Monday, October 31, 2011

October 2011 recap

October 2011 recap

October was a decent month, I mean as far as months of the year goes, nothing can compare to September, but for running – October isn’t so bad. Cool fall temps, crisp air, pretty leaves turning color – what’s not to love? Had two fun races this month, the BrickMan triathlon and the Baystate Half Marathon – really enjoyed both these events. Increased my mileage a good bit throughout the month as well. Not sure how the heck I ran as much as I did back in January and February (a short month at that), but starting to put those kind of miles back into the legs. Keeping the left calf stretched out as much as possible and doing the usual maintenance on my right side ITB. Still feeling good, so can’t complain. To mix things up, this past week returned to my old school street hockey roots and also added back in a Crossroads run (9 miles on Thursdays through the Newton hills). That Crossroads run this past week was pretty tough – a fair test of mettle, some parts saw snow that night – endured a cold, rainy/sleeting tromp back into the city after taking the T far out. Anyway, here’s the quick summary…happy trails!


Friday, October 21, 2011

Baystate Half Marathon Race Report

BAYSTATE HALF MARATHON
(officially known as the Lowell Sun Half Marathon)

SUMMARY
·         Date - Time: Sunday, October 16, 2011 – 8:00am start
·         Location: Lowell, MA
·         Conditions: ~50F at the start, dry ground, some wind on the 2-loop course
·         Distance: Half Marathon / 13.1 mile race (mostly flat, but some small inclines over the bridges)
·         Finish time: 1:36:59
·         Average pace: 7:24 / mile
·         Overall place: 146 out of 1,591 runners

PRE-RACE
For dinner the night before, had my trademark Masoor Dal (lentil soup) along with veggies and soy milk. Ended up going out that night but came home ‘early’ and got to sleep by 1am. Awoke at 5:45am, ate more Masoor Dal and a banana washed down with a glass of Gatorade. Set out from Boston and arrived at the race site just minutes past 7:00am. Was able to park at the Tsongas Arena garage (for $5) right at the race site, so that worked out perfectly.

(Click on images to enlarge.)

Anna, Nilesh, Betty before the race in the Tsongas Center
Met up with fellow City Sports run clubber friends Betty, Anna and Jan (Patrick was elsewhere) inside the warm Tsongas arena, used the facilities and attended to last minute pre-race details. Stepped back outside, dropped my bag at the bag check tent, warmed up by jogging and stretching before sliding in the starting corral with prolific marathoner Betty. (Betty’s race report.) Getting a little antsy in the starting corral, I started doing those short little hops that runners do when they wait at a traffic intersection not wanting to cool off too much. Given the packed corral, I landed one of my hops lightly on the toe of a guy standing behind me. Oops. I turned around and apologized profusely, he was fine so I joked: “That’s my strategy, take out the competition!” haha – that got a little laugh from those standing around us and hopefully diffused some pre-race nerves a bit.

THE RACE
Since I hadn’t raced a road race since June (battled injuries, etc.), I was hesitant to run this at first, but the team mentality swayed me. Three key goals:

1. Enjoy a nice outing with friends
ü  Got to run the entire half marathon with Betty, cheer on / provide race support for friends Anna (half marathon), Jan (full marathon) and Patrick (full marathon) and enjoy post-race time with everyone.
2. Run a pace between 7:15 to 7:27 min/mile (pace range for a potential future marathon)
ü  We averaged 7:24/mile – excellent!
3. Gain some information about my current fitness level.
ü  See further below for pacing and heart rate info…

The course was two-loops along the Merrimack River crossing at bridges close to downtown. Mostly flat, but a couple ‘inclines’ along the route, especially at one of the bridges. Kind of weak of me to even notice those inclines, clearly a result of running along the super-flat Charles River paths, time to vary up my routes and get some proper hills in… Crossroads Run anyone?

Both the full marathon and half marathon started at the same time, so got to see Patrick tucked in with the 3:05 pace group at the start. Betty and I continued on a fair pace for the first couple miles, I was happy to lock on to her pace throughout the run as she cruised the flats, glided through the water stops taking water without pause and powered up the inclines passing folks left and right. It was fun. We chatted a bit through the first loop of the course, and then kept conversation light on the second loop as our pace picked up. I tracked split times using my stopwatch and called them out as we hit each mile marker which seemed to work well for us both.
Betty and me about 3 miles into the run, rounding the corner and heading over the first bridge crossing the Merrimack River.
Mile-by-mile splits and average heart rate (HR) info below. The high HR (above 170) during the second half of the run indicates a solid effort to maintain this pace. I mean I felt relatively comfortable holding pace for 13.1 miles, but could I have maintained that for twice the distance? Not so sure, looks like I’ve got some training to do…


Nutrition/Hydration: Felt well hydrated at the start, carried a 12oz bottle of Gatorade and sipped it through 9 miles, then used the last two water stations – still looking back I could have drank more. Also around mile 7 ate two bites of a PowerBar stashed in my shorts pocket. Took a while to chew through it but it provided good nourishment, never felt hungry throughout the race.

