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Milwaukee Lakefront Marathon 3/10/2021

Background

Well, I even have a blog about my running so I don’t need to write a lot about my history of running. 

2020

Entering 2020, I didn’t really have any races to target and I hadn’t signed up for anything. The year before I had run the NYC marathon in 3:09 and I needed to improve with at least 15 minutes to have any chance to qualify for the Boston Marathon. This sounded like a big jump for a single year, so I decided to focus on a shorter distance. My high level plan was to run a half marathon whose VDOT score (https://runsmartproject.com/calculator/) would be equivalent to a safe Boston qualification in the marathon (2:53ish). This indicated that my goal for 2020 was to run 1:23 half.

COVID hit and even if I wanted I could not run a real race. I decided to still start a half marathon training cycle in March and hope to find some races at the end of May. Well, races didn’t really start happening for the following year, but I decided to keep going and organize my own COVID Half Marathon by the river paced by friends on bikes.

I did two training cycles that were absolutely the same and I ran the race almost on the same path. First training cycle ended up with a 1:24:55 half marathon (6:30 pace) on May 31 2020. Shortly after that I bought a bike and spent the majority of the summer biking with a nice 130 mile trip from Boston to Provincetown in mid August (I ate 3 ice creams in a day without regrets!). Two days after that I started my new training cycle with a running base significantly aided by all of the biking.

Two days before the race, Boston had a crazy snow storm. It was kind of weird being at work and explaining to my boss how I am planning to run a half marathon in running singlet and shorts two days later. Well, the next day was super warm, snow melted and I had perfect conditions on race day.

Race was perfect and I ran 1:22:31 Half Marathon on November 1st (two days before the November 3rd presidential elections, so I had all right to get totally wasted on election night). I even had some more energy in my legs and I could have run faster, but who has motivation to run faster than their A goal for the year?!

This was the first time I actually met a goal for the year, so I was pretty excited to see what’s to come in 2021.

2021

The goal for the year was simple: 2:53 marathon and qualify for the Boston Marathon. COVID was still booming in the first 3 months of the year and I wasn’t really looking forward to training in the winter, so I decided to target a fall marathon and use the first months of the year to gain some strength, build some aerobic base, etc. Well, in the end I didn’t do anything in the first 5 months and I was in worse shape than in the beginning of the year. I even was getting slightly injured and some of my previous hamstring problems were reappearing.

In June I visited Momo in Boulder and I took several days off from running. I realized that it’s high time to start a training cycle so I can run a marathon before the winter comes. I returned from Boulder on Monday night and Tuesday I started the same old 18 week, 55 miles max per week Pfitz cycle.

I had to find a good race. I calculated 18 weeks from the moment I started training and searched for decently sized marathons that are not too far and are good for BQ. That’s how I ended up signing up for the Milwaukee Lakefront Marathon – fast course, beginning of October with usually great weather, 2 hour flight away from Boston.

18 Mile hike in Grand Teton’s instead of a long run

Rant about my training program:

Some of you may be wondering: What is this training program, why is Rumen doing it, how does he know that this is the best program? The short answer of why this program: I read on reddit that there is a book called “Advanced Marathoning” and I, of course, wanted to be “advanced” so I bought it, read it and this is the easiest training program in the book… Did I think through all the options and decided that this is the best choice? Not really. Did I spend a crazy amount of my life following this program? Definitely yes. In retrospect, I am not really advanced and this program is very intense. Following a training program that is too hard and too much for you can be very bad and unproductive and I wish I had thought more all the 3 and a half times before starting it. However, following an imperfect program is a much better choice than not following a program and giving yourself an opportunity to slack when it gets hard. I don’t even know whether I would have trained properly if I hadn’t been inspired by “advanced” in the title of a random book.

There were two major twists of the training:

The training cycle was going as good as it can get until the day of my 28th birthday, 6 weeks before the race. I was doing a boring 7-8 mile recovery run, until 5 miles in the run my IT band stiffened and I had to walk and limp run to get home on time for work. It was very surprising and out of nowhere, but I guess age is not just a number and it has a dramatic effect on you immediately. I couldn’t run for several days and I was getting really worried and my anxiety levels were reaching new highs. Instead of a long run that weekend I did a very nice 60 mile bike ride by myself.

