Sean's Running Blog

December 22, 2024

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Location:

Snoqualmie,WA,

Member Since:

Feb 24, 2007

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

  • 2011 Boston Marathon -- 2:27 (Top 50)
  • 2011 Steilacoom 20k -- 1:04:57 (1st)
  • 2010 Indianapolis Monumental Marathon -- 2:26 (7th) 
  • 2010 Fall City 10k -- 31:06 (1st)
  • 2009 Indy Mini Marathon -- 1:07:53 (7th)
  • 2009 WWU Invitational -- 10000m (30:58)
  • 2009 UW Indoor Meet -- 5000m (14:49)
  • 2008 Orem Turkey Run -4 miler -- 19:55 (1st)
  • 2008 Seafair Torchlight 8k--25:03 (3rd) 
  • 2008 Time to Fly 5k -- 15:35 (1st)
  • 2008 Newport Marathon -- 2:22:47 (1st)
  • Steilacoom 15M--1:18:30 (1st)
  • 2007 Olympic Trials -- 2:30:41 (91st)
  • 2007 St. George --2:18:55 (3rd)

Short-Term Running Goals:

  • Feb 23 -- Ft Steilacoom 15M
  • March 23  – Ft. Steilacoom 20k
  • April 15  – Boston Marathon
  • June 8 – Sound to Narrows 12k
  • June 22  – Grandma’s Half Marathon (USATF Champs.)
  • July 7 – Run of the Mill 5k
  • July 27 – Torchlight 8k
  • September – SJJ Half (maybe)
  • October/November – Fall Marathon (maybe)
  • December – Club XC Nationals

Long-Term Running Goals:

 Stay healthy

Personal:

Ran track my junior and senior years in high school and cross country my senior year. Went to BYU but did not run. Served LDS church mission to San Bernardino, CA. Started running again in April 2005. Marathon debut was St. George in 2005.

I coach the Mount Si High School Track Team (distance)

Been married for almost 17 years. My wife, Mara, and I have four kids ages 16, 14, 13 and 11.

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Brooks T5 Lifetime Miles: 34.00
Ravenna Lifetime Miles: 250.00
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
12.000.000.000.0012.00

12 miles under cool but perfectly sunny skies this morning.

I decided early last week to not run a fall marathon so I will not be running TCM or SGM. There was no way I was going to hit the new qualifying standard at TCM anyway and I'm mentally really burned out.

So I'm dropping mileage to about 70 a week and just focusing on the cross country season. I am considering the Houston Half Marathon in January as my next big race but have some time before I need to commit to that. Hopefully backing off a bit a being more low key will help me re-engerize mentally and physically.

Best of luck to Logan and others running SGM and TCM.

Weight: 0.00
Comments
From wheakory on Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 13:09:25

Question: What signs lead you to feeling burned out? I kind of feel some of those same symptoms, where I feel I have to run. It almost a obsession, but I don't want to take a break and lose fitness to nail a better marathon time.

Smart move on your part, and if you did decide to do either fall marathon you would have done well.

From jtshad on Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 13:15:37

Good luck with the XC season, we will miss you at TCM!

From Sean on Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 15:25:22

I don't love the marathon to just go run for the sake of running. I'm to the point now that I won't run a race that long unless I feel like I have a real shot to excel and do my best. I don't have that right now and as I result, I dread the thought of running 26 miles. Most probably have days where they are tired of running, but I have had several weeks of it and rather than permenantly do damage to my enjoyment of running, I'm going to back off. If I had "something to train for" it might be different. If it was the last race within the OT qualifying window, it would be different. But my thought was why go out and run a mediocre marathon, still have the same recovery period and travel all the way to MSP to do it.

From Sean on Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 16:30:47

I don't love the marathon enough to just go run for the sake of running. I'm to the point now that I won't run a race that long unless I feel like I have a real shot to excel and do my best. I don't have that right now and as I result, I dread the thought of running 26 miles. Most probably have days where they are tired of running, but I have had several weeks of it and rather than permenantly do damage to my enjoyment of running, I'm going to back off. If I had "something to train for" it might be different. If it was the last race within the OT qualifying window, it would be different. But my thought was why go out and run a mediocre marathon, still have the same recovery period and travel all the way to MSP to do it.

From wheakory on Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 17:11:11

Thanks for your insight Sean that makes perfect sense. That's the way I felt this year. Last year I ran 6 marathons and I peaked pretty much at each one, but it's not the quality I wanted. This year I've bypassed ones that I've ran in the past to get quality times. It does make no sense to run a marathon if you don't expect to do your best and excel.

Now that being said I'm running SGM a little over a month from my hometown marathon hoping to do my best for the last one of the year, and then like you step back and lower the mileage.

Thanks again for your insight it helped me view my situation and the way I feel. With getting older and having a family it makes it tough each year.

I think two marathon's a year is what my new strategy will be.

From wheakory on Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 17:14:39

One thing I forgot to mention, you have so much talent and have a lot going for you. Got for the OT in 2011 and really see what you can do. Thanks again.

From Sasha Pachev on Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 17:37:18

Kory, Sean - I think the key for Sean to hit the new OTQ standard is to figure out why he cannot break 15:00 in a flat 5 K. 2:22 on a honest course while racing no faster than 15:30 in 5 Ks shows the marathon potential relative to 5 K speed is being sucked up pretty much to the limit.

Some thoughts on the common errors in trying to solve this problem (from experience, as I have tried to solve the same problem for years): a) it is not the lack of speed work b) it is not age c) it is not the lack of mileage. That makes it sound a bit hopeless, I know, but I believe there is a cure, it would just take a little bit of thinking of out the box. The key in discovering it is in the art of non-invasive measurement. You need to discover a non-fatiguing test that you can do daily that would accurately predict how fast you could have raced a 5 K that day. Then as you try different things perform that test during your daily run and see how they affect your 5 K ability. Right now I am leaning towards running one mile in 5:20 paying close attention to how I feel for that test for myself, but I think it is very much individual and will vary through seasons, and training focus even for the same runner.

From Logan on Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 20:14:03

Bummer you are not doing TCM this fall. I was hoping to run most of the race together. I think we have similar goals in mind for TCM. I think I will be racing for place instead of an actual time though. I hope to do well there. I know my training has been very consistent. Keep up the great work though.

From wheakory on Tue, Sep 16, 2008 at 00:50:06

I disagree with some of what your saying Sasha. Age does have a factor if I would have started younger running I would be a lot faster than when I've started at this age. I think trying to go anaerobic in every run is not the best thing either. But trying it often I agree with. To find some way to get faster for each individual runner will be different.

From seth on Wed, Sep 17, 2008 at 13:15:07

Sean,

I respect you for making the decision not to run SGM or TCM. Hopefully we will get to run together at another race. Best of luck with cross country.

Seth

From Jon on Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 22:03:10

Somehow I can't imagine doing a daily "self-test" would help Sean get over his burnout. That would add more stress/pressure. Sounds like he needs low key right now.

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