Sunday, November 11, 2018

What happened in Richmond

Here's how I trained for the Richmond Marathon, picking up where my last post left off:

August 27 - September 2
Mo: 8 miles
Tu: 8 miles
We: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 min. with half recoveries
Th: 8 miles
Fr: 8 miles
Sa: 18 miles with 3 x 2k (2 min. rests), 8k easy, 3 x 2k (2 min. rests)
Su: 8 miles
Week total: 70 miles

September 3 - 9
Mo: off
Tu: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 min. with equal recoveries
We: 8 miles
Th: 8 miles
Fr: 7 miles plus 6 strides
Sa: 4 miles
Su: Parks Half Marathon in 1:26:24
Week total: 53 miles

September 10 - 16
Mo: 8 miles
Tu: 9 miles
We: 8 miles
Th: 9 miles plus 8 x 40 sec. hills
Fr: 8 miles
Sa: 20 miles easy
Su: 8 miles
Week total: 70 miles

September 17 - 23
Mo: 9 miles
Tu: 3 x (2, 3, 4 min.) with equal recoveries
We: 9 miles
Th: 8 miles plus 6 strides
Fr: 8 miles
Sa: 19 with miles 3-6 and 15-16 at marathon effort
Su: 9 miles
Week total: 75 miles

September 24 - 30
Mo: 8.5 miles
Tu: 8 x 3 min. hard / 2 min. jog
We: 8.5 miles
Th: 8.5 miles plus 8 strides
Fr: 8.5 miles
Sa: 22 with miles 15-20 at 6:52, 34, 25, 27, 15, 28
Su: 8.5 miles
Week total: 75 miles

October 1 - 7
Mo: off
Tu: 10 x 500m (1 min. rests)
We: 9 miles
Th: 9 miles
Fr: off
Sa: 6 miles
Su: Army 10 miler in 1:06:25
Week total: 49 miles

October 8 - 14
Mo: 8.5 miles
Tu: 9.5 miles
We: 8.5 miles plus 5 strides
Th: 8.5 miles
Fr: 2 x 4 miles (2 min. rest) at 6:46 avg.
Sa: 8 miles
Su: 24 miles easy
Week total: 80 miles

October 15 - 21
Mo: off
Tu: 9 miles
We: 3 x (2, 3, 4 min.) with equal recoveries
Th: 9 miles
Fr: 9 miles plus 5 strides
Sa: 9 miles
Su: off (skipped planned MP tempo)
Week total: 50 miles

October 22 - 28
Mo: off
Tu: 2 mile test jog in PM
We: 8 miles
Th: 7 miles
Fr: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 min. with half recoveries
Sa: 7 miles
Su: 6.5 miles
Week total: 42 miles

October 29 - November 4
Mo: off
Tu: off
We: 6 miles
Th: 14 with miles 8-12 at 6:53, 30, 35, 35, 23
Fr: off
Sa: 5.5 miles
Su: 11.5 miles
Week total: 37 miles

November 5 - 11
Mo: off
Tu: 5 miles
We: 3 x 1k (1 min. rests)
Th: 4 miles
Fr: off
Sa: Richmond Marathon
Su:
Week total: 16 miles pre-race

Three things about this training block stand out and led me to think, going into Richmond, that I was in PR shape. First, it was consistent. I was not sidetracked by injury or illness, with the exception of two hip / hamstring niggles at either end of a 10 day stretch that began 3 weeks before the race. But by then I figured I had it in the bag anyway, and I was able to bounce back and get sharp in plenty of time before the race. Second, my overall volume was higher than it's been for I think 5 years, averaging 58 miles for the last 12 weeks. Probably my only other marathon training block that compares with this one was before my 2:58:56 PR at the 2015 Philadelphia Marathon, which averaged 55 miles for the last 12 weeks. I consciously modeled this training block on that one but incorporated a few minor changes, including slightly higher volume. Third, I had several workouts that compared with or improved upon my best ever. This started with the Parks Half Marathon. Although I've twice run half marathons 1:30-2:00 faster than I ran this race (in 2013 and 2016), those times were run on much faster courses than Parks, and there was a lot of standing water on the Parks course from heavy rainfall. So considering the course and conditions, this was arguably a PR-level performance. Two weeks after Parks I struggled on a tempo-run-tempo attempt in humid weather, but the following weekend (on Sept. 29) I felt smooth on a 22 miler while hitting paces that I don't think I've ever been able to touch at the end of such a long run before. Was it a fluke? Maybe. Warm and humid conditions at the Army 10 miler the following weekend prevented comparisons with other 10 milers I've run, and injury niggles forced me to skip a planned long tempo two weeks later. But when those niggles subsided, the same power seemed to be at my disposal when I hazarded a 14 mile progression run 10 days before Richmond.

