100k WC 2011

100k WC 2011

Gagarin Half Finish

Gagarin Half Finish
Gagarin Half Finish

Awards Gagarin Half

Awards Gagarin Half
Awards Gagarin Half

Cosmonauts give out the awards:)

Cosmonauts give out the awards:)
Cosmonauts give out the awards

snowshoe

snowshoe

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Luzhniki Half-25 -06



21C 100%humidity and cloudy

It's been a while since I have posted. Recovery was quick and relatively painless after the marathon. I had a decent 5k 6 days later (got some nice New Balance swag for my efforts).


                                                                            5k awards
                                                                       5k

All was going well. By week 2 we were turning up the volume heading into 90-100mile week territory to set me up for my 50 and 100k races. On June 5th I was planning a relatively decent time in the Zelenograd Half. Well that's when the sh!t hit the fan. The race was Sunday and on Thursday I got back after a 25k run and made myself a mountain of pasta...with Heinz meatless sauce. It was a new jar I had just opened. In the morning I had oatmeal before my run-that was all else I ate that day. Well, by late evening I was paying homage to the Great White Porcleain Goddess. I pretty much spent the night in the toilet vomiting and with diarrhea-major major suck. Friday- I was holed up in bed all day ditto for Saturday. Saturday evening I attempted to get some solid food down and all I could get in was 8 little potato and cheese varenniki. I was already down nearly 5kg- not good I don't have the extra weight to ditch like that. Sunday, I foolishly attempted the half and came up with a career worst. My stomach would not finally settle until Tuesday-5 days after the food posioning. This whole incident really pisses me off. One of the reasons I cook at home as much as possible esp before races is to prevent this crap from happening. The problem is simple:1. The grocery stores as of late have been hiring filthy migrant workers who have no clue about hygeine-yeah they stick their filthy paws we all know where and then shelve our food. This has even been in the news and reported-filthy b@stards. 2. We have problems with b@stards faking expiration dates which is what I suspect happened with the spaghetti sauce. So,no ,you can't even trust what you buy in the bloody store! I would personally like to beat both categories of filthy b@stards to a bloody pulp. So 5kg gone and some sh!tty training to follow.
A week later I did have a very good mile at the Kremlin Mile-sdespite the 100mile week. I started getting my strength back and last week topped out at 168km and Coach and I had agreed I run the Luzhniki Half as a final tempo run before the 50K World Cup 8 days later. I was tasked with running 50Kpace( assuming I get good weather at said 50) which meant about a 1:40 half but I was NOT to run faster than 1;35. it was supposed to be my I Don't Care Race. I screwed that up by a good 10 min and ended up 4th in the half. I ran even splits the whole way just picked it up about 40sec in the second half but ran about 85%effort. I seriously hope I did NOT screw myself for next weekend. This is what really needs to count. I get to drop the mileage and go really really easy all week. ice baths,horse doses of glutamine, amino acids, actovegin, massage,sleep, stretching....are all on the menu now. There is a tough lady from Lithuania running next week and I need to be fresh to even have a chance so REST is the goal now.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Luzhniki Marathon- Moscow 22-05



video-
http://www.vesti-moscow.ru/rnews.html?id=117334

yes I stuffed a cold sponge in my top not to make it look like I have boobies but to cool off!LOL


Well for starters, I thought I'd be reporting on my run in Riga. After a crappy half 2 weeks ago, things were not looking good. After about a week though, things picked up again and I could feel my legs were good. Workouts were good and the weather forecase for Riga was ideal- cool 8.30 start and not supposed to be above 15C that day. At bare bones minimum I was prepared to run no worse than I did in 09 and right about 3 hours. I pretty much know when I have good legs and when I don't and as I was heading into a long needed in coming taper, I could feel the strength coming up in my legs. A week before the marathon, I really wanted to run the Moscow Intnl Half. It was cold, wet, and about +5-7C- PERFECT! After looking at the results I was depressed-really depressed-winning time was a paltry 1:31 and change in awesome conditions( I'm a polar bear I thrive in the C O L D always have always will ). Yeah I could have won the thing and the prize package for top3 was good too-bloody hell I sat out to be fresh for Riga. Well, just before that half, I got a call from a long time friend of mine -Tamara. She asked me to consider running Luzhniki this year. I knew she needed a woman so our club would win in team scoring. 2 men and 1 woman score and we had lots of boys but one of the women who usually runs this was a no go.

