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Location:

Highlands Ranch,CO,U.S.

Member Since:

May 29, 2006

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

NCAA Champ

Running Accomplishments:

Im explorin' my potential

Short-Term Running Goals:

Train smart & listen to my body! Become a D1 All American!

Long-Term Running Goals:

One step at a time...

Personal:

Attend CU in Architectural Engineering.

"If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds' worth of distance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it,
And - which is more - you'll be a Man, my son!"

Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesCrosstraining milesTotal Miles
1.000.000.006.240.007.24

Ran the Evergreen 10k today, which was quite a race. THe race took place at an elevation of 7,700 feet, but much of the couse was downhill.

I tried to retain myself from exploding off of the starting line, which I partially did, but it seems that some instincts can not be fully removed. I had to put the pedal to the floor. I clocked the first two miles in 10:06, a blistering pace of a 5:03 per mile. My 5k split was exactly 16:00, which is a personal best so far in my running "career". At this point I was currently in fifth, but at mile four, this grueling pace caught up with me. I let one runner pass, but remained confident that no one else was going to overtake me. In the last mile, a runner of my similar age was gaining. With 800 meters left he made his move. Sensing that he would soon pass me, I turned forward, eyed the finish, and turned on the afterburners. I don't know quite how fast I ran the last 800 meters, but rest assured it was sub 4:45 pace. I had held him off, finishing with a personal record time of 33:40. Only later did he tell me that he, being my same age, was top ten in the state in the 10,000 meter his senior year of high school. Knowing this, I figured that I did well, especially since I have only been training (at a decently high level) for the last two months. I beat my personal best for the 10k by almost by 5:00 and my personal best for the 5k by 24 seconds, not bad for a single days work. I knew that my training was increasing my speed, but only now do I realize the extent to which it has helped me grow as a runner. At this rate, I would like to break 30:00 in the next six months. If I could do that, there is no way that the CU varsity squad could turn me down.

Comments
From Maria on Sun, Aug 06, 2006 at 16:52:27

Nick - congratulations on a huge PR in a 10K and en-route PR in a 5K! I suggest you revise your short-term goals in your bio here, as you're clearly capable of running faster than 16:00 for 5K, and you already far surpassed your goal for 10K :). I think you have a lot of potential still untapped, if you just keep up consistent training and stay healthy. I'm not sure though about breaking 30:00 in the next 6 months - I am not saying it's not possible, but you have to keep in mind the principle of dimindhed returns with more training and experience. When you first start training seriously, you improve by leaps and bounds, but then progress usually slows and while you continue to improve, the rate of improvement diminishes. As you get fitter it becomes more and more difficult to shed seconds and minutes off. 30:00 is a whole other level than 33:40. All I'm saying is that breaking 30:00 is a great goal to strive for, but I wouldn't put any time limits on it. Just keep training and it will come. Good luck! Oh, and I think you have a good chance of making CU varsity team now.

From Chad Derum on Mon, Aug 07, 2006 at 09:43:42

Great race, Nick. It's very cool to see your training paying off. I think Maria makes a good point about rapid improvement once you begin running consistently, but I don't think a sub 30min 10k is out of reach for you. It may or may not happen in the next six months, but it could certainly happen on the right day in the right race at some point in the near future. Stay healthy and keep your focus on your day to day training (which is the foundation for reaching the big goals) and you'll get there. Good job.

From Sasha Pachev on Mon, Aug 07, 2006 at 14:56:26

Nick:

Good job on the race. However, to get a more precise idea of what your performance really means, we need to check the exact elevation profile. Can you go to gmap-pedometer.com and chart out the course?

From Sasha Pachev on Tue, Aug 08, 2006 at 11:05:24

Nick - with only 400 feet elevation drop at 7,700 feet it is not enough to make it faster than sea level flat over a 10 K. Especially with most of the drop happening in the first half of the race.

I would make a rough guess, though, that your performance compares to about 35:00 - 35:30 in Bolder Boulder.

Jog for a few days until your legs feel good, then get back to the routine of speed work, tempo runs, and easy jogging in between.

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