What a
weekend! Leaving Early Saturday morning arriving in LA at 11:30 am. We splurged
for this race and booked a five star hotel located near the finish line. The
drive down to SoCal was wet and littered with wrecked vehicles. Fortunately,
the rainstorm that had been lingering for days moved out and blessed us with
clear blue skies so of course we hit the streets for St. Patties Day!
My night
ended early. Hot bath with tea, then I hit the sheets! I was nervous for this
race. I had trained my ass off literally logging hundreds of miles, not to
mention continually training for the up coming Tri Season.
Race day:
early rise and shine. I had to get to the bus located across the street from
our Resort in Santa Monica by 4:30am. This was a bummer considering the race
had a start time of 7:24 am. I arrived to the LA Dodgers Stadium at 5am leaving
me almost 2 1/2 hours to pick my ass and try to keep warm. Outside temp was 42
degrees (not the warmest of mornings) and before I forget, of course the pre
race jitters! I for some reason always have to use the bathroom...like every 5
minutes before every race. My nerves get the best of me!
A race with
this many people finding the proper pace corral is like finding a needle in a haystack.
My coach put together a race plan for me, which put me with a 3:05 finish. As
the race began I wanted to make sure to follow the plan. "Pace yourself at
no faster than a 7:10 mile for the first 10k and at the 10k mark pick up the
pace to a mild 7:00 mile and try to hold this until mile 20. Not lifting until
the 20-mile mark. This would put me in somewhere around 3:07-3:10.
Of course
in a perfect world this would be 1-2-3, but sometimes you have to adapt to what
your body is telling you and race smart. I knew at mile 6 I was working too
hard and that my heart rate was higher then it normally should be. I felt fully
rested, nutrition was in line, and pace was realistic with my training.
The day
ended up being warm and I had planned for a wet cold race! I found myself shedding
clothes almost instantly. I kept hearing Coach Dave in my head, "if you
ever have moments of just not feeling great pull back, hydrate, refocus, and
then pick it back up." Well I found myself doing this a few times and
guess what…it worked! My finish time was 3:15:03 a PR for me. I was stoked to
finish strong and from miles 20-26 oddly enough I felt alright it was the first
20 that hurt and required me to focus and dig deep. I learned a lot about myself
at the LA Marathon this year --- Race smart. Adapt to the unexpected. Be a little
more patient and let the race come to me.
No comments:
Post a Comment