Friday, June 26, 2009

Western States 100 Starts Tomorrow




Should be a fast race this year on both the men's and women's sides.

here are a couple articles from RW that profile the two top men and two top women.

Men

Women

Recovered? I think not...

NYC: Brooklyn Bridge - New York City WaterfallsImage by wallyg via Flickr

Last night we moved the Run to the Runners' Station due to a private event that had Niketown closed to the public. It was the trifecta of NYC Nike Running. We combined the Runners' Station (Ross), The Running Van (Spenser), and Run Club (me). Ramon decided we should run some repeats over the Brooklyn Bridge. Nevermind the flocks of tourists and the fact that we had miles of the running path on the west side to work with. I jogged over with the front group and started up the incline. My calves immediately tightened up, and felt like they were balling up. They were reminding me of the ridiculousness I'd put them through less than a week ago at Mt. Washington. I watched as the front group pulled away. My legs wouldn't carry me up the incline at anything even resembling a decent pace. I mailed it in early and just did one out-and-back on the bridge. As soon as I got back on flat ground, my pace returned to normal and I hauled back to the Station.

I'm taking today off.

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Thursday, June 25, 2009

More Running

Tuesday I ran with Tiffany during Run Club. We just did some easy miles on the bridal path b/c she's having some shin issues. The rest of the group went up on the road. I felt ok, but not great. logged a little over 6 miles.

Wednesday I went with Run Club out to the track and did speed work. The workout was 800, 1200, 1600, 1200, 800. First three intervals at 5K pace and the last two intervals at 3K pace. I wasn't feeling that great, but muscled through the first three, hitting the 1600 at 6:29. During the 1200, I felt a weird tightness in my leg, so I dropped after a lap and walked it out. I jumped back in on the final 800 and the tightness was gone. The whole workout felt terrible, but I guess that tends to happen after running a tough race the previous weekend.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Swim....Run

no bike tonight, but I got in a decent 35 minute swim (getting just slightly better at bilateral breathing, but I still suck at it) and then knocked out a run. I didn't take a watch and I didn't measure the distance, but if I had to estimate, I'd say it was 6-6.5 miles and I probably did it at around 7:30 average pace.

City Coach Summer Solstice Century (shortened)

I didn't get home from New Hampshire until almost 9 pm last night. By the time I got back, the riders had already been in the saddle for 2 hours. I had debated back and forth if I wanted to head down and ride with them. I finally decided it would be good for me to blow off some steam from a stressful/crappy past couple weeks. I got home, ate a quick bite, and then headed toward Prospect Park.

I don't know why, but I always get mixed up riding down to PP. I have no problem getting back, its super easy, but for some reason...Last night was no exception. I found myself in a somewhat shady area of brooklyn at night, using the GPS on my phone to figure out which street to turn on. Eventually, I got down to the park and started soft pedaling around the loop waiting on the group to catch up. After about a quarter of a lap, Shane caught up to me. We chatted and he told me that he had flatted, so he separated from the group. He and I rode together for a bit and after about another 1/4 of a mile, Shane flatted again. Just then Cane and Leanne caught up, so I latched onto their small group and started riding.

The full group was pretty spread out for much of the beginning of my ride. Eventually Gary caught back up and then we were able to completely regroup when everyone stopped for their food stop. From that point we pretty much rode as a group until the final couple of laps. I found myself out front and decided to pedal out some stress, so I pretty much hammered solo for the last two laps.

I would have liked to have been able to do the full century, but with the ride down to the park and the ride back, I definitely got in over 60 miles. My bike is covered in crap from the ride. The road in the park was wet and we had a nice big 2" deep puddle of water covering the entire road to ride through every lap. I've gotta find some time to clean my bike soon...It looks horrible.

Nothing like knocking out some decent mileage on a Sunday night.

Mt Washington: One tough Run

I took part in the 49th annual Mt. Washington Road Race on Saturday. I put my name in the lottery a long time ago and forgot about it. Then one day I got an email saying I was a lottery winner. So was Shaun. We laughed and joked about it knowing it was far on the horizon. Then Saturday came.

