December 9, 2023: The Monday Night Brewing Westside 10K

Several weeks ago, my good friend Brian Minor sent me the following text: 

This is how the latest round of the
mano-a-mano competition began. 

I ran this race for the first time in 2021 when I was recovering from a strained gluteus, and the 10-miler version in 2022 as part of an 18-mile marathon training long run. Both races were challenges, but this fall, rebuilding my fitness through the half-marathon training program, I felt that I was ready to record a good result - and to notch a win for myself in the long-standing mano-a-mano competition with Brian. It had rained off and on all night, and I needed the windshield wipers throughout my drive to westside Atlanta, but the rain had ended by the time I parked and picked up my bib. To add a "4% speed" advantage from "supershoes", I wore my Adidas Adizeros, which I had last worn in my successful Thanksgiving Half Marathon. Today was the first time that I wore those $250 shoes on a wet course, but I've had them for 9 months so I wanted to get my money's worth while they were still in good shape.  

Before the race, ready to win! 

I caught up with Brian in the port-o-potty line, then went out for a short warmup. I felt confident and strong today, ready for the challenge. The temperature was cool but not cold at 54 deg F, and we were still dry, with the rain holding off. Walking to the start line, I stopped for a moment at the front of the pack, turned around and said to Brian "I think this is the right place to start." Brian was surprised, then realized I was joking, and we stepped back around 50 feet. 

Several hundred runningnerds ready to run!
It's not raining, but there are many puddles. 

My main strategy for today was to avoid getting ahead of Brian, just wait with him, then take advantage whenever he had a slight falter in the last mile, assuming that happened. That strategy worked in my 60th birthday 5K. Brian has a "lightning" kick, and has defeated me a couple of times catching me from behind in the last 200 meters. We crossed the starting mat together, and settled into a nice easy pace. I was constantly checking to make sure that Brian was on my left. When I pulled ahead by just a couple of steps, I looked back, then slightly slowed down, to make sure that Brian kept up with me. About 5 minutes into the race, the rain started, although it was never too heavy, and ended within a few minutes. Since I was expecting ran, I wore a cap today, and that helped me stay comfortable as the rest of my clothing became damp. Fortunately all of my clothing was wicking fabric, with wool socks on my feet, so I was never uncomfortable with the moisture as long as I was moving today. We were running 9 minute / mile pace, which is my half-marathon goal pace, so I had room to speed up whenever that time might come. Mile 1, 9:03; mile 2, 8:58. I felt good at that easy race pace, although I noticed that my heart rate was a little higher than I expected, nearly 160 beats per minute. 

video of our start, courtesy of Beverly Minor

We ran that tactical pace for 2-1/2 miles. Approaching Westside Reservoir Park, I accepted a cup of water and took a short walk break. Brian pulled ahead, but when I resumed running, I was only 10 seconds behind. Running into the park, slightly downhill, I gradually caught up to Brian and was running directly behind him as we made the turn. I stayed to his left as we made the clockwise turn. I was hoping to hide behind Brian for awhile. The mile 3 alert sounded, 8:51. I figured that Brian heard me running behind him, but he might not know that it was me. Then someone coming the other way gave my secret away, shouting "Good job, FRANK!" I'm sure they meant well. 

After that, I pulled even with Brian and said "I guess now you know that I've been hiding behind you!" As we began to run uphill, Brian responded: "This is the race!" and took off strongly. I followed, shortening my stride, but I was winded by the time I had reached the top of the hill at the park entrance. Leaving the park, both Brian and I took water this time. I needed to catch my breath before I could even begin to drink. But Brian wasn't in a hurry either. We walked together uphill for 30 seconds, then it stretched to a full minute. After 90 seconds of walking, Brian said "Let's go!" and we both resumed running. Making a right turn on West Marietta Street, Brian and I ran together as both of our watches sounded the mile 4 alert within a few seconds of each other: 9:47. 

Red is faster, blue is walking. Too much blue in mile 5, so read on....

The road continued uphill; several large trucks passed heading to the intersection with Marietta Boulevard. I was feeling winded again. I dropped behind Brian and slowed to a walk. I remember that happened last year in this same location. What alarmed me today was that I saw 180 bpm on my watch. My heart shouldn't be beating this rapidly. It's a good thing I took that walk break. After 60 seconds I resumed running, not wanting to lose sight of Brian. We turned left through the busy intersection onto Marietta Boulevard, leaving the trucks behind. Brian was about 30 seconds ahead of me. I told myself, you can close that gap, just be patient. "Relax and glide." I made a right turn onto Huff Road, while the 10-mile competitors continued straight ahead. I didn't envy them at all! We began a nice downhill section. I thought that I might gain a few seconds on Brian. But when I checked my watch, I was truly alarmed: 188 bpm, while running downhill. That should not happen. Severe oxygen debt, I thought. 

I slowed to a walk.  

I FELT BAD.

Oh, SHIT!!!

In that moment, I realized that I had taken my blood pressure medication this morning. 

When my doctor started me on losartan for borderline hypertension several years ago, he warned me "Don't take it the morning of your big marathon." A few months later, about 12 miles into a long easy run for marathon training, my heart rate had skyrocketed. I had to walk-slow run-walk for several miles to get back to the car. I'm not sure how much I really know about cardiovascular physiology, but I know that blood pressure rises when running, to bring enough oxygenated blood to the brain and other organs. I'm guessing that if my peak blood pressure is "capped" by medication, my heart rate will increase, as my cardiovascular system attempts to keep up, by any means necessary. 

Since that time, I have been careful not to take the medication before a morning race, or even before a morning run. Until today. I messed up. 

A whole lotta walkin' goin' on. 
Someone oughta write a song....

