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Des News 10K

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Location:

Fort Collins,CO,

Member Since:

May 15, 2003

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

Unaided PR's:
5K: 14:48 (Track - 2001)
10K: 30:45 (Track - 2001)
10K: 31:32 (Bolder Boulder - 2013)
Half Marathon: 1:06:09 (Duluth - 2013)
Marathon: 2:17:54 (Grandma's) - 2014)
Marathon: 2:19:47 (Indianapolis Monumental - 2013)
Marathon: 2:19:49 (Indianapolis Monumental - 2010)

Aided PR's:
10K: 29:38 (Des News - 2011)
Half Marathon: 1:05:30 (TOU Half - 2011)
Marathon: 2:18:09 (St George - 2007)
Marathon: 2:17:35 (Boston - 2011)

Short-Term Running Goals:

Diagnosed with Ankylosing Spondylitis in June of 2008. Started taking Enbrel in March, 2009.

Run as much as I can, and race as well as I can. Make the most of however much time I have left as an able-bodied runner.

Training for the 2018 Colorado Marathon

Long-Term Running Goals:

  Run until I'm old, and then run some more. Stand tall.

Personal:

1 wife, 2 kids. 1 cat. Work as a GIS Specialist/Map Geek

Endure and persist; this pain will turn to your good. - Ovid

Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not disappoint us, because God has poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has given us. - Romans 5:1-5

 

 

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Saucony Trail Shoe Lifetime Miles: 247.50
Hoka Clifton Lifetime Miles: 491.50
Saucony Type A6 Lifetime Miles: 186.50
Saucony Zealot Lifetime Miles: 478.75
Saucony Kinvara 6 Lifetime Miles: 433.50
Saucony Kinvara 6-2 Lifetime Miles: 358.75
Brooks Pure Connect Blue Lifetime Miles: 337.25
New Balance Trainers Lifetime Miles: 314.50
New Balance 1400 Racers Lifetime Miles: 65.00
Brook Pureflow Lifetime Miles: 99.50
Race: Des News 10K (6.21 Miles) 00:29:38, Place overall: 13
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesCrosstraining milesTotal Miles
8.250.000.006.250.0014.50

Des News 10K today. I enjoy this race because it's so competitive, and I got a full order of competition today! Definitely both the deepest and top-heavy Des News field I've run in. It's sick how fast people ran today, but sick in a good way. It's great to have a race like this right here in Utah. Too bad it's all downhill, as no one outside the state gives the race any respect. But it's a great race.

Anyway, Stacy, Seth, and I drove down to SLC on Friday afternoon. Went early so that we could take our new (used) Volvo to the dealer (only dealer in the state) to do some magical dealer-only work (ie - turn off the air bag light). Managed to escape only spending $110 for that and a few other things.

We then shacked up at the Skyline Inn on Foothill Dr., just a couple miles from the start line. Ordered in pizza for dinner and sat around and gorged ourselves on TV (we have not have tv reception at home since we built our deck--no big loss). Went on to sleep my worst night of sleep ever. Absolutely terrible beds there, plus the room was too warm (weak AC). Wished I was in nice, cool Cache Valley. Got probably 3 hours of sleep, but I was ready to get up at 4:30AM, simply to get our of that dang bed. To top off the terrible bed, the room had no coffee machine. Even our hotel in Provo, a stone's throw from BYU, had a flippin' coffee machine. Oh well. My nervous system was pretty amp'ed for this race, so I was quite wide awake and ready to go anyway. But it would have helped with "other things".

Ate a banana and a couple mini-Cliff bars, and headed out to the course. Ran there, so it was about a 2 or 3-mile warmup. Conditions were cooler than I thought it might be, which was good, but still quite a bit warmer than what I'm used to. When I turned up Wakara, I noticed that we would have a favorable wind direction for that part of the race. Perhaps that helped make the race times so fast. I'm sure the nice temperatures helped too.

Took a potty stop, then warmed up a little more, did some strides, sat in the grass, and generally wasted time. Listened to a guy cuss up a storm because he realized he forgot his iPOD. Totally ruined his day. If you hate running that much, then don't do it! This guy was angry beyond belief, though, probably one of the same people who threw a fit on Ragnar's facebook page a few weeks ago.

Just before the race started, I bumped into an old teammate from Calvin, Kris Koster. Kris was a freshman when I was senior. He went on to be a multi-All American, and ran around 30-flat on the track in the 10K, and under 14:30 in the 5K too. He has family in Utah, and was here for a funeral, and jumped in Des News at 5PM last night. Pretty cool to see him after 9 years, and it definitely made my day (and helped my race, see below).

