Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Boston 2010

Wow what an experience, the atmosphere was just incredible the whole way around and the Bostonians should be congratulated for their hospitality and enthusiasm. Simon had said how great it was but until you do it yourself you just can't apprecite how great it is.

Previous week ran around 45km with some in New York and a couple of easy runs in Boston.


Boston Marathon

Took the yellow school bus out to Hopkington at 6 am, sounded like schoolkids with all the chatter on board with everyone very excited. Arrived at the school about 7 and then straight to the loo, had a bagel, settled down on one of the benches with Craig, chatted as we had our drinks and took turns in lining up for the portaloos. It was cold, so much so that my feet were aching, last time that happened was in Nepal and everyone was rugged up to the max, as it turned out I ended up running with beanie and gloves on for the whole race.

Around 9.15 we were told to start making our way to the buses to drop off our bags and craig and i went our separate ways, wishing each other all the best. Another loo stop and then walked down to the starting corrals with the excitement building all the time, the national anthem was played, the fighter jets came overhead and it was ready to begin. interestingly i didn't have any real pre race nerves, i think the excitement was just to great and then we were on our way.

Race time 3:02:32 5 minute pb.

5k-20:28
10k-41:11
15k-1:01:58
20k-1:24:14 Loo stop in this 5km
HALF-1:28:44
25k-1:45:30 hip started playing up
30k-2:07:58
35k-2:30:37
40k-2:52:51
42.2k-3:02:32

Got into a good rhythm early and the km's cruised by, did lots of hand slaps to the spectators who were very enthusiastic in their support, one thing I didn't get around to doing was getting my name or anything Aussie on the shirt but anyone with a name on their shirt got even more encouragement.

First half on the race, felt really good, my main concern was that i needed to go to the loo from about the 3km mark despite having been 4 times before the race, cold weather and my bladder don't go well together. Eventually gave in and at around the 18.5km stopped off, went and also put back on my patt strap which had fallen off early on, so had one of my bandages but i didn't want to waste any more time so I just held onto it. Based on km splits, this cost me about 1m 30s. Settled back into a rhythm once I got back running, unfortunately I didn't get to handslap or smooch the girls at the college as they were on the right and my pitstop had been on the left so watched proceedings with amusement and went through the half way mark at 1:28:44, did some quick calcs and was confident that sub 3 was still well and truly achievable. I'd had about 3 drinks at this stage, few sips in the cup and quite a bit on my face :).

Around the 23km-24km mark, my left hip that had been playing up earlier in the week in New York and which flared up again on Saturday started hurting again and made me slow down a bit, maybe the nurofen i'd taken before the race had lost its effect. The hills not that they were much came into play and it became a bit of a grind. I felt myself drifting into 4.30 splits as even though it was painful, it was manageable, however when I tried to speed up, the pain increased significantly so I eased back to the 4:30's.

Heartbreak Hill came and went, not much to report on there other than it wasn't much of a hill and I kept on thinking to myself there must be more but there were huge cheers as we reached the top. A number of people had started walking and i wonder whether that was more a mental barrier than anything else. Realised around this point that i needed to speed up a bit to get to sub 3, so tried for a few hundred metres but once again, it was too painful so eased back. Did some more calcs to see what I could do if I kept at the 4:30 pace as well as what I needed to do for a pb and then went into auto pilot determined to finish and do a decent pb.

Had a snake, only had the one for the day and a couple of drinks at the drink stations, walked through these and made sure I had the full drink and was on my way. Passed a lot of people over the last 8 or so km and only got passed by a few and was happy to come around the corner into the last straight at exactly 3 hours. The last few hundred metres seemed to take forever as the finish line seemed like an optical illusion and was very happy to finish and still in tact.

Found Craig fairly quickly who ran very impressively for a 3.01 especially considering his knee issues and little running over the last few weeks, so a very big congrats to him. Then found the girls who were ecstatic to see us in one piece, had some photos taken, Trace had bought an Aussie Cape with her and wrapped it around me and then we limped back to the hotel.

Physically felt pretty good after the race , i've been lucky in that I always seem to feel pretty good after the run, other than the obvious sore legs and a couple of blisters, ran in the Asics DS racers and they were great, will run future races in these for sure.

Trace and I caught up with Craig and Tiff last night for a few drinks and Chinese and had a great time, hope you guys have a great rest of your holiday.


So overall pretty happy with yesterdays effort, prob 8/10 and wouldn't change how I ran the race, I don't feel as though i went out too fast, even though times may indicate otherwise as I didn't run out of steam. It would have been nice to have cracked sub 3, it's just a pity that the loo stop and sore hip cost me any chance of doing that but at least I'm heading in the right direction. I'll start running in the next couple of days and then plan my next Marathon, will it be Perth, Gold Coast or Melbourne, lets see how the training goes before making a decision, I'm just a little wary of how close the first two are.

Had a great time In New York and Boston, off to Washington in a few hours and then Atlanta,Los Angeles and Las Vegas, should have a great time in each and will get at least a couple of runs in each place.

Thanks to everyone for their best wishes and support.

7 comments:

Biscuitman said...

Well done Rob - great effort. Good to read your report and glad you have pulled up ok. Enjoy the rest of your holiday. Fantastic to do a pb at Boston

attitude running said...

mate i watched it on tele, looked absolutely amazing!! what a great way to run a pb. congratulations and keep at it when u get back, im sure only improvement from here on in

trailblazer777 said...

Congratulations on an excellent PB in Boston! On a course as hard as that one thats a fantastic effort. Pity about the extra pitstops, and the hip soreness, but an outstanding PB all the same. Like Sling you are getting closer to the big one. That should be your last rehearsal for a sub 3.

No smooch, no name on the shirt, thats just not good enough...*LOL* :-) hahahaha
The eagles are finally on the move up the ladder, and my mob well we came up 15 points short to last years losing grand finalists...which sees us slip to 5th, but after the tiggers and the eagles we should be back in the top 2-4.
Nic Natanaui won the rising star award for his efforts on Friday night.

Enjoyed reading the writeup sounds like a fantastic experience with the fighter jets etc. The yellow school buses I remember seeing when I was in the US of A back in 2002. My brother did his first half marathon with the beanie and gloves in North Carolina too late last year. Hope you all make the most of your time over there, and hope to see some sub 3 action from yourself and Sling on 10-10-10.

homo said...

I was going to ask whether the aerodynamic haircut made a difference, but with the beanie that question has taken care of itself.

Well done! And what an experience it must have been. Boston does sound like the holy grail of marathons.

Who knows, might even motivate me to put on the running shoes again some time.

Enjoy the rest of your time over there and keep those quarters in your pocket in Vegas!

Sling Runner said...

Great report, Rob. They said it was the best weather condition in Boston for years. So you run at the right year! (as evidenced by course record)

I was watching your split live and I could see that you were on track for the majority of the race. At 35k, you had to run 4:00 pace for the last 7k and it proved tto difficult given your hip issues.

DC64 said...

Great run, 5 minute PB on a tough course; looking forward to your next one, and the sub-3. Glad you enjoyed the experience, not sure if anything can beat it. NYC maybe... I'll let you know in November!

Clown said...

Thanks guys for the comments.

Homo, hope to see you out there soon hitting the pavements. i think i'll need more than quarters for vegas with how Trace gambles.

Sugar, if NY Beats it for experience and atmosphere then that is truly amazing.

TB, good effort by the Dockers, I'm fully expecting you to beat us and i'll come back and we'll have a record of 1 and 5 as we won't beat Sydney. However, i can't bring myself to tip the Dockers to win, i'll have to forego a tipping point.