The following weekend I was signed up for a 5 mile race in a small town in central Massachusetts. My leg was feeling much better and I could definitely run 6-7 miles without suffering too much, but I was far from fully recovered. This is where the other major twists come:

I won the race for the first and most likely last time in my life. There was the police car making way and stopping traffic and me running right behind it wondering whether my IT band would force me to walk the rest of the race and create a really confusing traffic situation with a very slow police car chased by a limping runner chased by fast runners. However, I survived until the end and the local town had a new hero. I picked up my award statue, took some celebratory photos and hopefully ended up in the front pages of yet another local newspaper. 

Clinton, Massachusetts’ new Hero

On the following day, I had a 17 mile run according to the plan. I was afraid that my leg would give up at any moment and I would have to limb for a very long time, so I was running in a 7 mile loop to make sure I didn’t get too far. Somehow, my legs started working and managed to run the full 17 miles which was the first big sign that recovery is almost there and I am back to normal 4 weeks away.

Week leading to the race

The week before the race generally sucks. There isn’t any useful training that you can do. You are super anxious. I check the weather forecast for the race day 5 times per day, and even worse, it changes 5 times per day so you don’t know how to make sense of it. If something goes wrong in that week, such as injury, sickness, COVID, you don’t really have time to fix it. Basically, things can only go wrong in that last week. The two things that were going wrongly for me were the weather and my watch’s opinion about my fitness.

It’s a bit dumb to listen to your watch’s opinion about your health, but if there is something on your wrist measuring your heart rate 24/7 and it tells you “DETRAINING” 5 days before a race, it is hard to ignore it. For some reason my watch was really giving me mean messages all week and it was trying to make me doubt everything. I thought I managed to ignore the numbers on the watch for the most part it, but Jie still remembers how stressed I was about them so I might have complained 2-3, or maybe even, 80 times about them that week.

On the other hand, the weather looked perfect at the beginning of the week. It was about to be around 12c, no wind and no rain. However, as every day of the week passed the expected temperature started increasing by 1c and the probability of rain increased. Two days before the race the forecast was for 18c and 80% chance for thunderstorms. At that point, I was wondering whether the race will even happen as races get canceled for thunderstorms. 

Still, Jie and I flew to Chicago on Friday before the race, had a nice lunch and explored the wonderful Chicago Botanical Garden. It is a great garden, the weather was super nice for walking – sunny and warm. I got upset that I walked a bit too much two days before the race, but thinking back it was nice to explore a bit, relax before the race and I didn’t kill my legs or ruin my nutrition, so I don’t think I hurt my race with the Friday trip. 

I showed my pet crab the great Chicago Botanical Garden.

The day before the race reached my peak anxiety, but overall it was uneventful (which is the best thing possible). I had the classic 120 grams of whole wheat pasta, 3 eggs, salt and olive oil and a bottle of kombucha for dinner. It was October 2nd and Netflix had started showing Seinfield since the previous day, so we watched 1 episode before bed. The forecast was saying maybe 40% rain, but no thunderstorms and around 18c. 

Morning before the race

I got woken up at 4am in one of the most miserable ways possible before a marathon. The heavy rain was hitting the skylight in the Airbnb. I realized it will be a wet day. I had my classic breakfast, water and we started the 25 minutes drive to the start line. On the way things got even worse and we started hearing thunder. I was 70% confident that this race was not going to happen. However, we arrived at the start line 50 minutes before the start time and miraculously the rain stopped right after. I had prepared an extra set of clothes for a short warm up, so I didn’t start the race wet. I wanted to find a private area to change and I explored the random hallways of the high school where the start was. Fortunately, the sequence of random doors that we went through brought us to the back entrance of the VIP area, which had the most precious thing before a marathon – restrooms without a 20 person line!

Taking a photo with my watch on it to show the time so I can have my dinner the same time before my next race!

The thunderstorms were gone and the sun was making its way through the clouds. It was turning into not terrible weather, even though it was already a bit too warm for a marathon.

