Tag Archives: Racing

Fitness Friday: What NOT To Do During a Race

Running a half marathon in the Czech Republic
Running a half marathon in the Czech Republic

This post is mostly derived out of frustrating, although I’m trying to come at it from an educational angle! I’m not a road racing pro, that’s for sure, but I’ve run over 15 races in the last two years ranging from 5Ks up to half marathons, so I at least feel like I’m justified in adding some of my own commentary on to what NOT to do during a race.

So here’s my list of what you shouldn’t be doing during a race (as told by ME!):

Do not run more than two people abreast.

I realize some people run in packs or groups for motivation and support, but you have got to realize just how annoying it is to be the person behind a group of 5 people who are all running at the same pace, side by side. It’s a huge hurdle to get around and it’s ANNOYING. If you want to talk to your friend, fine, but keep it to two people side by side. There’s nothing fun about having to get around a wall of people.

Do not come to a complete dead stop in the middle of the pack unless you are actually planning on keeling over.

You’ve signed up for this race, you’ve (hopefully) trained for it… there is no reason you need to come to an abrupt dead stop in the middle of the crowd. You run the risk of causing a pile up and you’re definitely going to annoy the person behind you who suddenly has to go around you. If you need to bring your pace down to a walk, slowly, but purposefully, move to the outer left or right sides of the racing crowd (even up onto the sidewalk if need be) and then decrease to a walking speed. If you stop in the middle of the group (and you’re not actually dying) then be aware that everyone around you is going to be thinking evil, evil thoughts towards you (some may even say it outloud).

Do not wildly overestimate your running time and get situated in a totally inappropriate corral.

At some point, you need to face the reality of what your body can and cannot do. I’m not talking about the people that over or underestimate their race pace by about 5 minutes, but rather the ones that overestimate by huge chunks of time like 20 minutes. Even if you didn’t train appropriately, you can always fall back into a slower corral at the start with no fault or penalty. Consider that you’re actually slowing up other people in faster corrals if you cannot keep their pace since those people now have to go around (or through) you! There’s nothing more annoying than watching someone who is clearly unfit come to a grinding halt in a fast corral, almost cause a pile up and then watch as THEY get annoyed at everyone else. Like what the hell buddy?!

This also goes hand in hand with:

2015 Pride Run
2015 Pride Run

Do not sign up for the faster corral just because you want to be in the starting line pictures.

I’ve never actually experienced this one, but a friend told me about it. People who sign up for the elite pace times just so they can appear in the starting line pictures. Do not want. Go back to where you belong!

Do not come to an abrupt dead stop at the finish line.

I know, you’ve been running and you’re exhausted, but take an extra few seconds to clear an additional five to ten meters after the finish line. This helps to keep the finish line clear for other racers to finish.

Do not try out new gear the day of a race.

I’m even referring to the technical shirts they give you for free just for signing up. The last thing you want to find out is that your new sports bra is going to chafe you in area you don’t want to get chaffed, or that your spiffy new shoes are going to give you blisters. ONLY wear gear that you have run in multiple times before!

For new runners, I hope this helps you! Even seasoned runners can do with a friendly (lol) reminder every now and again (I personally need to make sure I don’t come to a grinding halt at the finish line!). Let me know if you think I left anything out, or if you have specific questions re: racing, I’d love to help you out!

Fitness Friday: 2015 Pride and Remembrance Run

The Pride and Remembrance Run marks my racing anniversary. It it was exactly two years ago that two very good friends of mine invited me to do the Pride Run with them. Ever since then I’ve been become an avid race-goer and couldn’t be happier!

These shots were taken fairly close to the finish line.
These shots were taken fairly close to the finish line.

This was my third Pride Run and it’s one that I don’t necessarily always look forward to. The course is seemingly (impossibly) ALWAYS uphill. There’s a sharp decline where the water station is, but somehow the rest of the damn race always feels like you’re on an incline. 😐

Course map – details via my Garmin
Course map – details via my Garmin

It starts in the heart of the Gay Village in Toronto, heads out to Queen’s Park, laps it twice and then heads back in to where the Start Zone. While I may not love the course itself, the finishing section is always hugely uplifting and everyone always seems to be in great spirits. The finish line is one of the best I’ve ever encountered – the crowd is always loud, always excited and always full of energy. I love, love, LOVE finishing the Pride Run to so much excitement. It’s an enormous mental boost.

I felt great right out of the gate, and my first few kilometers were fairly speedy. I hit a nasty wall around the 3k mark and slowed down a good thirty seconds per kilometer. Not pretty. I also, once again, walked through the water stations. Ugh. I really, really need to stop doing that, it’s murdering my speed. But all I can think during the race is how much I want to drink that water!

Finished!
Finished!

