Paul Jenkins -
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Paul Jenkins -
  • ABOUT
  • PODCAST
  • BOOKS I’VE WRITTEN
  • BOOKS I’VE READ
    • So far this year
    • In previous years
  • DECLARATIONS
Race Reports, Running

They built a bridge. I ran over it.

Reading Time: 5 minutes

If you look real close, you can see me...

It’s funny how we can be so close to something so big, and never know about it.  Kind of like living with a big ‘ol buffalo in your den and waking up one day and realizing it’s been there the last 5 years or so.  That’s a little how I felt when I heard about the Bridge Run down in Charleston, SC.  Granted, I’ve only been running a little over 3 years, but I was still surprised that I’d never even known about a 10k that has been run annually since 1978 and which now attracts more than 30,000 runners each year, and this year was no exception.  A record 40,000+ registered, and just under 35,000 showed up and ran, so I felt like I had a good shot at finishing in the top 10…thousand.

Just to give some comparison to the numbers, here’s what some other famous races draw:

  • Boston Marathon: around 25,000
  • New York Marathon: around 45,000

The number of runners was about 2.5 times the population of my hometown and a little over half the size of my entire county.  From what I understand, previous years the gun has sounded and everyone just took off, so with the growing crowds they decided to use a wave start this year and we were herded into corrals based on our expected finish time.  I registered in the 49:00-60:00 minute finishers, and apparently so did about 33,000 other folks, so I ran in a crowd the entire race.  That part of the experience was pretty frustrating, because I had really hoped to go sub 50:00, which meant an average pace of around 8:00/mile, but I knew right away that it would be very difficult when I ended the weaving in and out of mile 1 in 8:21.  Still, I was hopeful that the crowd might thin after that first mile. Ummm, no.   Continue reading

April 12, 2011by Paul Jenkins
Race Reports, Running

A Tale of PRs, Pee and Puke (Almost)

Reading Time: 8 minutes

Great race. Great medal. Weird dude in the corral.

March 26, 2011 has been circled on my racing calendar for quite some time now. First, after running it last year with Chris Pate, we both wanted to run it again to improve our times. Second, it would be a good excuse to take both our families to see DC. Third, I bought a calendar that already had that date circled. Fourth, I knew I’d be able to get a PR (personal record) on this tough, but quick, course. I had 2 things almost guaranteeing that:

  1. I’ve been running tempos every week since the end of December and as a result my “easy” pace had become almost identical to the pace I ran for the entire DC race last year.  I knew that if I ran only a little quicker than that, I’d PR easily.
  2. Chris Pate.  Ever since he kicked the crap out of me during his first and my second marathon (great story – read it here), I’ve wanted to beat him.  He’s a great friend, and a fast runner, and had become my white whale.  When he mentioned something about going sub 1:50 in DC, I said it didn’t matter what he ran, cause I was going to beat him.  Unfortunately, he tweaked his knee in training and had to DNS.  It’s a shame, because it would have been a classic battle, too.  At any rate, the gauntlet had been thrown and the thought of a sub 1:50 kept me motivated in training, even though my goal going into the year was sub 1:55.

Since Chris got hurt and couldn’t go, that took one family out of the trip.  We had another family mention maybe going, but since we’re all headed down to Charleston next week-end for the Bridge Run, they decided not to do both trips.  As it turned out, nobody went except me.  Nothing says “hours of country music and talk radio” quite like an 5 1/2 hour road trip each way, so I set out at lunch on Friday with 610 The Fan blaring about the Duke and UNC Sweet Sixteen games and went off to pursue what would hopefully be a big PR for me, and at the very least my first half marathon finish under 2 hours after 3 previous attempts.

It's hard to take pictures while you're driving.

