sub-3 or blow-up trying

April 24, 2024

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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: 0.00 Month: 33.00 Year: 424.00
Barefoot Lifetime Miles: 114.25
K12- Black Lifetime Miles: 401.00
Kinvara 13 (blue 1) Lifetime Miles: 335.00
Kinvara 13 (blue 2) Lifetime Miles: 363.00
Kinvara 14 Neon Lifetime Miles: 384.00
Kinvara 14/teal Lifetime Miles: 334.00
Kinvara Blue/red Lifetime Miles: 98.00
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
5.000.000.000.005.00

Ran 5 miles from the gym with Rick.  It was hot and he hasn't been running for a while, so we ended up run/walking the last mile.  He's the one who got me in to running, so I felt good about being patient with him.  Also, todays run helped me to stay in a recovery mode.  Now that the soreness is gone from the quads/calves, I'm beginning to discover other sore areas- mostly my left hip.  Since I ran with sore legs for almost 20 miles in Boston, I ended up using almost an entirely different set of muscles than I am used to tapping into.  Lot's of hips/arms, since the legs had stopped working.  It may take another week or so to feel normal.

Mizuno Wve Inspire 5 Miles: 5.00
Weight: 0.00
Comments
From wheakory on Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 16:44:51 from 134.50.89.33

From a marathon you can have damage tissue in the muscles for up to a month so a slow recovery and taking it easy is good.

What an accomplishment to run 20 miles on sore legs. Was it the downhill you think that caused the problem? Because I know based on your training that you didn't overtrain.

From rockness18 on Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 23:04:55 from 69.183.233.81

No doubt. I trained on hills, yet nothing significantly downhill for more than a mile at a time. The early portion didn't seem too steep in my mind, but I don't think I've ever faced a downhill distance that long. Having significantly stronger hills in CT, the legs getting stiff really caught me off guard. I was really frustrated through the hill portion (16-21) because they were way easier than I anticipated and my energy level was really good, but the legs were just toast.

Next time I prepare for Boston, I'll definitely look for a training place where I can run 3-5 downhill miles in one stretch. I'll also be very careful at Boston in the first couple of miles (probably did too much dodging in mile one, having started in coral #5).

Yes, the 20-mile accomplishment kept me from getting overly discouraged. I almost packed it in part way through (serious pain), but was able to stay focussed to the end. Sorry for the long vent, but I appreciate your interest and I'm still trying to process everything.

From wheakory on Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 00:33:20 from 24.116.159.75

I'm glad you can vent to me that's okay were here for that. When I trained for Boston I did long runs on downhills and it really does help. When I trained for my first marathon it was downhill and I didn't do any downhill at all. My legs were dead at mile 20 and I had to start to walk and run at mile 22. My calves were vibrating and having spasms. I hit the wall and finished at 3:48. I was completely dead at the finish.

What also could have contributed to the legs being fatigue is standing for two hours in the cold weather. Your muscles could have really been stiff and not loosened up for the start of the race (I believe this is what you said about the two hour wait).

Come run my hometown marathon in September and that will give you downhill practice. You would have a free place to stay at my house. I know that's a long ways plus plane tickets, but if you can make it the offers there.

The course is really closes to Boston's course.

Here's the web site

www.pocatellomarathon.com

From jtshad on Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 17:55:07 from 204.134.132.225

Hope the hip starts feeling better soon.

Kory, Pocatello first half hill is significantly steeper than Boston and the second half is a lot more flat (except small hill at 20M). Pocatello is a course that can really beat you up in the first half (unlike St. George, which beats you up in the second half). If you train for downhills, I would say Poky is easier except for the altitude difference.

From wheakory on Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 18:04:54 from 134.50.89.55

Jeff - your right about the first being a significant downhill. The first 11 miles being downhill that is, except at mile 7 you go up for .5 of a mile. Then you have a couple small hills before the half point. But you don't see that on the elevation chart unless you run the course like me.

Then after mile 13 you have about a .5 mile downhill section. Then mile 14 to 15.5 is flat. Then you start the rolling hills that end at mile 21. The final 5 miles are flat.

This course will beat you up and me you injured if you don't train properly.

From rockness18 on Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 19:04:57 from 69.183.233.81

Kory, interesting insights. I definitely feel the 2 1/2 wait in the cold contributed, but my lack of downhill training was probably a bigger factor.

I looked up your marathon, but I have a church activity on that same weekend. Would've been an awesome experienc, so thanks for the invitation. Look forward to crossing paths at some point in life.

Jeff, thanks...I'm not overly concerned. This past weekend I still felt as if I'd done 10 sets of full squats with 225lbs. Pain's gone in quads, feet, and calves and now the hip doesn't hurt until part way into the run.

From wheakory on Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 11:41:07 from 134.50.89.33

What marathon do you have around the area this time of year (June, July).

Well if anything changes the offer is there.

From rockness18 on Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 20:48:09 from 69.183.233.81

Pretty quite around us in June/July. It's too hot. Most of them start up around late Sept/early October- Hartford, Mohawk, Cape Cod/Falmouth, Steamtown, New York are a few. I committed to running Bay State (Lowell, Ma) with my long-run training partner in October. Was debating whether or not to do New York, but there's a lottery system and my time's 1 year away from qualifying (good enough if I was 40). Bay State will probably boost my confidence- it's flat and fast.

I'm doing a mission trip to Uganda in July (2 weeks) and then will be on vacation 2 weeks in August, and then will do our new year kick-off at church in the first weekend of September. Even if the weekend was free, I might need the extra month to be fully prepared for a marathon. Really hope I don't lose too much fitness during the short-term mission experience in late July.

Thanks for the gracious offer! Are planning on a marathon before the September one?

Last question...I've lost 30 lbs in the last year. It's plateaud, but has become easy to maintain (178ish). How directly do you correlate your improvement to weight loss? I think I saw you dropped from 171 to the 140's.

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