JFK 50 Miler
Apryle & I Prerace |
10th place 6:24:39
2.6 miles 17:50 (6:51 per
mile)
15.5 miles 2:04:06 (12.9
miles = 1:46:16; 8:14 per mile)
41.8 miles 5:19:10 (26.3
miles = 3:15:04; 7:25 per mile)
50.7 miles 6:24:39 (8.9 miles
= 1:05:29; 7:29 per mile)
Upon receiving my first
clinical assignment in Ephrata, PA, I decided to sign up for the JFK 50 in
Boonsboro, MD. Prior to my decision to target such a historic event in
November, I had been maintaining fitness by running 60 to 80 miles per week. At
twelve weeks out from JFK, Apryle and I developed a training plan that
consisted of one long run, two moderate runs, and four ten milers to fill out the
week.
Month
|
Day
|
Miles
|
Time
|
Pace
|
Long
Run
|
|
September
|
31 to 6
|
64.82
|
9:05:00
|
8:24
|
16
|
|
September
|
7 to 13
|
72.44
|
9:13:26
|
7:38
|
18
| |
September
|
14 to 20
|
86.53
|
10:35:35
|
7:20
|
31.07
|
|
September
|
21 to 27
|
66.44
|
8:14:52
|
7:26
|
16
|
|
October
|
28 to 4
|
81
|
10:05:42
|
7:28
|
26
|
|
October
|
5 to 11
|
83.46
|
10:16:01
|
7:22
|
24
|
|
October
|
12 to 18
|
71.25
|
9:00:35
|
7:35
|
16
|
|
October
|
19 to 25
|
57.63
|
6:46:16
|
7:02
|
13.1
|
|
October
|
26 to 1
|
95.24
|
11:52:23
|
7:28
|
26
|
|
November
|
2 to 8
|
56.73
|
7:56:45
|
8:24
|
16.2
|
|
November
|
9 to 15
|
74.33
|
9:29:55
|
8:40
|
14
|
|
November
|
16 to 22
|
94.14
|
11:58:14
|
7:37
|
50.7
|
Apryle Prerace |
Interestingly enough, this
was the least amount of miles per week I have done preparing for an ultra or
even an 8-kilometer cross-country race. However, I boosted my average pace per
week and that appears to have made more of a difference than mileage.
Additionally, I focused more on one long run per week than several moderate
runs per week.
In the last weeks of
August I was in the North Cascades doing some high mileage and steep elevation
gain with Apryle. Then in early September I returned to Austin to start my
fourth semester of Physical Therapy school and train in the scorching Texas
heat.
Stuart Range in Washington |
At the end of October, Apryle and I traveled north to Harrisburg/Ephrata,
Pennsylvania for my first clinical rotation, where I acclimated to the cooler
temperatures of the north.
In late September I
decided to do my first race since the Austin Rattler at the end of March. It
was a low-key race called the Lighthouse Hill Ranch 50K. I covered the distance
in 3:52:33. With that time I knew that I had my work cut out for me if I
expected to break 6:30 at JFK, so I turned up the pace and upped the long runs.
4x800 vs 3200 Challenge in Austin |
The training went smoothly
until early November when I tweaked my back and was forced to take a few days
off of running. I eased back slowly, as indicated by the slower pace and dip in
mileage three weeks out from JFK. I have never been a fan of the taper so it
was tough for me to see such a drop in mileage so close to the race. However, I
put it behind me and continued to press on.
Kenny Janasko & I in the college days |
On race day I felt primed
and ready to go; Apryle made the trip to Boonsboro with me and we went over a
rough plan for meeting places during the race. I also got a chance to meet up
with my old friend, college teammate and JFK 50 standout Kenny Janasko (6:12:47
2012 & 6:16:45 2013). Between Apryle’s support, Kenny’s course advice, and
my solid year of faster-paced training, I was confident.
I started the race at the
tail end of a lead pack of roughly 10 guys and chatted a bit with former Mount
Union competitor Tim Kelly. However, upon entering the AT trail section I
dropped off the back and ran alone for that stretch of miles. I had previewed
that section on November 8th and felt a little shaky about it. I was
concerned about rolling an ankle, however, the leaves had cleared off the trail
and it was much more runnable on race day.
Somewhere on the Towpath |
In the transition from AT
to Towpath, I noticed I had developed icicles in my hair and decided I should
ditch the stocking cap for my hat. The twenty-degree weather on race day did
not hinder me as much as I thought it might given my central Texas residence
for much of the year. Apryle was there to meet me with food and water and it
was a great boost to see her after about two hours of solo running in the densely wooded AT trail.
I hit the towpath and
according to the post race splits averaged 7:25 per mile on that stretch. I
remember being passed once or twice and passing about four people myself. From what
Kenny and Apryle were telling me at various points, I was in tenth place. At
around 38 miles I remember Kenny telling me that I was 6 minutes ahead of his
time from the previous year, which was motivating but I ultimately relinquished
that advantage.
Photo credit:
|
When I got to the road
section I had nothing left and had to take a rest and walk the small hill. I thought that I was in trouble at that point. If the section of
road continued to have even the smallest inclines I would be forced to walk.
But the road stayed rolling in nature and I got a second wind and was able
to
hold tight at 7:21
pace. This was the first ultra I have ever run without completely
falling apart in the latter part of the race.
Finish; Photo Credit: |
My finish could have been
stronger; however, I can think of very few instances where I have finished a
race strong. In high school 5k’s I would try to build an insurmountable lead so
that I could not be kicked down. In college I lost All-Ohio spots because I had
no finishing kick and since starting ultras I have lost 50+ spots in the
Leadville 100 in the last 30 miles because my pace would be stifled to a slow
trot. Perhaps it is due to poor nutrition or perhaps it is a mental block.
Whatever the reason, I will continue racing and trying to figure it out.
I don’t remember what
clothes I wore; but they undoubtedly were materials left behind by someone at a
high school track meet back in 2006… The shoes: Apryle’s mother found some
Nikes on clearance in a mall in Harrisburg. Dihydrogen monoxide: I took a
handheld water-bottle filled it with hot tea… and lost it somewhere on course
(thanks to the person that mailed to my parents address!). Food: Thanks to
everyone at the aid stations; I think I had about 12 gu packs… but my memory
escapes me.
Kenny, Tyler & I Post Race |
Apryle & I Postrace |
Just squeaked on next to the podium |
To quote Slug from
Atmosphere: “Some day I’m going to be so cool, but for now I’ve got cheap shoes
so I keep losing”. In all seriousness all the fancy tech gear and light-weight shoes
can make you look like a runner, but what really makes the runner is the
dedication, miles and fortunately or unfortunately genetics.
He's a beast!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Eddie
ReplyDelete