The drive up was fine, and I snapped a couple shots on the way into Washington.  I decided to go straight to the Expo and had hoped that I wouldn’t hit much traffic.  Yeah, right.  It took a bit to get parked and walk in to get my stuff. I saw some pretty good products, sampled some of the sports drinks, and chuckled at the guy giving the speech about the course and telling everyone to please look up around mile 12 so they wouldn’t miss the division of the marathon and half marathon runners. As he said, “With the blinking traffic signs and volunteers yelling at the runners, every year someone will cross the wrong finish line and be amazed at how easy that marathon was!”  On the way out I ran into Lou and Harriet, 2 friends I’ve met through the online running community at Running Ahead.  They’re both extremely strong runners, and I hope to be like them someday.  It was a nice surprise to bump into them in a crowd of a gazillion people.

Pretty uneventful night before the race. By the time I got to the hotel and checked in, it was after 8, so I ordered some room service (a club panini and fries, probably not the best pre-race meal) and ate it while watching some March Madness.  I made sure I stayed off my feet and probably went to sleep somewhere around 11:00 pm.

Decent crowd at the Expo when I was there.

The alarm sounded promptly at 4:41 am and I got up, had some coffee and a Cliff Power bar, and was in the car leaving the hotel shortly before 5:30 am.  I don’t mind saying that I was pretty nervous, I guess because the 2 weeks before the race I hadn’t felt any real groove in my runs, and so I wasn’t sure how my body would respond in the race conditions.  Traffic wasn’t too bad, and I was parked and done in the bathroom in time to run a couple of warm-up miles at an easy pace with some race pace sprints thrown in.  The warm-up didn’t do much to calm my growing concern, and as I made my way into Corral #5 I was in desperate need of a diversion.  Cue the weirdest dude I’ve ever met in a race…

As I stood to the side of the corral, one of the members of the 3:45 marathon pace group came and stood beside me, so I struck up a conversation with him about his strategy, how many marathons he’d run, etc.  I tried not to be too distracted by the way he was wrapping his foil cape around is waist, but when he handed me his empty Gatorade bottle and asked me to hold it, I asked him what he was doing.  Turns out that he does this a lot, and by “this” I mean wraps a foil cape from a previous race around his waist and pees in an empty Gatorade bottle while talking normally to a total stranger about what he’s doing.  2 words came to mind: BI…ZARRE.

Thankfully, crossing paths with Mr. Public Pee took my mind off the impending race long enough to breathe, and then we were off.  It was a little crowded for the first mile, but I was surprised how easily I was able to navigate to people and find a nice early rhythm. The first mile was a bit of an uphill and then flat for the second, and I got through them perfectly in 8:37 and 8:22.

I knew that miles 3 and 4 were downhill and so I’d planned on running them in the lower 8’s, and when I saw them click off in 7:55 and 7:57, I had 2 thoughts: I was running too fast, and I was running too fast but felt awesome and should try to run a 1:45.

I always wear my Garmin in a race to keep an eye on my pacing, and I also wear my heart rate strap, but I never look at my heart rate during a race because it just messes with my head too much. I say all that because maybe if I had looked at it, I might have made a different decision at this point in the race.  Since I didn’t, I kept pushing for a 1:45 and started the uphill section of the race.  Miles 5 and 6 are a steady climb of about 90 feet or so, and I covered them in 8:05 and 7:48.  I was surprised when I saw that the uphill 6th mile had been my fastest to that point, and I still felt fairly good.  Mile 7 was the biggest and steepest uphill of the race (at almost 100 feet of climb) and I ran it in 8:21 (which included a quick walk for a gel and water).  I felt quite winded at the top, but kept pushing on, thinking the worst was behind me.  Little did I know that my heart rate had already climbed to 193 during that last uphill.