Race

The race started and I was finally relieved that I was at the start line and I was feeling great and prepared for everything to come. I had spent the previous week preparing my body in terms of nutrition, sleep and rest to give the highest confidence that I will feel great at 7:30am on this Sunday morning. Nothing big went wrong, race was happening and I was here with a lot of energy and everything has went according to plan.

Beginning of Race

Compared to the NYC marathon, the Lakefront Marathon is a lot more uneventful. The first 15ish miles are through open fields, where you can see growing corn, and through suburban neighborhoods where the houses have a bigger yard than the average sized park in Boston.

I was feeling great and I was trying to not run too fast. Miles were passing by quickly and I was mostly focusing on getting water at every water station as they were only 1 every 2 miles. My plan was to get gels at miles 4, 9, 12.5, 17, 21, 25 based on the location of the water stations. For every mile X in the first 15 miles, I was saying “oh, this is the best I’ve felt on a marathon at mile X”. I saw Jie at mile 7 where she gave me a cold bottle of water, which I could pour over myself and drink from, which was super useful. The next time I was supposed to meet her around mile 14 and get another bottle which I was looking forward to. 

At some point I realized that my cadence is only at 180, which is on the lower end and forced myself to increase it a bit to my more normal values for this pace. Not sure what effect this had, but it was interesting that I could randomly just bump it.

The Strategic Mistake. 

Marathon is just running in a mostly straight line for 26.2 miles. All of the strategies that people have are not very complicated: they sound like “Run fast in the beginning and run even faster in the end”. I thought I had perfected the strategy during the race, but here around mile 14 I made the biggest strategic mistake I had ever made in a marathon. I was running all by myself but for around 4-5 miles I was hearing a bigger group of people chatting somewhere behind me. They were slowly catching up with me and at that stage they were right behind me and I could clearly hear what they were saying. It was a group of around 10 guys and I was feeling that any moment they would come stomping on top of me. I decided that maybe it’s better if I drop back and join the pack, run behind them, absorb their pace and get some wind breaking from them – worst idea ever. We entered the next water station, while I was already feeling thirsty and warm. A person hands a cup and a guy in front of me takes it, a new person hands a new cup, a different guy takes it. This repeated 4-5 times, until there were no people handing cups and I was left without water at the station. Maybe I should have stopped, had 2 cups of water and gatorade, but I continued. For the next 2 miles I was feeling that I was Moses crossing the desert and I was praying to God for water. There was a guy biking next to us, but he only had a camelbak that was going to his mouth, which I couldn’t convince him to give me. 

“Not 26.2 yet” plus the infamous pack on the background

At some point, I see Jie driving on the side of the road and I just shout “water, water”. However, there isn’t a good place to stop and it’s very hard to communicate a lot while running a marathon, so that didn’t work. I spent the next 2 miles until the next water station thinking of how stupidly I ruined my race. I slowly started catching up on hydration, but that’s not where you want to be in a marathon. This definitely impacted my race and lost several minutes, but lesson learned – don’t try to be smart during a marathon.

(dear reader, sorry if i disappointed you with the water story, but what do you expect from rumenruns.com)

Mile 20

At some point everything fell apart. We started mile 20 and my body kind of switched off. I thought there is no way I can make my goal and finish strong. However, the people around me were feeling worse and I started passing people from the infamous pack. Around Mile 21 there was a small hill. I was faster than everyone around me, but I looked at my watch and it said over 7min/mile pace. This was upsetting and I told myself “I didn’t come to run 7 minute miles”. Increased the pace and started passing even more people. 

I wanted to have one more gel around mile 21.5, but there was no water station. However, I randomly see a family with some 5-6 year old kids handing out cups. The kids were having a blast and some people were slowing and drinking from their water. However, here comes the thirsty Bulgarian, who grabs the cup from the hand of the kid, thanks them as politely as you could while not decreasing your pace, drinking the cup, having the gel and throwing both of them right next to their garden. THANK YOU SO MUCH GREAT FAMILY AT MILE 21-22 AT THE LAKEFRONT MARATHON AND SORRY FOR MAKING A MESS! YOU REALLY HELPED MY RACE.