By the way, while the course may be regarded as boring, and the foliage colors hadn’t kicked in yet, there was this rather dramatic view of the Merrimack River with the glistening sun bouncing off the rocks. I’m sure my HR dropped a few beats as this view induced a sense of calm and peacefulness for me. I took this shot from my bike after going back and cheering on Jan and Patrick doing the marathon.

Nice view of the Merrimack River from the race course.
POST-RACE
Finished with Betty – we were both really happy with our run performance. Went to pick up our bags and quickly changed into warm clothes, had some quick recovery protein, and stretched while cheering on several of Betty’s fellow Back on My Feet runners.

After cooling down, grabbed my bike from the car and rode the course backwards to support and cheer on Patrick and Jan running the full marathon. Encountered Patrick around mile 23 and then found Jan around mile 21. They both looked great. Headed back towards the finish line, ended up riding about 11 miles that day. Betty also ended up running in with Anna at the end of her half and then with Jan to bring him in the last couple miles of the marathon (I think she ended up covering 20+ miles total that day).

Got back with enough time to greet Patrick after an incredible debut marathon (3:00:50!) and then hi-five Jan through the last stretch of his run on his way to setting a marathon Personal Record (PR). We all enjoyed swapping stories while devouring the post-race food assortment: PBJ sandwiches, warm minestrone soup, bananas and salty potato chips.

Post-race celebration (l to r): Nilesh, Betty, Jan, Anna, Patrick
Had an occasion to attend later that afternoon and so was able to shower and change over at the UML Rec Center, which was very convenient.

OTHER NOTES
Race organization was great, from the race director promptly helping fix my registration mistake weeks before the race (oops, accidentally signed up for the full marathon), to the cheery volunteers when I went to pick up race bib numbers for the team on a rainy Friday, to the race day volunteers, many at the water stops dressed in lively costumes.

Had a fun pre-race dinner Friday night graciously hosted by Anna, who took extra care to make sure I had plenty of vegetarian options including tasty vegetarian (vegan) meatballs (brand: Nate’s) doused in her homemade sauce to go along with the pasta. Also enjoyed a couple special bottles of wine that night.

Great carbo-loading pasta+ dinner at Anna's in preparation for Sunday's Baystate Half & Full Marathon. The bottle on the right is a 1997 Villa Antinori Chianti Classico Riserva that I've been holding onto for 10+ years. Needed to let it breathe for a little while after uncorking, then it slowly found its flavor. The bottle on the left was a 2001 Villa Antinori Toscana Anna just happened to have, another fine Italian origin. Matching bottles, how about that!

Thanks for reading! Great team run, hi-five!



Sunday, October 2, 2011

BrickMan Triathlon Race Report

BrickMan Triathlon Race Report - Lawrence, MA
8:00am -- Sunday, October 2, 2011 -- 56F, overcast with wet roads
BrickMan Triathlon race website - click here.

Race Distances (Description):
> Swim: 250 yard (in a pool)
> Bike: 10.2 miles (3 loops of a circuit with several turns, pretty much flat)
> Run: 3 miles (4.5 loops around a park, very flat)

Background and Preparation
The BrickMan Triathlon is a small, local community race in Lawrence, Massachusetts (about 35 minutes north of Boston). This race is hosted by the Lawrence YMCA and benefits both the Y as well as Merrimack Valley Habitat for Humanity. This year 2011 was the 2nd annual running of this event - there were 103 finishers.

Decided within the week to jump into this race. That's the great thing about sprint triathlons, with relatively good fitness you can decide fairly last minute to do them. I went into it from a more 'fun' perspective rather than 'competitive', especially since I hadn't swum in over a year since I did the TDD Triathlon last year (clearly swimming is not my favorite) and also hadn't biked much this year (a paltry 300 miles ridden in 2011, thankfully including some recent time in the saddle on my road bike during a couple 40 - 50 mile rides with friends last month. Running, of course, I've been training...

The night before, had potato gnocci with marinara sauce for dinner along with a bowl of Masoor Dal (lentil soup). Not that this was going to be some long endurance event, but a little carbo-loading never hurt. Besides, I like gnocci and hadn't had it in a while. Morning of the race ate a couple more bowls of Masoor Dal around 5:30am. Left the house around 6:20am and arrived on site comfortably by 7:00am - plenty of buffer before the 8:00am start time. I had brought a PowerBar to nosh on during the drive up, but just didn't feel hungry for it then; of course during lap2 of the bike portion felt kinda hungry and regretted not having eaten it. Ah well.