So I was fit and there were signs that I was in PR shape. Plus the weather looked great: mid-40s and sunny but breezy, which happen to be exactly same conditions I had in Philadelphia in 2015. There are, however, two relevant differences between Philadelphia and Richmond: I had run the Philly course before, and the Richmond course is hillier. The Philly course isn't totally flat either, but the hills are not as significant and I knew where they are, having run my first BQ there in 2013. (Plus I used to live in Philadelphia). I ran the Richmond Half in 2016, but the hilly portions of the full marathon course are not part of the half marathon course. I had of course looked at the elevation profile online, but that's different from actually knowing the course, which I had never even seen.

Before the race I made a conscious decision to go for a PR and take the risk of blowing up. I'd already run 13 marathons, and I'm proud of my 2:58 PR. I'd like to see whether I can run faster, but I don't really care about racking up yet another marathon finish in a slower time, certainly not over 3:00. So my plan was to aim for 1:28:30-1:29 at halfway, to put myself in a position to run between 2:55 and 2:58. I expected miles 15-18 to be the most difficult of the course, with hills and a headwind on a long bridge. So I expected to slow down a bit there. Whether I could just eek out a PR or run for 2:55 glory would depend on how much I could rally after 18 miles, if things went to plan. Again, I knew perfectly well that things might not go to plan at all, as often happens in marathons. But the whole point of training for and racing Richmond was to try to run 2:55 or at least a PR. My training indicated that I had a chance, so I went for it.

Here's what happened: (A 2:55 marathon is 6:41-43 avg. pace)
Mile 1 - 6:42
Mile 2 - 6:43
Mile 3 - 6:37
Mile 4 - 6:41
Mile 5 - 6:43
Mile 6 - 6:53
Mile 7 - 6:22 (downhill)
Mile 8 - 6:38
Mile 9 - 6:42
Mile 10 - 6:44
Mile 11 - 6:51
Mile 12 - 7:01 (trouble)
Mile 13 - 8:27 (includes almost 2:00 in a bathroom)
Mile 14 - 6:51
Mile 15 - 6:40
Mile 16 - 7:20 (then I pulled the plug)

Through 10 miles all seemed well. During the first 10k I was a little worried that the pace was going to come back and bite me, but I felt ok and it was clear that I was already committed. After gliding downhill in mile 7 and crossing the river, I started thinking: ok, I can actually do this. I prepared myself for the hills that I expected to begin in mile 9. Looking back now, I realize that my HR was already too high before the hills started. It was already in the high 160s, and I'm pushing once I hit 170. So I should not have let it get higher than low-mid 160s by that point, but I was focusing on pace instead of HR (which, however, I was aware of). The first hill came right at 10 miles, and most of mile 11 was up and down. Looking back, I should have let myself run that hilly mile slower than 6:51, but it was probably too late for that anyway.

