Of Mice and Marathons

Sugarloaf Marathon

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Location:

Lake Orion,MI,

Member Since:

Dec 28, 2011

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

PRs

16:52 Phillies Charities 5k (2016)

35:52 Beach to Beacon 10k (2015)

58:10 Broad Street 10 Mile (2016)

1:16:02 Philadelphia Rock and Roll Half Marathon (2015)

2:46:54 Philadelphia Marathon (2015)

Personal:

I live in Michigan with my wife, Megan, and our boys, Charlie and Sawyer. I started running in September 2010.

(Please note that Strava links might contain blog inappropriate langauge)

 

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 17.80 Month: 188.40 Year: 510.50
Miles With Megan Lifetime Miles: 613.75
Nike Zoom Streak LT2 White/Orange Lifetime Miles: 189.95
Saucony Kinvara 5 Viziglow Lifetime Miles: 530.45
Kinvara 10 Lifetime Miles: 186.30
Kinvara 10 II Lifetime Miles: 137.80
Miles With The Boys Lifetime Miles: 99.90
Nike Zoom Streak LT4 Mr. Pinks Lifetime Miles: 21.60
Saucony ISO Freedom 3 Lifetime Miles: 609.15
Saucony ISO Freedom 3 #2 Lifetime Miles: 154.30
Altra Rivera Lifetime Miles: 337.95
Altra Rivera (Dark Blue) Lifetime Miles: 121.50
Saucony Kinvara 5 (2023 Vault Shoe) Lifetime Miles: 263.15
Saucony Kinvara 5 (2023 Vault Shoe II) Lifetime Miles: 228.00
Saucony Kinvara 13 Lifetime Miles: 188.90
Saucony Endorphin Pro Lifetime Miles: 170.00
Saucony Freedom 5 Lifetime Miles: 43.70
Saucony Kinvara 13 #2 Lifetime Miles: 20.30
Race: Sugarloaf Marathon (26.2 Miles) 02:52:52, Place overall: 9, Place in age division: 3
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
0.6526.380.000.0027.03

This one is for Coach Bam. Today I ran a strong marathon. I'll write more when I am done with my family time.

 I didn't walk! Onset of side cramps, but the old evil Gatorade helped me through. I think I may buy stock to show my appreciation. Strong finish: Mile 24=6:19, Mile 25=6:20, Mile 26=6:22, .22=1:14 (5:44 pace). The final miles were slightly rolling and flat. Course was aided, but there were some hill climbs and some of the downhills threw me more than aided me. I wasn't well prepared for those. I think I ran at the right effort even though the last miles were fast. The effort felt right throughout the race and tough from mile 19 or 20 on, but my legs responded (thankfully). This is sort of turning into a report . . . and I have some hot tubbing to do!

Thank you to Sasha for continuing to operate this blog. It means a lot to me and my running.

It's a good feeling to go from being a 3:09 marathoner to being a 2:52 marathoner in 5 and 1/2 months. Boston 2014!   

RACE REPORT

I was fortunate to stay at a ski house of one of the families who used to live on my parents' street. The race route goes by Sugarloaf Mountain, a famous ski resort in Maine and the house was about 6 miles from the start of the race at a campground where I used to go with a friend and his grandparents. Pretty nostalgic warming up on the campground entrance I hadn't seen since middle school.

After reading one of Paul's old race reports I realized I needed to eat more before a marathon (I also learned this from training when I did my 24 miler; I had a veggie wrap for lunch and it was perfect). The night before I ate a meal I brought from Indiana, which I eat the night before every race and most long runs. On the morning of the race I ate a granola bar (couldn't find my standard Cliff bars), a banana, and an orange. I decided to eat one more banana about an hour and a half before the race. I think my pre-race nutrition was helpful and a contributing factor to my success. I took 3 gels in the first 18.5 miles and called it good after that. Do the math on your longest long run calories wise and subtract what you expect in to burn in the marathon. This is what you need for calories. Of course there's more to it, but I'm guessing the simple equation isn't a bad bet.

Keep in mind the race was not closed to traffic completely or partially. Yehaw! I shouted at one car and gave it the not-very-nice form of a wave when it got a bit too close.

