Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Run for the Cure

Run for the Cure is an excellent cause. But I am just in it for the prizes. I calculate that there is a sufficient probability of generating a return on my 5,000 yen entry fee and head off Saturday morning for the two loop charity event around the Imperial Palace.

Saturday is a splendid autumn day, but I am focused on only one thing - finishing in the top three. You can see the intense competitive tension in these pictures at the starting line.

When the race starts I tuck in behind teammate, UK James, despite the fast sub-3:30 pace - and this puts me in 4th place. Two kilometers into the run I surge past James, making sure to pass him on a hill and with enough speed so as to crush his spirit and leave him demoralized and broken. The two leaders are still way ahead of me at this point, but by 5k I manage to overtake the #2 guy who turns out to be another teammate, Michael.

I struggle through the last 5k never catching site of the number one finisher. I hate to finish second, especially when everyone keeps asking me "Did you win?" "Did you win?"

But one consolation is my time of 35:43 on the crowded course. I am pleased to be only 21 seconds off the fast time I ran in August on a perfect day when I felt good. The other consolation is that all of top 3 finishers win the same prize - 10,000-yen New Balance Shoe voucher and 20,000-yen Adidas store gift certificate.

In this photo a jubilant Kylie, Michael and I celebrate on the victory stand.

Tuesday, November 09, 2010

Lack of long training runs

When I look at this chart of my daily run mileage and types from Running Ahead, I am struck by how much longer my races have been versus any long training runs. No wonder I was so tired at end of half-marathon. I guess I need to do some long training runs? or find shorter races...



Thursday, October 28, 2010

Fruits Marathon

I manage 8th place in the 23-kilometer Fruits Marathon on October
17th. This was intended as a social outing to the wine country west
of Tokyo, with a bit of running and cycling in order to admire the
scenery. But I don't really like wine. And as usual, once the race
starts my competitive instincts kicked in. I found myself passing
other runners and realized I had a chance to finish in the top 10. So
I maintained a 4-minute pace on the flatter first part of half of the
race, then somehow maintained my position to the top of Mount
Daibusatsu as we gain 1250 meter over the 23k. The course is a paved
road all the way to the top which helps me.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

5k time trial - 17:05


My recent 35:20 time for 10k implies that I can run a 16:57  for 5-kilometers.


So last night I attempted to break 17 minutes in the monthly time trial on the track at Oda Field.   Six years ago I ran around 16:50 in a 5k time trial, but in recent years I have been content to go out relatively easy on the first kilometer and try to run progressively faster on each kilometer.  


Last night I did the first kilometer in 3:23 and tried to maintain that pace.

It was painful - as you can see in this picture.

I faded over the 
3rd and 4th kilometer, but am reasonably pleased with the 17:05 I did manage to run.  

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Northwest 10k Road Run Championship

I entered the Snoqualmie 10k near Seattle on the morning of the race this past weekend.  I had been concerned about fatigue from my journey to Thailand, Singapore, Tokyo and Seattle over the previous 7 days.  But the course is scenic and flat and fast, and the race serves as the Pacific Northwest 10k road run championship -- so lots of fast runners from the Club Northwest team I occasionally run with in Seattle are participating.  
Conditions are almost perfect, sunshine and 14 degrees Celsius.  What, twenty degrees cooler than what I would have faced at Aiz I am actually a bit cold during the first mile.   But after the weather in Tokyo... well, I don't need to bother explaining how wonderful it felt to me to run in these cool, crisp conditions. 
In an effort to maintain a reasonably pace I run with a Club NW team member, Susan, for the first mile, and as expected she paces me to ideal 5:46 first mile.  (Yeah in America even though the race distance is in kilometers they give splits in miles..)  After the first mile I pickup the pace and abandon Susan and catch up with another Club Northwest woman, Claudia, who is the eventual winner of the woman's division.  I feel surprisingly fast and relaxed and am delighted with my 5k split of 17:34. 
My goal was to break 36 minutes, something I have not done is at least 5 years.  So I push myself to hang on and maintain the pace over the last 5k. I am all by myself for the last 4k and feel I am slowing down.  Thus I am a bit surprised (and happy) to see my finishing time of 35:20.  I finish 3rd in 45-49 division, and 19th overall.
For the Seattle runners this August race represents the latter part of their running season, and many of them peak for this event.  I am not at all sure anymore when my "running season" starts or ends, but August would really be my off-season to the extent that I have an off-season. 
   