Mile 22-26.2

This is the most interesting part and maybe the simplest part of the whole race and training. During that part of the race I was in very big pain. I was suffering immensely and every single part of my body hurt. My legs were shouting “stop running, you can just walk to the end”. However, if I had stopped even for a second, I think my legs would have turned into sticks and I wouldn’t be able to run again. There was this nice patch of grass on the left where people were sitting, laying down and enjoying the views of the lake and the only thing that my body wanted was to go and join them.

I started passing runners, some of them even walking, some of them just slowed down immensely. And here comes the tricky part: my brain is shouting “don’t waste all of your training, because you can’t deal with 18 minutes of pain”. Each runner in this stage of the race is facing a very simple question: should I stop or should I go? This is the moment where I had to decide whether I cared enough about my time in order to go through a 20 minute torture. Every single second of this time I was thinking about how much I want this to be over and for me to just be done with it. I try to distract myself with every single thing possible. “Oh, a big rock on the side”, “oh, we have to cross a road”. 

The biggest moral boost came from throwing my hat. I have raced with this hat for basically all my races so far and I like it. However, it had rained earlier in the race and it was soaked wet. However, right now, I didn’t really feel warmth or cold, I just felt pain and the hat was not helping with that. For half a mile I was wondering whether to get rid of it with possibly not seeing it again or carrying it on my head for the rest of the race. At some point, I made the decision to shed off the extra weight and throw it in a predetermined place with the hope that it would still be there 2 hours later. (Hint: It was there and I am running the Boston Marathon with it tomorrow :))

I saw Jie at mile 25.7 and she had a wonderful sign and a lot of energy to shout. I wish I could say it helped, but I was just counting down the 180 seconds that were left.

It’s over and my hat is gone.

Finally, I see the finish line, the stands, the announcer and I am there. After I crossed the finish line, I managed to sneak in a shout of celebration and then I was done. My body was so done, exhausted, I had no emotions, I could barely speak, I could just slowly walk straight. A volunteer came to me and asked me “are you ok” and my answer was “no, not really”. Well, still he just smiled and sent me my way. They put a heat blanket around me, and he slowly escorted me straight, while I was just staring emptily ahead. I walked through the exit section of the race. I had just a blind stare on my face, walking like a ghost. I squeezed out every single ounce of energy from my body. 

I paused and then it hit me: I did it, I am done and I succeeded, I ran 2:55:14 and should be good for Boston. At that moment, all of my emotions engulfed me and I had my little boy cry.

Beer can fix all problems

More photos: https://www.focalflamestore.com/search/?n=focalflame&scope=node&scopeValue=5bKFtR&c=photos&q=858#i=24

Categories
Running

NYC Marathon 3/11/2019

Pre-Training

I started running 3 years ago shortly before my first half marathon which I finished in 1:39. Last year, I did the Chicago Marathon in 3:26 and this June I did an Olympic triathlon so naturally I had to focus more on biking and learning to swim.

Training

I followed the Pfitz 55/18 Training Plan, from the beginning of July until November 3rd. I did 99% of the runs and I only missed the mileage on week 8 because I was traveling. 

The hardest workouts for me were the marathon paced runs and I failed to complete 2 of them as I didn’t have the energy or I went out without hydration in 90F weather. However, I nailed the last marathon paced run which was 18 miles with 14 at marathon pace (~7:10minute per mile), so that got me very confident. I also finished a half marathon in 1:28:33 and a 10k in 38:59 paced by a friend. I did all the tempos at 6:30-6:45 pace and I was doing the vo2max runs at 5:52 pace (44 second for 200 meters). Mondays were off 90% of the time, while I was doing some strength training on most Thursdays.

A new challenge for me this training cycle was the summer heat. I am not a morning person, but on multiple occasions I woke up before 7AM (and sometimes at 5am) on a Sunday to beat the sun! My most impressive run from the training was definitely a 15 miler on a treadmill in Vegas!