I gave up on racing Brian, and just concentrated on taking care of myself through the last two miles. I walked and walked, five full minutes. Many runners passed me: as Caroline Dunn came by, she asked if I was OK. I waved and simply said "I'll have an interesting blog post for this race." By the time Caroline had passed me, my pulse had dropped to 140 bpm, so I resumed running. Mile 5: 12:02. Almost immediately, my pulse was back to 180 bpm. I tapped my watch to make sure that the sensor was conducting properly, but my skin was damp, and this watch has been reliable. And I felt like there was a real problem with me, not the electronics. Another walk break, this time for two minutes. Approaching the intersection with Howell Mill Road, I recognized that I didn't have far to go. 51:30 elapsed, I probably wasn't going to finish within 60 minutes. 

Looking at this data, it was clear that my heart rate was far too high from the beginning,
I just didn't realize it until I was well into the race. 

I felt OK as I resumed running, around a 9 minute / mile pace. My heart rate was still high, but I didn't feel like I was in danger of collapsing, so I kept running. After the intersection with 17th Street, it was downhill the rest of the way, so I sped up a bit. Making the final turn onto Trabert Avenue, 56:45 elapsed. Could I finish in 3 minutes? The road curved gently to the right. I expected to see the finish line, but not yet! My watch didn't sound the mile 6 alert until shortly before the finish line: 9:44, 58:25 elapsed. Then the road made another gentle right turn, downhill and over the timing mat. The race clock showed 59:04 as I passed, 59:00 minutes on my watch, 6.08 miles for the course. 

video of Brian's finish
a few minutes later

I was so relieved to be finished, just running the 10K. I was wiped out physically, and perhaps even more exhausted emotionally. I found Brian, congratulated him on a good race, he mastered the many hills on this route, finishing in 55:30. Eventually I shared with Brian my medication faux pas. I don't want that to be an excuse for why I couldn't win today. That was my error, I know better, and hope I won't make that mistake again. 

Brian with the winner of the 10K race, Kevin Hicks

Frank with the winner of our mano-a-mano competition

(left) Big spread in our results: Brian 59th place, Frank 89th place.
(right) Results ordered by age: No younger participants outran me today! 

Today's stats

December 3, 2023: The Peachtree Mile

Panaroma photo in Piedmont Park after we finished the race, waiting for awards

Last year I had a great experience in the Peachtree Mile, finishing in 6:47 (chip time) for a personal best, albeit boosted by a 77-foot elevation drop. After I finished the Thanksgiving half marathon unscathed, I decided to register again this year. $35 for a 7-minute run, $5 per minute, although I got a nice T-shirt and a pair of branded mittens on top of today's race experience. 

This morning I woke up sore from yesterday's 5K effort. I tried some physical therapy exercises last night before going to bed, but had some left glute stiffness that was unresolved this morning. While I woke up at 5:30 am for an 8 am race, it took me awhile to get ready, mostly needing to make a deposit in the porcelain bank. (Today's race would have been a disaster if I had skipped that pre-race preparation step.) It had rained on and off all night, and was still lightly raining when I finally got in the car at 6:45 am for the drive to Piedmont Park. 

Arriving around 7:15 am, and making another bathroom stop in the park, I briskly walked from the parking garage to bib pickup at 14th Street and Piedmont Road. I hoped that would be enough to work out some kinks. I saw a few familiar faces: Matthew Grzeck and his son Santiago, Allison Troxell and Jacque Hartley, all of whom were also at yesterday's Singleton 20K relay. Instead of socializing, I tried to warm up a bit more by jogging in the park for a few minutes, but soon it was 7:45 am, and it was time to walk up 14th Street to the starting point at Colony Square. Allison and I talked during the walk: she has a goal of running 52 races this year, with today's race #48 for 2023. 

Before long we were lined up in one lane of Peachtree Street, facing south. We were a smaller group than last year. Matthew reminded Santiago to watch out for slick leaves on the path, which I also remembered from last year's race. I looked around and joked to Allison "There are a lot of 60-year-old men here today!" The race started at 8:00 am sharp. Allison, Matthew, Jacque and I started together, but within a block they were all ahead of me. For me, I knew within 30 seconds that I had not warmed up properly and I wasn't going to have a great race, somewhat hobbled by the left glute. I decided to just run and see how things worked out, after all it was only a mile. 

My pace wasn't very even for the first part of the race,
although that might have been the Garmin signal
affected by buildings on Peachtree Street. For the second half of the race,
my pace inversely correlated with elevation, as expected. 

At the corner of Peachtree Street with 10th Street, I took a quick peek at my watch: 2:42. That was a pleasant surprise: last year I reached the corner at 2:35, so despite the non-ideal conditions, I was doing better than expected to this stage. However, I couldn't get into a higher gear. A younger man passed me, tried to encourage me to keep up with him, but after 15 seconds of effort I had to fall back and let him go. Another peak at my watch as we reached the edge of Piedmont Park showed 5:40. Definitely not breaking 7 minutes today. Unlike yesterday's race, when no one passed me in the second half of the race, people were regularly passing me. Clearing the last tiny hill on 10th Street, seeing the finish line in the distance, I heard the steps of another runner gaining on me. I tried to speed up, but the other runner pulled alongside me to my right, then passed me a few steps before I crossed the finish line. I saw 7:31 on the clock, so that was better than the 8-minute finish that I was anticipating. 

I earned a finisher's medal! 

Official time: 7:27. I'm not particularly perturbed by the time. The experience confirmed that I just can't push hard running on two consecutive days. To my surprise, I placed 4th out of 6 men in the 60 - 69 age group. I was 43nd overall out of 74 finishers, although I had the feeling as I crossed the finish line that there was absolutely no one left behind me. (Looking at the results, there was a 15 second gap after me and the next finisher.)

The winner finished in 4:14. I was a minute behind the age group winner (results on right)
 but less than 20 seconds behind 2nd and 3rd place in my age group. 

With a small race, a large percentage of the speedsters end up winning something. Allison was the female master's winner, and Jordan Eison and Jacque Hartley won their age groups. 