Monday, July 26, 2010

Sprint Triathlon in 36C/98F heat


The most difficult part of yesterday's Watarase Triathlon was waiting for the swim to start and absolutely baking on the concrete rim of the reservoir in our full wetsuits.   The race officials finally allowed us into the water which proved disappointingly warm (disappointing when you are looking forward to a refreshing dip into cool water).  For the entire 750 meter swim I felt miserably hot.  I don't recall ever feeling too warm during a swim in my ten years of triathlons and open water swims (most of which have taken place in oceans or in cold lakes in Seattle area and northern California).   I was so happy to stagger out of the hot, murky water in just under 14 minutes.

And then came the second most difficult part of the Watarase Triathlon -- the T1 transition.  Dazed from the swim I  struggled unsuccessfully to peel off the sweltering wetsuit as I hopped across an endless stretch of burning pavement in my bare feet.  It took seemingly forever to get out of my wetsuit, slather on sunscreen and get on to my bike.  

But the rest of the Watarase Triathlon - the 20k bike ride and 5k run - was no problem - a pleasant day in the park.  It felt refreshingly cool on the bike - and the course was generally flat and straight.  At a distance of only 5k the run was psychologically easy to deal with -- after having become accustomed to longer distances lately.  

I seemed to place reasonably OK given that I usually am relatively more competitive the longer the distance of the event.   I felt I was cycling well, staying in my aero bars, passing lots of other guys and that I generally improved since Nijima - though the results did not seem to support this perception.  

Swim -  14:26  (64th overall)
Bike  -   43;12  (145th overall)  includes my endless transitions
Run -    19;16  (9th overall) 
Overall - 1:16:54 (59th out of like 300 total entrants) 

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Kamakura Rough Water Swim

I spent almost two hours struggling through 5-kilometers of ocean
waves yesterday in the Kamakura Rough Water Swim. 1 hour 55 minutes
and 30 seconds of swimming to be precise - more than 20 minutes slower
than my time in the same event last year which I have a vague memory
of being much easier and more pleasant.

Yesterday's event on the other hand was not particularly pleasant,
aside from afterwards sitting on the deck of the beach-house watching
the sunset, sipping a beer, and being glad the swim was over, and I
knowing I would not be doing any swims this long for another year.

I have spent considerable time on swim training since last year's
event and hoped to see a big improvement in time, but upon reaching
the first turnaround and seeing my split was 20 minutes, I realized my
time was going to be much, much slower than last year. And those
first 20 minutes seemed like hours and hours - it was distressing to
think I was only one-sixth of the way through the race. I tried to
stay positive and focus on each stroke. By the time I staggered out
of the ocean I was not so much fatigued from exertion as I was
nauseous from the swell and the salt water.

I finished 40th out of some 200 entrants (maybe a third of the
swimmers did not meet the cut-off time and ended up as a DNF). I did
not place as high as last year, though I am still pleased to be as
competitive as I was. Moreover I finished ahead of teammates Kimm-san
and Phil who are strong, natural swimmers who seem more genetically
pre-disposed to swimming than myself.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Shore Run 2010

I run Seattle's Shore Run 10k this morning and redeem myself for the
embarrassing
struggles at this event two years ago when I faded badly. This year I
stayed behind the
leading woman runners through the first 3 miles and we hit the 5k mark
in about 18:50. I broke away from a big pack around that point, ran
the last half of the race in 17:50 which is good for 3rd overall out
of 400 runners.