OK how to say NO without offending was the next task. I just said I'd already long since signed up for Riga, tickets were bought, and I've gone there to run for the last 3 yrs. Prior to making Riga my annual spring marathon, I had done Luzhniki here in 06 and in 07. In 06 lightning srtuck and it was a semi overcast cool day-I put down a 3:05- best performance I've ever had inside Russia and finished 6th. A year later- i was in my infamous Hole that lastet about 18 months where all I could do was put down sh!tty  perforamce after sh!tty perforamce and nearly retired from the depression that ensued as a result. I returned to run Luzhniki again only this time it was HELL and I DO MEAN PURE HELLFIRE AND BRIMSTONE! Temps soared to record highs above 30C that day (not a cloud in the sky and this course runs along the river entirely in the S U N). My girlfriend Olga was crewing for me crossing the bridge in the middle of the course to give me my drinks 8 times. Despite all that help, I still nearly passed out in the final 3km. I to this day remember Sasha Elkonin standing out there in the heat w/ about 2k to go helping out. My head was spinning by then and my task was not to pass out because all I had to do was get my ass to the finish for the win. I crawled in posting one of my all time career worst performances. I never thought I could run a marathon in worse conditions...well then I went to CHICAGO that fall (the year they shut the course because of the heat some 4 hours or so into the race) and ran slightly worse than I did at Luzhniki- un effing believable! That was it- never running this $%$#^&*(*( marathon again even with crew it's a bitch on a hot day because they only have FIVE  aid stations on the ENTIRE COURSE  and the pickings are slim- a LITTLE  bit of water, maybe bread and salt and sometimes but don't count on it -tea. That was it- I started going out in the spring once to Chicago for the 50k (which I won) then in May for Riga. Spring and fall marathons needed to be done outside Russia where I could perform in  normal civilized conditions. I've run many marathons in Russia and abroad and even when I'm peaked and in good shape, I run AT LEAST 10-20 minutes WORSE in Russia than outside.

Why does one do better outside Russia? There are loads of factors. Let's start with the stuff the organizers can't control:
Moscow is an ecological disaster-the air sucks
The asphalt- can be good, bad. sh!tty, and everything in between
The weather- I have done Russian marathons in the May-later August range=hotass hell almost every time
Did I mention the air sucks?

Now the stuff organizers could theoretically control-
ADD MORE WATER STATIONS  this is an issue at pretty much every marathon here so not fair to single out just one or 2 it's an across the board issue-some do better than others but they all fail on the principle of not putting water out til 10k into the race
Water stations need to start from 5K and be positioned at minimum every 5K thereafter none of the typical crap of first station somewhere at 10k
Sports drinks  gels etc- it's YOUR problem and strictly BYO here I have never ever seen or heard of a marathon here that offers what we take for granted in the US and Europe.

This is not a pretty picture-in Russia forget about running a PR. For my own personal performance discrepancy to be 10-20 min on average that speaks volumes. Summers here I'd run marathons for fun but never faster than about 3:15-25 ish. A couple few weeks later I'd show up in Anchorage or Chicago and suddenly 20 minutes- GONE! No I didn't mysteriously get fitter overnight, I don't have to worry about lack of  basics on the course and I have air to breathe.

Soo back to Luzhniki-again Tamara and now Coach are suggesting I should just run here. Oh for FU$K'S sake what the hell did I spend the winter training for???? Weather forecast for Riga-perfect Moscow- HOTASS HELL after days of nice cool temps. Tamara said I'd not be sorry and the prize package was good. Ummm yeah whatever that I could believe when I see. OTOH, in the summer series also put on by Luzhniki, prizes have always been good and if you place top 3 in the series at the end of the summer -the package is nice so can't say I could complain there. On a more serious note- Coach and I were looking at the  lineup for Riga this yr and it was stacked. Going top 3 was unlikely and eeking top 10 even on a good performance would be a project. Riga pays just top 3 now and, no I'm not in the position to just go up there for the hell of it and come home empty handed. I have to lose work time, pay for train tickets so if I can't break even and have some left thereafter then, no it's not worth it. Marathon tourism is for the rich brats. When I go somewhere it's to perform and finish in the prize category.

VERY DIFFICULT DECISION-

Riga-
Good weather
Will put down a solid performance (barring last minute illness like last yr)
Will not have to run in hotass spartan conditions
BUT will come home empty handed
16 hour train ride which also does take some of it out of me as I usually arrive 2 days before the race to sleep the train ride off

Moscow-
I can sleep in my own bed and prepare my own food at home before the race
Less than an hour ride to the start from home as opposed to 16
Realistic chance to go top 3
BUT- will run through hellfire and brimstone and sh!tty air
Weather forecast- hideous
Will likely put down a terrible time that will pe published on an international site-not good

