sub-3 or blow-up trying

Hogsback Half Marathon

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Location:

Mooresville,NC,

Member Since:

May 01, 2008

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

2007 Highlights:  Litchfield Road Race (7.1) in 58:36

2008 Highlights:  New Jersey Marathon in 4:12, Bay State Marathon in 3:10:30

2009 Highlights:  Boston Marathon in 3:13:26, Litchfield Road Race in 49:30, New Haven 20k in 1:25:03, Bay State Marathon in 3:09:09

2010 Highlights:  Bradley 10k in 39:58, Litchfield Road Race in 48:06, New Haven 20k in 1:23:59, Ghost Trail 1/2 Marathon in 1:29:12 (trail), Philadelphia Marathon in 3:06:59

2011 Highlights:  Litchfield Road Race in 47:44, Ghost Trail 1/2 Marathon in 1:28:35, Goshen Turkey Trot in 40:46, Jingle Bell 5k in 19:05

2012 Highlights:  Finished Boston Marathon in 3:41:59 in 89 degree heat, broke the top 100 in Litchfield Road Race (82nd), 1st Place (overall) in Solstice 5k, Hogsback 1/2 in 1:29:36, and bq'd in Bay State Marathon (3:14:20).

Personal Records

1-mile:  5:39/track (2008)

5k:  19:05/Jingle Bell (2011)

10k:  39:58/road race (2010)

20k:  1:23:59 (2010/New Haven)

1/2 marathon:  1:28:35 (2011/Ghost Trail)

marathon:  3:06:59 (2010/Philly)

 

 

 

 

Short-Term Running Goals:

Sub-3:05 marathon in Fall

Sub-1:23 in New Haven 20k

Sub-46 min in Litchfield RR

Sub-19 in 5k

Sub-5:30 in mile

Upcoming Races: 

     TBD

 

 

 

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

sub-3hr marathon

sub-5:15 min mile

become a competitive master's runner

win age division in smaller marathon

 

Personal:

Married w/six daughters (9 year age span)

Pastor a church in NC

Enjoy travel and recreation with family

Began running in November of 2007

 

 

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Miles:This week: 24.00 Month: 90.00 Year: 1425.00
Barefoot Lifetime Miles: 114.25
K12- Black Lifetime Miles: 401.00
Kinvara 13 (blue 1) Lifetime Miles: 341.00
Kinvara 13 (blue 2) Lifetime Miles: 366.00
Kinvara 14 Neon Lifetime Miles: 388.00
Kinvara 14/teal Lifetime Miles: 520.50
Kinvara Blue/red Lifetime Miles: 377.00
Kinvara 15 (blue/grey) Lifetime Miles: 238.50
Kinvara 14 Green Lifetime Miles: 280.00
Race: Hogsback Half Marathon (13.1 Miles) 01:31:32, Place overall: 11, Place in age division: 2
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
17.000.000.000.0017.00

Ran 4 miles as a warm-up and to contribute to my final 70-mile week.  This morning was in the mid-60's and wet, a mixture of light ran and 100% humidity.  Due to just a tad bit of soreness in my legs, I decided to run a conservative, yet firm race.  The event advertises itself as a "fast race" with an overall decline of 100ft.  However, I found it to be a much more challenging course than the 20k I ran earlier this month. 

I did not use a watch to time and although the course had mile markers, the times were only posted at mile 1, 5, 9, and 12.  Thus, I was pretty much forced to run by 100% feel. 

Mile 1 split- 6:15 (very steep decline...was honestly trying to keep a 6:45 pace)

Miles 2-5 were all through rolling hills, yet definitely leaned more downhill.  I just wanted to keep things around a 6:45 pace...again, forced to go by 100% feel.

Mile 5 split- 32:46 (take away mile 1, perhaps still a little too fast)

Miles 6-9 felt very comfortable.  I made a decision in my mind to keep a conservative pace in and keep myself in position to possibly break 1:30 which seemed very do-able.

