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“The Cowtown” 10K Race Report PDF Print E-mail
Written by Derek Lee-Wo   
Saturday, 24 February 2007 02:00

I did my very first 10K race today. Prior to this, the only other race I have even run was a 5K on Nov 5 last year.

Would you believe that my biggest worry prior to the race was finding somewhere to park and being worried about roads being blocked off in downtown Ft. Worth. This turned out to be a non-issue. While roads were in fact blocked off, it didn’t affect me at all.

I got to the race area about 75 mins before the start of the race. It was dark, windy, wet, and bit chilly, but I managed to stay warm by hanging around the expo tent.

For the last couple days I’ve been thinking about what pace I should try and run the race in. I set a goal of breaking 1 hour so I figured I’d start at around my normal training pace of about 10min/mile and see how I feel, probably going to 9:00-9:30 for miles 2 and 3 and if I feel fine, pick up the pace a bit.

I started off on plan, but I have a very hard time keeping pace. Eventually I saw a woman that seemed to be running about the same pace I was going at and she seemed pretty consistent so I decided to sit just behind her and I stayed there until about mile 4.5. The course was surprisingly hilly. After going down the first hill just around mile 1, the only thing in the back of my mind is that I need to eventually run up a corresponding hill since the finish is about about 2 blocks from where we started. At one point of the course, we were going up and down over and over. This was especially tough for me since I don’t train on any hills at all. All my training miles have been on flat roads.

Around mile 5, I was starting to struggle, but I held on…just barely. It didn’t help that at that same time, we had an uphill hill to run.

Once I got past that hill, I was within 0.25 miles of the finish so I picked up the pace and passed several people. I even pushed and managed to pass another run about 1 foot from the finish. Once I was done, I came extremely close to throwing up. Coincidental as I was walking around and I saw the finish area of the 5K race, I saw one guy actually vomiting.

My eventual chip time was 1:00:50. I didn’t manage to break an hour. My overall pace was 9:49 min/mile which is basically what I run in training. I’m actually very disappointed in myself. My 5K time from 3.5 months ago was 30:11 so my 10K time isn’t actually any kind of improvement, despite the fact that I have so many more miles under my belt since my 5K race, including 30+ mile weeks for the last 6 weeks plus I’m 10lbs lighter!
Some lessons learned and things I need to work on include:

  • I need to do some hill training
  • I need to find a way to learn proper pacing. With proper pacing and time awareness, I could have certainly run each mile 10 seconds faster and finished within the hour.
  • I need to figure out how much I can push myself earlier in the race. I ran the entire race at my training pace. I wasn’t breathing hard and could have probably carried on a conversation, but I’m afraid of running too fast early on in case I can’t finish.
  • I need to figure out why I can race faster than I train.

I’ve been running consistently for 6 months now and doubts are starting to creep in to my mind as to whether I can actually be ready for a marathon in Dec!

 
First 5K Race! PDF Print E-mail
Written by Derek Lee-Wo   
Sunday, 05 November 2006 09:24
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Today I had my very first race which was a 5K.  It was The Half 5K in Dallas.  I managed to place 5th in my age group....right in the middle since there were only 9 people in my age group.  I also placed 95th overall out of 241 runners.  My chip time was 30:11.62.  I'm a little disappointed as I really wanted to come in under 30 mins, but I came very close and I know I will do better the next time around.

 

Here is a link to the official results .

 

This race was a great learning experience.  I had been training recently at about a 9:46/mile pace, but I didn't know how fast I should run in the race.  My initial thought was to run the first mile at my training pace and see how I felt.  If I felt good, I would then increase the pace, running negative splits.

 

Well, as the starting horn went off, that all went out the window.  I had my Polar watch on and I ran the first mile at a 8:20/mile pace, even creeping up to faster than that at times.  With all the excitement and people around, my whole game place disappeared.  It wasn't until the second mile did I manage to settle into a nice consistent 9:00/mile pace.  Still faster that I would have probably liked, but it felt doable.

 

I started to get a side stitch at round 2.5 miles so that made it really tough.  My pace eventually dropped to around a 10:30/mile pace as I struggled with my breathing and trying to run through the side stitch.

 

If it wasn't for the stitch, I could have probably gone a bit faster.  My average HR during training is usually 154 with a peak of around 172.  For the race, the average was 167 with a peak of 176.  I was only working a bit harder than my training runs.

 

In the end, I enjoyed the experience and I'm already thinking about when my next race will be.  I'll probably do another 5K and follow that up with a 10K. 

 

I didn't have my music for this race, but I think I will definitely use it the next time around.  It will help me focus on my running and help me ignore all the others around me.  It was also very disconcerting hearing my breathing which I don't normally hear while I'm training.  I know there is a lot of debate as to whether racers should listent to music, but I tried it without and next I'll try it with music.

 

 

 

 

 

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 02 October 2007 18:05 )
 
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