This is what a 4:14 miler looks like (Will Ponder, age 22) 

And a 5:18 miler (Jill Braley-Boyd, age 45)

Allison Troxell female master's champion in 6:36 (age 52)

Winner of my age group in 6:25 (Charles Potts, age 63)

I managed to run a few easy miles after the race, enjoying the newly opened section of the Eastside Beltline in Ansley Park. My running goal for the coming week is easy recovery jogging, so that I'm 100% ready for my next mano-a-mano challenge with Brian Minor, at the Monday Night Brewing Westside 10K on Saturday December 9! 

December 2, 2023: The Singleton 20K Relay

With my focus on the Thanksgiving Half Marathon, I was not proactively thinking about other races. However, last weekend one of the run leads posted a note on the In-Training FaceBook site encouraging us to form teams if we were interested. I had recovered well from the half-marathon, posted my interest, and David Bloomquist responded. As the week developed, it looked like we were going to have a mixed master's team, but before I went to bed Friday evening, saw a note that read like one of our team members was under the impression that either the race or the team wasn't happening, not clear. When I woke up this morning, I wasn't sure if I would have a team when I arrived, but decided that either we would find people wanting to run with us or I would find a team that might want me. 

I love this sign! (but I don't know who created it)

Indeed we had three members ready to go: David Bloomquist, Sheelagh O'Malley, and me. David wanted me to be the anchor, so I took the "D" bib, Sheelagh the "C" bib, and David the "B" bib. David thought he had someone lined up for the "A" bib, so around 8:10 am, 20 minutes before the start, we went out for a short warmup jog on the Southwest Beltline. We covered a mile in 10 minutes, returning to the start-finish area at 8:20 am, with 10 minutes to go. David checked with the volunteers managing the event, only to discover that the person that he had identified an hour earlier for bib "A" was no longer available. Fortunately, the volunteers were trying to match up a young man who was looking for a team. Meanwhile I was looking at our "A" bib sitting alone on a folding chair without a runner, and MC Ronnel Blackmon was summoning the "A" runners to the start line. With David and Sheelagh's assent, I decided to switch my "D" bib for the "A" bib, to ensure that our team could start on time. It was just a fun run, no one had expectations of me or anyone else on the team, and I figured that I could continue my warm up in the first mile of the race. 

Ready to start, competing against
Stephanie Batson on the Tucker Running Club team

I lined up near the back of the starting wave. Within a minute, Ronnel had sounded the airhorn, sending us on our way. Stephanie and I ran together for the first few minutes. I was determined to start out slow (like the turtle) but when I first looked at my watch, was running 8:35 min / mile pace, faster than I had expected. Everything felt fine, so I decided to just stick with that pace. I had never run with a baton before (to which was strapped a timing chip) but it wasn't heavy, I just didn't want to drop it. After passing under the MARTA underpass (remembering a Friday evening last year when Bonnie and I waited out an unexpected thunderstorm in the underpass) the route was noticeably downhill. I've run this section of the Beltline many times on easy group runs, and knew that the return trip would be challenging, so I did my best to conserve energy. Eventually I pulled ahead of Stephanie and paced alongside a couple of other runners. Mile 1: 8:25, approaching the Metropolitan Parkway overpass. I stayed with that couple all the way down to the turnaround. We were about 10 minutes into the race before the lead runners on the return trip were passing us, four speedsters in quick succession. At the bottom of the hill, shortly before the paved Beltline ended at the I-75/I-85 underpass, we turned around, about 13 minutes elapsed.  

At the start: I'm on the far left, wearing the green
2023 Publix Atlanta Marathon shirt 

Heading uphill, I shortened my stride and immediately passed the couple that I'd been running with. I thought, I sure hope that I won't regret that move if they end up passing me. It turns out that was my fastest minute of today's race. Meanwhile my pulse was rising, reaching 171 beats per minute by the time I reached the mile 2 marker, right before Metropolitan Parkway. In the humidity and with sweaty hands, I was concerned about losing my grip on the baton: that would be embarrassing! For mile 2, I had slowed to 8:34, but that wasn't bad considering that we were running uphill. 17 minutes elapsed, on pace for a sub-27 minute finish, which was my plan for my leg of the relay. 

I kept running uphill, past a group of volunteers and a medic on a bike as I crossed Allene Avenue, the only road crossing our route. 21 minutes elapsed, around 2.5 miles covered. 5 - 6 minutes to go: I passed one more runner, but could hear the footsteps of a couple not far behind. The uphill effort was taking its toll: I badly wanted to take a walk break, but I was more afraid of being passed, so I kept pressing forward. At 23 minutes, I was approaching the MARTA underpass. 3 - 4 minutes to go, and the route was finally leveling out. Running, running, I saw Sheelagh up ahead, to run with me for the final section. I thought it would be only 0.1 mile to the finish, but after running together for a minute, there was the 3-mile marker, and what I had thought was the turn to the exchange area was blocked off! "I thought I was nearly done!" I gasped to Sheelagh. 8:43 for mile 3, 25:42 elapsed. I had slowed down a bit more, but understandable given the amount of uphill running in that mile. 

Finally we reached the right turn off of the Beltline, Sheelagh cheered me forward. I had noticed a slick wooden bridge at that mark during our warmup, but fortunately I had no trouble with footing. Staying on the path, avoiding the temptation to cut the tangent, I made another right turn heading into the exchange area. No one had passed me to this stage: I kept moving forward on the muddy ground as fast as I could, waved the baton in the air as I spotted David standing on the right. Crossing one timing mat, I put the baton firmly into David's outstretched hand, and he took off. 

26:27 for my leg: not bad, especially for a fun run! I ran a minute faster than in my last 5K race in late September. But I had really pushed myself, was completely winded. I needed several tries to properly stop my watch. I bent over for a minute to catch my breath, then remembered that the best thing that I could do for myself was to walk slowly. I eventually made my way back to the Beltline to wait for David on his return leg. If there was any consolation, most of the wave B runners in front of David were really working hard, looking quite tired, probably the same way I had looked with 0.2 miles to go. About 24 minutes after I had finished, I saw David approaching, snapped a couple of photos, and then turned around to run with him. 