After the hilly mile 11, or rather during it, I knew I was in trouble and tried to regroup. At the beginning of mile 12 there was a short downhill, but I could see the next (bigger) hill up ahead. That's when something strange happened. As I was running downhill trying to relax, my heart fluttered and I suddenly felt faint. I looked at my watch and saw that my HR had suddenly jumped from around 170 to almost 180, while I was coasting downhill. (My max heart rate is around 185). It occurs to me now that maybe it was the sight of the next approaching hill that sent my HR up. But at the time I thought something had shifted in my gut, which I've noticed can cause a HR spike. My stomach had felt off this whole time - in fact, since the previous night - and I figured whatever was bugging me down there had finally reached its breaking point. So I immediately backed off to around 7:30 pace up the hill, then hopped into a porta-potty just after the 12 mile mark. As I entered the bathroom, I looked at my watch and told myself: 2 minutes max. But nothing happened in there. I was just cooked and sat there trying to recover. After almost 2 minutes, I burst out of the bathroom and continued running. Now I knew 2:55 was not going to happen, but maybe I could shake this off and still run a PR. Luckily the next two miles were either flat or downhill. I went through halfway in just under 1:30, which meant that I had been on roughly 1:28 flat pace before my break. But there were a lot of miles left, and they weren't all going to be downhill. At 15 miles I reached the long bridge that everybody complains about on the Richmond course. There was a moderate headwind and a modest uphill just after we crossed back over the river. I handled the headwind ok, but once the uphill began I felt the same funny fluttering feeling and faintness that I had felt 4 miles earlier. Looking back, I see that my HR had jumped to the mid-upper 170s again. At that point I knew I was toast. I stopped at the 16 mile mark, got a drink and ate a gel, after which I briefly and half-heartedly started jogging again for a bit. But what's the point of jogging another 10 miles when my body was clearly telling me it was done? I had gambled and lost, so I stepped over to the sidewalk and took off my bib. Luckily the course had circled around near to my hotel at that point, as my Fenix 5x mapping watch enabled me to discover. I only had to walk for around 10 minutes.

I do not regret going for it or dropping out when I did. In fact, I think this experience puts me in a good position to reassess my training and try again, hopefully with more success in 2019. It makes me think back to another DNF of mine in 2014 at the Pisa Marathon in Italy. Then I made it almost 22 miles on what was probably 2:57 pace before my hip locked up and I was reduced to walking. At the time my PR was 3:06, so that experience convinced me that I could go much faster. Sure enough, I set PRs in my next two marathons: a lower 3:06 into a cold, rainy headwind on the slow Boston course in 2015, then my current PR of 2:58 in Philadelphia later that same year. (Pisa was also one of the earliest signs of the hip weakness that still plagues me and that, I later realized, underlies the injury problems that sidelined me for much of 2016). But the comparison with Pisa is not perfect. I made it much further in Pisa than I did in Richmond (but perhaps only because the Pisa course is completely flat), and my PR is much faster now than it was then. Then it was clear that I was due for a big PR if I basically just kept doing what I had been doing. Now, however, it's not at all clear that I'm capable of running faster than 2:58, even on a flatter course than Richmond. I had a great training block this time but fell apart surprisingly early. For that matter, it's not even clear that I'm capable of running sub-3:00 any more. Here are all of my marathon results since my 2:58 PR in 2015:

Houston (January 2017) - DNF (3:43)
Chicago (October 2017) - 3:10:57
Foot Traffic (July 2018) - DNF (3:37)
Richmond (November 2018) - DNF

Richmond was the first marathon I started but did not actually finish. But the only reason I crossed the finish line in Houston was because I needed to get back to my hotel, which was right next to it, and the course was such that I was far away when I blew up. At Foot Traffic my sister and son were waiting for me in the start / finish area, so after blowing up I got back to them as quickly as possible by the only route I knew: the course. But those were both effectively DNFs as well. If somebody had been waiting with a car to pick me up when I decided all was lost at both of those races, I would have hopped into the car. Only Chicago counts as a proper marathon finish, and my time there wasn't even fast enough to get me into 2019 Boston in the 40-44 age group (which, however, I did not apply for). It's true that all three of my marathons between 2015 Philadelphia and 2018 Richmond were warm: they were all in the 60s and 70s, and Houston in particular was also very humid. Richmond was my only marathon attempt in good weather since Philly. Still, I DNF'd, and this is becoming a trend.

Considering this trend, part of me is tempted to throw in the towel and say it's been a good run but everything comes to an end. To be clear: no part of me is tempted to quit running. I mean part of me is tempted to quit running marathons, or at least to take a break from them for an indeterminate amount of time, while focussing only on half marathon or shorter races. It's obvious anyway that at some point it's not going to be realistic for me to aim for PRs anymore, and I'm not sure whether I will keep running marathons once I'm convinced that I've reached that point. (I will definitely keep running shorter races forever). But I'm convinced that I have not yet reached that point, and the marathon continues to captivate me in a love/hate kind of way. Plus, looking over my training, I think I detect something missing that may account for my DNF in Richmond.