Warmed up for about 6 minutes after spending some time trying to get a satellite on my watch (tall, "cathedral" pines didn't help). 31-32 degrees at the start (not sure what the finishing temp was but I doubt it was more than mid-40s). Lined up a bit behind the line as some folks were in a hurry to go out fast. I knew I would catch them, so I relaxed. I double checked my watch. It had gone into power save mode. Tried to find a satellite, but they began the countdown. I heard "10...9...8...then 5...4" and so on and then the gun fired (I couldn't hear most of the countdown). I just hit start and figured I was manually splitting anyway and I know where my effort is supposed to be. At first I feared not having my Garmin crutch, but I quickly focused on running my race. I went out around what I thought was 6:45-6:50 and got an update before the first mile marker from a pack of guys who confirmed our pace. My watch must have found a satellite on the way because it straightened out eventually.

It was a chatty group those first few miles. One guy in particular. Helpful at first but after 3-4 miles I had to drop those guys because he was driving me nuts. I ran with one guy from those miles until mile 17 or 18 I think.

My single-serving running buddy and I ran with the lead woman for miles 6-10 I think. The 2 mile climb at 8-10 ate me up pretty good. I'm not used to hills like that. I was breathing, but I knew I had some downhills to reward me after mile 10. We dropped the lead woman sometime after 10 but before the halfway point. We hit some hammy screamers after the uphills. I was running 5:30 and still breaking (Coach Krong's advice in my head here, but it was very hard to keep my feet under me with those grades. Earlier a gent did compliment me on my cadence. Great race moment). The bike pacer for the lead woman had earlier told me not to trash my quads as we were going into the downhills. Easy for a cyclist to say (who was breathing harder than me on the uphills). Hit the half in the 1:27 range according to plan.

My friend and I decided around 11-13 miles we were going to slowly catch the next group of guys at about mile 16 or so. I said 18 or so that I wouldn't be anxious about passing them and getting passed in the last 10k. We caught them somewhere around 16 or 17 I think. My buddy (whoever he was) took off, and I ran with 3 guys until mile 21 or 22 when one of them took off. I dropped the last 2 or 3 as they stopped at a water station. I was grabbing cups but not stopping and trying not to slow down. I ran pretty much alone after 21-22. I had some side stitches that ruined my race last fall and they were right there to greet me at mile 21-22. I starting grabbing Gatorade. Magic stuff. After about 3 stations I got rid of them. I decided to turn it on once I I reeled in one last guy just before mile 23 (I know this is correct because I have video my mom took as she was driving by at that time). I don't know what he did in the last 5k, but I put 3+ minutes on him between pushing the pace and him struggling. No one passed me all race (as I recall) but I caught at least 4 in the final 10k and numerous along the way.

Those final miles felt as hard as my previous marathons, but my fitness (or something) carried me through. I split long for few of the last miles, which belies the average pace I was running. 24-26 average paces were 6:19, 6:17, 6:11 (1.03 miles! Ouch!). I hit the partial hard and saw the clock ticking 2:52:50 and pushed in at 2:52:54 with my fist pumping (video to follow). I felt pretty much dead but my form was still solid, and I was upright and felt incredible. I actually had run a strong marathon (aside from some egregious tangent running, which was not helped by an open course + inexperience. I'm still learning).

The rich chocolatey goodness: 6:09 (very short, 6:50 pace), 7:34 (long, 6:53 pace), 6:46, 6:37, 6:41, 6:36, 6:33, 6:43, 7:11 (hill!), 6:49 (hill), 6:24, 6:20, 6:35, 6:3, 6:21, 6:20 (I messed up here, 6:05 average. Think this was the steep downhill. Must have been), 6:30, 6:34, 6:36, 6:42, 6:45, 6:34, 6:32, 6:19, 6:20, 6:22, 1:14 for .22 (5:44 pace)

I feel the aided course helped me but not as much as I expected because I didn't realize the early climbs would be so hard. I don't have an official map, but I think the net drop is 1000 feet (not insignificant by any means).

A++ goal and my BQ by 12 minutes. 16 minutes and 19 seconds off the PR board.

Garmin Activity

We drove back from just before the finish line turn to mile 5 or 6 where we were staying. I was confused about how far we had gone. I thought we were getting close, but we weren't even to Sugarloaf, which is about mile 8. As it turns out, 26.2 miles is a long way to run. I also got to re-experience the course when we went home that afternoon. A long, beautiful beast of road race distance the marathon is.

