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Top of Utah Half Marathon

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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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Race: Top of Utah Half Marathon (13.1 Miles) 01:09:33, Place overall: 1, Place in age division: 1
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesCrosstraining milesTotal Miles
8.507.005.500.000.0021.00

Today was an interesting day. I did a Big Workout within the Top of Utah Half Marathon. I've been wanting to run the TOU Half for awhile, but figured I needed a workout more than an all-out race, so I decided to combine the two. The other idea was to add "race day magic" to a workout, which would make the workout a lot more fun and easier to complete. My Big Workout today was:

4 miles @ MP (2 minutes recovery)

3 miles @ MP (2 minutes recovery)

2 miles @ LT (1 minute recovery)

2 miles @ LT (1 minute recovery)

1 mile @ LT

The course layout for the TOU Half is a good one. The first 7 miles or so are a gentle downhill in the canyon. The next 3 miles flatten out a bit, but are still a gentle (but imperceptible) downhill. There is a relatively long uphill through Millville from Mile 11 to 12 or so, and then gentle downhill to the finish in Providence.

Weather was absolutely perfect. I mean perfect. 50 degrees at the start line, with promise of a tail wind coming out of the canyon. If the weather is remotely like this for the TOU Marathon, people will qualify.

To warm up, I ran from my house to the busing area (about 1.75 miles). We bused up to the start line up Blacksmith Fork, and I did some more jogging and got my porta-pot stops in. Ready to go. They started the race right on time.

My workout/race went as follows:

Workout Segment
Mile
Split
Comments
4-mile @ MP
1 5:13 out a bit fast
4-mile @ MP 2 5:16 settled in
4-mile @ MP 3 5:15
4-mile @ MP 4 5:16
2-minute recovery
0.35 5:52/mile pace
faster than expected
3-mile @ MP 1 5:10 starting to get tailwind
3-mile @ MP 2 5:09 this is fun
3-mile @ MP 3 5:10 tremendous fun
2-minute recovery 0.33 6:00/mile pace

2-mile @ LT
1 5:05 Hollow Rd
2-mile @ LT 2 5:09 Hollow Rd/Hwy 165
1-minute recovery
0.16 6:08/mile pace

2-mile @ LT 1 5:09 Hwy 165
2-mile @ LT 2 5:37
Millville; uphill; yuk!
1-minute recovery
0.23 6:15/mile pace
1:25 rest
1-mile @ LT
1
5:00
nice downhill

The first 10 miles of the workout/race was quite a bit of fun, and I felt fantastic. The cool morning and downhill start really made things fast, and then picking up the tailwind on my second MP interval made it feel like some sort of weird video game. 5:10 was effortless in those conditions. I was having a ball, and the MP sets went great. The first LT 2-mile interval went very well, and I held a good pace. The second LT 2-miler was a bit harder, mostly because of the long uphill through Millville. This was the only point during the workout where I felt like I was struggling. By the end of the uphill, I managed to find a good rhythm, and hit 5:25/mile pace, but the first half of that mile was a lot slower. I knew I had a downhill mile to end the workout/race with, and I was looking forward to it. I waited to the race's official 12-mile mark to start my last interval, which gave me a little bit extra rest. I ended up running the last 1.1 at LT to compensate, and was happy to hit 5:00 pace for it.

So that was my workout. The race itself was interesting too. I was a bit ahead of Logan during the first 4-mile MP interval, but I could hear him, so I figured he was just 10 meters behind or so. When I eased up for my 2-minute recovery, Logan went by, and looked as though he wasn't working at all. I was inwardly cheering for all my friends to hit big PR's, so I was happy to see him zoom by. Logan pulled away a bit on my recovery, but then when I started my next interval I really didn't close on him at all, so I knew he must be doing 5:10's. I hoped that everyone else was enjoying the tailwind as much as Logan and I.

This trend continued for the rest of the race, until Logan's fatal wrong turn: he would pull away on my recoveries, and I would gain nothing on the intervals. In fact, I think he was pulling away on the intervals as well. By Mile 10, I was so far ahead of my own schedule, that I thought breaking 1:10 would be probable, and Logan was a good minute ahead. He clearly had 1:08 in the bag. The left turn into Millville was around Mile 11. Logan was so far ahead of me that I didn't see him miss it, but did see him up around Main St. I was a little confused, as there was no volunteer at the corner, but I was pretty sure the turn was at 100 W (it is for the marathon). Plus the sun was directly in my eyes, so I couldn't see the course markings. I actually slowed down a bit and looked behind me as I entered the intersection, and then saw the marking to turn. Logan was too far away to yell at, plus I was breathing too hard to yell, or talk for that matter. And I sure couldn't catch him. I figured he would turn at Main St., which would give him the same distance, and all would be good. Alas, this was not the case. I finished the race, and started asking everyone where the winner was. I seriously thought he was just that far ahead of me. Everyone looked at me as though I was hallucinating. "You're the winner, you idiot." I was pretty bummed, because Logan had such a sweet PR going.

