Sign In to YourRunning
Email Prefs
You can opt-out at any time. More information about our privacy practices is in our privacy policy. The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
We never share your data with sponsors and partners, but from time to time we may send you promotional offers that they give to us. You can opt-out at any time. More information about our privacy practices is in our privacy policy. The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Get the world's best running newsletter!

Leading the Pearl Street Mile

Posted by simon on 11/2/2006
Leading the Pearl Street Mile

5th in 5:14. Not what I wanted, but not too bad.

It all went a bit wrong.... I went out too fast and three of them sat on me for the first 400m. (Picture shows me going to the front right from the gun.) I had to practically start jogging to get anyone to come past me. When they did, I was trying to recover and settle in when at 800 metres ex-Olympian Colleen De Reuck looked round at us all and then attacked. I had nothing left and just had to hang on.

Scott Hajicek (51), a demon trail runner and 2:45 marathoner, passed Colleen to win in 5:05 (he is the white-haired bloke in the white vest about four runners behind me in the "The Start" picture); Colleen ran 5:08; Kyle Hubbart (50 -- he won the 2-mile Sunrise Stampede in June in 11:08), got third; then Patty Murray, a former NCAA 10,000m Champion and Olympic Trials marathon qualifier, came hurtling past in the last 150m.

So.. I am not happy that I got so caught up with what Bobby McGee calls the "need to frantically reach for performance" that I lost awareness of the important stuff like rhythm, form, cadence, breathing and so on. Everything that would have let me be fully present.

Funnily enough I had worked out that 5:14 would probably win it, but this year's race was faster! Gabino said the big mistake was the start and that if I hadn't been the rabbit for the first 400 I would have had a better race; it's a question of experience. Because I was out front too early I never got settled in, and I switched to desperate survival mode.

Boulder Race Series Pearl Street Mile Beauty and the Beast Wave August 17, 2006.

1
2
3
4
5

No comments yet? Post the first one now!

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Captcha
This question is used to make sure you are a human visitor and to prevent spam submissions.
Copy the characters (respecting upper/lower case) from the image.

There's much more on YourRunning.com...

Sign up for The Weekly Kick

Email address:
Note:We hate spam, too, so we never rent or sell addresses.

Words + Videos

Pics

lake wherspan 10k.
Cherry Blossom 10 mi
Running  By John A. Hawley
Daniels' Running Formula  By Jack Daniels
Rock n Roll Virginia Beach 2007
ATHLETE Movie Teaser Posters - Series 2
Running up that Hill
A bit tired....
ATHLETE Movie Production Photos - Final Stills
SanFran2
m
Doggie Doo Run 5K
winner in Pacifico Marathon
The Pickle Run
Kissing the Hardrock
Skyline Drive
Bob Newhart and Me
NYC Nike Half Marathon Photos 7/27/08
2008 Marsh Creek Raptor Run
2008 Marsh Creek Raptor Run
Return to camp along the runway

Tags

5k 10k advice best advice bobby bostic Bobby McGee boston Boston marathon Boulder california central park cold colorado Colorado Runner Racing Series Dane Rauschenberg eldorado springs Fiddy2 garmin half marathon heart rate Henry Rono ice injury inspiration Jump and run :) just for fun keystone marathon marathons masters masthead contest mile motivation music newsletter new york new york city north pole north pole marathon north pole marathon applications nutrition nyc Olympics pain patty murray Paula Radcliffe race racing rain run running shoes Simon's blog snow speed track trail running training treadmill video wild west relay

Most Viewed

Most Commented

Most Emailed

Running Around the Web

Best blog posts from YourRunning.com and around the web

Sign up for The Weekly Kick

Enter your email address here

Your name (optional)

Note:We hate spam, too, so we never rent or sell addresses.