Chatted with a few others, and weaseled my way into the start. I somehow ended up 3 rows deep, and couldn't get any further up, being a 125-lb weakling and all. So I settled for 3 rows back, behind all the kids, including an 11-year-old whose mom personally insisted be up there.

They started the race right on time (this race is always very well-organized), and we roared out. Always a fast start, this Des News 10K. I quickly found myself in about 30th place or so. I got out from the crowd and wormed my way up, and was probably in about 20th by the turn onto Wakira. I couldn't believe how far up the leaders were, and how far back I was from my "peer group". I could see Jeff and Brad O. way the heck up there, and Seth P a little ahead of them. Leaders were almost out of site by a half mile. I figured that I was just having a tank of a race and going really slow. First mile split was 4:31. Okaaay. My goal pace for the first two miles for 4:35-4:38. I was not slow; everyone else was just extremely fast. Hopefully they would all pay.

I started running down the people that went out too hard. Knowing that my first mile was 4:31, I pretty much figured everyone went out too hard, and I was destined to win. Well, I didn't really think that, but I figured a lot of guys would come back to me, including Jeff and Brad. One-by-one I picked people off the next few miles. Mile 2 was 4:37 (9:08 for 2 miles). The pace felt quite hard (never felt relaxed at any point), and the downhill was hurting my back. I actually accelerated more and gained more ground on the flatter sections and on the uphill sections.

Mile 3 was tougher than I remember, and actually had quite a bit of uphill. Where did that come from. But again, I gained the most ground on the uphill, so although painful, it was good for my race. I also noticed a guy in dark maroon coming back to me, and I immediately recognized the distinct stride with the high leg kick: Kris Koster, my old college teammate. It's funny how you can recognize a stride after all those years. I was gaining on Kris, and he was the link between myself and the next pack ahead of him (Jeff, Brad, etc). Mile 3 was 4:50 (13:59 for 3 miles).

I was targeting 4:45 for the next couple miles, and then Mile 6 is always a death-march. Not that you can really "target" much at Des News. You more just load and go, and hope for the best. It's not a cerebral race. I caught Kris during the 4th mile. "Pack it up" I said to him as I pulled along side him. Got a lot of warm fuzzy college memories. Calvin College XC was well-known in DIII for its pack running. It's what gave us our strength, and how we won championships.  I ended up running with Kris the rest of the way, and we reeled in people together. Hit Mile 4 in 4:44 (18:43), so back to an ideal pace.

We made our turn onto the parade route, and of course by this point things were very uncomfortable. I really dislike any race shorter than 15K at this point of my running career. Too much pain, too much turnover, too much breathing, not enough rhythm. Kris and I continued to work together. Right around Mile 5, Kris looked up and said, "I lift my eyes up to the hills," a reference to Psalm 121 "

1 I lift up my eyes to the hills—
       where does my help come from?

 2 My help comes from the LORD,
       the Maker of heaven and earth."

Words of encouragement to me and also a reminder to enjoy God's creation that we were running in. Laboring but spurred on, we reeled in and passed a guy in red, and Jeff & Brad O. were coming back, and it was inevitable that we would catch them. Mile 5 was 4:45 (23:29), perfect.

I don't remember, but I think we finally caught Jeff & company with about 1 mile left. I sat on the pack for a few moments to gather some strength (I've been feeling pretty gassed since Mile 2!), and then made a move on the inside before the turn onto 900 S. Passed everyone, but then I couldn't finish deal, and we all stayed packed up. Made the turn onto 900 S, and started the uphill section to the finish. This part is always hard, and this year was no different. The work I'd done the last 3 miles to catch everyone was definitely set in, and I no pop.

Eventually Jeff, Brad, and some other guy passed me back, and then ground me up the hill. I sat and hoped for a good kick. Ugghh. Not feeling the fire either. Wish I had done some 10K training, as I promised myself that I would, but the last month was just miles and tempos, nothing hard. Had a little gap from the pack at Mile 6, but was 5:05 (28:34), which actually is my best Des News mile 6 split, so I shouldn't complain. Was 2 seconds beyond my peer group that I needed to beat, so still within striking range!

Unfortunately I didn't strike, and those guys somehow put another 3 seconds or so on me in the last 0.2. I guess Brad is a sub-1:50 800m guy, so that doesn't help (I ran 2:02, almost 10 years ago), but there's still no reason it couldn't have gone the other way for me. Kris had fallen back from my a little bit on 900 S (the uphill at altitude probably hurt him more, being a flatlander), so I remained ahead of him. Saw the clock for the first time right before I finished and realized that was going to kill my time goal of sub-30:00, and would be in the 29:30s. I had no idea. So that was good! Last 0.2 was 64s.

