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Flying Pig Marathon: In Pictures

9 Jun

Remember how I ran the Flying Pig Marathon?  Here are my pre-race and post-race posts… from over a month ago.  Oops!   I could lie and say I just now downloaded my mile splits and photos, but yeah, that’s not true at all.  It’s been a busy, surprising month, and while I’m working on making a blog comeback (for real!  I pinky-swear-promise!), I want to go back in time for a sec to recap one of the most memorable, grueling, awesome sauce races of my life.

En route to Cincinnati – love flying & love the window seat!

At the Expo with mom!

 

Dad was also with us, being awesome :)

Perfect fortune to get with my Chinese food the night before the race!

Race morning – ready to run!

I was too preoccupied by pre-race nerves to remember to take any Start Line photos before handing over the camera to my support crew, so the next photos I have are 10 miles into the marathon!

  • Mile 1 – 8:51
  • Mile 2 – 8:51
  • Mile 3 – 8:42
  • Mile 4 – 8:36
  • Mile 5 – 8:43
  • Mile 6 – 8:38
  • Mile 7 – 9:27 (uphill)
  • Mile 8 – 9:07 (uphill)
  • Mile 9 – 8:42 (uphill)
  • Mile 10 – 8:30

Ice cold water (with Nuun) hand-off at Mile 10

Sooo happy to see my support crew!

  • Mile 11 – 8:24
  • Mile 12 – 8:34
  • Mile 13 – 8:50
  • Mile 14 – 8:40
  • Mile 15 – 9:00
  • Mile 16 – 9:05
  • Mile 17 – 8:56

Dad jumped in to run with me just before Mile 14

*I just noticed you can see the 4-hour pace group (with the pink & white balloons) chasing us down, so this must’ve been around Mile 18, where we saw Mom & Brother.

Still feeling good – or at least I had enough energy to fake feeling good!

  • Mile 18 – 9:07
  • Mile 19 – 9:02
  • Mile 20 – 9:06
  • Mile 21 – 9:19
  • Mile 22 – 9:01
  • Mile 23 – 9:33
  • Mile 24 – 9:29
  • Mile 25 – 10:02 (darn!)

Only a couple miles to go – I wanted to double over like the dude in red

Dad was an amazing coach – never let me give up on Marathon #15!

With less than a mile to go, Dad veered off and I ran towards the finish line with nothing left in my tank but stubborn determination to finish in under four hours.

  • Mile 26 – 9:25
  • Last 0.54 – 4:35 (8:37/mile pace)

FINALLY ran down a new marathon PR with my coach dad!

Endurance & persistence will be rewarded!

Garmin Finish:  26.54 miles, 3:58:32 (8:59/mile)

Official Finish: 26.2 miles, 3:58:34 (9:06/mile)

And one more, so Sully doesn’t feel left out :)

Flying Pig Marathon: Everything I got

7 May

I’m in Cincinnati until tomorrow afternoon, soaking up every last minute of family time, but I wanted to drop in for some not-so-secret news (as it’s long been leaked via texts and phone calls, Facebook, Twitter, etc.)…

I didn’t know how I’d do with the 3 H’s (hills, heat, and humidity) of yesterday’s Flying Pig Marathon, since I’m accustomed to none of them… but I still set out with the goal of running my heart out and gunning for a PR (personal record).  And I did it!

I confidently tackled those gnarly hills in the first half (maybe a little too aggressively) and was running really strong up until Mile 20–my nemesis.  I dedicated Mile 20 to my mom, because I know the twenties are the “beast miles,” and I’d need all the inspiration I could get.  Although I was starting to doubt myself, no one believes in me more than my mom, so I held on to that for dear life, but those final miles are eternal and, at that point, it’s as much a mental battle as a physical one…

My 17 year old niece, Jessie, requested Mile 21 when I asked what mile I should dedicate to her.  She’s been battling cancer for almost 11 years now, and although I was in rough shape, I pressed on, fueled by hope.  At the end of a marathon, time slows down and the miles crawl by.  My body was done, screaming to be finished.  And as my coach dad ran alongside me, feeding me water, desperate to help me finish strong, I told him: a few long, slow miles of marathon suffering can’t hold a candle to Jessie’s courage.  That was all I needed right there.  Dad told me to do it and veered off course, leaving me to finish solo.  I channeled the courage, hope, and strength of Jessie and all of my amazing supporters: family and friends, and in my delirious, end-of-marathon state, I hung on by the skin of my teeth.

Like I said earlier, my main goals were to #1) run my heart out, and #2) run a PR, but my highest of hopes were to finish in 3:55 (averaging of 9:00/mile) and to run negative splits (meaning, I’d run the second half of the marathon faster than the first).  In actuality, I ran the first half in 1:56:47 (8:55/mile) and the second half in 2:01:47 (9:18/mile) and gave everything I got to finish in 3:58:34, an average of 9:06/mile.

Those high hopes are still there, and I think it goes without say that I can’t wait to resume training, run another marathon, and meet those goals, but right now, in this moment, I am completely over the moon!  I accomplished what I set out to do, and in many ways, surpassed my expectations, and surprised the heck out of myself.  I PR-ed by more than a minute and without a doubt, I ran my best, hardest, most wholehearted race yet.

A full race recap will have to wait until I’m back in San Diego and can download my split times and photos.  In the meantime, if you need me, I’ll be here on cloud nine, incessantly hugging my family.

Flying Pig Marathon: Ready… Set…

5 May

The Flying Pig Marathon is tomorrow.  In 24 hours, I’ll have crossed the finish line of my 15th marathon.

I feel ready, because I’ve trained more “seriously” than I have for any other marathon with (six whole weeks of) paced speedwork, tempo runs, and long runs.  I feel confident about pulling off a PR, unfortunately… the weather is less than ideal…  Tomorrow’s high temperature is 85-degrees with 87% humidityWhat is that ?!?!?!

The Pig’s letting runners defer to next year, but I’m trained now.  My head’s in it NOW, so I will run.  And I’ll run my heart out.

I could say this one’s for Jessie, but really, they’re all for Jessie.

#15 – Let’s do this.

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