Thankfully, as soon as I hit the 4k marker, I put on the burners and kept telling myself “It’s only 800 more meters. It’s only 700 more meters. It’s only 600 more meters.” I misjudged my timing a bit… when I hit 25 minutes in, I could SEE the finish line and I convinced myself I was only 60 seconds away. I kept up my pace, but I ended up being 90 seconds from the finish line… which clocked me in a 26 minutes and 29 seconds. A whole SECOND faster than my Rat Race a week and a half ago. DAMN! I had been really hoping to hit just over the 26 minute mark. Alas no. I’m okay with my time. I’m not elated, but I’m okay with it. I’m still twenty seconds slower than my best, but I was also twenty seconds faster than last year on this same course, so at least I’m improving!

And that’s it for my races until the fall because it gets too damn hot in Toronto during the summer! I’m planning on doing a 10k in New York City in September, and I’ve already registered for the Scotiabank Waterfront Half Marathon (October), but I’m still off my goal of being sub 25 minutes for a 5k so I’ll need to find something else towards the end of the year to race!

Race Summary

  • Finish Time: 26:29
  • Pace: 5:17 per kilometer
  • Overall placement: 638/1322
  • Age group placement (Female, 25-34): 73/247
  • Gender placement (F): unknown

Fitness Friday: Achilles St. Patrick’s Day 5K

Achilles St. Patrick’s Day 5K 2015 – bib number
Achilles St. Patrick’s Day 5K 2015 – bib number

Finally! My 2015 race season has begun!

I signed up for the Achilles/Steamwhistle Brewery St. Patrick’s Day run because it was a 5K, it was early in the season without being during a period of time when it’s unbearably cold in Toronto and it was… a St. Patrick’s Day themed (and as I’ve already indicated, I overly enjoy that particular “holiday”) which means I got to wear my amazing neon green Adidas running pants with extreme pride!

Achilles St. Patrick’s Day 5K 2015 starting zone
Achilles St. Patrick’s Day 5K 2015 starting zone

Unfortunately, it was a really windy and cold morning. While it was only around freezing, the wind was so horrible that the windchill pushed the temperature down to about -6C. The wind was regularly blowing around 30km/h, with gusts up to 50km/h – it was highly, HIGHLY unpleasant.

It was really quite cold!
It was really quite cold!

It was a smaller race, around a thousand or so people, which makes for faster race times since you have to do a lot less weaving around people before you hit your pace. I wanted to think I’d bust out a new personal best, but I had some harsh realities in front of me: I wasn’t in nearly as good shape as I was last summer when I hit my running peak for speed, I was almost ten pounds heavier as well and while I had been training, I had mostly been “sorta training”. Some weeks I was doing great, and others I just completely fell off the wagon. The only thing I really had going for me was that I had been keeping up with weightlifting and that was going *really* well.

Coming up to the finish line!
Coming up to the finish line!

I found the race pattern oddly disorienting for whatever reason (I thought I was going south when we were really running east). Not that it mattered, it wasn’t hard to follow as it was a straight there and back type run. We exited Steamwhistle Brewery (where the start zone was) and ran our way up into the financial district. I don’t remember a lot of the run to be perfectly honest. I was so focused on keeping my pace consistent that I really didn’t look around much. Most of my scenery was watching the kilometers climb on my Garmin!

Almost there!
Almost there!

The last part of the race was incredibly windy. So much so that as I was crossing back over the bridge towards the last section of the race, the wind actually blew me two paces SIDEWAYS! Holy crap! I wasn’t feeling so awesome by the last 400 meters,  but I spotted my husband about a hundred meters from the finish line and it gave me that extra push to just freaking finish. What I was really happy about is that I couldn’t bring myself to sprint too much at the end of the race, which means I was pushing myself appropriately throughout the whole race. This was GOOD news because I wasn’t sure I wasn’t really sure I had been pacing myself properly.

Achilles St. Patrick’s Day 5K 2015 Race Map
Achilles St. Patrick’s Day 5K 2015 Race Map

I ended up clocking in at exactly 26:10:00. My jaw dropped when I saw my chip timing. Right down to the millisecond, that was EXACTLY my personal best race time from 2014 for a 5K. While I’m slightly annoyed that I didn’t manage to a least squeak in a SECOND faster, I’m rather floored that I managed to bust out my previous pb on the first race of the season! Since I’ve set myself a goal of hitting a sub 25 minute 5K this year, this bodes extremely well for the rest of the year – I just gotta keep at my training plan! (For reference, last year I managed to knock off 75 seconds between March and June, so I’m hoping that’s do-able again this year.)

The “medal”
The “medal”

5Ks don’t usually have medals since they’re considered a pretty easy race and the fees are usually quite a bit lower than longer races. However, we were provided a lovely bottlecap opener on a lanyard upon completing the race. Highly amusing! Steamwhistle Brewery then hosted an event inside their building after the race where racers got some beer (yeah, that wasn’t sitting well in my stomach afterwards…) and some seriously amazing chili.