Parking was easy and plentiful in a lot right behind the YMCA. Registration was a breeze in two minutes, and it included a nice poly t-shirt. The transition area was a grassy fenced off area within the park right across the street from the Y, and had plenty of space to rack your bike.

The Race Segments


Swim (250 yards: 5:35)
Since this was going to be a pool swim in the YMCA's pool (nice, clean, clear water pool by the way), they had asked for your estimated swim time during registration so that they could seed / stagger the start with the fastest swimmers at the front. The idea is that the first swimmer would go down lane1 to the other side of the pool, dip under the lane divider and then swim back and down lane2, dip under the next lane divider and repeat all the way to the other edge of the pool. Doing that would be 250 yards. And every subsequent swimmer's start would be staggered after the previous swimmer just about reached the opposite end of lane1, usually about 20-30 seconds between each swimmer.

So I estimated my 250 yard swim time conservatively at 5:55 (5 minutes 55 seconds). I was thus seeded as the 60th swimmer in line to start the race, so I started my swim roughly 20 minutes after the first swimmer started. I was pretty happy with a swim time of 5:35, which ranked as the 58th fastest swim time of the day, so not a bad estimate I guess their system works! As usual I was just happy to get out of the water...

Transition 1: swim to bike (2:19)
I forgot my race belt which holds your race bib number making it easy to put on top of your outfit. Because I forgot it, I had to use safety pins, and without going into too much detail, getting my full zip jersey on took some effort in the transition area which required me to repin my bib number, which probably added an extra 30 seconds to my transition time. Dealing with sharp, pointy pins when you are in a rush is never a good idea!

Bike (10.2 miles: 31:50 / 19.2 mph)
I also hadn't ridden my tri bike since last year's triathlon, and the battery on my cycle computer had run out, so I would be riding this one without any speed information. No biggie, just meant I would have to ride purely on feel which I should be doing anyway. It had rained recently, so the ground was wet which made for cautious cornering on the many turns throughout the circuit course. The course was almost completely flat with just one small 'bump'. The road quality was ok, some parts were a little cracked up, but you could usually find clear stretches to ride through. Volunteers and a police detail were stationed at every turn and intersection helping to direct cyclists and pause car traffic. I finished the three loops in 31:50 (19.2 mph) which ranked as the 22nd fastest bike split.

Transition 2: bike to run (1:35)
Even though this transition time was still a bit on the longer side relative to others, I'm pretty happy given my history of l-o-n-g transition times. Also decided to go sockless on the run, so saved some time not having to put them on my wet feet. Had a little concern with getting a blister since the roads were wet, but decided to htfu and keep moving.

Run (3.x miles: 22:08 / 7:16 per mile)
Came out of the transition area flying happily, but tried to make sure I didn't over-cook myself right of the bat, so backed off my pace a little. Lots of company out on the course at that point due to the swim stagger, though people were comfortably spread out through the course the entire time, I never felt overcrowded. As usual with me, it took a bit to find my running legs - and it's such a short race, there really isn't time to 'warm up' during the run. Anyway, after the first couple loops, I started picking up the pace. In retrospect I could have run a bit faster and endured a bit more 'suffering' but again, was just doing this for fun. I finished the 4.5 loops of the run course in 22:08 about a 7:16/mile pace and the 16th fastest run split of the day.

Total Race -- 1:03:26, 24th place overall out of 103 finishers

Final Notes
Race coordination and volunteers were fantastic, absolutely fantastic - everyone was smiling, attentive and helpful and provided clear instruction throughout the event. Being able to use the locker room at the Y was great, and provided a warm, comfortable and easy place to gear up and get ready for the race and then to change back into warm clothes afterwards. Post-race food included bagels, orange slices, tortilla chips and hummus, water and gatorade, among other items. Race winners and age-groups winners received awards which were actual bricks with an engraved plaque cemented on the top, novel idea.

All in all, this was a great little race benefiting good causes - I'd recommend this race, either for a seasoned triathlete getting in a final race of the season or especially for a first-timer who would be hard pressed to find a friendlier, more welcoming race to make their first foray into triathlon.

Saturday, October 1, 2011

September 2011 recap

Just a quick recap for the month of September... added some decent base mileage as well as some bonus time hiking and cycling. My overall training pace/speed improved, but I'm not convinced that's an indicator of anything really important. Adding track workouts or intervals would improve my pace, but long slow distance runs may slow my overall pace. Doesn't really mean a good or bad result, just mixing up training overall to race strong, confidently and fast. Anyway, looking forward to October now and running through autumn in Boston. Happy trails!