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Halloween Halfathon

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Location:

St. Petersburg,FL,

Member Since:

Dec 30, 2014

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

  • 5k - 3/8/14 - Armadillo Run - 15:58
  • 10k - 2/7/15 - BDR, Safety Harbor - 33:17
  • 15k - 2/21/15 - Gasparilla - 51:05
  • 1/2 - 12/14/14 - Holiday Halfathon - 1:13:31
  • Marathon - 10/04/15 - Twin Cities - 2:38:46

Short-Term Running Goals:

2016 Races

Clearwater Halfathon - Jan 11
Donna Hicken Marathon - Feb 14
Gasparilla 15k - Feb 20
Florida Beach Halfathon - Mar 6
??? Chicago Marathon ???

Long-Term Running Goals:

Find balance. Run with my girls. Break 15 in the 5k.

Personal:

Born in 1973 in Southern California.

Ran in high school for Arcadia. They have a famous cross-country team now. In my day, we were famous for dodging our coach during runs.

Over the next 15 years I ran very little, but life was awesome. I lived mostly in Northern California, where I met my wife. We moved back to her native state of Florida in 2005, where I gradually started running more seriously.

 

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Race: Halloween Halfathon (13.109 Miles) 01:20:45, Place overall: 5, Place in age division: 1
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
10.002.004.000.0016.00

AM: 2 warmup, 13.1 in 1:20:45, 1 cooldown. Halloween Halfathon, first in a series of half marathons that brings out good local runners. In the days leading up to the race, I was uncertain if I'd even run. At one point though, I realized I'd regret it if I didn't. Usually going into a race, I'll have done a bunch of work at race pace and have a definite pacing plan. Today I just wanted to hang onto my local competitors as long as I could.

That turned out to be 4 miles. There was humidity and wind to contend with today - neither terrible, but  times were supressed. Which kind of worked in my favor, since our lead pack went out a bit more slowly than it would have otherwise. It was awesome running the first 1/3 or the race with Mike, Sean and Chris/Chris. I regret not being able to hang.

Similar to TCM, my legs became an issue into mile 4. It feels like a numbness in my left hip with decreased mobility, while an ache grows in my left hamstring. Unfortunately, the problem has not improved in the last month - it's actually gotten worse. This is discouraging since I haven't been doing workouts, or mileage - I've been taking it easy and just getting less fit and more injured.

I thought pretty seriously about dropping out when I lost contact with the pack at the end of mile 4, but I haven't DNF'd yet, so I figured why start that precedent now. I ran a lot of miles after that in the 6:30 range, which at least felt comfortable. I figured people would be coming for me sooner or later, but I ran the rest of the race alone. It was a bummer, but not a surprise. I knew there was a pretty good chance I could be in for a day like this. Mike ran great, Sean is on his way back.

As lousy as my time was today, it is the best I've run in a month. I'm going to look at it like that, at least for now. If I still can't run in a month, then I'll be ready to panic.

Comments
From Bret on Wed, Nov 04, 2015 at 11:30:56 from 216.234.133.229

Hey Drew - I must have missed this entry over the weekend. Sorry to hear about the injury. I have been there - where you are "losing" fitness because you are running easy without doing workouts and the injury is not improving - or even getting worse.

Hate to give advice on it - as I think we (runners) all deal with injuries in our own way - Hope it gets better for you and you don't become too frustrated with the down time. You have had a really strong year with some outstanding training and racing. So - as you say - don't panic!

From Drew on Wed, Nov 04, 2015 at 12:47:32 from 24.73.66.122

Thanks Bret - having this race helped shake some things loose (physically and mentally). Then there is this: http://www.runnersworld.com/injury-prevention-recovery/cure-quad-pain-calf-pain-and-heavy-legs

I have sometimes found that counter-intuitive things help - for whatever reason taking a few weeks easy did little to help my legs feel better, but running a sluggish half did help. Or maybe that's just how long the recovery took - sometimes cause/effect is just an illusion, who knows. I'm feeling better at last, so I won't complain.

From butlerbrunning on Wed, Nov 04, 2015 at 16:31:35 from 104.52.197.67

Man alive Drew...sure am sorry to hear about all your troubles..Hopefully with a little r&r you'll be back at it in no time. I'd suggest hopping in a good ole ice bath for about 10 minutes and see if that helps. As much as I hate getting in them there is nothing like them to make my legs feel new.

From Jason D on Thu, Nov 05, 2015 at 23:46:27 from 68.80.27.222

I don't know how you guys do it. I take a week off after a marathon and don't race anything much longer a 10k in the 6 weeks following it. A half might not be for 3-4 months!

To your point about cause and effect in the comments I would add the example my philosophy professor gave me about complex cause:

an overloaded truck goes over a rusty bridge and it collapses. What causes the collapse? If I ask students they will reply definitely either way. The answer I was given was "it's the conjunction." But this is still not correct. The causes are actually far more complex. The bridge is rusty because infrastructure such as bridges is neglected and the truck is overloaded because of efficiency and demand of the capitalist system. Perhaps the driver doesn't use good judgement, and so on.

How does this meandering example apply to running? Injury cause and rehab still seem to be a fairly inexact science and the causes aren't singular. It's mind-blowing to me that I can go to a doctor and they are doing a lot of guess work but I'm in the humanities so I don't have much to say :-)

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