David near the end of leg 2

I quickly slid my phone into a pocket and began running as David caught up to me. "2 minutes to go!" I said for encouragement. I had thought that I would run alongside David, but I wasn't sufficiently recovered to keep up with his pace. As we reached the mile 3 marker, I called "You can do anything for 1 minute!" and dropped back, stepping off the course to avoid interfering with any runners behind David, after all my race was already finished. The bike medic asked if I was OK - I assured him that I was, and walked the rest of the way to the exchange area, making sure that I didn't get in the way of any runner on the narrow pathway. 

David had already handed off to Sheelagh, completing his leg in 26 minutes as well. After David had cooled down a bit, he introduced me to our "D" bib runner, a young man named Johann. He looked ready to run fast, probably faster than the masters / grandmasters runners on his team. I was happy to see that we had a full team, and Johann assured me that he had met Sheelagh and would recognize her when the approached the exchange area. After 26 minutes, I saw Sheelagh making the final turn to approach the exchange area. Sheelagh smoothly transferred the baton to Johann, and our last leg of the relay was underway! 

Johann on the left, orange jersey and maroon shorts.
In the distance, Sheelagh has just made the final turn.

Sheelagh holds up the baton as she approaches the timing mat

Crossing the timing mat, Sheelagh spots Johann

who steps out on cue

Smooth handoff! 

Johann is quickly moving out of the exchange area

and Sheelagh has just finished a 26 minute leg of her own! 

Johann ran a strong leg of his own, sub-25 minutes. We joined him to run together to the finish, but Johann was competing with two other "D" bib runners, and their teammates were trying to join: 12 people together on a narrow path, fortunately no one was tripped up. I couldn't keep up with Johann and happily fell back and jogged on the side of the path. Ronnel was there to give each of us a high-five to congratulate our team's strong performance!  

Team David Bloomquist #328: great job!!

November 23, 2023: Breaking 2 attempt at the Invesco QQQ Thanksgiving Half Marathon

I ran my first sub-2-hour half-marathon in December 2015. Out of 31 half marathons run before today (not counting virtual races), 6 of those races were sub-2 finishes. The last time that I broke 2 hours was in December 2019, when I was probably in the best shape of my life. Since then, I've finished much slower, including one disastrous race in December 2021 and a truly crappy effort early this year. My most recent sub-2 attempt was out of reach by the 10K mark. I had big plans to gradually build distance over the summer. But by the end of August, my longest effort was 9 miles. 

If I was ever going to break 2 hours again, I needed some discipline, with the Atlanta Track Club training program. I didn't manage the training perfectly, but did the best that I could balancing running with challenges in life and at work. During the course run on November 4, I felt a quadriceps pull about 8 miles in. After it was apparent it wasn't going away on its own, I ended up walking 2 miles back to the car, wondering if my training was finished for this round. I dusted off the physical therapy exercises, and fortunately it resolved within a few days. A set of "monster walks" seemed immediately curative. With a little surprise, on November 8 I ran a 3-kilometer indicator run on the track at Agnes Scott College in 14:48, putting forth a maximum effort, but with minimal pain. If there was slight disappointment, plugging that 3-km time into the venerable McMillan calculator predicted a half-marathon finish of 2:00:22. Oh well, I was confident that I would run better than my March race. I resolved to be happy with any substantial improvement, whether it was shorter or longer than 2 hours. 

I'm in the middle, near the back but still visible if you look carefully

For my "Breaking 2" project, 11 weeks of Saturday long runs with a 10-minute/mile pace group culminated in a perfect weather morning: 41 deg F, little or no wind, and clear skies. I had not perfectly managed the training program, but did the best that I could while navigating some work-life-running challenges. During the course run on November 4, a quadriceps strain slowed me down 7 - 8 miles in, and after accepting that the pain wasn't magically going away, I walked 2 miles directly back to the car. As soon as I was home, I dusted off the physical therapy exercises, and fortunately it resolved within a few days. It seemed that a set of "monster walks" was immediately curative. To my surprise, on November 8 I ran a 3-kilometer indicator run on a track in 14:48, without pain. If there was slight disappointment, plugging that 3-km time into the MacMillan calculator predicted a half-marathon finish of 2:00:22. 

But one reason for optimism was the successful PNC Atlanta 10-miler one month ago, where I averaged the 2-hour half-marathon goal pace of 9:09 min / mile for 9 miles, banking enough energy for a faster finish. The hilly 10-miler route had covered some of the same terrain as today's race course, so I felt it was a valid predictor race. I also had vivid positive memories of the course from my personal-best 1:53:14 race on Thanksgiving Day in 2019. Fortunately I had no trouble accepting that I could not even get close to that personal best in today's effort. As we gathered in the corral for wave C, Chris Carino asked what was my goal, and I replied "1:59:59 - I'll be very happy with that!" 

Thousands of runners in front, looking due north toward downtown Atlanta

Lined up just behind the 2 hour pacer

Thousands of runners starting behind me, looking due south toward Center Parc Stadium

The 2:00-hour pacer lined up at the very front of wave C. I took a position a few rows back, resolving not to accidentally pass the pacer in the beginning of the race. It took a while to begin, perhaps there was a delay with clearing traffic from the route, but the 7:45 am start for wave A was delayed until 7:55 am. Had we started on time, the track club's plan was to separate waves by 3 minutes, but with the later start, Ronnel Blackmon was instructed to send us forward every 2 minutes. Ronnel gave the signal to begin, and I crossed the starting mat within a few seconds, but was immediately 50 feet behind the 2-hour pacer. The route was crowded, and my legs felt stiff, even though I had properly warmed up and then had kept moving while waiting in the corral. Before long we were on top of the back of wave B, and that slowed things down a bit, which was probably ideal in retrospect. I very gradually loosened up, and was more comfortably running at 9:10 min / mile pace approaching the state Capitol complex. After turning left on Decatur Street, I passed the 1-mile marker at 8:56. The 2-hour pacer was probably 10 seconds ahead of that hot pace. I guess I was going to be on my own today. 

