Kerry's Running Blog

St. George Marathon

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Location:

Cedar Hills,UT,USA

Member Since:

Apr 08, 2006

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Age Division Winner

Running Accomplishments:

5K: 21:39 (2006) Half marathon: 1:33:45 (2006) Marathon 3:31:49 (2006)

Short-Term Running Goals:

Lose some weight and get back into racing shape. Run more races this year.

 Next race: St. George Marathon

Long-Term Running Goals:

Stay healthy and in good enough shape that I can more or less keep up with my youngest daughter.

Personal:

My wife Laureen got me into running. She went into the St. George Marathon Ten Year Club last year and I should go in this year. I have two daughters (15 and 21).

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Cumulus12 Lifetime Miles: 10.65
Race: St. George Marathon (26.2 Miles) 03:31:49, Place overall: 909, Place in age division: 74
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
0.0026.200.000.0026.20

Perfect day for a race. Loved running by moonlight with the cool temperatures. Started out with Paul, Cory, Tom and Kevin. We lost sight of Tom in the first mile (as he went on to a 3:17 finish). Caught up with Larry, Wayne and Kent and ran with them for a while. First mile warming up and dodging people in 8:19 (HR 136). Second mile in 7:59, HR edged up to 151 with the uphill section. Third mile 7:28 pace and with the downhill HR fell to 148. Was definitely holding back through these early miles to avoid the usual crash and burn around 20. Lost Cory at one of the water stops as he was having some plantar pain.

Covered the next four miles at a comfortable pace (7:28, 7:42, 7:24 and 7:16). HR stayed below 150. Started to feel some strain heading up Veyo and into Dammeron Valley. Managed 8:49 and 8:25 over the next two miles. We stopped for a POP break at the beginning of mile 10 and only hit 8:50. At that point the sunlight warmed us up a bit. Mile 11 in 8:43, mile 12 in 8:11. HR 152 to 155 heading up the hill.

We felt tired by the time we finished the climb through Dammeron Valley and it felt good to just let gravity take over. Mile 13 in 7:47, 14 in 8:04 (took another POP break) and 15 in 7:44. We pretty much held the same pace through 18 (7:43, 7:49, 7:50). As Paul was feeling the lingering effects of TOU and wanted to drop back, I plowed on ahead.

I was dreading the next part of the course as it was always during this section that things began to fall apart for me. I felt OK, however heading up the 2 percent grade and finished it in 8:27 (which was faster than I'd projected). The next mile was about the same (8:31). I checked my time at the 20 mile mark and was surprised to see that I'd hit my projected time for a 3:30 to the second. That gave me a burst of energy just as I was hitting the downhill section (7:36 for mile 21). For some reason, I slowed for the next mile (8:22) and my HR climbed to 160. I was starting to feel pretty tired, but the crowds lining the streets provided a big boost so I managed a 8:01 for mile 23 and for mile 24. After turning onto the diagonal, I was feeling pretty much beat. My pace dropped to 8:20 for mile 25 and to 8:50 for mile 26. Realizing that I'd slowed way down and that after all that effort I might miss qualifying, I pushed the last .2 mile as hard as I could (2:06) and finished in 3:31:49, slightly disappointed that I hadn't come in under 3:30, but just greatly relieved to know that all the hard work had paid off with a Boston qualifying time. It was such a great feeling to have reached that goal.

Comments
From Paul Ivory on Mon, Oct 09, 2006 at 19:39:50

Kerry, again congrats on qualifying for Boston. Are you going to give any more of the race details past the mile 18? You did a great race.

From Paul Thomas on Mon, Oct 09, 2006 at 22:07:03

Congratulations (again) on running an awesome race, Kerry, and qualifying with minutes to spare. Your training this year has been inspiring. I was thrilled that you were able to reap the fruits of your labor. It was great running with you (as long as I was able to). As I saw you pull away around mile 18, I knew you were going to make it. That's twice this year you left me in the dust. It's not going to happen again. Next time, we're both going to PR.

From Sasha Pachev on Tue, Oct 10, 2006 at 09:05:19

Good work! The training has paid off.

Mile 22 has some uphill in it. Also, as you are moving along and it gets warmer, you dehydrate and HR starts to drift up a bit. Your muscles also get sore, so you lose economy. That means even without dehydration and other influences that

raise your HR, it will be higher at the same pace. I believe also the loss of electrolytes can raise your HR. Not sure if the glycogen depletion and low blood sugar alone would do it, but it is also possible. I'd say it would if you are still running the same pace.

From Kerry on Tue, Oct 10, 2006 at 09:52:44

Thanks, Sasha, for all your advice and encouragement! I don't think I would have put in as much work without the support I received through the blog. I felt a lot of gratitude those last miles as I was still running.

I took eGel at 5, 11 and 17 and had planned on taking one more at 23, but I thought I might gag if I tried to get one more down. It might, however, have given me a little boost for the last two miles. I'm looking forward to this coming year and setting some new goals.

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