Monday, December 3, 2012

St Jude Memphis Marathon Report

What a day it was. As I am sitting here typing this post, I am thinking back over that day and trying to determine how I want this to read. I want to be positive even though I was so close to my goal time. I did in fact improve my time over last year by 1 hour and 6 minutes, which I am stoked about, but I know I should have been a sub 5 hour marathoner pretty easily. This will be a rather long post, so sit back and ready yourself!

EXPO: The expo is always cool. I love seeing everyone milling around looking at the sponsors, buying St Jude apparel. This year, as you know, I signed up to be a St Jude Hero! That meant that I promised to raise money for St Jude and it gave me the opportunity to wear a special singlet stating that I had raised a certain amount, so again I want to thank each of the that donated money to this race. I went to the expo alone this year due to my family being involved in a church program, so this actually made me be a little more focused on my race and what I wanted to do. So I picked up my packet and strolled around, spent some time talking with Dane Rauschenberg. This guy ran 52 marathons in 52 weekends while holding down a full time job! Amazing accomplishment! It was good to talk with him for a bit and discuss strategy! I really did not stay very long at the expo, I bought nothing, did not even really look for anything, i just went with the flow of the crowd and headed back home to try and get a good nights sleep.

RACE DAY:
I woke up a little before 5 Am and took a quick shower, ate my bagel and then met up with Buck and Steve to head down to the race. Once down to the site, we just walked around, met up with other runners, took pictures with my fellow Warriors and headed to the start line.  I lined up in corral 7 and waited. Last year I was corral 11!  So I had higher expectations!

Mile 1-3:
These miles always go by pretty fast because of the crowds of runners and the crowds of spectators. I really was paying attention to my pace because I knew I did not want to start off to fast. I felt comfortable running but once I looked at my Garmin, I knew I needed to back it down some if I wanted maintain.I was running with a friend at that point and several times we both had to slow each other down to stay within our paces. We had already gone down Beale Street, down Riverside Dr, which goes along the Mississippi River, which is one of my favorite parts of the race. My 5K split was 31:16, which was a 10:06 pace. I was feeling good and on my pace.

Mile 4-9.5:
I was still feeling good as we passed the Pyramid, a Memphis landmark and as we turned in to the St Jude campus. The campus last year was a very emotional spot of the race for me. All the families and children of St Jude outside cheering on the runners was something I will never forget. This year it was different. I had the St Jude singlet on , so I think more people were yelling at the singlets than I noticed last year, so that gave me an extra boost. The whole section was different than last year. Once we got out of the campus, I knew we were at the 10K mark. Mile 6 was my planned stop to eat something and get water for 1 minute, and then go again until mile 10, just like I did in training! I had to add a bathroom stop in at this mile marker though, which I do not think hurt my time that bad. I did end up splitting away form running with Steve at this point, which allowed me to focus on my race a little bit more. My 9.3 mile split 1:36:54 with a pace of 10:26, still on track!!


Mid way, 13.1:
After you hit the 9.3 mat, you start heading back towards downtown and I always remember seeing the heart on the top floors of LeBonheur Children's hospital. It sort of guides you back to where you finish. I was hitting the water stops as I planned, eating what I brought and overall feeling pretty good. I was starting to get passed by a lot more people that were trying to kick it in to finish the half marathon, but I did not let them phase me cause I knew I had a ways to go still. One thing that stood out to me was that I did not feel so alone once the "Halfers" turned to go to their finish line and the marathoners continued on. Last year, it was like a ghost town, but I was further along this year than last, which helped me mentally. I knew I was coming up on the section of the route that I hated, so I just tried to prepare my self mentally to get through the next few miles until we turned on to East Parkway. My 13.1 mile split was 2:18:49, a 10:36 pace. I felt good about this cause I was using a 2:25 mark for the half, so that would get me under 5 hours. Still on track.

Mile 13-20
This is basically through the midtown area of Memphis, and I hate this part. I am not sure why, but I dreaded it the most. The route along Peabody seems to last forever and a day. Another bathroom stop, more nutrition and water at every stop was my game-plan. I hit a wall at 16 last year, but I knew I was going to make it through that marker. I was at mile 17 when I hit the 3 hour mark, which was good. I was still on my pace I wanted to be, I knew I would soon be making one of the final turns, heading down East Parkway soon. Last year at this point I was so out of it mentally that if I could have found a cell phone I would have called my wife to come pick me up, but I was still feeling strong. I think having a better idea of the course helped me a lot as well. I had hooked up with the 4:40 pace group at this point and ran with them through mile 20, which was helpful because it allowed me to gauge my pace better.My 19.6 mile split was 3:34 with a 10:54 pace. I knew I was on my way to a sub 5 hour race.