I ended up about 10 seconds off my own PR, which I was quite happy with. Had I tapered, worn flats, and raced all-out, I think sub-1:08 would have been in the works. But that was not the goal today. Jon, Cody, and Walter all got sweet PR's, and I was really stoked for them. Big things coming at TOU and St. George for all those guys.

Cooled down with the guys afterward, sat around for awards (didn't win anything in the prize drawing, and then ran home. 21 miles total for the day, capping off a 104-mile week, my first 100-mile week since 2004, and my most mileage in a week ever. 6 more weeks until St. George. 4 weeks of good, hard, quality training. Every week of training gives further opportunity to grow stronger and get faster.

(Burn: 242 miles)

Comments
From James in Sunny AZ on Sat, Aug 25, 2007 at 16:37:08

Congrats on the great big workout! Sounds like things are looking good for the OT qualifier.

From Cody on Sat, Aug 25, 2007 at 17:32:31

Nice Race/Workout. Way to stick to your workout when it would have been "easier" to just race with Logan. It will pay off for you. Good job on getting so many quality miles in this week, traveling and all.

From Chad on Sat, Aug 25, 2007 at 18:22:45

I don't usually offer people congratulations on their workouts, but congratulations, Paul! Actually, I wish you would have left out the part about this being just a workout. To run 1:09 for the half in a "workout" is insane. Frankly, it hurts my feelings.

You are mad fit and set to do amazing things at STGM. Great job.

From ashman on Sat, Aug 25, 2007 at 18:49:32

Nice run Paul! Frankly, I'm kinda jealous.

From Jon on Sat, Aug 25, 2007 at 20:43:45

Nice workout. But are you sure you are going to be able to pace me at TOU, or will 6:00 pace be too slow? I don't want you suddenly popping off some 5:00 miles mid-marathon!

You'll do great at SGM!

From Cody on Sat, Aug 25, 2007 at 20:45:34

He can do 6's in his sleep. You had better watch out.

From Paul Petersen on Sat, Aug 25, 2007 at 20:53:13

Thanks guys. Today was fun. The real story of the day though was breakout races by Jon and Cody. Very impressive the more I look at it, as both of your performances equate to sub-2:40 on the TOU marathon course. Jon is looking at something in the 2:35 range, so we better adjust our pacing plans a little bit. Cody is looking at something in the 2:39 range on the TOU course, which equates to 2:35 range on the St. George course. Better gear up for fast marathons guys.

From Jon on Sat, Aug 25, 2007 at 22:47:03

http://www.umnh.utah.edu/pageview.aspx?menu=4298&id=16126

Is that you in the picture?

From Michelle on Sun, Aug 26, 2007 at 00:11:41

congratulations on the great workout (especially the fast pace on the flat miles), and thanks for the description. You are inspiring!

From Paul Petersen on Sun, Aug 26, 2007 at 11:53:23

Jon - the people in the photo are: Demetrio Jr., Sasha, Albert Wint, and myself. I've never seen that; good find.

From Superfly on Sun, Aug 26, 2007 at 18:20:16

Great run Paul. Your training run = everyone else's PR dreams. I'm gearing up to have a celebrity staying at my house.

From Jon on Sun, Aug 26, 2007 at 18:29:50

I recognized Sasha and you, but didn't know the other two.

From James on Mon, Aug 27, 2007 at 01:20:23

You are the man!

From Clay on Mon, Aug 27, 2007 at 15:25:32

Awesome race Paul and congrats on the win... You had an incrediable week of training, a true inspiration!

From Sasha Pachev on Mon, Aug 27, 2007 at 15:58:27

Paul - those assumptions for Jon and Cody work if we get the tail wind in the canyon again. Otherwise, go by effort. In fact, always go by effort regardless, and keep adjusting the goal through the race.

Jon - Paul might see $1000 ahead of him (e.g Hobie is not there, and I start struggling), smell the blood and go after it, so be prepared :-)

From Paul Petersen on Mon, Aug 27, 2007 at 16:07:42

Sasha - very true about the tailwind. However, everyone will also have a few more weeks of good training, plus a quality taper. Take out the tailwind, and they might break even or close. Keep the tailwind and watch out! The other thing is that the tailwind affected 3 or 4 miles of the race, a small fraction.

Regarding TOU competition, I talked to the race director when getting my number the other day and asked who was in. Hobie has indeed entered (very recently). He also mentioned a Kenyan that wanted to run, but Kenyans often do not go through with it, so probably just 50-50 on that. So there is a chance for some easy money, but it's doubtful.

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