I feel a bit sheepish about needing to burst into a frenzied sprint in
the final 100 meters to overtake one last competitor - but it is worth
it to nab the gift certificate prize at Seattle's Jock and Jill
specialty running store.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Ocean Swim School


I did open water swim training yesterday.

In 90 minutes yesterday we got more practical triathlon swim experience than in my first 6 years of triathlon.  During most of my years of triathlon, I would only experience the chaotic start of a triathlon maybe 2x per year.  Yesterday our group kept racing from the beach into the surf and battling the crowd and the current around buoys, interval after interval.  I wish I had done this years ago. 



Monday, May 17, 2010

Niijima Triathlon 2010


Bicycle training is apparently not necessary in order to achieve a respectable Olympic Distance triathlon time.  I finished the Niijima triathlon this weekend in 2:31:23 despite essentially zero training on my bike.  


I finished the course 3 minutes slower than last year: 

             2010                           2009

Swim  26:09   (58th)      26:28  (93rd)         

Bike  1:24:49 (100th)   1:22:05 (76th)  

Run    40:25   (8th)         39:42 (4th)

Total  2:31:23 (44th)    2:28:15 (39th)

* 44th out of 242  /  39th out of 170 finishers

Going into the weekend I was very stressed about my lack of bike training. Though maybe I was even more stressed about sleeping in the bowels of a boat and then waking up and doing a triathlon swim in the cold Pacific Ocean. 



 The boat turned out to be a charming adventure again this year though - there is something inherently exotic about embarking on an overnight boat trip to a remote island with 21 fellow athletes.  And the triathlon went well -  


Swim - The ocean water was really, really cold.  The first moment jumping into the water was not at all pleasant.  But as usual the worst part was the anticipation of the cold water.  Once we started swimming, the water temperature was simply a non-issue.  Still I struggled at the start 

making the adjustment from a winter of training in a

 calm, warm swimming pool.  My first lap was 13:15, while my second was 12:45 as I got into a rhythm and I begun passing other swimmers.  My time is only 19 seconds faster than last year, but I think I did swim much faster as indicated by my much higher place this year.   



Bike - I thought I was in really big trouble when after only 500 meters of cycling my muscles started screaming with surprise.  What an unfamiliar activity.  But somehow the long-term muscle memory from decades of bicycling across the

 United States and around Seattle and San Francisco kicked

 in a bit. I was able to ride in my aero bars and push the bigger gears for a good percentage of the rolling course and enjoyed the sunshine and scenery.

Run – The lack of bicycle training seemed to manifest itself more once the ride was over and I started running. The uphill coming out of the bike to run transition was an ordeal. I could see teammates ahead of me on the turnaround sections, but I just did not have the strength this year to make up the huge lead they had established.



Though my Niijima time was "respectable" considering my lack of bicycle training, I do hope to improve on this by mid-summer.  


Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Fuji Susono 2010

Every May I run the Fuji Susono Half-marathon.  For some reason, that is not entirely clear to me, I am the organizer of this event and in charge of coordinating the overnight adventures for 25 or so teammates.  I am generally pretty good at planning travel, but in Japan everything is inscrutable to me, and I have been out of the country for weeks, so the activities are a bit chaotic.  Fortunately my teammate Chiba-san is amazingly organized and diligent and it turns out to be a great little weekend trip with a nice express train journey to the sprawling resort situated on the side of Mount Fuji.  We enjoy singing and dancing and feasting and skating and lots of family activities.