The only issue was my right hamstring that has been giving me trouble for the last ~18 months. My foam roller became my best friend which significantly helped with the tightness and the pain was much more manageable compared to before. I also went to two different Chiropractors, PT and regular massages which helped to different extents.

Overall leading up to race day, everything was running smoothly. I was extremely anxious at the days before the race and often I was getting very obsessed about it. Throughout the week leading to it I was constantly reading past year’s race reports and looking at the course map to “prepare”.

I got to NYC on Friday, went to the expo to pick up my bib. I was obsessively conservative in the amount of walking I do in and kept my plans in NYC to a minimum. The night before the race I had the usual pasta with eggs. I got some semi decent sleep and woke up on race day.

Pre Race

I was in wave one which starts at 9:40AM, but because it’s the biggest marathon in the world, my alarm woke me up at 4:10AM, which is almost 6 hours before the race, which I find ridiculous. I drank a lot of water with nuun, had a slice of bread with banana and I spent 5 minutes wondering whether there is a point in warming up and foam rolling 5 hours before the race start, but of course I did it anyways.

I was staying with friends in Manhattan, 30-minute walk from the buses that take you to the start line. Still, I took a lyft to conserve more energy and at 6am I was next to the NYC Public Library, where I started my long, long waiting journey to the start line. I was greeted by a line that spanned one street and one avenue. In case you are reading this before NYC Marathon 2020 and wondering where to go at the next morning: make sure you go to 6th avenue and 40th street as the line starts from there. If your Lyft drops you off where you board the buses, you have to walk one avenue and one street in order to get to the start of the line!

There were bathrooms at the start of the line for the buses, which was important preparation before the 90 minute bus ride. 

The line moved fast and at 6:15 my bus left. At 7:15 we were at the Verrazano bridge, but it took us literally 40 more minutes to cross it as there were hundreds of buses in front of us! I arrived at 7:55 and I had to immediately search for a bathroom again – I guess that was a positive sign that I was well hydrated.

Bag check was supposed to close at 8:10 so I did a slow jog to find it on time. However, the jog was not necessary as it didn’t seem to be closing on time and they were very lenient about timing. I had some sips of coffee after I believe I accidentally jumped a line of ~100 people waiting for the free coffee. Then I lined up at the entrance of the corral at 8:35 to get access to the line-free corral porta potties. I spent the next 30 minutes laying on the ground and conserving energy. I was trying to calm down from all the anxiety, did some breathing exercises and tried to avoid getting kicked on the head while lying on the ground.

The corrals started moving 15 minutes before the start and I was very unprepared for that. A lot of people from later corrals passed me while I was trying to take Gel #-1 while also taking off my throwaway sweatpants. There was a nice warm up jog (500m) to the start line and we officially lined up. Everyone tells you to not throw the extra clothes until you actually hear the cannon(there is indeed a real cannon?!) and the race starts, but of course I threw away my shirt 5 minutes before we started running.. It takes you 2 seconds to take off a shirt while it takes you a lot more time to actually cross the start line.

Race

We were finally at the start. I was shocked that this is actually happening. The goal was to run between 3:05 and 3:10, but I realized that 3:05 will be close to impossible. Weather was perfect (48F/8C and sunny).

Mile 1: 7:44

First mile is uphill and I tried not to blow up my race at the start. I went out conservatively while trying not to waste too much energy jumping around people. I had a great hat that I found at Goodwill for 2$. I hoped I can keep it until Brooklyn where I could throw it to a friend that’s spectating, but I got very hot 10 seconds into the race and I donated it. The views from the bridge are gorgeous and there wasn’t a single cloud in the sky.

Mile 2: 6:42

Downhill. I pushed a bit to compensate for the lost 40 seconds. It was tricky to find a clear path where I can avoid slowing down and losing my inertia. In the end of it we saw the first of many spectators and it was already decently busy on the sidelines. My diaphragm started cramping, but I tried not to panic, took some deep breaths and everything seemed settled after a minute or two.

Mile 3: 7:04

Mile 4: 7:10

Legs started having small twitches and I could already feel my right hamstring that has been problematic.. I took my first gel at Mile 4 as I was planning to take one at every fourth mile.