All in all, a fun, simple run, although with a weird course map. I liked that it’s a smaller race, so I’ll probably continue to sign up for it in coming years.

Race Results

  • Finish Time: 26:10
  • Pace: 5:14 per kilometer
  • Overall placement: 283/1129
  • Age group placement (Female 30-39 years): 27/217
  • Gender placement (F): 76/634

Fitness Friday: Goals for 2015

Last year I started something I’d never really put down on paper before; my fitness goals for the year. Having a handy list online to refer to was great at keeping me motivated (even though, realistically, the only one keeping tabs on myself was me) and for having an easy reference point whenever I wanted to re-focus my fitness efforts.

I didn’t succeed on all of last year’s goals, but that’s okay: Not succeeding in all my goals makes me realize I need to refocus if some of them are just too far off the mark (or completely unrealistic).

Here’s my list of things I’d like to accomplish in 2015:

  1. WeightLoss – Let’s try for 145 pounds instead
    • Jesus, Mary and Joseph, this must be on everyone’s list and I don’t think it’s ever really going to disappear from mine. I had a goal of hitting 140 pounds last year and never made it. I originally chose 140 as that would make me “healthy” if we were going by those nasty BMI charts (I know, I know, BMI is a really bad indicator of “healthy”). The closest I ever got was 147, and that was pushing it. I only managed to hit that when I was at the peak of my half marathon training in September, and I definitely wasn’t able to sustain it, since I blew up like blowfish throughout December when my running bottomed out. I’m currently looking at a weight of 157 on the scale and it’s… uncomfortable. I felt the healthiest around 148, so I’m kind of aiming for around 145 pounds (gives me some leeway cuz I love me my wine and fries).
      lol ain’t it the truth?
      lol ain’t it the truth?
  2. Race Pace for 5 and 10Ks – Sub 25 minute 5K, sub 54 minute for 10K
    • While I really enjoyed running two half marathons in 2014, I’m not really looking to work too hard on my pacing for that long of a stretch of time (pushing myself for two hours straight? Nothankyou.). What I would like to do is achieve an under 25 minute 5K (my personal best right now is 26:10) and an under 54 minute 10K (pb of 55:14). I’m going to have to work more on interval and speed training (something I really, really despise) and I’m going to go have to get on it PRONTO because I’ve got races already starting in March! I think this is the toughest goal I have set out for myself this year because it means I can’t just “naturally” get better at running, I have to actually push myself to do so, and that can be discouraging and frustrating to me.
      Toronto Island 10k – clocked my personal best for a 10k in 2014
      Toronto Island 10k – clocked my personal best for a 10k in 2014
  3. Weightlifting – STICK WITH IT
    • I really enjoy lifting. It makes me look leaner, burns more calories when I’m sitting on my ass and gives me bulges in nice places as opposed to the not-so-nice places when I’m not lifting. I had goals for how much weight I wanted to lift last year, and never managed to achieve them. I hurt myself pretty significantly throughout the year and I want to avoid that, but I also want to STICK with lifting. I feel like I’d go back to it every few months, get sick or injured, then stop for another couple months, THEN go back to lifting and start at rock bottom again. So while I would like to see a 100 pound bench press and a 160 pound squat out of this body, what I really want is to just freaking stick with the lifting and not let it fall by the wayside. Lifting is the first thing I drop when I need some space in my schedule, and it’s kind of stupid because it’s the one that takes the least amount of time out of my schedule – seriously, 30 minutes three times a week? I can’t manage that? Come on now.
      I looked, and was, stronger than I am now. Need to get back to it!
      I looked, and was, stronger than I am now. Need to get back to it!
  4. Run more – run over 550k in 2015
    • In 2015, I would like to run slightly further than I’ve run in previous years. Given that I have no intention of training towards a full marathon, or working towards consecutive halves, this basically means I just have to run more consistently. I’m not bad when I have a plan, but there were some months throughout 2014 when I only ran about 20k (or like December… 10k :s ). However, I have done as much as 80k a month, and that’s closer to what I would like to be doing. So the goal to run over 550k in 2015 is only a small jump from the previous year (514k) simply because I want to remain consistent.
    • For reference, here are my distances for the previous four years:
      • 2014: 71 runs, with an average distance of 7.2k. Total distance covered: 514k
      • 2013:  77 runs, with an average distance of 5.4k. Total distance covered: 417k
      • 2012: 46 runs, with an average distance of 4.3k. Total distance covered: 200k
      • 2011: 50 runs, with an average distance of 3.4k. Total distance covered: 173k
        Nike+ 2014 log
        Nike+ 2014 log