Actually, I see two things missing. One of them is hill training, since it was the hills that got me in Richmond. I should incorporate more hills the next time I run a hilly race. But I think my next PR attempt should be on a flat course, so I'll set this consideration aside for the moment. The other and main gap I see in my training as recorded above are marathon effort workouts. Consider: my problem in Richmond was basically that my HR was too high even before I hit the hills. Even on a flatter course, I surely could have run 2:55 pace for longer, but not easily enough to go the full distance. I was not able to run relaxed enough at that pace. Why not? Well, probably because I hardly ever trained at that pace; and even when I did, I almost never practiced running relaxed at that pace. My mid-week workouts nearly always, with only one exception, involved some sort of intervals that alternated between running much harder and much easier than marathon effort. Don't get me wrong: that's great. But it's the only kind of mid-week workout I did, with the single exception of a 2 x 4 mile MP workout on Oct. 12, which however averaged slightly slower than 2:55 marathon pace. I was also planning a long MP tempo on Oct. 21 but skipped it due to a hip / hamstring flare up. But didn't I run marathon effort during some long runs? Well, not much. Often during long runs too I went from running easy pace to running faster than marathon pace; and even when I did run marathon pace during long runs, it was usually towards the end when my heart rate was high. Again, that's great, but it's all I did. The gap I'm noticing is that I did not train my body to run 6:41-43 pace while keeping my HR low enough that I could maintain it for the full marathon distance, and that's critical. Those other kinds of workouts are important too, but in place of some of them I should do more pure marathon pace runs. I did only one before Richmond. Before 2015 Philadelphia, I did three. Next time, I think I should do four, with the focus on keeping my HR down.

I am registered for the Buffalo Marathon on May 26, 2019. That will be my next marathon. It is not flat, so I will need to incorporate some hill training. The date also means that the weather may not be ideal. Of course I knew this when I registered, but I wanted a late Spring marathon so that I have a good chunk of time to focus on shorter distances before switching back to marathon mode. Given these factors, plus my recent string of DNFs, my goal in Buffalo will just be to finish strong. I'll get into the best marathon shape I can, but my race strategy will not involve taking the sort of risks I took in Richmond. I'll keep things relatively conservative in the first half and maybe use HR instead of pace as a gauge to make sure I get to the finish line. Then, if that works out tolerably, I'll make another PR attempt next Fall. After Richmond some people in my club were throwing around the idea of doing Philadelphia in 2019. That sounds good to me. After that, who knows?

For the immediate future, though, I'm going to turn my attention to speed and LT workouts with a view to having fun at some winter club races and then taking aim at some of my non-marathon PRs - every single one of which is from 2013! I've gotten within seconds of both my 10k and half marathon PRs since then, but it's silly that they've lasted this long. I think the trouble I've had in recent years with faster running is rooted in my weak right glute medius, which I've now diagnosed with two PTs and know how to strengthen. I'm going to prioritize that in the coming months.

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Late summer training and the South Lakes 10k

My recovery from the Foot Traffic marathon on July 4 went smoothly. We headed to Greece two and a half weeks after the marathon and stayed there for five weeks this year (a somewhat shorter trip than usual). I was able to start doing workouts and increasing mileage again basically right after we arrived in Greece, and my training went very well during those five weeks. Here's what I did since just after arriving in Greece (on July 20) until today:

July 23 – 29
Mo: 6 miles
Tu: 3 x (1, 2, 3 min.) with equal recoveries on track
We: 6 miles
Th: 12 miles
Fr: off
Sa: 6 miles
Su: 3 x (1, 2, 3 min.) with equal recoveries on track
Week total: 51 miles

July 30 – August 5
Mo: 7 miles
Tu: 6 miles
We: 5 mile tempo @ 6:35 on rolling hills
Th: 6 miles
Fr: off
Sa: 14 miles with some hills
Su: 7 miles
Week total: 50 miles

August 6 – 12
Mo: 7 miles
Tu: 6 x 800m (400m jog), 3 x 200m on track
We: 7 miles
Th: 7 miles
Fr: 12 x 1k @ 3:56 avg. (90 sec. rests)
Sa: 6 miles
Su: 7 miles
Week total: 60 miles

