The only light was from across the lake, reflected off the clouds.  You could see the road, and you could see runners as they got within 20-30'.  It was like running on a treadmill, because nothing seemed to be moving past.  I liked this part of the race.  I felt good, after my best night's sleep ever before a race, and the temp was perfect (50).  The sky began to lighten as we approached the end of the island run.  I saw a few bison in the distance.  At mile 7 I stopped to take an excedrin.  I wanted the caffeine and a little buffer for the sore ankle and hammy.  It seemed to help.  The view of the eastern mountains across a glassy Great Salt Lake was inspiring.  My ten mile time was 1:17.  I knew I wasn't going to tear up this course, and that was in line with what was realistic for me at this time.

 Around mile 11 we started across the 7 mile causeway.  The shoulder was in pretty good shape, and I got in 3-4 miles on the more forgiving surface without giving too much extra effort.  The first couple miles of this stretch provided the most beautiful views of lake, cloud, mountain and sunrise; light radiating trickling over the tops of the clouds.  This was the highlight of the day.   My half split was 1:41, again, not great, but reasonable for what I was trying to do today.  (Which was???....) I had a gel at the 13 mile aid station.  The causeway seemed to stretch on for a while, and I knew there was lots of race to go.  Someone said there was one girl up ahead, which kept me inspired to try and catch up to her.  I got talking to a couple young studs who were ambitiously running their first marathons.  They were both holding on very well through mile 18.  We leapfrogged each other for about 17 miles of the race, before one of them blew up around mile 22.  I passed the other one around mile 24.  This made me glad.  He had a posse shadowing him in a car, honking and shouting all the time.  I pretended like they were cheering for me.  

We finally got across the causeway.  I was sick of running east.  We still had to run east some more.  I had another excedrin somewhere in this stretch.  I passed quite a few people between 17 and 20.   The marathon was taking it's toll.  One thing I couldn't understand was the quantity of guys veering off to the side of the road to take a leak.  How could they need to pee at this stage of the race?  Anyway...we finally turned.  I caught up to the woman leader.  She did awesome.  At the 20 mile area I caught up with the other guy who liked to run on the shoulder.  He was beginning to have a tough time.  I didn't hang back to help anybody.  By now I was just trying to put off walking for as long as possible.  The mind games began.  Hold on till 21.  Hold on till 22.  At 23 I gave in, but never for long.  It didn't hurt any less to walk than run, so I ran.  I had one last gel at 23, and resolved to run the rest of the way in.  The race turned into half mile segments for me.  23-23.5 felt good.  23.5-24 sucked.  24 was okay.  25 I walked some.  With 1.2 to go, I knew I wasn't going to beat my sister's TOU time.  That goal was out of reach.  But finishing without being a total wuss was still within reach.  There was one cruel hill coming up Gordon ave that got the better of several runners and many half marthoners.  I was coming up on a guy, my last chance to pass somebody, and he had something left.  I didn't.  I came across at 3:33:36.  My garmin was under 3:30, however.  I must have really been diddling around at the start.

I felt a bit shaky at the end.  The post race food was a 2/10.  Bananas, oranges, and bread with chunky peanut butter?!?  That's it.  Water.  No gatorade on the whole course, just this yucky heed stuff.  I really cooled off.  Some medical volunteer saw me shivering and got me some blankets and stuff.  94 was my temp.  No wonder I was cold.  

So that's it.  I rate the first half of the course 9/10.  The second half was 5/10.  For a first effort, the organization was fantastic, probably 9/10.  

Compared to flying down a canyon, this marathon was slow, pedestrian.  Post-race I feel way better than other times. (no blisters)  I'm glad I ran an unaided course, and take my time as a pretty accurate snapshot of my fitness and motivation level right now.  I probably could have gutted a couple or three minutes off my time, but motivation is where it is.  My next marathon is Boston.  I bet I can get up for that one... :) 2nd half took me +10 over the first.  This is by far my most even marathon.  It was good to experience the last 10k, and hopefully do better in the future.  

The men's winner was 3:04 and the woman was 3:36.  Too bad no quality bloggers showed up to set more indefensible course records.   

Mile splits: 7:26, 7:50, 7:46, 7:41, 7:32, 7:37, 7:53, 8:13 (up the one hill) 7:17 (down the other side) 7:33, 7:41, 7:52, 7:41, 7:50, 7:56, 8:00, 8:20, 7:43, 8:12, 7:46, 8:10, 8:50, 9:06 (last gu, falling apart) 8:28, 8:32, 8:15.   Reasonable.  Acceptable.  

Comments
From crockett on Sat, Oct 09, 2010 at 17:17:26 from 71.36.84.70

Nice job. Thats for the good information about this new race.

From Maurine/Miles on Sat, Oct 09, 2010 at 17:50:54 from 63.255.172.2

Nice to hear how this marathon went. A lot of that is my old stomping/training grounds back when I lived in Layton for years. It will be interesting to hear if this will be successful. Not going to get too many blog people this close to TOU or SGM.

From Twinkies on Sat, Oct 09, 2010 at 20:06:34 from 24.2.82.73

Great job Kam. You ran a smart race. I didn't realize you were running this, or I would've looked for you at the start.

From Andy on Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 12:06:40 from 208.54.5.61

Good job!

From allie on Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 13:04:39 from 174.23.232.22

great job! it was interesting to read your review of the race. i agree that for a first year event they were fairly organized. but it will be interesting to see how they compete with the other fall marathons in the state. i think it will remain rather small for the next few years, but you never know.

nice job once again. sorry i missed you yesterday.

From Kim on Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 20:50:13 from 67.199.180.90

Congrats Kam! Loved the report. It sounds like this was a nice one to keep your eyes open on...loved hearing the discriptions of things you saw along the way. I think we sometimes forget to use our eyes when we are doing this great thing we do...running. When we did SGM last week it was fun to see one lady who was running and she stopped to take pictures of all the breath taking views many of us were missing.

From Kam on Mon, Oct 11, 2010 at 23:34:53 from 174.23.181.203

Thanks for the feedback. I think this race has a chance. There are lots of folks who get shut out at St. George who may find this to be a good alternative.

After running the last 14m of TOU, I don't think I'll bother entering the lottery next year.

From Tom on Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 10:37:40 from 137.65.56.16

Great job on the race and race report!

From JD on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 13:07:23 from 166.183.135.49

Nice job on the marathon. Enjoyed the report. I wholeheartedly agree with you about TOU. I won't bother running it again. Those last miles of the course are brutal.

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