Same as race day:
- Shoes with orthotics, RoadID, stretchy triathlon laces, lightweight socks, lubricated toes and places that chafe
- Lycra shorts and Coolmax underpants, shirt, and jogbra
- Visor
- Watch starts at the beginning and keeps timing until I'm done - no stopping it for breaks or anything else (although I do time my half-mile splits to check my pace)
- No running buddies to amuse or distract or hold me up or to wait for or annoy
- No music to provide motivation or keep me from hearing sounds around me
- Running on asphalt pavement, usually with a camber
- 1 Succeed capsule every 30-40 minutes (341 mg sodium, 21 mg potassium each)
- Take my homemade gel in frequent sips (1 ounce every 3 miles - slightly higher consumption rate than race day)
- Good hydration (24 ounces/hour) with mostly plain water and still end up slightly dehydrated (down 1.5% body weight post-run, but also after 2 bathroom stops)
- Please no rain on race day, like today. Race Gods, from my blog to your ears!!
- Earlier start at 6:50 AM (New York City Marathon starts WAY later, ugh)
- No water stops nor enthusiastic, friendly volunteers and spectators
- No sunglasses today (too early in the day), usually wear during long races to prevent eye fatigue
- No Imodium today, but I've found in six marathons that taking it well in advance becomes increasingly important after mile 13. Sometimes critically important.
- Run the outside line on curves instead of cutting across the tangents in the race
- Jog up steep hills instead of power-walk up them in races over 10 miles (to stay out of my red zone). The race courses will be somewhat hillier than my training routes.
- No knee bands today to reduce arthritic knee pain (which I sometimes wear during races)
- Slower pace: 14:14 min/mile overall today (6:12+ marathon pace), hopefully 12:35 - 13:25 min/mile (?) average on the course on marathon day (5:30- 5:50 finish). My average pace outside of bathroom and refill breaks for 19 half-mile segments was 13:32 min/mile.
- More casual walk breaks now and then to drink and refill water bottles (during marathons I try to restrict them to either at water stops, or one minute per mile).
- Longer bathroom breaks in a real bathroom instead of a nasty porta-potty with long lines or behind a dumpster in the city
- Hopefully today's weather was hotter (72*F - 83*F) and more humid (60-70% RH) than race day
- Somewhat sloppier about my form - tended to shuffle more and use arms less than in races
- Psychologicially easier to turn around before I had planned in training than in a race, but I didn't today
- No eight busy street crossings with traffic lights to stop at on race day
- Shorter mileage! Only 40% of a marathon today.
- No heart rate monitor today - sometimes I wear it for races to help keep my pace sensible for the first 13-15 miles
- No specific pace plan or pace chart to follow today - just keep jogging
- Carried my water today - 20 ounces of water is 1.30 pounds I won't have to carry on race day - maybe worth a minute or two on a marathon distance.
- Hopefully my body weight will be a few pounds less to carry around on race day, too! Every pound is worth at least a minute off my finish time!
Nice job, Nancy.
ReplyDeleteI also keep thinking about how much faster I'll be when I lose more weight.
Thanks! I think 1-2 minutes off your marathon time per pound of body weight is about right for me, even though I'd like MORE! :-)
ReplyDeleteI like the comparison list. Very interesting indeed.
ReplyDeleteYou sound very prepared!! :-)
ReplyDeleteI hope so! This will be my 7th marathon, and it would be nice to (finally) get things right. I also wrote this because I see a LOT of people doing things *MUCH* differently on race day than they did in training, and having a lot of (fairly predictable) problems as a result.
ReplyDeleteOh, about MCM (Mike, I looked for your email and couldn't find it quickly) I'm going to be doing the middle 10 miles with Holly from http://triandbehappy.blogspot.com/
ReplyDeleteTwo notes:
ReplyDelete1. No music. I sure as hell couldn't run 10 miles alone without my MP3 player, unless I was participating in a race and totally focused on the job at hand. I have a hard time keeping that "race" focus on my training runs...just too many miles.
2. Running on roads with camber. I try to do this often, but sometimes it is a nice break to hop up on a sidewalk or run in the grass along side the road for a while. Just to give the knees and ankles a break. I actually know someone who has had to rehab a pretty serious injury from this very thing...
Fortunately I'm not a music addict! I like it, but it's not something my training or racing depends on. :-) Plus we have enough creepy people in my area that I want to be able to hear it if the bad guys are behind me (or the bikes going 25 mph).
ReplyDeleteI tend to have some knee problems on steep cambers, and in road races I end up switching sides of the road frequently if I can. When I have a road race that's just on one side of the road, I start to get in a little trouble if it's very long. I try to practice on each slant to keep my knees accustomed to it, but they like flat the best.
i thot i was the only one who thot about camber. it makes a difference in my knees so i feel it.
ReplyDeletegreat post Nancy.
ReplyDeletei constanty reveiw how to make each race better. I try to mimic as much as I can but in my case, a heat stroker in Arizona, i will do a long run with a camelback with 60-90 ounces (oh okay fine 2-3 liters!) of water which I would never do in a race. I can run with or without radios or ipods. To me its more what can I listen too, evil conservative talk radio is good for me. Ipod if its just a so so outing.
No wonder, Commodore, you're mainlining that evil conservative talk show stuff directly into your brain!! ;-)
ReplyDelete