The race itself is a bit of an ordeal (for me anyway).  The course climbs for the first 5k, then it rolls up and down for the next 11k before dropping back down over the final 5k.  I feel reasonably good through about 10k but then start to run out of energy -


5k      -   21:05
10k    -   40:02
15k    -   60:20
21.1k -   83:21

Compare my times over the past 3 years at this course -

2008 - 1:20:18
2009 - 1:25:03
2010 - 1:23:21

I just could not stride out on the final 4k downhill section and make up for the slower uphill start like I did back in 2008.  Maybe it was the fatigue from recent travel and stress, or maybe just mental weakness (or maybe the basketball shorts I raced in).  I felt completely drained at the completion of the run and was passed by 3-4 people over the final 5k (in contrast to most of my recent races where I have managed to pass competitors the entire race).  Still I was able to enjoy a 5th place podium finish and the nice weekend. 


Sunday, April 04, 2010

Jeju Ultramarathon

I was irrationally distressed about letting 18,000 JAL award miles expire on March 31. When I learned that the organizers of the Jeju Ultramarathon were offering my team free race registration and 2-nights of free hotel accommodations and I could journey to this South Korean island for next to nothing I was ecstatic.
There was just one catch - I had to run 50-kilometers.

50 kilometers is a long distance to run for me. (I know, I know, it is long for most people to run). In my case I have been doing 10k/half-marathon oriented training, and 50k dis
tance is about my average weekly running mileage. I was terribly concerned about suffering some over-use injury and taking weeks to recover. So I decided that I would emphasize survival and use the technique of alternating between walking and running which has been proven to reduce stress on the body. I repeatedly reminded myself before the race - walk early and walk often. As it turned
I got off to a very slow start - my stomach was full from eating a big break
fast, and much kimchi the
day before, my teammates and I started at the back of the pack of 500 runners; and so the first half of the 50k was a socializing and sightseeing event, punctuated by oddly frequent bathroom breaks.
Through it all, I was very disciplined about following my plan of doing 5 minutes of running, then 45 seconds of walking, then 5 minute running, 45-second walking, etc. I sensed th
at my run/walk technique drove the Korean competitors crazy as I passed them, then abruptly started walking. I was convinced that they were all thinking "look at this lazy American who keeps stopping to walk". Meanwhile I was thinking how darn much discipline the technique required and how it would be simpler to just run.
But the run/walk technique worked really, really well for me again. I kept feeling s
tronger and stronger as the race
went on, and begun to run faster at around the halfway mark - after each walk break I burst out into to a faster pace. It felt like a triathlon in the sense that I just
kept blowing past other competitors. At 35k I thought to myself that I should have taken the event more seriously as the start as I could have broken 4 hours, which struck me as a worthy goal. At 40k, I figured I sh
ould attempt to come as close to 4 hours as possible (though I would need to break 39 minutes for the last 10k). Yet still I adhered to the run/walk format all the way to about 47k before running it in. I was rather astonished that I actually did run under 39 minutes for the last 10k despite the walk breaks (not to mention that I had run 40k already).
Here are my rough splits for each 10k -
10k - :56:10
20k - 1:49:31 (53:21)
30k - 2:38:01 (:48:30)
40k - 3:20:56 (:42:55)
50k - 3:59:48 (:38:52)
I seem to have achieved the main goal of walk/run - minimal stress to my legs and minimal interruption to my triathlon training schedule. My right knee was sore the day after the race but I have felt good the last few days.

And it was a great opportunity to experience South Korea. I enjoyed a fine 35k bicycle ride along the Han River through central Seoul.

The Ultramarathon was a great chance to meet people from all over the world.

In addition to
free race registration and 2-nights accommodation at a 4-star hotel, we received a particularly s
harp-looking hot-pink jacket. This came in handy since it was surprisingly cool on the "Hawaii" of Korea. Matthias and I both wore our lovely pink jackets the day before the race as
we strolled along the waterfront near the hotel. Apparently Jeju is the number one destination for Korean honeymooners and the "pair look" concept of the newlyweds wearing matching outfits is quite popular. Matthias and I received a particularly disapproving look from the Catholic nun whom we asked to take our picture posing in front of the rocky coastline.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Ohyama Tozan Climb

I completed the Ohyama Tozan 9-kilometer run/climb on Sunday. 

