Short story is that I got 5th overall and second in my age group. But they told me I won my age group (40-49) because the guy who got second got top three overall. So I got a blue ribbon with a medal on it for winning my age group even though a guy who was 43 ran 10 minutes faster, which seemed a little silly to me.
Either way, it was perfect weather for a race, chilly at the start and
then mild during the race. Race starts in Breck, which is at around 9500 feet.
At the start Andy Wacker took off at what must have been
close to 5-minute pace uphill, and then a pack of five of us, with me following
three men and one female, running at closer to 7-minute pace, well
behind.
I moved into 4th place at about two miles, as we
worked our way up gradual single track. I had planned to run conservatively, by
heart rate, but my heart rate data was wonky and unusable, so I was running by
feel instead. I got the sense that I was running hard, and when my HR data
finally started registering correctly, I could see I was in the 170s, which
was indeed too intense for a 2-hour-plus race.
I laid off the gas a bit, trying to keep my heart rate below
170. The trail got way steeper, though, and I got passed by a guy after the
five mile mark. I continued to make steady if not spectacular progress up the
hill. Hit the crest at 6.5 miles at 12,500 feet at about 73 minutes and then
the mile-7 aid at 78 minutes.
At that point, the marathoners, who got a 10-minute head
start on us, continued on the crest and us half marathons took the steep fire
road back down into town.
It was rocky for about two miles and then smoothed out. I
trotted my normal conservative pace on the rocky stuff and then tried to push
on the smoother sections. Mile 10 was a 6:11, my fastest of the day. At this
point, the road opened up, and I could not see anyone ahead or behind me. A guy
at an aid station said I was about four minutes behind the next runner.
That did not do much for my motivation. We switched from
fire road to single track, and that’s when my low-6-minute pace turned into
high-7s. There were a couple of rollers, and then a bit of a contrived section
as we got back into town. Race ended up being 13.54 miles, according to my watch.
Finished in 2:05 and change.
On the whole I’m satisfied with the effort.
I certainly didn’t execute a perfect race. In an ideal
world, I would have started off with my HR in the high 150s and finished with
it in the low 170s. Instead I did the opposite. I toasted myself a little
early, but I think 2:05 is a decent reflection of my fitness. With perfect
execution I might have gone 2-3 minutes faster, but I think I finished where I
belonged relative to the other runners.
Race results notwithstanding, I’m happy with how my running
is going.
It was about two years ago when I started upping my mileage
beyond 15-20 miles a week. Last year, I averaged closer to 60, but I was injured
the second half of the year, so it didn’t do me any good. This year, I think
I’m a touch better off fitness-wise, but have accomplished it on less mileage
(about 40 miles a week) and most importantly, with no serious injuries (knock
on wood).
So yeah, racing reasonably well (for my fitness level) at mid-distance mountain
races with no injuries. I’ll take it.
Here's a pic of the top 3 plus age-group winners:
Here's a pic of the top 3 plus age-group winners:
Photo courtesy @agoldie94
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