Pikes Peak 10k - Run10k


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Rockville, Maryland
United States
Montgomery County Road Runners Club
60F / 16C
Sunny
Total Time = 48m 4s
Overall Rank = 137/1445
Age Group = F35-39
Age Group Rank = 21/264
Pre-race routine:

Crazy Saturday. I was running around w/ teeball pictures and game, lacrosse game, swim lesson, my swim set, picking up food for a Sunday baby shower, got my race number, donated running shoes for recycling and then went over to a neighbors house for dinner where I ate and drank too much.

I am (sort of) training for a marathon next weekend and have had some good run workouts just not at the marathon level but super good for a 10k. So I was hoping to do well at this race. The weather was going to be perfect and it is a net downhill course - prime for running fast. My 10k PR was 55:32 and I really hoping to break 50min b/c of the downhill sections on the course.

I was also hoping to use this race as a good way to remind myself how to run at race pace. My last race was in November and that was for survival. My last hard run was in August so the legs differently needed a wake up call.
Event warmup:

Woke up and got some breakfast. Felt ok considering the night before. I got a little warmup in at home by taking the dog for a walk and jog - about 1/2m.

Packed up the family and headed to the start. The race was a point to point so Tony dropped me off then drove the kids to the finish area. I got in some more walking to the start line then added another 1/2 m of jogging and a few strides. Quick trip the porta-potties then positioned myself in the 7:00-8:00 mile pace corral.

Waited an extra 10min b/c the start was late.
Run
  • 48m 4s
  • 6.21 miles
  • 07m 44s  min/mile
Comments:

The race course was awesome. A short run from the start line was a left turn onto Rockville Pike then a straight to the finish. The spacing of the waves really helped with crowd control. It was mildly conjestion at the start but my the first 1/2m I ran in my ovwn space.

I remember a person from my BT MG group describing how a 10k should be run and while I don't remember it word for word I tried to take the advice and put it into my own plan.

The first few miles I ran hard especially on the downhill slopes and by mile 2 I had that slight I might have gone out too fast feeling (right on plan). I started to develop a side stitch around mile 2 and I remember reading those usually come on b/c you are pushing the pace too hard. So I tried to level off and not continue accelerating. I also switched up my breaths to inhale with the foot strike opposite my side stitch. That has worked for me on the past. The course flattened out a bit when I hit the 5k mark. I think miles 3-4 I could have pushed a little harder but I didn't want to blow up at the end. So the part of the advice - run hard enough to wish it was a 5k - I didn't quite hit.

After one more mile and a slight incline, I started to focus on only 2 more miles even though my brain was starting to suggest slowing down and quitting. I told myself I've run this hard for 4 miles and was well within my goal - don't blow it now. On the inclines, I paced myself to stay right around the 8/8:08min mark. I didn't want to lose time but I didn't want to gas myself either.

For the next mile, I picked up the effort. My HR was on the rise and my breathing was right behind. I was not labored yet but it was becoming an effort to keep as much oxygen flowing as I wanted to sustain my pace.

At mile 5.5, there was a longest, biggest incline of the race but I stayed strong and knew once I got to the top it was all downhill to the finsh.

Sure enough, at the top I could see the finish less than 1/2m away and it was a big race to the bottom. It's funny how downhill sections of a course can be great for recovering or catching one's breath but in this case I had hit my peak at the top of the hill and I didn't let up. I pushed as hard as I could down the hill and was really sucking wind. But I was done and my goals were accomplished. As far as the last 2 miles and the advice - mile 5, the pain sets in and you want it to be over (check). Mile 6, run with your heart and pour everything that's left into the tank (check). And those last .2 are on auto-pilot (triple check). So I feel pretty good about how I ran the race. It was nice to set a goal and meet it. I've had some rough patches with training lately so this was a nice mental boost.
What would you do differently?:

Definitely a course I can run faster with a little more training and the inside knowledge of the race course.
Post race
Warm down:

Walked around trying to find the family and get Tony off on his bike ride. Lots of food tents for the runners. The kids and I walked

What limited your ability to perform faster:

Nothing today. I will savor the good and not worry about nit-picking.

Event comments:

Great course. Lots of volunteers and stuff to do at the finish. The only knock is starting 10min late. And I found it a little funny that a big push was promoting a healthy lifestyle and the food tents consisted of:
pizza/pasta/subs, popeye's chicken, dunkin donuts and bagels, PF changs chinese food and some other stuff.




Last updated: 2012-04-13 12:00 AM
Running
00:48:04 | 06.21 miles | 07m 44s  min/mile
Age Group: 21/264
Overall: 137/1445
Performance: Good
Pace (per mile): 7:34, 7:49, 7:50, 7:48, 7:51, 7:39, 6:14 5k split 24:01
Course: donwhill, slight rolling course
Keeping cool Good Drinking Just right
Post race
Weight change: %
Overall: Good
Mental exertion [1-5] 5
Physical exertion [1-5] 5
Good race? Yes
Evaluation
Course challenge Just right
Organized? Yes
Events on-time? No
Lots of volunteers? Yes
Plenty of drinks? Yes
Post race activities: Good
Race evaluation [1-5] 5