Running northwest through downtown Atlanta, I thought about how easy this felt at mile 2 of a race than in mile 26 of the full marathon. This part of the route felt fairly level. Before long we were at 18 minutes elapsed, covering mile 2 in 9:06, closer to goal pace. The pacer was still about 10 seconds ahead but perhaps he was under control. Then we began an extended downhill section along Marietta Street, fairly gently past Georgia Tech. At the mile 3 marker (8:55, 27 minutes elapsed) a fellow runner shouted out "Just 10 miles to go!" I corrected him: "10.1 miles!" He conceded "Never underestimate the last 0.1 mile." Then we crossed the 5K timing mat, 28 minutes flat for me (9:00 min / mile average pace). "Now it's 10 miles to go, I called out!" There was nice camaraderie amongst the runners in the group running around me, although I missed the first water station in that section, as it came up a little earlier than I had expected from studying the course map in the days before today's race. Fortunately I had elected to carry a 16-ounce plastic bottle of Nuun, so I didn't need the extra hydration, although I wondered if I should have taken the walk break. Turning onto Northside Drive, there was a longer and slightly more pronounced slope: steep enough to see it and revel in it, but not steep enough to mess up my form. Heading downhill, thinking of the mantra "Relax and Glide", I caught up to run lead Brad Blitz, who had led most of my long runs in this training round. He was happy to hear that I was running well so far. When  I complained a bit about the fast pacer, Brad said "Probably trying save some time before getting into the hills." I replied "I'm trying to save some energy before getting into the hills." Mile 4 in 8:50, reaching the mile 4 marker around 36 minutes flat. I thought to myself, "The Atlanta Track Club should create the Fulton County Downhill 4-miler race!" 

At this stage I took my first gel, as planned. A water station was just one minute ahead, but I still had a few ounces of Nuun, and swigged down the last of that mixture instead of dealing through the chaos of the water station. Brad and I ran near each other through most of Atlantic Station. The 2-hour pacer was up ahead somewhere, but nowhere in my sight, never saw him again today. I think Brad was informally pacing a couple of other runners, certainly providing encouragement in the fashion of a good pacer. There was still a lot of conversation amongst the runners. I noticed landmarks such as the Millenium Gate. At the Interstate 75-85 overpass, I completed mile 5 in 8:57 on my watch, and around 45 minutes elapsed as we passed the official marker. 

Making a sharp right downhill turn following the tangent onto Spring Street, we were soon running uphill, for the first time since the first half-mile of the race. I focused on form, imagined running a tangent over the next three blocks to the left town onto 14th Street. The road was more steeply uphill, but by shortening my steps and maintaining a quick turnover, I managed to keep moving until the crest at Peachtree Street. I audibly let out my breath on the other side of Peachtree, "Wheeeewww!" and resuming gliding past mile 6, 9:15 and 54 minutes elapsed. That was my first mile slower than goal pace, but perfectly expected with 70 foot ascent for that mile. 

After heading into Piedmont Park, past a large cheer group, I crossed the 10K timing mat at 56:11, averaging 9:03 min / mile pace. I still felt really strong, knew that I was slightly ahead of pace, having balanced reserves of both time and energy during the net downhill sections. I walked through the Piedmont Park hydration station, taking my first walk break of the race, although it was very short, probably only 15 seconds. Returning to pace, I accidentally bumped elbows with another runner - "Sorry!" we both said. Then the woman looked again and said "Hi Frank!" Oh, it was Jacqueline Garner, "JG" from Coach Carl's training group! JG and I are the same age. She is a step faster than me, but I'm close enough so that we sometimes ran speed workouts together, or I would trail by a few meters, letting JG pace me through the workout. I started to chat about how well my race was going, trying for a sub-2-hour finish. JG had the same goal "I'm not going to talk much" she said "But we can encourage each other!" JG was all business today. While I had intended to stick with her for awhile, knowing we would need mutual encouragement in the uphill miles to come, JG effortlessly moved ahead, on the way to a negative split and 1:58:05 finish. I took a look at my watch as the time approached 1 hour flat: 6.65 miles, so about 1 minute ahead of goal pace. Mile 7 came up quickly, 9:08 minutes. There was a big cheer group at the Charles Allen Gate, representing Atlanta Run Club. Despite most of their members probably running this race, they still had a really good turnout. 

On 10th Street, we were running uphill, reversing the last half-mile of the Peachtree Road Race. When I ran this race in 2019, I remembered feeling the heavy wings of Fatigue in this section. Today I still felt strong, thanks to the slightly slower pace. My attitude was 100% positive. That was really helpful, because turning left onto Juniper Street, we were in the midst of a 2-mile, net 100 foot uphill stretch. I told myself, "Don't look at your watch" and "You've got this, you're doing great!" channeling Ali Feller's signoff on her podcast. When the mile 8 alert sounded near 8th street, 9:14 - not bad! We kept climbing past 6th street, where we had turned off for the 10-miler a month ago. Today we kept grinding on. This was where my quad strain had begun on the course run three weeks ago, but today - nothing, no pain at all! 

I took my second gel while crossing Ponce de Leon Avenue. That was perfectly timed, because one block later was the water stop, just where I expected it. Here I took the full 30 seconds to drink a cup of water mixed with a cup of powerade. That invigorated me as I resumed running. Mile 9: 9:26, my slowest mile so far. But running uphill, taking a walk break, I was able to put aside those concerns. 1:22 elapsed as I passed the mile 9 marker. That felt like what I had run in the 10-mile race last month, so assured me that I was on track. 38 minutes left to cover 4 miles. No ... 4.1 miles. I had run the first 4 miles, downhill, in 36 minutes. Could I run the last 4.1 miles, with some uphill to come, in less than 38 minutes? That was when I first realized that my goal was at risk. 

