Psycho Wyco – Run Toto Run – 10 Mile Trail Race

Last weekend was a great workout.  It was my 20-mile run in preparation for Little Rock 26.2.  This week, the weather was pleasant, a little bit cooler than it has been.  On Tuesday, I started to debate if I should do the trail race.  Coach Ken gave me a call and told me about another one of his athletes creating an ankle issue from the exact same trails.  My teammates, at work, were seemingly all against me doing it as well.  On Friday, when I got the killer tech-shirt and mug from packet pickup (thanks Sharon), I made up my mind.  I’m doing this!  The shirt is perfect!  I couldn’t NOT wear the shirt, and I didn’t want to be the person wearing the shirt without doing the event.

I didn’t get out of the house as fast as I wanted to, but luckily, traffic was non-existent.  When I stopped at the 7-Eleven to get my 5-hour energy, the lady working recognized me as I walked in and asked me “What flavor today?” Like I come in everyday or something, which I don’t.  It felt good to be recognized, then I felt a little weird.  Anyway, when I got to the event.  The bus was waiting for me, and my buddy Matt, from work, had a spot open right next to him.  Seeing a friendly face that early set things in the right direction.

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We got to the race starting spot about 40 minutes before the start of the race.  Since it was about 10*F  (-12* C), we were talking about how to stay warm.  I felt like I was dressed properly.  I had 5 layers on top, tri-shorts under my running tights and 2 pair of socks.  There were about 15 other folks from work, that I recognized, at the start.  I met a few coworkers for the first time too.

From the start the race just got better and better.  All the friendly faces. It was super organized.  There were a few dogs out too.  The vibe was just great.  When they started the race, I went out slow, just like I will in Little Rock.

I ran this race with Tyson the last time, but I thought it was too cold for him today.  I was a little nervous about doing it solo since he actually helped me out so much the last time we raced.  Today, I only used my hands twice.  The first time I pulled on a tree that was hanging over the trail, and it alost came down on the person behind me.  The entire valley heard the tree crack.  The second time, I encountered a large rock and had to put my hands out in front of me in order to not crash into it with my knees.  That was the cause of the minor cut I have on my left hand.  I came out of this race in much better shape than I did in 2010.

It was obvious from the start that I remembered every single foot of this trail.  Trail running is pretty much heads down, especially in these conditions.  I could have told you every spot that Tyson pulled me up.  The spot where Tyson stopped me from landing on my butt.  The spot where Tyson didn’t stop me from hitting my butt was recognized too.  I remembered all the aid stations, and I even used the aid stations properly this time.

When I made it to mile 3 without really any discomfort at all, my confidence was high.  I started looking at my watch to see my pace.  At that point I was still pretty much just going with the flow and stuck behind quite a few people.  I decided that I wanted to catch 1 person every mile.  I still didn’t want to race and get hurt.  I was very focused on staying healthy.  However, it is a race, and I enjoy race day.  So, I started to pass a few people and get out of the bunch that I was in.

At the next aid station, I was still feeling super.  I kept going.  I think there were a few people that I had to pass multiple times just because I was taking my time at the aid stations.  At the aid station at mile 5, my 5-hour energy was frozen almost solid.  I got what I could and a slushy cup of gatorade and went on.  I remember walking the hill after that section last time, so I didn’t let myself do it this time.  The only time I was walking today was when I was in a bunch and on a very technical section.

I noticed that in the first 5 miles everyone was pretty much moving forward.  On the second half, it seemed like the people I passed were much more willing to stand aside when they heard me approach.  I was very surprised when I saw people wearing headphones, but I did only see a handful, well, maybe 10 total.  It just seemed like getting a heads up on slippery sections would be worth leaving the music in the car.  I’m not judging, I’m just saying, the people behind that one girl with music on heard me give a heads up and didn’t fall on their face.

I saw a few wipeouts, heard a few wipeouts, and after the race saw some torn up gear, destroyed shoes, and plenty of mud splatter.  I felt like I was pretty clean.  Actually, I was pretty clean.  My shoes didn’t even have mud on them when I got to the car.  My socks were dirty, and so was the bottom of my tights, but other than that, I was good.

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I finished with 1:57:40 officially.  That’s over 1.5 hours faster than the last time.  Quite a significant PR for 10 miles.  117 of 296 overall.  I’m happy anytime I can be in the top half!

I can’t say enough how much I really love the events this group puts on.  As much as I loved the race the last time, it was even better this time.

I hope to do this race again, and maybe next time I will try the 50k.

Long Run – Eagle Creek by dashauncarter at Garmin Connect – Details

Long Run – Eagle Creek by dashauncarter at Garmin Connect – Details.

Longest run of my training cycle complete

I let my virtual partner (9:50) get out to a good lead. I had Tyson with me the first 2.5 miles and I had to take a natural break. I didn’t stop my watch just to see how prepared I actually am. I used this as a mental toughness workout. I wanted to catch the virtual partner in the last mile. Saving as much energy as I could but still having the win within reach. I don’t think my plan could have played out any better. Going into the last lap I was just thirty-ish seconds behind. I still had enough gas in the tank to catch up to the virtual partner and pass him by over 20 seconds. I know its silly, but this felt like such a huge win for me mentally. Better yet, my “average moving pace” was 9:23 and I feel super 11 hours later. I’m very excited for this race. I’m not sure that a sub-4 is totally out of the question, but a 4:20 should be very doable with descent weather.

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2012-02-05

  • It's race day! #
  • Huge PR. Cut 5 minutes. My 10k pace today was faster than my 5k race-pace in December. 48:33 unofficially. #groundhog10k #
  • 48:30.9 officially!!!!!! Groundhog 10k. Results are on KC Running Co. website. #
  • Can't sleep. #
  • "… cancer doesn't care if you're pro-choice, anti-choice, progressive, conservative…" Patrick Hurd #
  • My phone was so jacked that I wasn't even getting text messages. #hardreset #
  • Note to self: get @jillianranee and @babyeac a "friends of the zoo" pass for the spring #

Groundhog 10k

I wasn’t really feeling like I was going to have a good race. I have had some great workouts the weekends leading up to the race. I also had some serious pain-in-my-feet issue. I was pretty confident that I was going to get a PR but I didn’t think that I would get anywhere close to my goal.

I got up thinking that I would get there early enough to watch the 5k. Instead I woke up early and took Elizabeth to get breakfast for Jillian. I got to the event with just enough time to warmup and get in line.

One of the best parts of race day, is seeing all of my MTC friends and seeing all my peeps from work, outside of work.

My timing was pretty perfect in regards to warmup, breakfast, potty, and being ready to start. Since I wasn’t confident going into the race, I had a sausage McMuffin for breakfast. My energy and stomach felt perfect while they were doing the countdown for the start.

At the start I told myself that I just want to PR. My warmup mile was faster than PR pace so I felt like I could go out at an 8-minute pace. I would just do my best to hang on from there.

This is an underground race so my footpod was replacing the gps. I have learned to use the mile markers to mark my laps instead of relying on the footpod. It works great for most things, but not so great when trying to PR in a race.

My first mile was fast. I was just waiting for the bonk for every mile after the first and it never happened.

I finished ahead of my previous PR by 5 minutes. I finished ahead of my 10k goal for the year by over a minute too. I couldn’t be happier with my results.

Official results 48:30.9.

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2012-01-29