I got up early and ate a bagel, banana, and a clif bar. We made the drive to the start of the of the race, traveling through intermittent rain. When we arrived, the sky was overcast, but no rain was falling. We checked in and wandered around the grounds wasting time until the start of the race. We finally were able to find the guy we had offered a ride down from the summit, loaded the car, and then sent Shaun's mom up to the summit. The report from the summit was that the overhanging clouds were low and that visibility at the summit was over 100 miles. I waited in line for what seemed like forever to go to the bathroom one last time before the race started and then Shaun and I walked up to the starting line.

Shaun wanted to film a bit of the start, so I went into the mass of people and he stood in front of the starting line. The MC said a few things and then a cannon fired (which scared the crap out of everyone) to signal the start of the race. I started out at an easy pace. Shaun ran back to the starting line and then caught up to me, filming as we ran the only flat (short) section on the course. Soon the course started skyward and the sweating began. From the first few steps up the mountain, I knew it was going to be a brutal run.

I quickly left Shaun behind. I actually thought I was running pretty slow, but I guess it was actually "fast" b/c Shaun didn't hang very long. The incline was steep and as I was running, I thought to myself, "there's no way the entire thing is this steep. I'm sure there are sections that will be this bad, but this has to 'flatten out' a little." Shortly after that, I think it might have gotten steeper. Mile 1 came up a lot faster than I was expecting. There were short sections where the road wasn't quite as steep, which actually felt flat, until I looked up and realized the road was still rising before me.

By the time I made it to mile 2 I was already questioning how far I'd be able to run before having to take a walking break. I started bargaining with myself. I'd see a tree or a pole and tell myself I had to run to it. I continued this until I knew I was closing in on the mile 3 marker and then promised myself I had to run until I got to that marker. My calves were burning. The muscles in my lower back were burning. My clothes were soaked with sweat, but I continued making deals with myself.

When I hit mile three, I told myself I had to run to the halfway point before I would allow myself a walking break. However, my pace continued to slow and I found myself walking. I picked it back up and went through the halfway point at 46:58. We had entered the clouds and the temperature was cooling, which seemed to breathe new life into me. I settled into a slow, but steady pace as the road continued skyward. I passed the mile 4 marker and started in on mile five.

The pavement abruptly ended and we ran along a nicely packed gravel road. It was at this point where the road seemed to go vertical. I'm not sure if the road was actually getting steeper or if I was just getting that tired. I had to walk several sections of this stretch. It seemed like one of the longest miles of my life. I kept looking for the mile 5 marker, but it seemed to never appear. Finally, I reached the marker and the road flattened. It wasn't even a faux-flat section. The road was actually flat. I picked up the pace (along with everyone else) and rounded a corner. There were several race photographers snapping away. Around another corner, the road bended skyward again and the course was full of people walking again.

I fought the urge to rest my screaming calves. Visibility had dropped to about 50 feet or so, but the temperature seemed to be warming up again. Somewhere around mile 6, I rounded a corner and the clouds were gone. Clear skies above and clouds below. The transition was so sudden that it took me a little while to look up. As soon as I looked up, I was wishing I hadn't. I could see the road twist up the mountain and the scores of tiny runners making their assault on the peak. I wisely looked away from what was coming and took in my surroundings. The clouds stretched below me as far as the eye could see. There was a single peak protruding from the clouds in the near distance, but other than that, it was a sea of cotton. I put my head down and kept putting one foot in front of the other and worked my way up the road.

I got up to a ridge and was able to look back down on the course where it emerged from the clouds. I imagined someone else coming out of the clouds, seeing my current position, and cursing. It made me laugh on the inside a bit, knowing that's where I was not so long ago. About that time, a girl running next to me blurted out in exasperation, "where is the mile 7 marker!" I laughed out loud, we rounded a corner and saw the marker. There was also a sign that said "photographers ahead, be sure to smile." I figured that meant I should look like I wasn't suffering too much, so I tried to put on my best running "face" and rounded the corner. The Mt. Washington Observatory came into view and I ran past the photographers. I knew I was close to the end, but my legs just didn't want to carry me up the incline.

I promised myself one more short walking break and then began my final assault. The course wound around the back side of the summit and then up to the top. When I got around the back, I finally saw the ridiculous finish. Almost everyone was walking up the final stretch. It was a ridiculous 22% grade. I gritted my teeth and started in. My legs burned as I went up the final couple switch backs, but I could see the finish. There was no way I was going to walk. I made the last turn and picked up my pace to finish strong. I crossed the finish line in 1:40:28.

