Fast forward to the Montgomery Half Marathon this weekend. I was more than prepared after going through the last 6 months of very effective marathon training. With this being my first race with cool race temps since last April, I knew I would beat my last half marathon PR, but only expected it by a couple of minutes. My only real goal was to finish around 1:49. However, this race was much different from all my previous half marathons. This one had hills! All the others were flat, flat, flat. I expected a PR, but knew I was running a tougher course. Also, I didn't plan for this to be an "A" race. Last week was a 49 mile training week with a 20 mile long run, and this race week started with a hard 12 miler on Monday. Basically, I am training for marathons and don't really taper for the half.
The race began and off we went up a 1.5 mile hill. It wasn't steep by any means, but it was still uphill. By Mile 4, I was running around an 8:00 pace and the cool temps were making me feel really, really good about that pace. With my goal pace being 8:19, I was cruising along, feeling good, and was putting time in the bank in case things got worse. I am not saying I was purposely running faster and then suffer a slow down later on. I was running faster and feeling great! By Mile 7, I was thinking this could be an amazing finish time. Still half way to go, I continued on. I visualized myself being in one of my tougher workouts called Step-Up Intervals where you run a relatively easy 6 miles and then a hard 7 miles after that. I told myself, "treat this like you just started the step-ups". I wasn't fatigued by any means, just cruising along, convincing myself this is not a dream. My average pace was now around 7:55. I am thinking...."Am I crazy?".
The race was full of small up and down hills...until Mile 10. I looked up "Oh my gosh!". It wasn't a long hill, but it was a potential heartbreak hill for sure. My decision: "charge the hill". I treated it like one of my hill workouts and went right up it, passing a number of people. While it took me a couple of miles to recover from that hill, I never skipped a beat on my average pace.
The greatest thing about this race was the finish across the perfectly manicured baseball field, complete with all the hooplah and fanfare. At that point, I was in heaven. I felt great. I had run well and worked the last miles effectively. But the best thing was that I felt that I could have run much longer at that pace with no problem. At the finish, my watch time was 1:41:41 which was also the official time. The course was a little short for some reason, maybe 2/10 mile short, so I feel compelled to use my Garmin pace and add a little time to make it a full 13.1 for my personal remembrance of this day. So, I call it a finish time of 1:43 and an average pace of 7:52. Awesome! Did I beat my start-of-race goal of 1:49? I would say so! Did I PR by 8 or 9 minutes? Yep! Am I a bit excited? You betcha!
As shown in the photo, I sat down in the stadium to relish the moment and send a few text messages and tweets to whoever would listen. I also met two special Daily Mile / Twitter people: James K (alroadrunn3r) and Drew T (dtrachy). So you see, this was an awesome day!

It really was an awesome day, John. It was really great to meet you and share in your PR. Hope we can do it again soon.
ReplyDeleteWow, way to PR! That's great!
ReplyDeleteI'm a big fan of hills in a race, but that's because I'm from a hilly city & train on them weekly.
What a gorgeous looking baseball field from that pic!
Again, way to go, congrats!!