Denouement

Speedy Spaniard

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Location:

Kowloon Tong,Hong Kong

Member Since:

Jul 02, 2007

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Olympic Trials Qualifier

Running Accomplishments:

Unaided:

5K - 17:11 (track Pre-kids and at BYU) (1998)

10K - 35:48 (track Pre-kids and at BYU) (1998)

10K - 35:34 (road - Shek Mun 10k 12/12)

1/2 Marathon 1:19:44 (UNICEF HM 11/12)

Marathon 2:47:08 (ING Hartford Connecticut 10/10)

Aided:

St. George Marathon 2:50:40 (10/08)

1/2 marathon - Hobble Creek 1:17:14 (8/08)

10K - Deseret News 10K - 35:02 (7/08)

Short-Term Running Goals:

PR 1/2 marathon AGAIN


Long-Term Running Goals:

Break 2:46 in Boston!

Personal:

I used to run for BYU, but only after trying out three times and finally walking on, so I was never a star. However, it was wonderful to run with great people and under Coach Shane. When you run with fast people, you can't help to improve! I graduated BYU in 1998, and didn't run a race until 2002, after having my second child. My hiatus and other crazy life commitments have made my competitive running suffer, but the last couple of years I have tried to get back into it the best I can. I have been married since 1996, to Paul Lowry, who is a runner himself. I have three boys (my three rascals), ages 12, 10, and 8.

After a great 2008 season, I was injured and eventually diagnosed and cross-diagnosed with Ankylosing Spondylitis, a type of arthritis disease, which precludes running for all but the most stubborn.  So I am on medications, trying to stay healthy, and seeing my PT often.  And running!  Now beating the streets in Hong Kong.

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
NB RC900 Black/yellow Lifetime Miles: 183.31
NB RC1300 Red/Black Lifetime Miles: 195.31
2012 MTR Lifetime Miles: 4035.70
890 Blue Lifetime Miles: 310.55
NB RC 1600 Lifetime Miles: 96.76
RC 1400 Lifetime Miles: 90.60
NB 890 Baby Blue Lifetime Miles: 233.26
NB 890 Electric Blue Lifetime Miles: 319.67
NB 890 Tokyo Turquoise Lifetime Miles: 163.54
Race: Speedy Spaniard (6.2 Miles) 00:43:26, Place overall: 9, Place in age division: 4
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTrainer 1 MilesTrainer 2 MilesRacer MilesTotal Distance
5.420.006.200.000.000.000.0011.62

OK, so the good news is that I didn't totally give up. 

The bad news is I did worse than last year, and not just by a little.

Here are my splits:

1 - 6:50

2 - 6:50

3 - 7:04

4 - 7:28

5 - 7:15

6 - 7:11

last little bit 54 sec.

So I felt good at the starting line.  I was nervous, but able to relax with effort which is about usual for a race start.  I guessed that I would be able to beat last year's time, but thought my place would be worse because of three ladies that didn't race last year were racing this year that I thought would beat me.  The first mile is uphill and I hung with Hal and Gina.  I was hoping for 6:45 splits but could tell by mile 2 that 6:50 would be about the best I could do.  And by mile 3 and especially mile 4 I just wasn't strong enough to keep up pace.  I tend to get weak mentally as well in the middle of races. 

By the middle of mile 5 I knew I had just over 1.5 miles to go and started to pick it up (admittedly from my slow 7:30ish pace).  I wasn't able to keep up a strong pace through that entire period however.  With a mile left I found myself asking, "Why do I race for fun?  Why is this my chosen hobby?  I could be making beaded jewelry or canning fruit right now."  By .5 miles to go I knew I needed to pick it up to at least finish strong, and I told myself out loud, "Come on!  Come on!"   Funny, that didn't help much. 

I was trading places with another girl for the last two miles and was able to find it in me to pass her with .25 to go and was able to kick it in. 

I was 43 seconds slower than last year, about 7 seconds a mile slower.

I am seeing the wisdom in focusing on endurance instead of speed since this seems to be my race weakness.  I guess I should do my speed in the form of long tempo runs and only occasional long intervals on the road.  And keep my miles above 60 throughout the summer.

The good thing is that races tell you where you are.  By knowing where I am, even though it seems I am slower this year, I can run races smarter and refocus my training.

Night Sleep Time: 0.00Nap Time: 0.00Total Sleep Time: 0.00Weight: 0.00
Comments
From Sasha Pachev on Tue, Jul 24, 2007 at 20:26:19

It takes awhile for the mileage benefits to kick in, especially in shorter races. For a while your legs are tired, and you cannot race well, then things begin to settle down.

From Clay on Wed, Jul 25, 2007 at 09:51:32

Michelle, I think you passed me right at the end... Don't get to down, you make us old men feel bad. Keep up the good work...

From Maria on Wed, Jul 25, 2007 at 10:16:23

Great job on not giving up when things weren't going your way! I'm sure if you keep up your mileage over the next 6 weeks, you'll see some nice improvements. What I found helps me in terms of speedwork and strength at the same time, is aerobic fartlek on roads: 8-10 x 2-5 min. @ 3K-10K pace with equal time jog in between, done within 8-9 mile run. You can vary the duration of fast portions depending on how you feel.

From Michelle on Wed, Jul 25, 2007 at 10:57:44

Thanks all for the encouragement and advice!

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