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Salt Lake City Marathon

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Location:

Salt Lake City,UT,

Member Since:

May 22, 2012

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Age Division Winner

Running Accomplishments:

5k - 16:40 (2014 SLCTC Winter Series)

Half - 1:15:26 (2014 Canyonlands)

Full - 2:34:17 (2014 Boston)

Long-Term Running Goals:

Stay in shape

Personal:

Married with sons ages 8 and 4

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Merrell Road Glove Lifetime Miles: 92.47
Brooks Defyance 3 Lifetime Miles: 670.34
New Balance MR 1400 (2) Lifetime Miles: 469.02
Brooks Cascadia 7 Lifetime Miles: 552.10
Saucony Fastwitch 6 (Orange 10.5) Lifetime Miles: 238.47
Saucony Ride 5 Lifetime Miles: 270.14
UA Cold Gear Rubber Lifetime Miles: 398.72
Kinvara 5 Test Lifetime Miles: 537.10
Asics Hyper Speed 6 Lifetime Miles: 128.90
Kinvara 5 (May 2014) Lifetime Miles: 464.01
Altra Loan Peak 1.5 (free) Lifetime Miles: 109.83
New Balance RC 1400 Lifetime Miles: 414.63
Brooks PureFlow 4 (June 15) Lifetime Miles: 380.33
PT Lifetime Miles: 14.00
Brooks Launch 7 (9-15) Lifetime Miles: 234.59
Treadmill 2016 Lifetime Miles: 38.39
Brooks Cascadia May 2015 Lifetime Miles: 120.74
Treadmill 2017 Lifetime Miles: 3.10
Race: Salt Lake City Marathon (26.2 Miles) 03:21:36, Place overall: 63, Place in age division: 12
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
0.0026.200.000.0026.20

I trained 480 miles from December 20, 2011 for this race. I started with Hal Higdon's beginners 2 and did that faithfully for 11 weeks. I started out pretty much cold having run perhaps once or twice a month since my first half marathon in October 2010, the Other Half. I trained about 155 miles for that race, but did not train for the three weeks leading up to the race having started a new job. My time then was 1:47:36 and I really struggled in the last half starting with the mile 7 hill.

This time around, as my pace quickly improved, I started to read a lot more and I mixed in a bit of speed work starting week 12. My first time trial came with the Striders 10 miler in week 12. I finished that in 7:07 miles. Given the hilliness of the race, I began setting pace targets of 7:00 threshold pushing into the high 6s and 7:30 marathon pace.

In week 13, I went to the IHC running lab to get a lactate threshold test and was saddened to learn that my threshold predicted 8:00 marathon miles. With six weeks to go, I didn't have much time to increase my threshold, but I was told of some areas of focus that could push my pace toward the 7:30 mark. I learned of Jack Daniels and the McMillan running calculator at this point and did two speed sessions a week until the last week.

Three weeks prior, I did the Riverton Half in 1:33:04, goal was to break 90 minutes but hilly and a windy day. With this evidence, I felt I could target a 3:10 marathon three weeks later, even though McMillan predicted me in the 3:16 range.  This was also against the advice of my millimole build-up, but I thought I may as well lay it all out there.

Against the advice I'd read, I went out too fast averaging 7:10 over my first five miles with a 6:58 mile 3. I was at a 7:20 pace through mile 20 when the cramps in my legs (which I started to feel in my right quad at about the half-way mark) and overall fatigue took over.  The last six miles were 7:49, 7:58, 8:27, 8:14, 8:54 and 9:07. As nobody passed me, I assumed most other runners were suffering a similar fate.

Still, I am proud of this time for a first marathon. I am happy that I only missed three training days and added workouts in the last six weeks. I am excited that the few nagging injuries I had did not become serious and I ran the marathon injury free. I am also very happy that I shed 20 excess pounds and I am now closer to my ideal weight. 

I ran track in school from 8th through 11th grade. I don't remember precisely, but I believe my PRs are 5:01 for a mile, 10:20 for two miles and 16:20 for a 5k. That was when I was 6' and 120 pounds. I ran with Teren Jameson in jr. high and he and Adam Stark in high school. I never really improved my mile from jr. high when Teren and I were competitive and I always felt that I wasted my potential - partially because of poor work ethic and partially because I hated it so much. I now love it, I am running injury free and I am hoping to prove to myself that I can run somewhat competitively at the local level. With work and two young boys, this may prove somewhat of a challenge but we'll see...

Night Sleep Time: 0.00Nap Time: 0.00Total Sleep Time: 0.00Weight: 0.00
Comments
From Kam on Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 10:24:06 from 68.66.163.179

Josh, I saw your recent striders times, and came back to read this report. You are quickly becoming a force to be reckoned with. Congratulations on rediscovering the running joy. I'll be excited to see how Ogden treats you. Taking the first half pretty easy is hard/counterintuitive, but I think it's a winning strategy. You've got to have a bit left in reserve for the canyon; otherwise it will feel uphill.

From Josh E on Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 11:32:20 from 205.235.104.4

Thanks Kam. I ran that canyon once and realized I should never do it again without traffic control. It is narrow and windy so that strategy makes a lot of sense.

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