Sunday, August 30, 2020

2020 Med City Marathon (Virtual-Unsupported) 30-Aug-20

The 25th Med City Marathon was to take place in Rochester, MN back on May 24th. Due to Covid-19, it was postponed until Sept 5th, but eventually replaced with a virtual option. I had planned on running in Rochester as I had never been there. Once it went remote, I made plans to run it in August, as soon as the temps got down below 60 for a weekend-overnight. Checking the forecasts, it looked like Sunday August 30th, showing lows of around 55, would be the day.

The week before my race, I received my race packet. On Saturday, with the help of my daughter, I opened it and got my full-zip race jacket and bag. I wouldn’t get the medal until I finished! The jacket is nice – never had any kind of shirt/jacket with the thumb holes. This has the zipper on the left-hand side (which is backwards from all other zippered jackets I have), but the medium fits well.

Set my alarm for 4:09am race morning (It’s never set for a typical time! Don’t ask), and woke up after a normal 6hr sleep. I had prepped my UD vest with 4 (vanilla) Gu’s and a headlamp, filled my 2L bladder with water, and hit the bathroom. Nothing out of the ordinary – the same shorts/shirt I always wear for long runs. Broke in a new pair of Asics 2000-7’s two weeks back, and stepped out my front door at 4:35. Temp was 57°, humidity was not unusual at 89%, but the air quality was a surprise, with it being in the ‘Moderate’ category (at 72)

Early, Moderate air quality?
Ran down the block, turned and made my way around the rec center fields, then across Wheelock Parkway and down to the Lake Phalen running paths. Each loop is supposed to be 3.1 miles. 8 loops, plus the extra 1.4mi to get there/back and I’d have my full 26.2 marathon.

in the dark
My plan was to run ~9:00min/mi pace to start, just a nice comfortable pace. I did hold my headlamp for some of the first lap – I usually start out at 5am for my 2-loops before work during the week, and the darkness is manageable without it – but I wanted to be extra-safe and not trip over something or run into a tree branch as I did a few weeks back (caught it just above my right eye). Loop one was over in 27:41 (after a 7:34 run to the lake). Took a short ~15 sec walk break each loop there, and continued on.
Grass was wet with dew, but never ran in it enough to get my shoes wet/squishy like at Trail Mix in mid-July.

Didn’t see a soul on the 2nd loop either, and had a split of 27:57. Keeping around a 28min/loop pace was my initial goal, with slowly increasing it to be near 30, before having to give up on time and just make it through. I had only done one longer run since my Trail Mix 50 six weeks before – that was the 25k loop at Afton 3 weeks ago, after which my left ankle stayed sore, and was just now feeling better (~90% anyway). So ~20 miles was my goal to stay somewhat on pace, then limp my way to a ~4:15 – 4:30 finish. Goals – you never know how the day is going to go!

Loops 3 and 4 were fine (28:09 & 28:29), so I was at 13.1 miles in 1:59:52. Still felt really good, felt I would have plenty of water (and not have to text my wife to meet me to refill). Sun came up just as I came upon the end of loop 4 (~6:32am).

Loop 5 was more interesting – aside from the typical walkers out, when my left knee, about halfway through the lap, became very sore and had me limping for a stretch down the little hill on the east-side of the lake. Still, I ran it in 28:08 (2:28:00 total).

Soon after starting Lap 6, I had company. Another school parent lives nearby and I see her running sometimes on Sunday mornings. I let her know I’d be out, and she came out and slowed her pace to run a lap with me. 😊 That helped a ton, as I was started to struggle…my left knee was so-so, but my legs were getting heavy and sluggish. We had to dodge a few people as more walkers were coming out, but we did see something quite amazing – a bald eagle flew by us, very low to the lake! Certainly don’t see that (there) often! I pushed to do it in 30:09 (2:58:07 for ~19.3 miles), and felt glad to have made miles 16-19 in that pace.

I immediately slowed to a walk and said goodbye, then it was, as I said – just plodding along, alternating some running with walking. I knew I could walk the whole lap in ~43 minutes, so I figured out my worst case times, and if I was doing 35 min laps. Both within my expected finish times.

After 4 hrs, on last lap

Had some abdominal soreness that came and went, but heavy legs and sore ankles really did me in. Lap 7 in 36:26, and still walking faster than most people when I couldn’t/wouldn’t run. Lap 8 – finally my last lap – was more of the same. Almost. I was in the last 1/4mi of the end of the loop, when a sudden buzzing sound right in my face and stinging on my right eyebrow, just under my hat brim and inside the edge of my glasses. Ouch!!! Bee sting. After maybe one sting while running ~5 years ago for the first time ever, I had one earlier this summer walking barefoot in my backyard. So this made #2 or 3 ever. Sure took the focus off my feet for the last mile.

Final Stretch!
I finally left the lake and went through the neighborhood around to where I’d finish. I had given my wife a heads-up, and she and our daughter set up a finish line tape for me to break through. Not being fast – I had never had that experience before - it was nice!. Then my daughter presented me with my medal and we walked the last block home. Finish time: 4:20:27.

Getting my medal from my daughter!
4:20:27
Other random notes: Had a plain bagel with butter/jelly before I started, ate 4 GU’s (every 45 mins or so) and had two S!Caps after the halfway point. Checked my water bladder when I got home and it was practically empty. It had only gotten up to 63°, so it didn’t become an issue with needing to drink more. This was my 141st race/event. 14th marathon and 43rd marathon or ultra distance, and 13 straight years completing at least a marathon.

Still pleasant and 63° at the finish
Will have to see how my left knee/ankle heals up, but the plan is to run the Fire Tower 50k sometime in (late) September. Virtual, but on the true course at St. Croix State Park.




Phone 'health' data