A blistering ~13:30 pace. It was slow, but I conquered Mt. Washington. I finished 218th out of well over 900 runners. I didn't think that was too bad since I could only run bridges for hill work and since I was at sea level the previous day.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Bilateral breathing: I suck at it

I got back in the pool last night for a quick 30 minutes swim. I really need to start working my breathing from both sides, so I incorporated breathing on my left side. I'm terrible at it. I just can't seem to get it right. Eventually, I suppose. That or I'll drown.

Prior to going to the gym to swim, I knocked out an easy 6 miler at run club with Tiffany.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Nine Mile Monday Night

I needed to relieve a little stress last night, so I went out on a run. I left behind the watch, the sportband, and the ipod. I just ran. When I got to the Williamsburg Bridge I just decided to run it for a while. After a few repeats, I headed home. I got in 9 miles. The weather was amazing, with a slight breeze. There was another girl pounding out repeats on the bridge. We passed each other 4 times during the course of our runs. It made me happy to know someone else was crazy enough to be knocking out bridge repeats at close to midnight on a monday.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Texas A&M wins 2 National Championships!

over the weekend, A&M won both the Men's and the Women's Outdoor Track & Field National Championships!

The Men's Championship came down to the final event. Exciting finish. Read about it here.

Friday, June 12, 2009

The week in review

I've been bad. I haven't updated, but its been a bit of a crazy week.

Last weekend I was able to get in a couple decent runs, including one just over 2 hours. I did a bike/run brick of 55 miles/6 miles.

Wednesday was the Chase Corporate Challenge. The race itself was a complete cluster. Terrible, terrible organization and execution. I managed to run a 22:18, which was a 6:22/mile average. That's definitely the fastest race pace I've ever run in any race.

I'm looking forward to a weekend of running, riding, and swimming. The cervelo should be done soon, which I'm also pretty excited about!

Friday, June 5, 2009

RATW - Recap


3,000 miles.
7 days, 1 hour, 15 minutes, 5 seconds.
92,694 calories burned.
$5,300 raised so far.

It was a long, long week. Riding for 3 hours a day was the easy part. The rest of my week entailed getting up at 3:50 am each morning and working from 9:30-8:15ish every day. I even decided to throw a half marathon into the mix. I was fatigued and dragging for 7 full days, but I wouldn't change it if I could.

The ride was quite surreal at times. After the first 20 minutes or so of riding, Shane would be sleeping soundly as I pedaled away on the computrainer. Each day, I watched the city wake up from behind a glass window. It was as if the outside world was the store window display I was looking at, rather than the opposite. Watching the city wake up was a really cool experience. People walked by. Some were curious, some gave thumbs up or waved. Others stood and watched a little too long--creepy. Then there were the people who had to be stereotypical New Yorkers. They walked by and didn't acknowledge that anything was even going on.

Saturday was probably my favorite of the days, simply because of the craziness of it all. I had an adjusted shift from 4-7 am, rode 56 miles, jumped on a train, and went to run the Brooklyn Half. The running felt way too easy. I cruised through to a 1:36:xx finish without really even trying too hard. I thought sunday would be rough, but I knocked out 54 miles without much trouble. Monday started out rough, but ended up being my best day of riding. Tuesday, I was rewarded with a day of soft-pedaling. I only had to hold about 14.5 mile per hour pace, which resulted in an easy 37 mile day.

The finale was pretty low-key, yet very fitting. JC finished up to a smattering of cheers and applause from a small crowd of customers, fellow riders, a few friends, and store employees. The group of riders posed for pictures both inside and outside of the store, and surprisingly, we were able to amass all 8 riders in the middle of a work day.

It was pretty amazing that we pulled this off over the course of a week without any major injuries and not a single person showing up late for their shift. I'd like to thank each and every person who came by and supported not just me, but any rider. The gatorade, mt. dews, food, gels and such were great, but the important part was your physical presence. It was an amazing pick-me-up, especially for those of us who rode through the night and early morning.

Thanks to JC and Shane for organizing and overseeing the event. I know you guys were running on fumes. Thanks to my teammates who pedaled the other 21 hours of the day. Thanks to all for the donations. And most of all, thanks to JC for inviting me to be a part of the team.

Monday, June 1, 2009