My pre-race strategy was fairly simple.  I had decided that I’d check my time at key intervals like mile 5, the halfway point (mile 6.5), and mile 10.  Anywhere between 40-42 minutes for each 5 mile section was the goal, and so far I’d been on track.  Knowing that the course was more uphill in the first half and downhill in the last half, I had decided that a negative split was very possible, and so my halfway time goal was 55 minutes.  I’d hit it in 53:27, and knew that if I did run a negative split, 1:45 was still very possible.  Mile 10 would be my next big indicator, especially since miles 8, 9, and 10 were mostly downhill.  I had planned to run them close to a 8:00 pace, and when I saw that I’d done them in 8:19, 8:06, and 8:14, I knew something was wrong.  Finishing the first 10 miles in 1:21:44 kept me in denial and I did the quick math in my head about how fast I’d need to run that last 5k in order to get in at 1:45.

Without knowing that my heart rate had been averaging in the high 180’s ever since mile 5, I went for it.  Mile 11 was downhill then flat: 8:03.  And that, my friends, is where the run for 1:45 ended.  Mile 12 was uphill, and I had nothing left.  I ran it as hard as I could and would walk for a few seconds when I needed to.  it took me a few of those breaks to get to the top, and by the time I’d run that mile in 9:15, the 1:50 pace group passed me.

Without dragging this report on longer than necessary, I have to say that this is the moment of the race I am most proud of.  When I made the decision early in the race to go hard after 1:45, I truly believed that if I blew up in the last 5k, I’d still at least get a 1:50, and so when the 1:50 pace group passed me and I could feel my body fading like it has in my other half marathons, I really struggled mentally.  In past races, this has been my breaking point, and would normally mean a slower mile, followed by another and then another, and so on until the end of the race, be it a half or a full.  But not this time.  I remember saying to myself, This is why you ran all those tempo runs, why you pushed yourself to the limit week after week.  I felt like my goal was gone, and yet I still determined that I was going to push as hard as I could to the end.

I didn’t check my Garmin much after that point, only every now and then to see where I was time wise.  I don’t even remember seeing my pace, but I definitely limited my late race fade to that 1 mile, and later I was surprised to see that I’d run mile 13 in 8:24.

The final push of the race involved a small uphill climb followed by a right turn that led to the finishing chute.  As I pushed up the hill, I looked down and saw 1:48:something and was filled with mixed emotions realizing that it was very possible that I had pushed myself to the limit and was going to come up just mere seconds short of what I had worked so hard for.  Screw it, I thought, and dug deep.  As I entered the last 100 yards or so, I was shocked to look down on my watch and still see a 4 instead of a 5, and I sprinted for everything I was worth until I crossed the line and bent over with my hands on my knees and waited for the puke that I could feel in my throat.  A few deep breaths later I was still puke free, and I heard a volunteer asking if I was okay. I told her I was just really tired, but I was smiling, because bent over I could see my Garmin and it read…

1:49:32.

For the record, I ran 2 PRs during the race. The first 10k of the race was my fastest by about 3 minutes, and my finishing time for the half marathon was a 14 minute improvement over my previous best. Here’s the course:

 

March 28, 2011by Paul Jenkins
Race Reports, Running

Winter Flight 8k race report

Reading Time: 4 minutes
Runners at the start of the Winter Flight 8k

This is the front of the pack. I actually got in there after snapping this pic. I'm an idiot.

Cliff notes version:
Goal was anything under 40 minutes. Finished in 39:04. Yay me!

The longer version that is much more fun to read because it has really long run-on sentences that can waste a large portion of your day:
I’ve had my eye on this race for a few weeks, because I thought it would be a good chance to test whether or not the tempo runs I’ve been doing since the first of the year have had any positive effect. I’ve been pretty sure that I was getting a little faster, but like they say, if you haven’t done it in a race, you really don’t know.

When I got up and was getting ready on race day, I started having real doubts about whether or not I was going to get anything under 40:00. Even though I had run a 4 mile tempo run at a “better than hoped for” pace a couple of weeks earlier, I hadn’t had a tempo run feel as good as that one since, and the more recent ones had even been a little slower.