Turning onto John Wesley Dobbs, I glided downhill to the underpass for Interstate 75-85. I could see, above the top lane of the highway, the top of the hill on the otherside of the highway. I wasn't sure at first until I realized that the ant-like figures were moving, so those were runners on Irwin Street, not the top of a building. Passing through the underpass, I mentally prepared myself for the steepest uphill section of the race. I remembered from 4 years ago a volunteer encouraging us to "Keep your heads up!", and remembered those words when it was my turn to grind my way up the hill. "Keep your head up! Shorten your stride! You've got this! You're halfway up! You're doing great! And ... and ... finally over the top!" 4 years ago, I thought that many others walked up the hill, but today almost everyone around me was still running, slowly, but running, not walking. Shortly after that ordeal, my watch sounded mile 10 in 9:17! But as I passed the mile 10 marker on the course, I saw the watch clicking toward 1:32 elapsed. 28 minutes to cover the last 5 K. Exactly the same amount of time that I ran for the first 5K on fresh legs. Now I was definitely tired. 

But as I ran east on Irwin Street, away from the steep underpass, I began to feel better, a little stronger. I didn't look at my watch, continued to focus on form. Irwin Street had a tiny incline but not enough to adversely affect my running. I've noticed before that a very slight upgrade is probably ideal for my stride. As we approached the right turn at Randolph Street, a volunteer called "Up the hill!" Was that meant to be helpful or encouraging? In that moment I truly understood the phrase "It is what it is." I was still running fairly well, but was thinking of Eliud Kipchoge in his first Breaking 2 attempt in Italy, saying to his coach "We didn't do it." 2:00:25, he was so incredibly close, but didn't achieve the goal time. Fortunately, given more time to train, Kipchoge succeeded, 1:59:40 in Vienna

A quick right onto Edgewood, then a quick left on Bradley. Another steep uphill - but there was a water stop. Thank goodness, I had a great excuse to walk up that hill, not even deviating from my plan to walk through the water stations. At the top of the hill, we turned right onto Decatur Avenue. The walk break had succeeded in restoring some equilibrium, I began to get back on pace now that we were on a level road. Mile 11, 9:33. At the mile 11 marker, my watch registered 1:41 elapsed. 2.1 miles, 19 minutes left, that meant 9:00 minute miles all the way to the finish. "I can do that" I said to myself. This is everything I’ve been working for since first week of September. A woman in front of me handed a top shirt to a man, saying "I'm going for sub-2." She looked stronger than me, but I said to myself "Me too, going for sub-2.

Turning left onto Hilliard Street, running through the MARTA tunnel, emerging with a right turn onto Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, I could see the gold dome of the Capitol building in the distance. Ahead and to the right was the Corey Tower, it seemed to be a few minutes away. Less than two minutes later, I was passing the Tower, so I guess I was running quickly enough. MLK Drive was flat enough. Approaching the I-75-85 connector, Mile 12, 9:05. That was an improvement, but there were 5 seconds that I would need to make up between now and the finish. Approaching the official mile 12 marker, my watch showed 1:50 elapsed. I did the arithmetic in my head: Average 9:10 min / mile pace to this point, 12 seconds slower than 2:00:00 pace. With 1.1 miles to run in 10 minutes or less, the 2-hour goal was still doable, but I would have to hustle. 

At the same time, a woman ran up to me and said "I'm following you all the way in." She fell back as I was thinking "I'm the one who needs a pacer!" But turning onto Capitol Avenue, I knew from past experience that I had a long downhill finish ahead - just as soon I cleared the Interstate 20 overpass onto Hank Aaron Drive, due south toward the former Olympic Stadium, now Center Parc Stadium. I could see the Olympic Rings in the distance, estimated it would take 3 minutes to get there. 3 minutes ticked by and I still wasn't there. Time to accelerate. When I finally passed under the rings, my watch read 1:56:00. I wasn't sure but was concerned that if the finish line was 1/2 mile away, I was going to miss my goal by a few seconds. I wished that I had measured out the distance from the Olympic Rings landmark earlier this morning. We crossed a couple of timing mats: Were those to announce the names of incoming finishers? They weren't that close to the finish line. Oh, those were the starting line timing mats. How far to the finish? Nothing to do but lean into this final downhill section. I caught up to a group of five younger women running together, taking the entire lane. I wanted to go around but couldn't do so without leaving the lane and adding some extra steps. They broke apart to pass a slower runner. I thought about trying to pass through the gap, but then they shifted into a higher gear. I matched their tempo, now satisfied to follow them for the rest of the race. 

The back side of the finish line, around 7:15 am

My watch sounded mile 13 before I turned the corner onto Georgia Avenue. I didn't notice the alert but the watch recorded 8:41 for that stretch. After turning the corner, I saw the mile 13 marker, looked down at my watch, and saw 1:58:4x. "I'm going to make it!" Finally, I mentally relaxed. Remarkably, as my mind relaxed, my legs moved even faster, drawn by the magnetic pull of the finish line. I heard Ronnel announcing finishers - I looked for him on the left, then the right side of the finish line, didn't see him, but then I was over the timing mat for the finish line. I held both hands as high as possible in celebration! Then reached up and stopped the watch: 1:59:33!! I did it, I did it, I DID IT! 

I turned around to see if I could recognize coming in behind me while walking backwards, but didn't see anyone familiar. The volunteers asked us to keep moving, and I decided that it was too risky to walk backwards any faster. But looking around once more, I saw Brad Blitz, then Daniel Yee, and was thrilled to share with them both "First sub-2-half in 4 years!

The official result was available a few minutes later: 1:59:26! Hey, I beat Kipchoge's 26.2 mile time by 14 seconds - if that means anything.....LOL. Best of all, although I was tired, I wasn't injured. What a great feeling to have succeeded in this stage of the great rebuilding project! I didn't run a negative split, but given the downhill start, I was pleased with the successful execution of my race plan. And for whatever it's worth, I outran the McMillan calculated result by nearly 1 minute! 