Was glad to be done, glad to hit my time goal, and glad to beat my course best by 48 seconds. Official chip time was 29:38, gun time was 29:39. I'll go with chip time here. Starting 3 rows back did not help, although running 4:30 for the first mile (opposed to 4:20) probably did help.

That said, I was a little shocked to get my bum handed to me on a platter en-route to a 29:38. 3 years ago that time would have been good for 3rd overall and 2nd Utahn; this year it was good for 13th overall and ?? Utahn. Not top 3, that's for sure. But it was all very exciting racing, and fun to work my way up in a good field like that, to recognize people as rivals and reel them in over the duration of a race, and to find an old teammate and work together with him (running with Kris was definitely the highlight of my day, by far).

Another positive was that we were all reeling in Teren J. over the last couple miles. Never came into contact with him, but I'm always glad just to have him visible. He ended up about 15 seconds ahead. He is running the TOU Half, so perhaps home-field will give me the advantage I need to finally slay the dragon? Jeff has owned me this year at the shorter distances (5K/10K). Perhaps we need to race another half marathon? TOU Half, Jeff? But I least I had to opportunity to make the pass in this race, whereas at Law Day I couldn't even made contact! And thankfully  I don't have to race any more 5K's or 10K's for a year or two or three. Maybe ever.

So in a nutshell, it was a PR effort, and a big course best. Great time and good progress compared to my 2007 time. I think I am on track for where I need to be to make a legitimate Trials shot. I get better as I go out in distance, so I don't put too much stock in 10Ks (especially downhill ones), but I have every reason to be encouraged because I can compare to my '07 time. The big negative was not being able to finish out yet another race. Although I have not been falling apart at the end, my kick and my killer instinct has not been there at any race this year. I believe that more than 50% of the problem is just attitude and emotional fatigue from the race. True the lack of speedwork didn't help, but most of it is mental. It can be improved.

After the race, I talked with Kris and a few other people for a while, then cooled down back to my hotel with Kris and Teren. Felt pretty good during the cooldown, and worked out most of my calf and quad soreness during the 4-mile run. Hopefully I'll feel good on Monday...for the start of marathon training! Everything I've done so far this winter, spring, and summer, has led up to this point. Just get me to 14 weeks before the marathon, healthy and fit. And that's where I am. The race is Nov. 6. I am healthy. I am fit. Just need the specific training, and to endure the next 3 months.

Saucony Type A Miles: 14.50
Comments
From Derunzo on Sat, Jul 24, 2010 at 20:52:02 from 98.229.131.173

Awesome race & report! You were ripping that first mile. Congrats on the PR!

From Holt on Sat, Jul 24, 2010 at 21:26:28 from 174.27.236.205

Great race Paul. The whole thing says a lot about what is to come for you this fall.

From Rob Murphy on Sat, Jul 24, 2010 at 22:20:04 from 69.144.239.26

Great race (as usual) Paul.

Hey, I have a guest bedroom in my basement in Salt Lake if you ever want to use it before a race.

From Burt on Sat, Jul 24, 2010 at 22:47:22 from 68.225.214.248

I always love to read your reports. They're the best. And even though you're a 125-lb weakling, I wouldn't mess with you. Especially when you wear that intimidating beard.

From jeffmc on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 00:11:37 from 76.27.88.14

Sorry Paul, no TOU half for me. I am moving to Las Vegas next week, and I start grad school at UNLV in August, so I will probably do very little racing between now and November. Maybe I can find a race or two in Vegas to give me a tune-up before the marathon, but traveling is pretty much out of the question.

Anyhow, great job on your race today. I was really surprised to see a 4:44 split for that 4th mile, I didn't realize that you had started that far behind us.

From Superfly on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 00:13:34 from 208.117.127.110

Great race and even better write up. Maybe a PR effort there too. I really enjoyed it and got the feel that your hungry for then next three months. Should turn out great for ya. Hope you stay healthy and if so you'll be ready to do some damage.

I was thinking about coming up for TOU half. If so maybe you could win and then run back to pace me for the last 6 miles:)

From Paul on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 14:26:04 from 174.27.193.158

Thanks all.

Rob - I usually like hotels when traveling with family (more privacy and more fun), but this one was just kind of a lemon. But maybe I'll take you up sometime.