And that’s it for me! Pretty short and sweet. The goals are a bit more vague this year compared to last year, but I think it gives me opportunity to grow without getting panicky, which is what I started to feel towards the end of 2014 with my lifting goals (and promptly bombed out of every single one of them). Do you have any fitness goals for 2014? Tell me! I’d love to hear about them.  🙂

Fitness Friday: Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront (Half) Marathon

I really wasn’t planning on doing the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon race. After the race in Prague, I hadn’t been interested in doing another half marathon any time soon. However… I had mentioned to some people on my Ultimate Frisbee team that I was looking for people to run races with (because standing at a start line by yourself really does suck) and one of them invited me out for the half marathon. I was like weeeelllll mayyyyybe I can do the half.

STWM
STWM
Morning of the race – crack of effing dawn
Morning of the race – crack of effing dawn

So race day came and I was really worried about my knees. REALLY worried. I met up with my teammates and we huddled together (it was dang freezing COLD) at the start zone in a slower corral than I was marked for (it didn’t matter, they weren’t really checking our line up skills it seems). One thing I noticed right off the bat was just how well this event was handled.Nothing like Ottawa Race Weekend’s utter fucking disaster zone at the start. And even though there were tons of people in this race since the half and the full started at the same time, it went off without a hitch. At no point were we forced to stop and walk because the crush of people was too large. I cannot say how much I appreciated that. Having to stop and walk because there’s too many people is just soul-destroying as you watch your few seconds/minutes of edge dwindle away into nothingness. OTTAWA – You need to fucking fix your shit for next year because every other city is managing to do this with MORE people than you have and they’re not nearly as clusterfucky!

I was wearing my new fancy pants!
I was wearing my new fancy pants!

 

So we took off and the first section was uphill ( 😐 ) to Bloor Street. It then cut along down Bathurst and out to Lakeshore. I saw some amazing signs (“Pain is temporary, but internet race results last forever” was definitely my favourite!) and some cute costumes (Captain Canada stuck out in my head as he would stop to high five little kids on the side of the street! I also saw some crazy guy JUGGLING the whole way! He ran the half at an incredible pace AND juggled the entire time!). I was having a GREAT first 10 kilometers. I was doing a fantastic pace (around 5:51 per k) and not feeling out of breath or in pain. I hit the first 10k mark at 58:55 which surprised and pleased me.

But then, rather rapidly, around the eleventh kilometer, my knees started to get tighter and tighter as I pushed on. I tried correcting my stride to straighten out my legs/knee. Then I tried knee ups and high kickbacks – those seemed to help a lot and they’d alleviate some of the pressure on my kneecaps, in particular the left one. It wasn’t great, but it wasn’t super painful yet. There were some nasty uphills on the loop back into the city (we had run out to High Park, then u-turned back down Lakeshore to head back to the downtown core) and I wasn’t too happy to see those suckers towards the end of the run. (It seems the race organizers have a different definition of a FLAT RACE than I do!)

Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront (Half) Marathon Route
Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront (Half) Marathon Route

When I finally hit the 20k marker, I started to get incredibly emotional. As I approached the finish line, I was on the lookout for my husband who would be very close to the finish line (assuming he could get a spot in the crowds of people) and he had never seen me run a race before. I was really looking forward to seeing him and I was in so much in pain from my knee and broken down physically that it was started to have an impact on my emotional state. (I can’t even imagine what running a full marathon feels like.) I was near tears towards the finish line (although I didn’t spot him due to a miscommunication: he thought I’d said I’d be finished by 11 a.m. whereas I had said I’d be done just slightly after 11) but sucked it up for the last 300 meters and actually managed to sprint towards the finish line (which is interesting, I thought I had been pushing it more than that… I don’t know why I suddenly had more gas in my tank.).

Finish line photos
Finish line photos

I crossed the finish line at a gallop and came to a grinding halt right after the track mat that logged my official finish time. My left knee completely seized up – I suddenly couldn’t bend it anymore, and if I tried, I was gritting my teeth with the pain. I exited the finishers’ chute slowly and painfully with a peg leg that was not bending. I’m sure I looked ridiculous. I grabbed my medal and silver foily blanket and made my way out to the family area where my husband was waiting.

In the end, I managed to finish in 2:07:25, which was over a minute faster than the half marathon in Prague last month. This surprised me because I hadn’t been training and I was significantly heavier than I was last month as I had gained about seven pounds. I was really happy to have done even that small bit better because it’s such a confidence booster!

Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Half Marathon Medal
Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Half Marathon Medal

Race Results

  • Finish Time: 2:07:25 (new personal best!)
  • Pace: 6:02 per kilometer
  • Overall placement: 5959/10542
  • Age group placement (F30-34): 431/912
  • Gender placement (F): 2531/5627