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Location:

San Antonio,TX,

Member Since:

Dec 13, 2009

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

5K PR - 18:01 - Nov '14

10K PR - 38:37 (workout) - Oct '14

Half-marathon - 1:22:43 - Jan '14

Marathon - 2:58:43 in Boston! - Apr '13

50 mile - 7:49:30 (2nd) - Nov '15

Short-Term Running Goals:

- Balance

- Run more trails, volunteer, more social running, run with a team

- Race a lot more.  learn.

Race results / possible schedule:

Apr 2 - Hells Hills 25k trail - 4th

Apr 9 - Toughest 'n Texas 20-mile Trail - 2nd

May 7 - Paleface - Trail Marathon - 3rd

May 29 - American Hero road 25k - 2nd

Jun 25 - Pedernales Falls 30k nighttime Trail - 5th (sick)

Jul 16 - Muleshoe Bend 30k nighttime Trail - 3rd

Jul 23-24 - Fossil Valley 9-hour nighttime Trail - 2nd

Aug 6 - Colorado Bend 30k nighttime Trail - 4th

Aug 27 - Reveille Peak 30k nighttime Trail (entered)

Sep 10 - Franklin Mountains 50k (entered - not all-out effort...I hope)

Sep 17 - Lighthouse Hill 20-mile trail (entered)

Sep 24 - J&J 50 mile trail

Long-Term Running Goals:

Compete in a few more ultras without going off course (again)

Sub-18 in a 5k

One.  Good.  Marathon.

Personal:

I started running at age 30, in late 2009.  I have 2 daughters (10 and 8 yrs old).

  

 

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Saucony A5 Lifetime Miles: 1054.70
Kinvara 2 - Gray/red Lifetime Miles: 1551.08
Kinvara 3 - Gray/red Lifetime Miles: 1244.23
1160s Lifetime Miles: 888.70
Saucony A5 Red Lifetime Miles: 565.10
Saucony A6 - Yellow Lifetime Miles: 214.00
Saucony A6 - Red/blue Lifetime Miles: 61.50
NB MT101 Trail Lifetime Miles: 302.00
Fastwitch 6 Red #1 Lifetime Miles: 286.50
Fastwitch 6 Red #2 Lifetime Miles: 267.00
Race: Houston Marathon (26.22 Miles) 03:25:59, Place overall: 424, Place in age division: 71
Slow milesFast milesTotal Distance
26.220.0026.22

Great day.  My first marathon was a success, and I beat my original goal of 3:30 by 4 minutes.

 

Night before – Danielle and I met April, April’s sister, and her friend for a carb-loading dinner.  It was awesome to meet April and pick her brain a little.  Mr. and Mrs. Flatlander also stopped by for awhile; it was great to finally meet Mark in person as well and talk a little running.  Hopefully I’ll be seeing more of these fellow FRBers in the future.

 

Race day – Weather predictions were all doom and gloom the night before, but the thunder and lightning stayed away on race day.  It rained off and on the entire race, soaking us to the bone, but at least we had a race.  The bad part was the unseasonable warmth.  The temps were in the mid-60s the whole time, with about 90% humidity.  I decided I better start slower; I even told Mark last night I would run 7:40s and 7:50s in the first half because of the heat.  I guess I lied.  Miraculously, we bumped into April before the race among the 20,000 participants and made our way to the starting line.  The mile splits below are from Garmin.

 

Miles 1-5: 8:02, 7:34, 7:36, 7:42, 7:42.  The gun went off and April and I started together.  I ran with her for about 3 steps and she was gone, picking her way through the crowd.  The first mile was really clogged up.  I noticed about an 8:30 pace about halfway into that first mile, but didn’t panic, and used it as a nice warmup.  Obviously it opened up a bit after that because I was in the 7:30s pretty quick.  5K was 24:04.  I focused on shortening my stride to keep the pace slower but I felt really great.

 

Miles 6-10: 7:33, 7:30, 7:39, 7:37, 7:36.  Whoops.  I started running by feel.  It felt so very easy, so I threw the conservative plan out the window and listened to my body.  That probably would’ve worked if it was 20 degrees cooler, but not today.  10K was 47:55.  I saw my dad around mile 8, which was awesome.  The crowd support was unreal – people lining the streets in the rain all 26 miles.  Here's a picture my dad took about 8 miles in:

 

Miles 11-15: 7:28, 7:35, 7:35, 7:38, 7:40.  Still feeling ridiculously great.  My plan was to hang around 3:20 pace just in case, and I was still right on it.  In mile 13, I ran right by my childhood best friend’s house and saw his mom out there – pretty cool.  I went through the half in 1:40:22 (nearly a PR) but was still breathing really easy and didn’t feel a big toll on my legs yet.

