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Asics Fleet Half Marathon

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Location:

London,UK

Member Since:

Jan 02, 2006

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Age Division Winner

Running Accomplishments:

Collegiate: 100m - 13.2 (1985) 200m - 27.0 (indoors, 1989) 400m - 62.3 (indoors, 1989) Post-Collegiate: 5K - 21:37 (1998) 5mi - 35:15 (1998) 10K - 45:04 (1998) 15K - 1:11:36 (2006) 20K - 1:35:34 (2006) Half - 1:42:03 (2007) Marathon - 3:37:04 (Cal International, 2000)

Short-Term Running Goals:

Get my weekly mileage in the 35-40 range.

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

I guess at this point I just want to keep running for fitness and weight control.

Personal:

I was born in Moscow, Russia in '68, where I started running sprint events in '83. I moved to the US (NYC area) in '91 and didn't run again till '96 when I discovered road racing scene. I was hooked after my first 5K race. I had another break in running from '01-'04 and decided to seriously get back into it in August of '05. I'm married and have 16 year old daughter. I have moved to London in August '06, will probably stay here for a few years.

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Asics Gel Nimbus 9 Lifetime Miles: 354.40
Mizuno Wave Rider 9 (3) Lifetime Miles: 350.73
Adidas Supernova Cushion (2) Lifetime Miles: 293.25
Asics DS Trainer XI Lifetime Miles: 134.68
Saucony Fastwitch Endurance Lifetime Miles: 120.98
Brooks Defyance Lifetime Miles: 13.00
Asics Gel Nimbus 10 Lifetime Miles: 0.00
Race: Asics Fleet Half Marathon (13.2 Miles) 01:42:03, Place overall: 541, Place in age division: 10
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTrainer 1 MilesTrainer 2 MilesRacer MilesTotal Distance
1.509.004.200.000.000.000.0014.70

Finally a good race and a PR! The course was 0.1 long, and not only on my Garmin. I asked couple of other runners with Garmins, both 301 and 305, and they also had 13.2 mi. It's a certified course by UK Athletics, but I have to wonder... Maybe 0.1mi. is acceptable margin of error, but it would be nice to have result of 1:41:xx rather than 1:42:xx.

The good:

- weather: absolutely gorgeous day, maybe even a bit too warm - mid 50s, bright blue skies and a lot of sun (which made it feel too warm at times). Miles 8-10 got pretty windy, but the rest was fine.

- course: very enjoyable and scenic through Fleet town center and countryside. Really nice. Not flat, it was constantly rolling up and down, but without steep hills. Even for me, the hills were no problem, and I don't train on hills at all now. Only mile 10 was mostly uphill, the rest were all up and down. I don't know if the net elevation was positive or negative, but it's not a slow course.

- mile markers: clearly visible and mostly accurate. A lot of miles were just a tad long, that's how extra 0.1mi. appeared, but I was able to split all the miles, even 13th one, which is often not signed in races.

The bad:

- water stations: since it was pretty warm, I tried to drink at each station, they were positioned every 3 miles, approximately. BUT - when will race directors get the idea that serving water in stiff plastic cups is a disaster for runners who try to drink without stopping! You can't make a funnel with plastic cups like you can with paper cups (they tend to break), so what happens is that most of the water ends up all over your body rather than your mouth. I tried to do my best, but only managed to get a few ounces out of each cup. Oh well.

 Now for my race. I lined up in front seeing how narrow the starting road was. Even though the race used ChampionChip, I didn't want to fight my way through hundreds of people. There were more than 3000 people running, it's one of the more popular pre-London halfs. The race started, and everybody sprinted ahead. I really had to hold back. Tons of people passed me in the first 200 meters. That's when it was very useful to have Garmin (and it was working, too!). I saw the pace dipping under 7:30, backed off big time, and let them all go. Many of them came back to me later.