August 13 – 19
Mo: 16 hilly miles
Tu: 6 miles
We: 7 miles
Th: 10 x 500m @ 1:49 avg. (1 min. rests)
Fr: 7 miles
Sa: 7 miles
Su: 4 mile tempo @ 6:24, 4 x 200m on track
Week total: 65 miles

August 20 – 26
Mo: 8 miles
Tu: 8 miles
We: 18 miles @ 7:36 avg., pushing miles 13-16 into a headwind in 6:58, 50, 53, 46
Th: 8 miles
Fr: off (traveling to US)
Sa: 6 miles
Su: South Lakes 10k in 39:32
Week total: 60 miles

One of the corners I cut in my abbreviated training for Foot Traffic was I neglected to get fit first through shorter, faster workouts before switching into marathon mode. I just didn't have time, but the consequence was that everything faster than easy pace felt harder than it should. So during these five weeks I mainly focused on getting that fitness and a little speed back, though I was also able to increase my weekly mileage to actually a bit higher than it was before Foot Traffic. Now I'm fit and ready for marathon-specific training over the next eleven weeks. I already did one good long run workout this past week just before leaving Greece, but the main ones are still to come.

Today I ran the South Lakes 10k in Reston, VA, only two days after returning to the US. I knew that I'd be jet-lagged and figured I'd have a better time pushing myself in a short race than trying to do a workout on my own. Plus I ran the same race in 2015 after doing 5k-10k training all summer and wanted to see how my fitness now compares with three years ago, because two and a half months later (after taking a short break and then shifting into marathon mode) I went on to run my current PR of 2:58 at the 2015 Philadelphia Marathon. South Lakes is a hilly course, so not fast, but the weather was virtually identical in 2015 and 2018: mercifully cool for late summer (upper 60s) but still somewhat humid, though not oppressively so (dew point around 63). I ran 39:15 in 2015 and 39:32 today, which I think bodes well given how my training has differed this summer compared with three years ago.

In today's race I also tried out the Nike Vaporfly 4% for the first time. I've had a pair for months but deemed my fitness unworthy of them until now, and they're so expensive that I'd only hazard wearing them in a race. My first impression is that they're big and squishy, sort of like the original Hoka Cliftons but with a carbon fiber plate that makes them ride better at faster paces. I wore the original Cliftons as my easy run shoe in the Fall of 2015, as it happens. (I have also worn the Clifton 3, which is quite different, but no other versions). I think the light weight of the Clifton helped me increase my stride rate (which was a problem for me then) while their max cushioning enabled me to avoid injury during my best ever marathon build-up. The Vaporfly is more than an ounce lighter still (officially 6.5 oz.) than the original Clifton. Still, it's so big (i.e., the stack height) that it doesn't feel at all like a fast 10k shoe that might have a similar weight. The Vaporfly is strictly a marathon shoe. I wore it today just to test it out, but I wouldn't wear it again in a 10k or shorter race. I can see how it will save the legs in later miles of a longer race, though. The carbon-fiber plate and surrounding squish made all the ups and downs of the South Lakes course seem to involve a lot less pounding than a normal shoe would. Afterwards I changed into Adidas Supernovas for my cool down. Supernovas typically feel heavy and soft to me, but immediately after taking off the Vaporflys they (the Supernovas) felt small and hard. It was an odd sensation. Given all the hype, I expected the Vaporflys to feel like a super fast shoe, but they don't at all (at least not to me after one try). They feel like Hokas on steroids, engineered somehow to enable you to run kind of fast (MP) for a really long time with miraculously little impact stress. That may indeed enable people to run faster marathons, and maybe half marathons (I'll test that out in two weeks). But it's not a fast 10k shoe. I'd be interested to hear whether others have similar or different impressions of the Vaporfly.