 Mile 20-26
Mile 21 was when I saw some familiar faces! My wife and youngest son Jesse were there cheering me on. I was not expecting them to be so that made it even nicer to see them and their sign. I had thought my wife had said they would be around mile 20 and when I did not see them I figured something just didn't work out, so I was really happy to see them at 21. I stopped and got a kiss and a high five and kept on going, determined to keep running. Mile 22 came up on me and that's when I felt the dreaded twinge of calf cramps! I slowed down a bit, walked a little and even stopped to stretch out my calf, and it seemed to help for a minute, but it got to where I could only run for about 2 minutes before they locked up again. So I would run and walk, run and walk. I drank 2 waters at every stop, emptied out all my nutrition I had left and tried to force myself to run just a little bit further. I knew I needed to keep going to hit a sub 5 and I tried. The 2 minute runs soon became one minute runs, then 30 second runs, then it was light pole to light pole through mile 25. Once I hit 25, I knew I was on the cusp of a 5 hour finish and I just gritted my teeth and tried to push through the cramps, hoping I could run them away,but it didn't happen.

Mile 26
Once you hit 26, there is a slight uphill you make before turning into the stadium and I had just turned on the back road leading into the stadium when my watch hit 5 hours. I wanted to finish strong though, so I tried to wipe the pain off my face and run through the finish line, but of course, I got another cramp right there about 20 feet from the finish line and I was running like a hobbled old man. I made it through at 5:01:46, with a pace of 11:32. This was an improvement of 1:06 over last year!  That's a 1 hour improvement, not a 1 minute improvement! BOOM!

184/245 in AG
1669/2624 OA

I got my finisher's medal (which is seriously blinged out) and then tried to climb the steps out of the infield of the stadium. BAD IDEA!  Climbing steps was not good for me. I only made it halfway before I had to sit down and then fight off serious cramping. Eventually I made it to the food tent where I grabbed some pizza, cokes and some other goodies, including a box of Krispy Kreme donuts!

Saturday night I spent basically on the couch fighting off calf cramps eating donuts and a huge steak my wife cooked for me. Sunday morning was tough for me to get around, but I felt amazingly better than I walked. On Sunday afternoon, I got a chance to go back downtown and hang out with blogger Jeff Irvin from Dangle the carrot fame! Jeff, his wife Annie and friends were super cool as we got to hang out at the hotel lobby and talk about the marathon and future races.

While I was running, I really questioned myself about whether or not I wanted to try to do an Ironman. If you had asked me Saturday or even Sunday, I am not sure what I would have said. Right now I am only about 40% sure I want to go on and try Redman next year after this race. It was tough, but I know I have a sub 5 in me. I know it! So we will see. Right now I am going to enjoy the holidays, I am going to reintroduce myself to Stella (my bike) and get back into the pool. Even as I am writing this, thinking about 2013, I have some lofty goals. I had at least 8 PR's this year and swam/biked/ran more than ever, and I feel good.

As soon as I get all the pictures, I will have a post with nothing but photos of the race. Thanks for reading!

19 comments:

  1. Shaved over an hour off a marathon time is aweseome. And your solid paces the first 80% of the race are signs of your hard work. Hope you can figure out the cramping issue.

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    1. Thanks, not sure I will ever find out what caused the cramps, but I will definitely take an hour improvement!

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  2. Way to finish and a great PR!

    Good luck in 2013.

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    1. Thank you Diana in Maui for James in Memphis (that doesn't sound as cool as Maui!)

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  3. Awesome race!!! Your strive for those PR's is inspirational. I didn't even know what a PR was until I met you. 2013 is going to be an amazing year.. THINK 10... I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me!!!

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  5. Congrats on the HUGE PR! You definitely have a sub five in your future as soon as you figure out the cramping thing.

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  6. CONGRATS!!! That is awesome, over a hour PR is amazing!!

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    1. if only every PR was an hour, I'll be a speedster in 2 years!

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  7. Great race report, honey. We were very happy to see you at mile 21! I think you should be very proud of all the training you put in. You crushed last year's time.

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    1. Thanks Babe, I was just glad I wasn't walking when I saw you guys! Thanks for the sign, I loved it!

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  8. Great job buddy!

    DOn't think about an IM until 1/1/13. Recover, enjoy family time and the holidays, go for some short 3-5 mile runs every now and then....then ramp up then.

    Great race, great RR, and great time.

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    1. Oh I am already thinking about it and ready to start S/B/R training! And do not worry, Sat afternoon I sat on the couch eating donuts!

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  9. Great job James and congrats on the huge PR!

    This is a wonderful place in a rather unique city and I cannot wait to come back.

    It was awesome finally meeting you and Jesse!

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    1. Awesome meeting you, Annie and your friends! Glad you had a good time in Memphis!

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  10. Another marathon in the books. Nice work.
    I can't remember if you've tried the compression sleeves or not. During my marathon training, I found that they made a HUGE difference for me.
    Probably just one piece of the puzzle for the cramping but I'll take all the help I can find.

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    1. I have not tried to run in compression sleeves before, always just used them for recovery, but it might be something worth trying!

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