 

Miles 16-20:  7:37, 7:36, 7:50, 7:35, 7:49.  Ok, doubts started to creep in mile 18.  30K was still a great split, 2:22:51 (7:40 average so far).  I slowed down as the legs were starting to burn a bit in 18.  Then I inexplicably sped up in mile 19, feeling strong again – maybe I shouldn’t have done that.  By mile 20, I was giving more effort but the pace was starting to bleed out for good.

 

Miles 21-26.2: 7:55, 8:04, 8:19, 8:39, 8:58, 8:43, 2:27 (0.33 miles on garmin).  Cue death march.  Looking at the splits now, I thought it would be worse (wasn’t looking at my watch much at this point, but every time I did I thought I saw 9-something).  I saw my dad, brother and his fiancĂ©e at mile 23 (brother lives in an apartment right on the course).  I faked a smile for them, and then went back to pathetically staring at the cement 3 feet in front of me.  My lovely wife had finished her half marathon and was there cheering for me with about a tenth of a mile to go!  I saw the clock, and put on a furious sprint (8:00 pace was a sprint) and officially beat 3:26 by a second to get a 3:25:59!  I think the bonk should be mostly attributed to going too fast in the early miles on a hot, muggy day.  Still, it wasn’t an aerobic wall – I actually caught my breath a little but just could not will myself to pick up the pace.  So, I gotta think part of it was also mental, but maybe part fueling?  I had a total of 5 gu and took Gatorade pretty much every stop.  Weird to think that wasn’t enough, but my stomach felt fine and I could probably tolerate more; I really think I was burning fats at the end, but I’m not experienced enough to know for sure.  A real learning experience, but I’m still really, really happy with the time given the conditions.  Here's the smile I faked at mile 23 - looks like I am barely moving!

 

After the race I very slowly went to meet Danielle.  It was then that I got light-headed and she told me to sit down.  I obeyed, and started to feel a bit better.  When April and company found us (April looked much more lively than me, after her awesome PR), I managed to get up and sorta tried to pretend I wasn’t as exhausted as I was, but I still looked terrible I bet.  It took me awhile but I am feeling better now.

 

Some stats from runpix – I finished top 6% overall, top 8% of men and top 12% of my age group.  That also feels pretty good, because it lets me know everyone struggled as well.  First half was 1:40:22 (7:39 pace), second half was 1:45:37 (8:03 pace).  My first 20 miles was 2:32:54 (7:39 pace).  Last 10K was 53:05 (8:32 pace).  So there it is.

 

Anyway, definitely a successful day.  I would love to make a run at BQ at this race in 1 year, so back to training.  Danielle and I are hoping to run Oklahoma City again in 3 months if work allows.  Not sure yet whether I want to do another full already, or maybe just the half.  But Boston is officially on the brain now!

1140s #2 Miles: 26.22
Weight: 0.00
Comments
From Jon on Sun, Jan 30, 2011 at 20:56:56 from 74.177.100.209

That's a good time for your first marathon, especially your relative lack of slowdown. Nice job.

From Tom Slick on Sun, Jan 30, 2011 at 21:15:59 from 69.171.160.89

Congrats on bringing a plan all together! Great race, great report, Super time for your first marathon....Nows the time to pick your effort apart so you'll do even better the next time out!!!!!Congrats again!

From Bec on Sun, Jan 30, 2011 at 21:19:37 from 71.199.12.198

Great first-time marathon! Sounds like you had a nice and enjoyable experience.

From flatlander on Sun, Jan 30, 2011 at 22:51:13 from 76.31.26.153

That was truly a great first marathon. I was watching your 5K splits live and I knew exactly what had happened to you the last 10K, but you fought through it very well. I had a friend who ran 3:17 about 2 months ago and he ran 3:34 today, just to put things in perspective. Even allowing that he maybe had a bad day, I think you gave up at least 10 minutes to the heat, Boston is definitely in your crosshairs. Thanks for letting us crash your party last night, it was great to meet you, Danielle and April. Congratulations again.

From seeaprilrun on Sun, Jan 30, 2011 at 23:44:25 from 68.103.248.137

Outstanding first marathon Joe! Your 10k "death march" was actually relatively mild and not near the crash that it is for many! You fought well and ran an excellent time! I think in better conditions the toll would have definitely been less and made for a better 6 miles! You did AWESOME and it was great to meet you and Danielle! I am really glad I had someone to nervously chatter with on the start line while we waited for the show to start!

