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TOU Marathon

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Location:

Woods Cross,UT,USA

Member Since:

May 01, 2006

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Age Division Winner

Running Accomplishments:

Current Running Life:
5k: 17:50 (2010 NSL)
10k: 38:20 (2007 Des News)
1/2 Marathon: 1:23:30 (2009 Provo Half)
Marathon: 2:53:46 (2007 St George)

Short-Term Running Goals:

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

 

Personal:

Daddy to 3 great kids - 16 year old son and 11 year old twin daughters

I do not know what tomorrow will bring but I do know it will start with a run.

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Saucony Grid A2 Lifetime Miles: 125.40
GoRun2 Lifetime Miles: 53.70
Adrenaline 2014 Blue (1) Lifetime Miles: 442.70
Adrenaline 2014 Red (1) Lifetime Miles: 429.20
Race: TOU Marathon (26.2 Miles) 03:10:43, Place overall: 74, Place in age division: 8
Slow milesFast milesTotal Distance
0.0026.2026.20

This was marathon number 4 of 5 of the Utah Grand Slam series. I ran Park City 4 weeks ago and will finish the series in St. George in 2 weeks. I started getting a little achy and my stomach was a little unsettled a couple of days before race day and feared the flu was coming on. I wasn’t overly stressed and figured if I did get sick I would just run this one easy and have extra energy for St. George. Went to get my usual pre-race meal at Fazoli’s only to find out that it had gone out of business. I had to settle for some nasty pasta dish at Ruby River. Got up at 4:00 a.m. on the morning of the race and after getting everything together realized that I couldn’t find my Garmin. After looking for 10 minutes I finally gave up and went with the old fashioned Timex Ironman. The stars weren’t lining up like I had hoped they would.

It was very cold the morning of the marathon – about 26 degrees at the start. The first 14 miles are run down Blacksmith Fork canyon. It is a gentle downhill with only a few uphill bumps. Starting at mile 18 the course flattens out with a few climbs. I expected to run a slightly positive split because of the nature of the course. I ran this as my first marathon in 2004 where I went out way too fast and ended up walking quite a bit the last 6 miles. I planned on holding back a little in the beginning so that I didn’t have a repeat performance.

Averaged 7:08/mile the first 4 miles (so much for holding back). I felt good but mentally I thought it was a bit too fast. I made a conscious effort to back off and averaged 7:27/mile for miles 5-7. My pace was all over the place the next 5 miles (7:10, 7:05, 7:25, 7:27, 7:17). I’m not sure how much of this was due to terrain and how much was from my inability to hold a steady pace. Somewhere during the 12th mile I started experiencing a little intestinal distress. I decided that at the start of the 13th mile I better address the issue. Hit the POP and lost 1 minute. I was frustrated that this happened and started running angry (not a good thing this early in the race). Started moving up quickly on the group of people that passed me and got even more frustrated realizing that these are people that I had already passed earlier. Mile 13 split was 7:59 but actual running time was 7:00 (half marathon in exactly 1:36:00). Ran mile 14 in 6:45 and caught the runners that I was with when I made the pit stop. I made up the lost time in 2 miles which was probably a mistake. I was still feeling good so I continued pushing it a little and ran mile 15 in 6:59.

We were now out of the canyon and running through rural towns. Miles 16 and 17 were both run in 7:07. This was the last of the downhill and about where I started to fade in 2004. Saw my wife and son at mile 17 and tossed my long sleeve shirt to them. It was still a little cold but I was afraid that I would overheat if I left it on. Was still feeling good and continued to push. Splits for miles 18-20 were a little slower but were dictated by the terrain (7:17, 7:23 and 7:19). I felt strong and wanted to push harder but felt that doing so would be a mistake (I started to push at mile 18 at Park City and paid for it later). I was constantly moving up on other runners and picking them off one at a time. It was fun to feel so strong at points where I felt near death two years ago.

Started doing some quick math to see how reasonable a PR was. Felt that with the upcoming hills I would miss my PR by about 2 minutes. Mile 21 was a little fast (7:03) and I’m not sure why – I think portions of it were downhill. Miles 22-24 were slightly uphill and it shows in my splits – 7:28, 7:37, 7:29. I knew that despite the slower times, I was still in good shape because I was still moving up on other runners. As I would approach them, I would notice how slow their stride turnover was and knew that I could get by them. Mile 25 was a little slower than average (7:27) because there is a short but nasty climb and also because it is mile 25. For some reason, my mile 25 splits are always slow. I think that this is where I start to give into the pain. I really need to work on being mentally stronger. With 1.2 miles to go I realized that a PR was within reach. It would take a little work but it was definitely doable. Ran mile 26 in 7:06 and the last 0.2 in 1:21 (6:45/mile pace).

Finish Time: 3:10:43 (a 53 second PR).

Overall Place: 74/2,005

Gender Place: 69/1,071

AG Place: 8/123 (my first day in the new 35-39 age category having turned 35 the day before the race – I would have taken 11th place had I run the race 2 days earlier)

Grand Slam standing: Maintained 7th place overall and extended my lead over 8th place.

Even though I had already qualified for Boston, I felt as though I had gotten in through the back door. I qualified at age 34 with a 35-39 age qualifying time because I aged into the higher category. I really wanted to qualify for real before running it. I have no idea how much running I will do between now and the St George marathon in 2 weeks. Most likely will shoot for 40 miles this week and 20 miles the week of the marathon. If I can recover fast enough, I will be shooting for another PR in 2 weeks.

Mile splits were:

1 0:07:03

2 0:07:07

3 0:07:12

4 0:07:10

5 0:07:27

6 0:07:31

7 0:07:22

8 0:07:10

9 0:07:05

10 0:07:25

11 0:07:27

12 0:07:17

13 0:07:59 (bio break)

14 0:06:45

15 0:06:59

16 0:07:07

17 0:07:07

18 0:07:17

19 0:07:23

20 0:07:19

21 0:07:03

22 0:07:28

23 0:07:37

24 0:07:29

25 0:07:27

26 0:07:06

26.2 0:01:21

Comments
From Cody on Sat, Sep 23, 2006 at 21:09:28

Nice job on the PR while "saving some". What is going on with the "Bio Breaks"?? That unlucky mile 13 saw some serious activity today between you and me. I am really impressed with the negative split. You stayed really strong even on the tough 18, 19 miles. I do recall you passing me right before the end. I just couldn't keep up with the man. Good work and good luck at STG. I couldn't do it. I need 6 months to mentally recover before I can put myself through that again.

From Nick on Sun, Sep 24, 2006 at 10:45:21

Good job in the race and congratulations on the PR! All of the hard work you have been doing seems to be paying off.

From Paul Petersen on Sun, Sep 24, 2006 at 16:11:43

Nice job Andy, one race to go! It was good meeting you at the expo.

From Brent on Sun, Sep 24, 2006 at 17:07:38

Andy, impressive given your injury troubles, good luck at St. George. Did this time qualify you for Boston?

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