Mile 5: 7:00

Mile 6: 7:10

My shoe got untied! I got a bit disappointed at myself. I tied them around 6 times at the start line, but apparently didn’t find the correct setup. I spend the next 5 minutes worrying that my other shoe will get untied…

Brooklyn was much hillier than expected. Everyone talks about the bridges, but indeed the race is never fully flat and its constantly going up or down.

Mile 7: 6:58

Mile 8: 7:15

My head was full of worries and thoughts: whether I will be able to keep up this pace or whether my hamstring is going to hurt even more and I will have to start walking. Also, the crowd support was pretty big however I found it a bit overwhelming at parts. I was trying to look at all of the different people and reading the signs at the race, which was draining my mental energy and I realized it’s better to focus on running and ignore my surroundings. I had to vocally talk to myself to calm down and focus on the running while ignoring the future and my surroundings. 

Stomach wasn’t ready for gel 2 at Mile 8 (These early gels really suck as the last thing I want at that stage is to eat), so I delayed it by a mile.

Mile 9: 7:19

Oh, wow, that mile was crazy. The crowds were at least 5-6 people deep. It’s definitely the loudest mile of the race. I tried talking to myself, but I could barely hear my voice. Also, the road narrows so it gets extremely packed. 

Mile 10: 7:05

Mile 11: 7:09

I entered steadier state and I realized I am around a minute behind from 3:05 pace and even worse: I don’t make up time on the flat miles. I tried to put more effort, but realized that 3:05 is a dangerous goal and if I chase it it may become 3:15. I decided to just continue running 3:05 pace on the flat miles and slow down on the uphills and see where this will take me. A small negative split would give me 3:08, which was well in my goal range.

Mile 12: 7:08

Mile 13: 7:03

My hamstring started hurting significantly. I was massaging it every other mile or so. On mile 13, I saw that they are giving some from the medical tents and for some reason I thought it’s biofreeze. I took it and massaged it on my leg and it really helped. Two miles later I realized it was just vaseline, which killed the placebo… My brain is not the sharpest in the middle of a race.

Gel 3 at 13 was a challenge. I distinctly remember how I spend 30 seconds trying to unpin it from my tights.

Actually, the whole “carry 6 gels for a marathon” thing has been a challenge. I specifically bought and raced in tights for the first time as it is much more comfortable to carry the gels. When I wear shorts, the gels become too heavy and pull the shorts down. Also, they move much more, while with the tights, they sit… tightly.

Mile 14: 7:11

Mile 15: 7:37

Mile 16: 7:16

Williamsburg had some extremely quiet sections and some extremely noisy ones. Fortunately, I started being more focused on the race so I don’t really remember the details. I was very convinced that Queensboro Bridge is at Mile 18, even though I stared at the course map for at least 1 hour in the previous week (and it’s not a very complicated map). So when it arrived at Mile 15 I was and we went on the bridge I was a bit surprised. The bridge is extremely quiet which I kind of enjoyed. I was going uphill steadily following the fastest person around me. 

Mile 17: 7:24

Mile 18: 7:01

Mile 19: 7:13

I had very high expectations from 1st avenue so I was a bit underwhelmed after seeing Brooklyn. There were a lot of people, but they were very quiet. I had a gel at mile 17.

I had a great rhythm until mile 18.5 where I just wanted to stop, go home and never run again. I reminded myself of the last 18 weeks of training and how stupid will be to waste them because I don’t want to run 7.7 more miles. I managed to convince myself to continue and shortly after we reached another bridge.

Mile 20: 7:17

Mile 21: 7:13

The bridge entering Bronx was nasty and very sunny. Even though it was 10C/50F I felt hot and it kind of sucked. I followed one guy on the uphill, which made it much easier. Bronx was nice with a lot of music. There was a water station at Mile 20.5 which was right where I wanted to take my second to last gel as mile 20 was a bit too early and mile 21 was a bit too late. The marathon god gave me a hand in times of trouble.