I am racing so much lately, and I was a bit concerned to find myself limping when I tried to do some strides during the warmup.  Actually my struggles during the warmup may not have been the mileage and racing as much lately, as the tough yoga session the day before.  I really have no idea.  

So I started at a relatively slower pace - 3:56 on the flat first kilometer.  This may not seem that slow, but amazingly there must have been close to one hundred other 40-50-year old men and female runners ahead of me at this point.  By maintaining about a 4-minute per kilometer pace through 6k (23:55), even as the course got gradually steeper and steeper, I passed dozens and dozens of runners - and was feeling reasonably good given the increasing grade of the hill. 

But then we hit the stairs at 7k.  I just can't get over how the guys around me simply exploded past me at this point. This happens to me at every hill climb race. Today I was telling myself to be mentally tough on the first set of stairs and not let up.  But I still dropped from 12th to 17th place over the 8th kilometer.  Do these guys really train that much all winter on stairs (or am I just that weak on stairs and slowed down that much?)

I hung on fairly well over the final kilometer up the rocky steps to finish in 48:44.  This was good for 18th place.  Not 18th overall -  18th place in my age division.  Yet I felt like I ran nearly as well as at Arizona/Tokyo races where if finished 3rd/4th respectively -- overall. 

Ohyama Tozan is always an interesting challenge for me - even if I am not competitive on stairs. 

Thursday, March 04, 2010

Below is a chart of my monthly running mileage for the past 8 months.

I begun making a concerted effort to run more after the end of my triathlon season in early October. A lingering cold and travel hampered this effort, but since late November I feel like I have been running an awful lot at over 50k per week.

And it seems that this additional running has improved my race times.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Arizona Marathon

I run a charity half marathon on the western edge of Phoenix. As you might expect if you know Phoenix, the course is flat and fast. So flat that the freeway overpass during the final mile seems like a mountain. As you might not expect, this race through the desert is surprisingly cold at 8am, and surprisingly lush with the first half winding through golf course resort neighborhoods.
I had low expectations for receiving serious race support. The early aid stations offered cinnamon rolls with gooey frosting. But then around halfway as I approach an aid station, a young boy sprints up to me, struggles to run along side me, holds out a handful of PowerBar Gels and asks me if I want one. I am so impressed: first by his effort, second to receive just what I wanted - Power Gels, and third to receive them right when I needed them at halfway right before water.

I finish 3rd overall out of 540 in 1:19:43 - precisely a minute slower than Kanagawa, but reasonably good given the lack of taper, and given that I could see no one near me for most of the last half of the race. All I could see was this huge futuristic stadium finish, and the freeway overpass looming across the desert in the distance.

Monday, February 08, 2010

1:18:43 Half-Marathon


I run 1:18:43 (chip time) at the Kanagawa Half-Marathon.  

This is my fastest time in 4 years.  My teammate Juergen points to a age-grading calculations that would suggest guys over 40 slow-down some 30-seconds per year in a half-marathon which would make this time even more strong for me.

I am not convinced we should make such a large adjustment for age (I would rather not concern myself with this at all), but in any case it is a very good run for me, perhaps the best in my second running life. 

My rough splits - 18:35, 36:55, 55:50, 1:14:48 reflect my generally consistent effort (I am puzzled why the 3rd 5k is not as fast). 

The additional mileage I have done recently seems to have helped my endurance at the end of the half-marathon.  And the barefoot running and strides seem to have improved my form, and perhaps helped improve my time versus last year, though it is difficult to gauge.


Monday, February 01, 2010

One-legged hill training

I attend a running seminar on forefoot running last weekend by my ekiden teammate - Mike Trees.

Mike comments that runners tend to be rather stuck in their ways and reluctant to try new things.  Well, there may be something to this --  I am quite jaded and skeptical about new training, nutrition and gear recommendations, and generally just want to enjoy the same old running.   But I am a triathlete, and Mike goes on to say that triathletes are more eager and willing to try new techniques...