So here I stand I'm 36(also not good) and have good legs( also smthg I don't always get). This may be one of the last chances I get to think about a PR and there will likely be no possibility of running a marathon for time til 2nd half of next season at best because of my ultra racing committments. What the hell do I do. I mulled it over for several days. Late Monday I called tamara to give her the OK to add me to the list and hold me a number. On Tuesday, 2 days before I was supposed to leave for Riga, I very sadly moseyed down to the station and sold my tickets back(you can do that here for near full face value til 8 hours prior to departure) and then just rebought tickets to Daugavpils for the 50K in July. I walked out of the station just wanting to cry. I'm 36, not getting any younger, run every season anymore like it's my last and had just sold my spring marathon, and perhaps MY LAST OPPORTUNITY to run a respectable marathon, downriver, literally. I could live with this if I were 26 and I knew there'd be lots of more fast marathons but getting old sucks there is nothing glamourous or sexy or attractive about it and I dread the old fart slow down. Americans like to purpotrate that propaganda of growing old gracefully. Well guess what, in Russia we are frank and say things how they are- that propaganda is pure bullocks! I hope to be able to hold on til I'm 40 performance wise but who knows.

So, race day, I'm up at 6 for my oatmeal and caffeine. I was out the door about 7:45 and at the start about 50 min later. The thermometer already read 21C in the shade at just before 9am-not good:-( I found Tamara and got my number and lots of familiar faces were surprised to see me. Most knew I was heading for Riga again. Many thought I was just going to run the 10K. Actually, a lot of people who had planned on the marathon ran the 10 because of the heat. Plus, after running Solnechnogorsk in 09 Coach had pretty much put a moratorium on my running Russian marathons for the reasons mentioned above.

10AM start -why on Earth don't they move the start to 8am it wouldn't be so bad at all then because many would finish beofre the heat of the day??? I'd rather drag my ass up in the morning despite being a night owl than run in the heat of the day! I decided to sleeve-white Moeben sleeve and then just wet them along the way to provide air conditioning for the arms and the white would help keep that damn sun off. White hat was also obligatory. There was ot a cloud in the sky  and the temps just kept climbing and it was just baking in the sun along the course. At one point near the Kremlin wall, they had just put doen new tar and asphalt -it was still sticky and boy did it just R E E K! Awesome black asphalt on a hot day! All the while I'm  running  and remembeing that when I checked just before I left the house I  saw it was 6C in Riga at 7am yet I was running in this God  forsaken sauna! Oh for F%CK's sake! I parked out at no faster than 4.30/km pace on purpose-that was even ambitious in this heat (3:10). In Riga I'd have gone out at 4.20-22 and just parked that was the plan but no way was I  attempting that in these conditions. One girl passed me at 6k and I thought -ambitious she's going to try for 3 hr pace. I sat back and just played my cards as wisely as possible. Ok Coach was under the bridge in the strategic spots at planned to feed and water me 8 times along the way. This allowed me to maintain even pace. I had the gels and salt tabs he had the drinks. All was fine til I hit the dreaded Dead Zone. This would mean not much for fluids from roughly 17ktil 27k because of the positioning of the aid stations and my lack of a person to cover this critical spot. ! The organizers did have a table just past 20k, but     I just spotted water and sponges-there were reported banana sightings here but I missed them though I spotted bread and salt at another station. Had gel and salt tabs but very little to wash it down w/ at this spot. I was still holding pace and further up I see that 2nd woman who had blown past me at 6k inching closer and closer. I picked it up to pass her and leave a gap so as to hopefully prevent her from getting me back later- she was done. I never saw her again after that. 26K my mouth is dry and I'm friggin' parched. I'm beginning to really fell like sh!t. Coach was just a bit further up but by the time I got to him it was really too late- I was already mega thirsty(not good) and despite drinking like a fish, couldn't make up for the loss in the Dead Zone. By the time I hit 37k my pace was pathetic- down to 4.50/km and I figured it was probably hot enough to fry an egg on that smelly new tar spot I had to cover 4 times over the 2 loop course. I just gutted it out to the end and finished 2nd-no one wins this twice! Lots of folks ran 1 loop and dropped out from the heat.  26 in the shade according to Tamara by finish time and I was home just after 3pm and saw 28 in the shade. TOO DAMN HOT! For the Fareinheit minded that's low 80s but way hotter in the sun.

Now I can't imagine how anyone runs this w/o crew.   Putting a couple more tables on the loop would make a big difference. It's just dangerous to be out there running w/ so little water! There were just 3 tables on the loop the one on the 20k turnaround you hit just once.

I finished and proceeded to drink like a fish. They had cola and oranges at the finish. The cola went down really nice I was so damn thirsty! Off to shower as I had time before the awards.