Mile 22: 7:15

We exited Bronx on another bridge and I found yet another person to chase on the uphill. We entered Manhattan again for a final time. At the small park at the end of Mile 22, my hamstring was killing me. At the same time I looked at my watch and my expected finish time was constantly increasing and it was approaching 3:10. I realized 3:08 is out of scope and I even have to fight a lot to make 3:10. Things were looking not great and the 18 weeks of training were coming to a failure, unless a miracle happens.

Mile 23: 7:20

***The Miracle***. A recurring theme in my running is running closely behind someone as it’s much easier to follow than to lead. In this case I found this wonderful lady, who was passing everyone around. I told myself at beginning of Mile 23 “Ok, you have one very simple goal until the end of the race. Don’t lose her. ” I was scared this can backfire if she slows down and I will lose all motivation. However, she kept a very wonderful pace. I was extremely focused on following her – I even slowed down on the water stops with her, if she went to the left side of the road I was there, if she went right – I was there as well.

Mile 24: 7:23

Apparently, this was a huge uphill, but I only realized after looking at the course map. Actually, I don’t remember almost anything from this mile as I had only one goal – don’t lose the woman with the green.

Mile 25: 6:57

I saw several friends cheering for me, I had half a gel for a mental boost and I had my fastest mile of my marathon. Pretty good for mile 25, while suffering in immense pain. I remember checking my watch every 20 seconds and how my pain was increasing every time I realized that I’ve ran only 0.07 more miles.

Mile 26: 7:02

Mile 26.2: 6:58

At mile 25.5 my pacer dropped me, but still I was at had 30 seconds to lose and still make 3:10. Last mile is uphill, but I don’t care. My senses don’t work well enough to differentiate between uphill and downhill. I try to do a final sprint, but there is absolutely nothing in the tank. I see the flags at the finish stretch and I try to search for my country. My brain is exhausted and I decide this is too much effort.

I finish at 3:09:31.

Post race

The finish line at big marathons is a big mess. There are MANY people who finish continuously. This means that after you finish you can’t just stop and sit, you have to continue walking to make space for the next finishers. And at especially big marathons, you have to keep walking for a while and this is not exactly what I look forward to after running for 3+ hours. There are volunteers whose job is to prevent people who have finished a marathon from sitting. So, you sit on the ground, take a breather after the race and this guy comes and tells you to get up and walk for half a mile more. I was wondering what kind of people will volunteer for that job, but I realized it’s the NYC marathon, so this must be the most coveted position for volunteers 😉 Jokes aside, it’s a hard job and thanks to the volunteers who kicked me out and helped me after the finish line. I know I shouldn’t have sat on the ground.

I also met my savior, the wonderful lady who saved my race. I went and told her “thank you” and she of course responded by “for what?” as she had no idea who am I as I was always behind her.

I was feeling surprisingly better compared to last year after Chicago. The nice thing about running more and faster is that you also recover faster. I could walk normally after the race, while this wasn’t the case after Chicago. I still felt pretty terribly for the rest of the day, but I managed to take the train back at night and be at work at 9:30am on the next morning!

Takeaways

I had a perfect execution. The only thing that I could have improved is to learn how to tie my shoes properly!

Pacing wise I had a 30s positive split with fastest mile being mile 25. Ignoring the bridges, my splits are between 6:57 and 7:20ish. Not sure how I could have ran it better. Maybe I could have run faster in the beginning instead of in the end and suffer slightly less.

The race is a big logistical hassle as you spend 4 hours traveling and waiting before the start, but you get to run through the five boroughs…

The other annoying thing with the race was the amount of people running 🙂 There a lot! From start to finish, there is a huge pack and you have to think about how to pass people in front of you, you have to strategize at the water stations, etc. Until my woman savior, I didn’t find someone that is running consistently with my pace and I was always passing and getting passed, which was frustrating.

Overall, I really enjoyed the race and I am really proud with my execution. This is my third marathon and I can finally say I nailed preparation, pacing and nutrition. It was quite a ride and I am so glad it’s over as I don’t have to worry about it anymore 🙂 I still need to improve at least by 15 more minutes to qualify for Boston, but I leave this for future work – I am focusing on the holiday season for now.