On another note, it's almost September, which means registration for Boston is around the corner. I've run Boston once (in 2015, which seems to be my theme today). Last year I wanted to run it again but didn't have a qualifier due to my injury-plagued 2016. But I got a qualifier in Chicago last Fall and planned on registering for the 2019 Boston. Now that registration is rolling around, though, I'm starting to feel the way I have usually felt in past years - like I don't really want to run Boston. Lest you accuse me of heresy, let me clearly state that Boston is a great race and I really enjoyed running it (and PRing) in 2015. But there are also reasons not to run Boston. The Boston hype kind of makes me gag. There are other marathons in the Spring that I haven't already run and would like to do, including Cleveland, Vermont City, Buffalo, and smaller local races like the B&A Trail and new Salisbury Marathons (which I tried to do this year but couldn't due to injury and illness). None of those races costs $200 plus Boston hotel rates. Marathons aside, wouldn't it be fun to devote the Spring to racing shorter distances and get back to marathon mode next Fall? Finally, weather is the single most important factor out of your control that influences marathon performance. I wonder how many people will skip Boston in 2019 just because of how bad the weather was in 2018. But it isn't just 2018 - the weather almost always sucks in Boston, just usually not quite as much as it did this year. So I'm having doubts about registering. Would anyone like to try convincing me to register, or does anyone want to run one of the other marathons mentioned above with me next Spring?

Saturday, July 7, 2018

Foot Traffic Flat Marathon: training and race report

Look, I ran another marathon: the Foot Traffic Flat Marathon on Sauvie Island outside Portland, Oregon! It's a fantastic event that I encourage others to do, even though my race did not go well. Since an actual human being recently mentioned to me that he had read this running blog, I'll take this opportunity to do some catching up.

After Chicago last Fall, my previous marathon, I had hoped to run a Spring marathon but a minor injury to my pes anserine tendon (of whose existence I thus became aware) forced me to take 10 days off in late February shortly after I had shifted back into marathon mode. At that point I was not far enough along to be able to recover my fitness quickly after 10 days off, but it was too late to start over and get in a full build-up. So I abandoned the Spring marathon idea and briefly refocused on running a half in April instead. But I only managed to get running again for 5 weeks before the flu forced me to take another 10 days off in late March and early April. So I ended up just doing a few club races this entire Winter and Spring, mainly as workouts.

Usually we head to Greece for the summer sometime in mid- or late-June. But this year my nephew's birth was the occasion for my son and I to visit my sister in Portland, Oregon, in early July. When we were making plans for this visit in March, before I got the flu, I mentioned to my sister that I noticed there was a marathon near Portland on July 4. She replied enthusiastically that she knew of the race, that I must do it and get the Portland race experience, and that she wanted to drive my son and I up to the race early that morning and hang out there with him while I ran. So I registered and booked our tickets. In retrospect, I don't think it was a good idea to do this race 4 weeks after my nephew was born, because my poor sister was hardly getting any sleep and had more important things to worry about. I should have done it another year instead. But she had been trying to get me to run a marathon in Portland for years and seemed to enjoy it, somehow, despite barely sleeping. She's really into biking and soaks up that outdoor, endurance sport ambience. I guess it runs in the family.

The day I started running again after being leveled by the flu was exactly 12 weeks before the marathon. Normally I like to make sure I'm generally fit before beginning a 12-week block of marathon-specific training, but this time around I was starting from ground zero. I had no residual fitness since the flu had hit me quite hard and I wasn't in great shape before getting the flu anyway. Plus, this year's germs seemed to take longer to recover from than usual, so it was really slow going at first. Here are my 12 weeks of training for this race since recovering from the flu:


Wk 12 – April 9-15
Mo: off
Tu: 3 miles
We: off
Th: 4 miles
Fr: off
Sa: 5 miles
Su: 4 miles
Week total: 16 miles

Wk 11 – April 16-22
Mo: off
Tu: 6 miles
We: 4 miles
Th: 6 miles with 6 x 40 sec. hills
Fr: 4 miles
Sa: off
Su: 10 miles
Week total: 30 miles

Wk 10 – April 23-29
Mo: 3 miles
Tu: 7 miles with 8 x 40 sec. hills
We: 4 miles
Th: Fartlek: 2 x (3, 2, 1 min.) with equal recoveries
Fr: off
Sa: 14 miles
Su: 4 miles
Week total: 40 miles

Wk 9 – April 30-May 6
Mo: off
Tu: Fartlek: (5, 4, 3), (4, 3, 2), (3, 2, 1) min. with half recoveries
We: 5.5 miles
Th: 7 miles
Fr: 6 miles
Sa: 16 miles, pushing 3 miles after 11
Su: off
Week total: 45 miles