From Bonnie on Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 00:49:21 from 64.119.33.134

Congratulations, you are a marathoner now! I was happy to see you beat your "under 3:30" by so much!!

And ... welcome home.

From DaleG on Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 00:56:37 from 67.2.65.133

Congratulations on your first marathon!!! I'd say you did fantastic. Man, there were a lot of fast people in your age group. Thanks for showing the pictures. Very cool.

Just one question: Did you tape your nipples? LOL

From Burt on Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 01:26:04 from 72.223.90.79

A blogger extravaganza! Okay, the first thing I have to say is that I thought I clicked on April's race report. Then I scrolled all the way to the bottom and saw Dale saying something about taping your nipples. What the...? Anyway, awesome job! All that training paid off. And the death march wasn't that bad. It felt worse than it was because you had been running at such a consistent rate the whole time. And it was a year ago yesterday that I met Flatlander. He's a lot cooler in person, huh?

From Tracy on Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 09:39:45 from 209.175.177.37

Congrats on the great race! Cool pics!

From Marathon Dreamer on Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 10:47:54 from 174.254.88.227

Awesome first Marathon!!! That last 10k is usually the hardest part... but that last 10k does get easier with future marathons!!! Congratulations! !!!

From Rye on Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 11:34:51 from 168.103.139.210

Congrats on a successful race! Are you going to make it a habit now to train in the middle east in preperation for your next marathon? Great pics. Treat yourself to something!!!!

From Kelli on Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 15:46:53 from 173.8.92.196

TOP 6%?? That is nothing to sneeze at. you had an incredible first marathon DESPITE the weather. I love the rain, but the heat and humidity would have done me in for sure! And, just so you know, the last 6 miles are always a death march---you did nothing wrong!

NICELY DONE!

From SlowJoe on Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 18:26:49 from 184.79.24.255

Thanks Jon, nice to hear the words "lack of slowdown" after that.

I appreciate that Tom, the hamster wheel upstairs is definitely spinning on how to improve.

Bec - definitely had a great time....mostly!

Flat - really glad you stopped by. Sorry your friend had a rough day, but I have to admit it makes me feel good about my race.

April - your company definitely made the whole marathon experience even better, it was great meeting you and your sister and friend. Hope we can all do it again sometime.

Thanks Bonnie, it's been an awesome week or two for sure!

Dale - no bleeding nipples, but the soggy shoes gave me 1 decent blister on a toe.

Burt - yeah that would've been an awkward question on a different blog. Flatlander is pretty cool on the blog too, but I agree!

Thanks Tracy, it was nice to have a couple of race pics that didn't cost $29.95.

MD - I'm glad to hear you say that. I really am!

Rye - I did get in some good training in Iraq...but....no!

Thanks Kelli - it felt very wrong! But running 26 miles is not a normal thing for me, so I'll take it for sure!

From Kelli on Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 18:36:20 from 71.219.84.215

Funny thing, I have run one marathon where it rained the entire time and it is the ONLY time I did not get so much as a blister or lose a toenail!!! Bummer it did not work that way for you!

Running a marathon is like giving birth, you forget how bad it is quickly. Wait, you are a guy. Ask your wife, you have two kids to prove that theory.

REST UP and take care.

From daceg on Mon, Jan 31, 2011 at 23:56:37 from 24.49.167.230

Congrats on the first one. That is a great time! Each one after this gets easier to work out. Keep runnin'

From ChrisM on Tue, Feb 01, 2011 at 08:12:43 from 217.171.129.72

congratulations on the race - that is an extremely impressive first marathon

You get to join the club of the 1% of first time marathoners that do not suffer any spectacular slow down, running only 5 mins slower the second half

Time to change your name to fastjoe!

From Kam on Tue, Feb 01, 2011 at 14:36:22 from 68.66.163.179

Great job on the race. 3:26 was my first marathon time, but it wasn't an even race at all! BQ is definitely in your cross-hairs.

From SlowJoe on Tue, Feb 01, 2011 at 17:50:27 from 184.79.24.255

That is funny Kelli, this wet day was the first time I have ever gotten a blister in a race.

daceg - thanks, knowing what pace to set seems tricky for sure.

Thanks Chris - as horrible as it felt, I guess 5 minutes isn't too bad when you think of it like that. Guess marathons are hard...no one told me that.

Thanks Kam, BQ feels pretty far away right now but I'm excited to see what some consistent high-mileage weeks can do.

From Mike on Sat, Feb 05, 2011 at 13:39:50 from 71.195.187.76

It's good to see that all the training paid off. Nice work!

From Jason McK on Mon, Feb 07, 2011 at 11:30:07 from 63.255.173.99

Great marathon! Keep up the (s)miles.

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