I'm taking 5-6 days completely off to recover, reflect, and get some academic work done. Thanks everyone.

Newton (Marathon Racer) Miles: 27.03
Weight: 0.00
Comments
From Rob Murphy on Sun, May 19, 2013 at 12:28:17 from 24.10.249.165

Big congratulations!

Enjoy the hot tubbing - you earned it.

From joebell1981 on Sun, May 19, 2013 at 12:39:42 from 99.39.133.24

Awesome run! Well done on the very quick improvement!! That's a great half time, also! I was at Carmel running the full this year (poorly) :) Maybe I'll see around some future local races - I live in Columbus, IN and run Indy races from time to time.

From Jake K on Sun, May 19, 2013 at 12:41:18 from 66.228.74.2

Way to go Jason - that's a nice finish ... No wall!!

From Matt Schreiber on Sun, May 19, 2013 at 13:30:08 from 66.17.102.185

Wow Jason. Congratulations! Can't wait to read the full report!

From Bret on Sun, May 19, 2013 at 14:31:13 from 96.228.167.228

Awesome .... Knew you had it in you. You've got even more. Enjoy the day and relive each moment - it is a great feeling isn't it?

From Bam on Sun, May 19, 2013 at 15:28:39 from 89.126.28.24

Jimmy-Mack-Almighty - what a pr! Congrats on the huge pr and a great race. Enjoy your recovery and as Bret mentioned, relive each moment. Well done Jason, another well deserved result. Be sure and to take the time to recover. Good man.

From SlowJoe on Mon, May 20, 2013 at 06:14:05 from 64.134.156.19

YES!

my prediction was pretty good. Oh, and congrats on the ridiculous PR, look forward to the details

From jtshad on Mon, May 20, 2013 at 07:02:08 from 69.20.183.178

Congrats on the new PR and a strong race. Nice finishing pace!!

From RileyCook on Mon, May 20, 2013 at 09:17:34 from 132.3.45.83

Awesome! Nicely done Jason. You deserved it with all the hard work you put in.

From Andrea on Mon, May 20, 2013 at 12:55:08 from 72.37.171.52

Really excited for you! Sounds like you ran a consistent pace with very impressive last few miles. Congrats :)

From Bam on Tue, May 21, 2013 at 08:31:36 from 89.126.28.24

Great report Jason. You ran a cracking race and this year looks like being another quality year, with more breakthroughs...

From Jason D on Tue, May 21, 2013 at 20:25:27 from 24.1.80.94

Thanks, everyone. I appreciate the support. It was easily my best race. I learned a lot from this buildup and this race (specifically about hydration and tangents!).

Rob: The hot tub was even better than the shower I had after my first marathon. I was very fortunate to have complete use of the house.

Joe B: I was doing some light strides next to you just before we had to line up at Carmel. I was doing to introduce myself, but I was trying to decide if I really had to pee or not!

Jake: I guess not! But I realized this race that when you start to really race rather than run a marathon it feels hard the whole time. You aren't breathing hard, but you do wonder how you can take 8-10 mile tempos and then do a 26+ mile one. My fueling was good, but I think I could have had another banana :)

Matt: Thanks. I surprised myself.

Bret: Driving the much of the course back and then home was pretty awesome. I was able to relive it. The last two days I have been wondering how I ran that hard. More improvements to come.

Jeff: Thanks. It felt like the last 5k of a half when you are working hard, but those legs seem to move on their own. I'm now upset that some of my shorter races didn't have very fast finishes when my strides are around the 4 minute mark.

Joe: I was thinking of your advice on the hills. I was shooting for 1:28 at the half or a bit under and I was right on. Thankfully the hills come early and not late. I'll need to keep that in mind for Boston.

Riley: Thank you. Hard work doesn't always pay off, but it did today. The improvements from now on will be hard fought I think.

Andrea: Thank you, and thanks for tracking me. With a small race, I guess there wasn't much to track :) It had some great aspects to it though. Those last few miles were surreal. I attribute 98% of my success there to clean Maine air of my youth, in contrast to here with the corn processing plant that smells like a pan being washed that had just cooked eggs.

Bam: Hi.

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