Burt - the beard adds about 5 lbs (mostly food that gets stuck in it), so I'm a 130 lb weakling when I wear it.

Jeff - yeah, I knew you were moving, but didn't know if was this soon. Yeah, mile 4 & 5 were good for me, but I'm still amazed how fast you and everyone else got out. I just can't do it. It was fun reading your blog, though, and comparing the overall time at each mile. Looked like I was about 20 seconds back at the 2-mile.

Clyde - TOU Half is a good one, usually have nice cool weather. Competition will good, and it can be a PR course on the right day.

From Adam RW on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 15:20:30 from 24.10.132.131

As always, thank you for sharing a very entertaining recount of your race.

From Little Bad Legs on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 16:44:43 from 67.170.153.203

Impressive run! Great job Paul.

From Merri on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 16:47:33 from 160.7.252.148

Great job Paul, loved the race report.

From Lindsey Dunkley on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 17:15:41 from 75.169.144.67

Great race Paul...good luck to you in your next races!

From allie on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 18:16:45 from 174.23.226.74

great job on the race. it is always fun to read your commentary.

about the guy who forgot his ipod - there was a woman on the marathon bus who was in the same dilemma. she was seriously devastated. i recommended that she could just sing to herself but she didn't think that was funny.

From James on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 18:34:16 from 174.23.34.125

I liked to report as usual. That was one heck of a field yesterday, very fast and deep! I think you ran smart whether you tried to or not. 29:38 is a killer time on downhill, flat, or being pulled behind a car. You are showing some good speed still for being a distance man and training like one. I agree with Dave, this fall will prove to be a good one for you! I just remember how studly you ran in 2007 after running 48 seconds slower at Des News than you did yesterday!

From Bec on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 19:29:14 from 76.23.55.210

Wicked speed dude, wow!

From Jason McK on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 23:47:33 from 97.117.40.115

Awesome report. Nice job on the race too. Good luck with the next 14 weeks. May the heavens smile down on you!

From Scott Ensign on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 23:51:57 from 71.35.225.230

nice race Paul, and good to see you down there. speaking of the start, did you see the giant wearing cutoff jeans that jumped in right in front of me and Carol right before the start? I'm all of 160 pounds but that still intimidated me.

From jtshad on Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 23:55:47 from 69.20.183.178

Nice race and great perspective. You are looking great for that Trials qualifier run.

From Paul on Mon, Jul 26, 2010 at 07:50:38 from 174.27.193.158

Scott - the "giant" broke 31 minutes, which has to be a world record for a 10K in cutoff jean shorts and compression socks. You should be honored to have been touched by his awesomeness.

From MichelleL on Mon, Jul 26, 2010 at 12:14:02 from 67.41.230.247

Fun read, yet again. I know just what you mean about finding that killer instinct. There's definitely a mental fatigue in a race I have to relearn how to overcome.

So awesome you went so far under 30. Hope your body bounces back from the race.

From Scott Ensign on Mon, Jul 26, 2010 at 20:23:30 from 71.35.225.230

incredible. I watched him go out like a bolt of lightning and was very impressed. so just out of curiosity, who was that? I am going to go cut off some jeans and see if the magic rubs off!

From Burt on Mon, Jul 26, 2010 at 20:47:45 from 206.19.214.144

Maybe it was fellow blogger CDViking (6' 7")or loschi (6' 8").

From Holt on Mon, Jul 26, 2010 at 20:58:44 from 75.169.90.161

I was wondering where that guy finished - I never saw him the whole race and hoped that it was because he started behind me! But nope - thanks for rubbing salt in the wounds!

From Paul on Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 09:41:12 from 174.27.193.158

It was BJ Christenson. He's fairly well-known around here in both running and triathlon circles. Probably known more as a triathlete.

From Huans32 on Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 09:58:01 from 138.64.8.52

Yep that would of been BJ. I have seen him in a few of the tris I have done. He was one of the ones that flew by me as I was running my 5k sprint tri and him doing the Oly and starting his 2nd lap around. Also saw him down at IMSG. He is just under going pro. His only problem is that he works full time, schooling and trains for tris. He is awesome.

From Jon on Wed, Jul 28, 2010 at 23:48:42 from 75.169.144.58

Wow- great job, especially how much ground you had to make up on everyone. Now use your health and base to build up your marathon training and go OTQ!

From Seth on Mon, Aug 02, 2010 at 12:34:59 from 199.188.28.8

Even with the downhill, sub-5 minute over 6 miles is amazing! Great report!

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