Wk 8 – May 7-13
Mo: 4 miles
Tu: 5.5 miles
We: 8 miles
Th: 5.5 miles
Fr: 8 miles plus 5 strides
Sa: 5.5 miles
Su: 16 miles, pushing 3 miles after 11
Week total: 53 miles

Wk 7 – May 14-20
Mo: 8 miles
Tu: 6 miles
We: 9 miles
Th: Fartlek: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 min. with equal recoveries
Fr: 9 miles
Sa: 7 miles
Su: 7 miles
Week total: 59 miles

Wk 6 – May 21-27
Mo: 18 mile progression, with miles 12-16 under 7:00
Tu: off
We: 7 miles
Th: 8 miles
Fr: 3 miles
Sa: 8 miles
Su: 16 miles
Week total: 60 miles

Wk 5 – May 28-June 3
Mo: 6 miles
Tu: 8.5 miles
We: Fartlek: 3 x (1, 2, 3 min) with equal recoveries
Th: 10 miles
Fr: off
Sa: 6 miles
Su: off
Week total: 40 miles 

Wk 4 – June 4-10
Mo: 6 miles
Tu: 18 miles, tied up early and slowed down after 12
We: 6 miles
Th: off
Fr: off
Sa: 6 miles
Su: 9 miles
Week total: 45 miles

Wk 3 – June 11-17
Mo: 6 miles
Tu: 7 x 1 mile (2 min. rests), from 6:46 down to 6:08
We: 6 miles
Th: 7 miles
Fr: off
Sa: 21.5 miles
Su: 6.5 miles
Week total: 60 miles

Wk 2 – June 18-24
Mo: off
Tu: 8 miles
We: 6 miles
Th: 4 mile tune-up in 25:14
Fr: 7 miles
Sa: off
Su: 11 miles
Week total: 45 miles

Wk 1 – June 25-July 1
Mo: 5.5 miles
Tu: 3 miles @ 6:37 (3 min. rest), 2 miles @ 6:32 (2 min. rest), 1 mile @ 6:20
We: 5.5 miles
Th: off
Fr: 5.5 miles
Sa: 3 x 1k @ 6:38 (1 min. rests)
Su: 4 miles
Week total: 38 miles 

Wk 0 – July 2-8
Mo: 4.5 miles
Tu: off
We: Foot Traffic Flat Marathon

As you can see, this was very much an abbreviated build-up. The first baby marathon workouts were in weeks 9 and 8, while I was still building mileage, and neither of them went well. It wasn't until 6 weeks to go that I had my first good long run workout while at a conference in Vancouver, running around Stanley Park on May 21. But that turned out to be my only good long run workout of the entire cycle, probably not coincidentally since the weather in Vancouver was so much nicer than in the DC area. Later that same week, back in DC on May 27, I tried to run 21 miles easy on a very humid day but barely made it 16 miles. The next long run on June 5 was not much better: that time I made it slightly further (18 miles) and briefly got going faster but then fell apart even more spectacularly. I finally concluded after that run that the shoes I had been wearing since January for faster and longer runs, the Nike Elite 9, were not working for me and probably had precipitated my pes anserine injury, which was then starting to bug me again. I just about pulled the plug on the marathon after that run too, but instead I hoped that reverting to my trusty Adidas Bostons would help me turn things around. (Why did I ever set the Bostons aside?) I was able to get in a couple of good workouts in my final pre-taper week (3), although I never got going faster than 7:15 pace in my final long run that week. I figured it might be just enough to run a slowish marathon in good weather, though. In the end I averaged 44.25 miles per week during these 12 weeks, compared with 53 miles per week before Chicago. But this time around I had done almost none of the major workouts that have formed the backbone of my marathon training blocks for the past several years.

I wasn't hoping to set any records in a summer race with inadequate training. But I thought my fitness was beginning to come around and figured I was capable of running 3:05 or so in ok conditions. My 3:10 in Chicago will probably put me in the second wave at Boston, so I was hoping to beat that by just enough to get into the first wave. The weather was indeed ok: at the start it was cloudy and cool, maybe 60 or just under, and not very humid. It warmed up gradually during the race to over 70 by the end, but the humidity stayed in check and the sun peaked out from behind the clouds only during that last 30-40 minutes. These were somewhat better conditions than I had in Chicago, which was more humid and warmed up sooner, although the Chicago course is flatter and I was in much better shape for Chicago.