October 22, 2023: The PNC Atlanta 10 Miler

After John Dougherty suddenly passed away on September 23, Bonnie flew that afternoon to New Jersey to be with her sister, for emotional support and to assist with funeral arrangements. I flew to New Jersey the following Friday with Bonnie's brother, Brutus, for the funeral on September 30, then we all returned to Atlanta together late on Sunday October 1. I had been working on a grant application due on September 30, and with John's passing it was difficult for me to keep up with anything more than what absolutely had to be done to finish the grant proposal and keep up with my Emory course. Getting back to work on Monday October 2, I was going to bear down and catch up on everything, including a research paper from a recent Ph.D. graduate's thesis that was due on Monday October 16. 

Then on Thursday evening October 5, Bonnie was leaving her office, walking to her car in the parking deck, when she apparently missed a step and fell, severely hyperextending her knee, and as we discovered in the following days, completely tearing the tendon holding the lower leg to the patella. Since then, Bonnie's independence has been sharply limited, other than going from home to doctor's offices, and more recently, to surgery on Thursday October 19. Fortunately the surgeon was pleased with the surgical outcome, but Bonnie faces 6 weeks of immobility to allow the surgical repair to heal, and then faces months of physical therapy. If there is any good news, the surgeon assured Bonnie that after physical therapy, she should be able to resume activities that she was doing before the injury. So we're hopeful. 

Getting back to me, I'm in the middle of a running "rebuild", in the Atlanta Track Club half-marathon training program, trying to see if I can run a half-marathon in less than 2 hours on Thanksgiving Day. I've done this several times, but my most recent "Breaking Two" accomplishment was nearly 4 years ago. There are probably a few reasons for the long gap, including not having run that many half marathons since that time (thanks pandemic) and having gained about 20 pounds in the past 4 - 5 years. In August I resumed tracking everything I ate with the Weight Watchers app. It works, I'm down 5 pounds after two months, and I'm confident that I will gradually lose more weight if I just maintain awareness of what I'm eating. With the loss of the pounds, and the onset of cooler weather, I can tell that my fitness is improving. I've had some good workouts on the track. In the 10-miler, my goal was to practice goal half-marathon pace. I'll need to run 13.11 miles averaging 9:09 minutes to run a sub 2-hour half-marathon (without rounding off for significant figures, 1:59:57!) 

My specific goal for this race was to run that pace for 10 miles. 

  1. Could I do it? 
  2. If successful, how would it feel? 

With Caroline Dunn before the start

And with Stephanie Batson a moment later. 
I like this year's in-training shirt, very comfortable, 
and also very visible. 

A couple of photos of wave C at the starting line,
less than a minute before our wave began the race.

Lining up in wave C before dawn, I saw Colleen Curran, Caroline Dunn, and Stephanie Batson - it was nice to catch up with all three of them. The extraordinary master of ceremonies Ronnel Blackmon sent off the wave A runners at 7:15 am, wave B 3 minutes later, and then wave C at 7:21 am. As we moved toward the starting mat, Stephanie darted out ahead of us. Crossing the start line, I easily found a 9:30 min / mile pace for the first couple of blocks, then turning left onto 17th Street. On occasion other runners were dashing past. I saw another runner wearing the Thanksgiving Half Marathon in-training shirt, joked with him "I wonder how many of these runners we will be passing later in the race!" I just running steadily across the I-75/85 overpass, across Spring Street and West Peachtree, then a left turn onto Peachtree. Around this point I had caught up with Stephanie, and we ended up running the rest of the first three miles together. Mile 1 marker at 9:27 (+67 ft, -11 ft). That was a little slow, but I knew that I would need to rein myself in on downhill miles 2 and 3. 

Crossing the overpass over the I-75/85 connector.
Atlantic Station is now immediately behind us. 

Stephanie and I chatted most of the way down Peachtree Street. I remember one older man on the sidelines looking straight at me as I passed, saying "Great job, sir!" I took a walk break near the mile 2 marker accepting a cup of water. It was funny (to me) to hear a volunteer say "Oh my gosh, I just gave that runner an empty cup" which must have happened to someone just ahead of me. Mile 2 in 9:11 (+15 ft, -42 ft) and then mile 3 down Cardiac Hill, in 9:05 (+66 ft, -144 ft). 27:43 elapsed, 9:14 min / mile average pace. 

As soon as I made the turn in the Peachtree Hills neighborhood, I lost track of Stephanie. For awhile, I hoped that she was drafting behind me, but I gather that she fell behind quickly in the hills. In some years this has been the first tough part of the race, but this year I felt that I was able to take on the rolling hills under control. It was nice to begin passing a few people in this section. Emerging onto Lindbergh Drive, we approached the main MARTA station at mile 4, 8:57 (+86 ft, -60 ft); 36:40 elapsed. This translated to a 9:10 min / mile average pace - I was thrilled to have worked down almost to my overall goal pace. I was feeling strong, definitely had 6 more miles left in me. 

Turning right onto Piedmont Road, I took a walk break at the second water stop. After briefly going downhill over Peachtree Creek, then through the I-85 underpass, we ran a rather steep uphill getting into Midtown Atlanta. I had struggled with this hill in our training run a week ago, taking a long walk break, but today I had the mental strength to keep running uphill. I crossed the Mile 5 timing mat at 46 minutes flat (+86 ft, -78 ft; officially 45:58 chip time), which was a 9:12 min / mile average pace. If it looked like I was beginning to slip from my goal pace, actually I knew that I was doing OK - much stronger than last year. I felt that I had banked a decent amount of energy for the second half. We still kept climbing uphill - once again I was glad that I had recently run this section in training, so I was able to stay calm, shorten my stride, and passed a few dozen people. As I crested the hill, a couple of blocks before Monroe Drive, I knew that a water stop would be around the mile 6 marker, and as I crossed Monroe Drive, I took a citrus gel (Atlanta Track Club was giving away boxes of these to trainees a week ago). I actually had to run a couple of minutes after taking the gel before reaching the water station, which wasn't ideal. Mile 6 in 8:57 (+56 ft, -64 ft), 55 minutes flat, back on the 9:10 min / mile average pace. A couple of minutes later, I finally reached the water station. It's a good thing that I brought my own gel: a volunteer was handing out gels, but he was standing much too close to the volunteers handing out water. It takes me a full minute to tear open a gel and roll up the package to squeeze the contents into my mouth. It's only after that minute that I want the water to rinse down the sugar. 