If you log stalk me over at Running Ahead, you’ll see that I’m making a concerted effort – perhaps for the first time – to train my body to not only run fast, but to run fast farther. That’s been the reason for the tempo runs, and this was going to be my first real “game day” taste. I’ve had a growing concern that I might be one of the “practice great, play terrible” guys who could knock out pretty decent weekly mileage but never translate that into the expected race results. One of the users over at RA (thanks, L Train) suggested that tempo runs could help and even went so far as suggesting that my first 2 marathon times and training thus far were similar to his. Since he’s qualified for Boston with a marathon time that’s over an hour faster than mine, I listened.

Anyway, enough of that rambling. I got to the race at Catawba College in time to get my bib (#190) and went out for a 2 mile warm up. Best part of the pre-race stuff was bumping into a friend who had run the race twice before and was able to give me some tips. Best advice? First 3 miles are steadily uphill and the flashing light at mile 3 means you’re downhill and flat to the end. Turned out to be a godsend, because the hills were brutal and knowing when they’d end saved me mentally.

Lining up at the start was different, because instead of going to the back like I usually do, I went about 8 lines deep and started towards the front. Talked with a guy who was running it for the first time, too, and was also targeting a sub-40 finish. I suggested we run together and he agreed, but at the start he went out around 7:10 pace, and said “I’m not too good at pacing” so I let him go. Mile 1- 7:42.

One of the things that blows my mind about the people I consider faster runners is their ability to talk in a race. I can talk during a training run, but in something like a 5k I can’t imagine trying to have any kind of conversation, so color me surprised when I struck one up with a guy somewhere in the 3rd mile. I couldn’t believe that we were talking about how he hadn’t run much in the past week or so do to being sick, but I could tell he was strong, and I was feeling pretty good, too. He pushed on up a little ahead of me, and I was cool with that because I was right on target for a sub-40. Miles 2 and 3 went by in 7:59 and 8:03. Slower, but with all the hills (which you can see in the elevation profile below), I still felt good.

As I got to the flashing light that signaled the beginning of the end, I came up on the left side of the bad pacer, and we ran together for about a quarter of a mile until he said he’d need to walk a bit and for me to go on, which I did. My only regret about the race now is that I didn’t get more out of the downhill portion from the light on. But, I finished up mile 4 in 7:46 and was all smiles for about another quarter mile until I saw the hill that my friend had NOT TOLD ME ABOUT, and it was a monster. By the time I’d gotten to the end of it, I found myself walking within sight of the lights at Shuford Stadium where the race ended with a lap around the track. I probably walked about 10 seconds before I told myself that you don’t walk THAT CLOSE to the end, and so I was off again.

One last left turn into the parking lot, followed by a downhill sprint and I was on the track. One of the nicer touches at this small race was that they called out your name as you finished, and as I rounded the last curve, I heard the announcer say someone’s name and that they were going to break 39 minutes. Hearing that got me moving even faster, and I tore down the last 100 meters somewhere around a 6:00 pace. It was cool to hear “Paul Jenkins, from New London” as I crossed the finish line. Last mile (really .98)- 7:36 for a finish time of 39:04.

After the race I tried to find Ryan, the guy who had trouble with the fast start, to see if he’d gotten a sub-40. No success getting with him after the race, but I did see in the official results that he came in with a 40:43. Hated that for him, and just goes to show how important pacing is, especially in shorter races. I’m thankful to people who have taught me that, and it felt good to have a goal and break it.

Winter Flight finish time

Not quite an Olympic Stadium, but Shuford Stadium was nice and the track was the same distance around.

January 31, 2011by Paul Jenkins
Page 1 of 212»

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It means the world to me that you're here. I write mostly to get out of my own head, and tend to focus on culture, faith, church hurt, and emotional and spiritual health.

I long to live an authentic life marked by faith, family, friendships, and joy. If what I write resonates with you and you choose to subscribe, I'd consider myself even more blessed. 😀

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