A Ten Mile Warmup for a 5K Run
Against all odds I dragged myself out of bed at 5 a.m. Sunday morning and got myself down to the starting point of the US Half Marathon. It’s a fantastic course starting on the Municipal Pier and going through the Marina to the Presidio, around and up to the Golden Gate Bridge, then across, down a trail that leads under the Bridge and back up, then back to San Francisco on the Western sidewalk and back to Aquatic Park.
I finished in 2:06:33 (chip time… it took a minute and a half to reach the starting point after the gun, but I’m an “age grouper” so I can claim the start-to-finish time. That time is over 10 minutes slower than my time in 2004. I’m just not as fast as I was two years ago. Oddly, I’m at about the same amount of mileage for the year as I was at this time in 2004, but I think I know one of the factors making a difference. I’ve been running mostly flat courses this year. Where I live I have easy access to the Embarcadero, which is a lovely run, all flat. In 2004 I lived in places near to hilly courses. Here I have Potrero Hill, but it really doesn’t compare to a Twin Peaks run for training. Probably if I want to get my hill chops back, I’ll have to go to another part of the city to run.
My left metatarsal was acting up again. I could feel it hurting by mile three and I was very concerned that I might have to drop out of the race, but I concentrated on my stride and keeping good form, and my foot never got much worse. I’m starting to think that switching to the «moderate stability» model of Saucony Omni was not such a hot idea. I’m also considering having a stride analysis done, to see what I should work on to improve my stride. If it makes me faster, OK that’s good, but if I can learn not to injure myself, that’s priceless.
The weather was amazing on Sunday. Sunny, but not too hot, and just enough fog to make for some really dramatic views of the Golden Gate without getting in the way of the Sun which, in turn was not too hot.
As it turns out, the US Half was scheduled for the same day as the Treasure Island Triathlon. I’m not in condition for an olympic distance triathlon anyway, but that’s officially scrubbed from the list. I did recently get in touch with my old swim coach, so perhaps early next year I can do an event in warmer water.
By mile ten I could feel that I was getting toward the end of my endurance and made a conscious decision to turn up the intensity a bit. No sense in having energy left over, now is there? At mile twelve I was looking at that last stretch and wondering if I’d make it. But I reminded myself that I’d already finished, that I’d finished the moment that I committed to do the run, and that the only thing left was to enjoy the experience of watching the last mile manifest. If that sounds a little new-agey, well, OK. It’s how I like to look at things. Once I’ve embarked upon a path and truly committed to a course of action, the hard part is over. All that’s left is to watch the results of that commitment unfold.
The other thing that I reminded myself was that I have a fantastic capacity to recover from exertion. Give me a short period of relative rest and I’m good to go again. So if tired I slow down and catch my breath at a lower pace until I feel ready again, then push through. Nevertheless, that last half mile around Aquatic Cove was a hard push. I can honestly say that I didn’t have much kick left in me when I crossed that finish line.
I have to confess a little disappointment in my time, but it’s more than overshadowed by the memory of a really fun race and the knowledge that I did the best I could on that day.
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