My plan was to go out no faster than 7:50-7:55, and then either pick it up half way, or run even and kick the last 3 miles. In reality, I ran around 7:50 for 10 miles and then gradually sped up. The splits are not even because of course undulations, but I was constantly seeing 7:40-7:55 on each mile so it was okay. More importantly, I was completely comfortable the first 10.5 miles, and that was the key. I ran at the right effort. My breathing was pretty quiet, and I had a steady rhythm going. After the long uphill section between miles 9 and 10, I started noticably passing people. A lot of them were slowing down. But I felt strong and in control, although I was working a bit harder now. The wind was slowing me down a bit on these miles. I kept rolling until mile 11, and then, using the road protected from the wind, I sped up. I saw 7:20 on my Garmin, and that's when I knew I was going to have a good race. I passed dozens of people in these last 2 miles, and no one passed me at all until the finish! It was a great feeling. I was working very hard, but I still felt strong. In the last mile, though, I started to struggle, because there was some uphill again, and I could feel my legs getting very heavy. I was afraid I started kicking too soon, and will die a premature death. But I managed to hold the pace, although it was a painful last mile.

Last 100m. were on the grass, I was sprinting like crazy and didn't see the race clock at all (it was on the right side, and I was running on the left). I also didn't see (and didn't care for) a photographer. I can only imagine what kind of photos I will get!

Official results are not out till tomorrow evening, so I have no idea about my place or official time, but my Garmin gave me 1:42:04, and I'm pretty happy with it. It's a PR by 2:30. I hit my target time, even not considering that the course was a bit long. Hopefully, now I'll hit my marathon target as well.

Splits:

 Mile  Distance  Time  Pace
 1  0.99  7:43  7:49
 2  1.00  8:01  8:00
 3  1.00  7:43  7:45
 4  1.04  8:01  7:45
 5  1.02  7:48  7:41
 6  1:01  7:59  7:53
 7  1.01  7:51  7:49
 8  1.01  7:56  7:51
 9  1.00  7:51  7:51
 10  1.01  7:59  7:55
 11  1.00  7:40  7:39
 12  1.00  7:20  7:22
 13  1.01  7:23

 7:19

 13.1  0.11  0:42  6:30

Update: found race results here. Looks like I was 10th in F35-39 and 59th woman. Overall gun position 541, gun time 1:42:12. Chip time a second faster than I thought, 1:42:03.

 

Comments
From Paul Petersen on Sun, Mar 11, 2007 at 14:50:25

Yea, great job Maria! Good sign for the marathon!

BTW - your garmin measuring 0.1 long is within the error of the unit, but more likely it is due to tangents. Over a distance of a half marathon, it is not uncommon for runners to add on a little bit here and there for swerving out to aid stations, missing some tangents, etc. These little bits can add up.

From Cody on Sun, Mar 11, 2007 at 16:43:26

Congrats on a big PR! All of the hard work and some frustrating racing has finally paid off. Enjoy it!

From Sasha Pachev on Mon, Mar 12, 2007 at 09:06:13

Congratulations! This is your first PR since you started on the blog, right?

From Dave Holt on Mon, Mar 12, 2007 at 12:28:02

Great work Maria - all those longs days at the track are paying off1

From Tam Hoang on Mon, Mar 12, 2007 at 12:32:09

Awesome job Maria, especially the last 2 miles at 7:22" and 7:19" pace - after already running 11 miles at sub PR pace!

There is a saying for every mile you race, it takes a day to recover. Please allow enough time for your body to fully recover. I know I did not do it after setting my 1/2 Marathon PR. Easy said than done!

From Maria on Mon, Mar 12, 2007 at 13:27:27

Thanks everyone!

Sasha, this is my second PR since I started on the blog. The first one was 15K I ran in May 2006.

I don't know how many more PRs I can get, but at 39, I don't take any of them lightly. I'm going to enjoy this one for sure.

From Nick on Wed, Mar 14, 2007 at 11:49:37

YES!!! Just look Maria, you hung in there and kept your head up after some tough races, and look what happened! This was a great effort, and you should feel very happy about it!

From Jon on Thu, Mar 15, 2007 at 00:18:00

Maria

In order to be certified, the course has to be AT LEAST 13.1 miles long. That doesn't mean it can't me .1 or 1 mile longer, and still keep the cert. Many races are actually a bit longer than "official" distance due to needing to put the start/finish in a park or something like that.

From Brent on Mon, Mar 19, 2007 at 19:03:19

Maria, outstanding, wow, I am impressed, no guts not glory, you had the guts to go for it and got the glory of a PR. Wow, way to go.

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