Mile 9 split- 1:00:48 (felt very positive about this split...still feeling comfortable)

Miles 9-12 were still moving through rolling hills.  The slight lean downhill was beginnning to shift to a slight lean uphill.  My energy level still felt strong and my hope was to remain in position to break 1:30.  Mile 11 was mostly uphill, yet in my mind this was a positive thing (whatever goes up must eventually come back down)

Mile 12 split- 1:22:30 (legs a bit stiff, yet energy level still strong)

Quickly began crunching numbers in my head.  Felt confident that a 1:30 was still within reach.  Mile 12 began a slight decline which gave me confidence to turn it up a notch.  However, half way into mile 12 came a very steep hill...uh-oh!  It looked to be about a quarter mile, so I still felt there was a chance...but as it leveled out it was followed by another steep hill...dang!  Just put my head down and kept going strong.

At this stage I realized the 1:30 wasn't going to happen, but still wanted to finish with an overall 7 min pace.  Things eventually flattened out and I still had the energy to sprint the final 1/4 mile or so. 

Mile 13.1 finish- 1:31:32 (still felt strong)

Overall, I felt good about the race.  In hindsight, I definitely had it in me to break 1:30.  A few things may have helped- a watch, or timed mile-markers, a quicker pace in miles 9-12 (it was hard to gage on my own), and a better sense of the course (I honestly thought I was in position for a strong finish...just didn't know much about that final hill).  Also, felt good about finishing a full minute in front of a local runner who has been neck-to-neck with me in the past 3 or 4 races (beating me twice and me beating him by a few seconds once).  Ended up in 11th place, 2nd in my age group.  Also, my wife completed this race with a pace just over 10 minutes...huge accomplishment after having 6 children! 

NB 903's- 83.5 miles

 

Weight: 0.00
Comments
From Sasha Pachev on Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 14:50:40

Dave - Congratulations. This is very solid. You are now racing a half faster than you raced a 5 K in June. This is quite an improvement.

From JimF on Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 15:49:46

Great job on the race! I think 1:30 would definitely be in the bag with some better weather, less hilly course and less than a 70 mile week. Considering all of those factors I think it is an excellent result and positions you well for your marathon. As Sasha points out you have made some incredible progress this year. Congratulations!!

From haynes on Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 17:38:25

Good race. Did you notice how we went with the running water for the first half then crossed the bridge and went against the running water for the second? I knew it was a down and up course because of that. I don't actually trust my garmin for altitude change because it will highly overestimate it. Yeah, you should be under 1:30 on another course later in the year (ie. colder). It may not have seemed warm ever but times suffer from 60 up and that is exacerbated by the humidity.

From Robert on Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 18:11:59

Great work and good job listening to your body.

From Dale on Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 19:34:46

A good solid effort, especially given the conditions and the course. It's always good to finish a race strong like that, and not always the easiest thing to do. Good job!

From josse on Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 20:42:02

Great job, to bad you can't run around the hill instead of over them.

From Jon on Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 20:55:27

Nice job!

From rockness18 on Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 21:49:10

Thanks for all the encouraging responses! Sasha, I credit much of my improvement to this blog...it makes a world of difference. My goal is to get a BQ and with this run under my belt, it seems within reach. You folks have dones wonders for my workout plans through my ability to see your workouts and observe your advice to one another...and yes, if there was a way to run around hills, I would definitely commit myself to mastering the technique.

From smally on Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 23:34:59

Dave,

First off tell your wife congratulations, we all know who is most important.

I admire you racing without the watch, I really tried to do my best running by feel for my last 10 miles today, I felt so free.

Lets be smart these last 3 weeks and most importantly realize just how blessed we are.

Great race today.

Todd

From bedoukian on Sun, Sep 28, 2008 at 21:18:57

I'm sure if you run the race next year and keep training you'll break at least 1:29! That last mile was devastating! especially when it started on a downhill...congrats on improving so much so fast! what marathon are you going to try to qualify for Boston? Haynes and I are doing the Hudson Mohawk in 2 weeks. Supposed to be one of the top 10 fastest marathons in the US. We decided Cape cod was too hilly for us (or at least me) to break 3 hrs.

From rockness18 on Sun, Sep 28, 2008 at 22:44:04

bedoukian,

I'm looking to run the "Bay State" marthon in Lowell, MA, also considered a "fast course". Hopefully, "fast" for them is relatively closer to my definition of fast than Hogsback's. Good luck in the Mohawk...hope you break 3 hrs!

From haynes on Sun, Sep 28, 2008 at 22:59:30

Lowell is supposed to be quite fast. And I have heard that not only from the website, but from people who have run it. Good luck.

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