(In fact one new technique I have tried -  the barefoot running mentioned in my post of December 3rd,  is progressing slowly but surely - I am up to 3k per week of barefoot running - with no serious ill effects.)

Mike tells me that if I wish to get faster I need to work on strength and form.  I have been hearing for some time now that plyometrics can be effective, so I am relatively open to doing Mike's strength drills which we practice a few times and you can see on his blog - 

I will start a 6-week hill cycle after next month's races and post feedback to this blog. 
 

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Shibuya Ekiden


I am the weak link on a stacked master's relay (ekiden) team at the 4x2.9k Shibuya Ekiden. Compare to last year when I was the star taking the lead for our winning team. This year I follow Kuri's blistering 9:21 and my 9:57 manages to hold onto first place, which is all that was really required of me, as I hand off to Mike Trees one of the faster 45+ 10k runners (in the world. seriously) Fabrizio anchors us to victory in total time of 39:20 - and I get the glory again at award ceremony in this picture.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Hong Kong Mountain Race

I am reminded again that trail running is not my strength - or at least reminded that racing down rocky stair steps is not my strength.

I had heard that the 14-kilometer Lantau Mountain Marathon in Hong Kong had an interesting climb followed by a nice flat trail section and I had gathered a group of teammates for the event.

The initial 4.5k climb up the rocky mountain trail went fine - I started slowly and then passed dozens of runners on the narrow trail. The view was fantastic and I felt I was moving into good position. But then we crested the hill and I struggled on the downhill as runner after runner scampered around me. I was becoming a bit of a hindrance to the other runners with my slow, cautious side-stepping. Apparently I am just too caught up in self-preservation, and do not lean forward and let gravity carry me down. My only solace was the thought of opening it up on the final flat 7k and overtaking everyone.

However while the final 7k section proved to be relatively flat, it continued to be a narrow and rocky trail, and I could never really open up and simply "run". I had built up a lot of pent-up energy by this point and whenever we did hit a more open section, I burst into a sprint. I managed to overtake most of the runners who had passed me on the downhill, and finished 16th overall in 1:38:21, 3rd in my age group which was good for a HK$200 gift certificate.

My teammate from Tokyo, Fabrizio, was one of the runners who had blown past me on the downhill. I managed to catch up with him, and we were together with 2k remaining in the race when Fabrizio tripped on the treacherous trail and went down in a bloody heap. Poor Fabrizio staggered in 4 minutes behind me. Another teammate, Matthias, did the full 29k version of the course and fell several times plunging down the steep trail.

I felt vaguely responsible for my teammates' mishaps since I am the one that suggested this event - and this club definitely sits on the flat, fast, wide paved running surface side of the continuum. My friends that encouraged me to do the Lantau race on the other hand are trail runner purists who live to run in natural setting and uneven terrain, and who view urban running with scorn and disdain. I sit somewhere in between, and would prefer to do most of my running on mountain paths, but as I said at the beginning of this post, it was clear that when it comes to racing - plunging down rocky steps is not my strong suit.

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

1,500 time trial - 29:35

Thanks to my teammate Mary, I was finally able to do a swim time trial in the pool today and establish a benchmark for my swimming times.  The triathlon times in open water seem less accurate because of currents and other variables.

I struggled to swim 29:35.  Mary and I shared a lane, and I started first since I am usually faster, but she got fed up with my pace and passed me at 300 meters, afterwhich I drafted off her for much of the remaining 1200 meters.  

I did the 1,500 swim segment of the Choshi Triathlon in October in 27:32 (and my pace at the 5,000 meter Kamakura open water swim was also around 27:30 per 1,500 meters).

I guess this quantifies how important the buoyancy of my wetsuit is for me, and that I need to learn how to do flip turns if I hope to swim well in a pool.