This year the route had changed a bit: instead of briefly turning into Ansley Park, we kept running uphill on Piedmont Road. It was a relief to turn into the Botanical Gardens, and after a minute running down the nice hill behind the Piedmont Driving Club to enter Piedmont Park. The outer road of the Active Oval was rolling hills, but I absorbed some positive energy from a large cheer group, several dozen people from the Atlanta Running Club. As we ran past the 14th Street exit, the mile 7 alert sounded: 9:11 (+121 ft, -59 ft), 1:04:10 elapsed. Still on pace as long as I could speed up a bit in the last couple of miles, which I was pretty sure would be the case. 

Thanks Alice Pate for cheering for us on the toughest mile of this course!

We exited the park at 12th Street, and began climbing immediately after crossing Piedmont Road. It didn't look that steep at first, but the hill was gradually and continuously uphill, all the way up to Juniper Street. Last year I gave in to a nice long walk break on 12th Street. This year I fought off the temptation, just shortened my stride, and maintained a running motion. This was another sector where I passed a few dozen people. As I turned left onto Juniper Street, I could see that the first block or two of Juniper Street was downhill. But my legs had turned to jelly on the 12th Street hill. I wondered if that had been a wise decision to run all the way up 12th Street, since I couldn't get back up to speed right away, and then we started going uphill, again! The one positive thing about Juniper Street was Alice Pate standing on the right side of the road, cheering on the runners that she knew and capturing our photos - thanks Alice! In previous years on this course, we turned left at 8th Street, but with the change in mile 6, we were now routed to 6th Street. Those extra blocks on Juniper Street were straight uphill. Mile 8 in this race is always my slowest, no matter the route, and this year was no exception. I was pleasantly surprised to see not only a sub 10-minute mile, but 9:36 (+111 ft, -30 ft)! I walked through the water station around the mile 8 marker. Mile 8 was still my slowest mile today, but not terrible. Elapsed time of 1:13:45 dropped my overall average pace to 9:13 min / mile. But I knew from experience that miles 9 and 10 would be net downhill. 

As I was getting back up to speed, a car turned sharply in front of me and another runner, to get into a parking garage. The driver waved as they turned, but I had to quickly stop my acceleration and yelled "Hey! Hey!" I didn't care for that close call. I tried to shake off that memory as we turned right onto West Peachtree Street. 10th Street is the top of the hill in mile 9, but the other disadvantage of running down to 6th Street is that we had to work our way uphill for four blocks, not the two short blocks from 8th Street in the previous route. The Garmin data shows that I really slowed down in this part of the course. Fortunately I was able to get back to a good speed shortly after crossing 10th Street, and at least I didn't have jelly legs this time. A few runners passed me in this section, which prompted me to increase my own pace, and thankfully my body responded as I had hoped. Before I knew it, my pace in the 9th mile had dropped from >10 minutes per mile around 10th Street to <9 minutes per mile before we had even reached the mile 9 marker. 8:40 (+32 ft, -104 ft), 1:22:25 elapsed. Average pace per mile to this point: 9:09!!

And I knew that I had banked enough energy to run a strong final mile. My goal time today was 1:31:30, which would correspond exactly to the same pace needed for a 2:00:00 half marathon. As soon as I had passed the mile 9 marker, I definitely sped up, with a nice downhill assist to the 17th Street intersection. I could see the I-75/85 overpass up ahead, but I ran up that final hill of the race fairly strongly, passing quite a few people who were clearly exhausted. Not that I wasn't a little tired myself, but the mantra "You can do anything for one mile" gave me wings to fly! I had not remembered how many blocks it was to the final turn into Atlantic Station (the answer is 5 blocks, 2 blocks to Market Street and then three more blocks) but I just turned off my brain and ran-ran-ran. A 9 minute final mile would get me to my goal with a little cushion, and whenever I glanced at my watch, I saw 8:something for my pace. 

The final turn: I was running strongly, saw Allison Troxell (one of Coach Carl's long-time trainees) walking from the finish. I had enough energy to smile and wave. Then Atlanta Track Club Executive Director Rich Kenah was along the cones in the middle of the road, cheering us into the finish. I felt well enough to smile and say "Thanks!" as I passed. I wasn't sure how far the finish line was from my location, just counting on the confidence that I was running fast enough and had gotten far enough by mile 9 to achieve my goal, so now it was to see how strongly I could finish. We made a sharp right turn - a ha! there is the finish line, the road took a little jog to the left and straightened out. I saw two women running ahead of me; I threw in a final kick, closed some distance on them, pushed a little harder to get a few steps ahead of them, and over the finish line! Stopping my watch, 1:30:47 elapsed, mile 10 in 8:21, -43 ft (so no wonder I ran so quickly!) 

Just steps from the finish line.
Individual photos from Marathon Foto are free this year! 

I achieved all goals today: with an official time of 1:30:41, I outran my goal time by more than 45 seconds, achieving an average pace for the entire race of 9:04 minutes per mile. I also ran a nice 1:15 negative split today, 45:58 for the first 5 miles, then 44:43 for the last 5 miles. I was tired but I wasn't wiped out (although Bonnie might disagree after seeing me nap off and on for the rest of the day...). I was proud to survive the beast of uphill miles 7 and 8, and had banked enough energy to take advantage of the downhill miles 9 and 10. 

Look at those hills! Craaaazzzyyyyyyy!

Today I could not have added on another 5K to complete a half marathon at that pace - but with a full month of training remaining before Thanksgiving, I now think that I have a realistic chance of breaking 2 hours if conditions are good. Today's race was a nice comeback, completing a quality effort this year, erasing the disappointment of a 3-minute positive split last year. 

Actual temperature was 61 deg F at the start, and
the same temperature during my cooldown mile after the race.
The statistic that I'm most proud of is passing 130 people
on the second half of this tough course.