I decided to take advantage of the cool start and go out a little faster than my goal pace, intending to execute a modest and controlled slowdown during the second half as it warmed up. Despite the name of this race, its course is in fact not flat but consists of rolling hills for most of the first 17 miles, including one or two modest hills, after which it is mostly flat with one bigger hill on a short out-and-back segment. Only the 250 or so marathoners start first at 6:30am, and the entire course is on farm roads around a rural island outside of Portland with majestic views of Mts. St. Helens (especially), Adams, and Hood. There were few spectators or really anyone at all out on the course, so I was quickly by myself in a semi-meditative state, alone with the views, until after a turn-around just past 10 miles, when other runners passed me going the other direction, and then after 17 miles when the marathon course joined the half-marathon course and I started passing groups of walkers until the finish. At each water stop there were a few people handing out water in absurdly small cups who sometimes noticed that a runner was coming. I didn't manage to get a great deal of water during the race.

I settled into a pretty consistent pace just under 7:00 and went through halfway in 1:31:13 (6:58 pace). But I already started feeling crappy by 11 miles, which is really early in a marathon. In mile 11 I got the distinctive metallic taste in my mouth that I only get during migraines, though no migraine actually developed until later that evening. I've learned from 30 years of experience, however, that the symptoms I mainly associate with migraines are only the tip of an iceberg. Other physiological events occur below the surface that leave me mysteriously out of sorts for up to 2-3 days before and after migraines. Sometimes I'll feel incomprehensibly crappy during a workout and have to abandon it early, believing that I must be in worse shape than I had thought, only to realize when a migraine surfaces in the next day or two that it was the cause of my feeling crappy all along. Then it passes and I'm fine again, always relieved to have the migraine behind me. It has almost become a tradition for me to have a migraine 2-4 weeks before a marathon, which derails one workout but puts me at ease knowing that I'm not going to get another one that affects the race itself, since I usually don't get them very often (and the actual migraines I get nowadays are pale images of the ones I used to get). But this time around I did not have a migraine during my taper and one did affect me during the race. I felt crappy from 11 miles and never recovered. Despite getting the distinctive metallic taste in my mouth, I still wasn't sure that was the cause until the full migraine arrived later that evening. "Oh, that's what it was," I thought, almost welcoming this excuse to have run so poorly.

I did not immediately slow down in mile 11 but only started slowing a little in miles 15-16 when the rolling hills went more up than down, and then I stopped to stretch at a water stop at mile 17 where the marathon course rejoins the half-marathon course. After that I jogged a few miles more slowly and then basically jog-walked the final 10k. What first slowed me down was muscle tightness in all my usual weak spots. But in the final 10k it was GI discomfort that led me to jog-walk, which is consistent with both the warming conditions and the presence of a migraine, since at least my migraines have some sort of deep connection with my gut (the headache part is just the cherry on top). I finally crossed the finish line in 3:37:56, having assured my sister that I would take no longer than 3:45 even if I blew up spectacularly. This was in fact the least slow of my now 4 marathon blow-ups, which includes my first marathon and Houston a year and a half ago. This one was also by far the most fun, because my son and sister were there, the race environment was scenic and chill, and my hopes weren't very high in the first place.

I was hoping to run a solid, if not fast race, and didn't manage that. But more importantly I wanted to get my training back into the ballpark where, after recovering from this race, I can handle a proper marathon build-up to Richmond this November, and I did manage that. For Richmond I'm going to restore all the corners I cut for this race, since I'm now more familiar with the purposes they serve. We'll head to Greece in a couple weeks and I promised my wife that I wouldn't do serious marathon training there this year (since I did nearly all my Chicago training there last summer). But I do plan to establish a solid base of mileage with the usual hills, fartleks, eventually some tempos, and easy long runs by the time we return in late August and Fall marathon training picks up in earnest. I'm registered for the Parks half on September 9, the Army 10 miler on October 7, and the Richmond Marathon on November 10, and I may do the South Lakes 10k in late August as well.

So, on to Richmond....