Getting back to Boston

January 02, 2026

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Location:

Fort Smith,AR,USA

Member Since:

Jan 01, 2008

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Boston Qualifier

Running Accomplishments:

Dec. 5, 2009 -- St. Jude Memphis Marathon, 3:31:56. Boston qualifier for 2011. Two-time Boston finisher. 19 marathons so far in 10 states, Canada, Germany, England and Sweden. Next up: London (4/25/17)

5K -- 21:57; 10K -- 45:54; 20K-- 1:42:39, Half -- 1:39:30. All subject to improvement. Maybe. Or maybe not.

Short-Term Running Goals:

Short-term: Just get my motivation back and go from there

Long-Term Running Goals:

A lot of marathons, and other distances, slowly.

Personal:

Physician assistant/hospitalist, divorced since December 2010, one child (son). Ran high school track, took 10 years off, ran a 15K on my 25th birthday, took off next 21 years.

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
22.020.000.000.0022.02

Very good 22-miler this morning with Pat and Kenny. Did a 10-mile loop on the River Trail, dropped Kenny off at his car, then a 12-mile loop across the river, up Kavanaugh and down Cedar Hill. I left Pat shortly after the turnaround at Mount St. Mary's and wound up beating him by almost a mile. We started slow, picked up the pace later, particularly after starting the second loop, and I pushed the last five miles pretty hard. The result was 22 miles in 3:25. If it's true that you should be able to run 22 in training in about the same time as 26.2 in a race, I should be in good shape in Newport. A 3:25 will get me where I want to be, which is Hopkinton.

I think this is definitely the best LR I've ever had. Certainly a lot better than my 22 in October before Memphis, when I really struggled. The weather was ideal -- mid-40s, overcast, minimal wind. A few sprinkles fell but not enough to get anything wet.

I'm starting to like the idea of going out really conservatively in Newport, then gradually picking up the pace as I go. Kinda what I did today, only with a little faster start; maybe run in the low 8s for four or five miles and then pick it up from there. It was nice being able to actually accelerate after the 17-mile mark today. The turnaround in Newport is at mile 15, so that would correspond pretty well with trying to put the hammer down at the turnaround. Psychologically, I do well with accelerating on the return leg of an out-and-back, which is one reason I think Newport was a good choice for my BQ. Maybe that realization that I'm homeward bound helps me overcome my governor in the Noakes central-governor theory.

Night Sleep Time: 7.00Nap Time: 0.00Total Sleep Time: 7.00
Comments
From Robert on Sat, Mar 21, 2009 at 19:11:47 from 65.101.173.205

Great job! There is a well known pace strategy for keeping the first 6 miles of a mary over MP. I think it goes MP+30 sec. for 2 mi, then MP+20 for 2, then MP+10 for 2, then flat MP until mile 13, and then you slowly work at going negative. I'd like to try it, but chicken out at the starting line and usually just stick to MP. However, I did run a really hot race (Twin Cities) starting slower by 30 sec. for the first 4-5 miles and then went to MP. That helped at ton at the end and there was no wall (a first). I think it really pays to start slow, but you have to trust yourself.

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