The awards- this was not what I expected and was actually shocked. Top 6 got something;  top 3 got a REALLY NICE PACKAGE. Tamara had said Adidas was going to give shoes and gear and then I figured just small things if anything else. Coach had watched this marathon the past few years while I was up in Riga and said prizes were not crazy great. Hell, they used to give cars to the winners but that was long ago! So, as they rounded the 6 of us up, I saw a bunch of stuff by the podium and figured probably some for us some for the age groupers -no way that was all for us. I kind have run many a race here and got some nice things, but they usually don't give piles.
                                               Top 3 in red




They did! In addition to the package from Adidas-shoes and a backpack top 3 got
A NEW GARMIN
a juicer- not the cheap kind but the nice quaity ones
a monster sized basket of assotred teas and the dishes,cups, and teapot to boot(I'm quite the fan of green tea esp when it's hot)
massage oils, recovery oils, and warming ones for tired muscles
fresh kolbaski-they always have that at the summer series too-YUM!







Ok the kit was nothing to sneeze at and absolutely nothing to complain about. This would be very good by Western standards and you would be hard pressed to find a race in the US that would offer a package that good.  In fact, it was worth more than I got for my 3rd place finish in Riga in 09 when I busted my ass and just missed a PR!I think the only other marathons I can think of in Russia that even come close to giving that good a package are Moscow International in the fall and  Siberian International in Omsk. White Nights in St. Pete I've heard good some yrs ok in others. Back in February, they were advertising that Luzhniki this yr would offer one of the best prize packages in Russia and were supposed to announce prize money or whatever in April. My thoughts were like-whatever- in Russia -yeah right because not following through happens here. Plus, I was not even considering coming back to this race after a 4 yr hiatus. In Riga, I'd have likely finished 7th at best. So, I guess despite having to run through hellfire and brimstone, I may have made the right decision.





After Coach helped me haul the load home, I treated him to pizza. We were both starving and he deserved it for crewing all day. he was red as a beet too from the sun! Despite drinking like a fish- I still lost 3.5kg too- not good!

If anyone is interested, this is the course that will be used for the 2013 World Championships.






Saturday, May 7, 2011

The Day the Raven Just Couldn't Fly

Spring Half Marathon-Moscow 7-05



This one is held on the island in the middle of the river surrounded by the rowing channel. This is where the rowing team plays. Course is simple-5x4+k loops flat and fast. There was one potential issue: AngryNesting Ravens. One of our guys was actually attacked by said Angry Nesting Ravens here a couple yrs ago. He ran on the island a few days ago and had reported no Angry Nesting Ravens this time. So, for good measure, I figured I'd let our feathered friends know that I come in peace. So, in addition to my Skinny Raven socks I usually wear,  I dug out my singlet and raven warm up shirt for the occasion. That was Thursday.

Friday morning I got up about 9 and saw I had a messge from my friend Eva. Eva and I went to Beloit together and ran track and xc and have remained good friends since. The dreaded message was to call Kim's dad. Oh, sh--! I just got an awful feeling and knew it wasn't good. Kim's parents did not know how to reach me here in Moscow. Kim is our close friend out in Boston. Kim graduated Beloit in 94 and we first met when I was a freshman in 92. How time flies! Kim was also one of my best friends. After Beloit I visited Kim  when I ran Boston and later when I was in grad school at Middlebury. Lately, we had been skyping  a lot. Kim was probably one of the most accepting, unselfish, and open minded people I'll ever meet. So 9AM I decided to call.Cell off- I tried a few more times but given it was after 1AM there I decided best to call when it's morning there. So after my lesson (met my student from 10-1), when it was already mid afternoon here, I went home to call. I got Kim's mom and knew it was NOT good.
She told me how Kim's foot had finally started feeling better (she had fallen a couple weeks before and messed up her toe and foot-bad bruise too). and decided to go for a walk. She suddenly collapsed and 2 plumbers who had been working on the house up the street immediately came to help. They offered to call 911 but Kim came to enough to call her mom to take her home. Mom rushed out and took Kim to the hospital where she had the second heart attack and suddenly passed. This was all too difficult to process. Kim was fairly young and in decent health and I'd just skyped w/ her recently. I never EVER could have imagined that would be the last time I'd ever see or talk to her again. Her mom said dotors found clots in her lungs and suspect the initial clot may have formed in her injured foot. She had no symptoms of anything being wrong-no pain no shortness of breath prior to the incident. I was at a loss for words and just devastated. She had a good family; wonderful parents.
So I got online w/ Eva after I talked w/ Kim's mom and Eva and her husband were signed up to run a half tomorrow and would be back Sunday. I said I was supposed to run a half tomorrow too and for time, but I just did NOT want to go anywhere and be around people. Hell, when my mother passed I didn't answer the house phone for close to a month, selectively answered my mobile for business only, and did nothing social for over 2 months when a Dutch friend of mine finally got my arse out the door. I just went to work and back during those 2 months and even that was a project. I ran on my own and that was the year that went to hell in a handbasket too. Eva said she was going to run the half. I figured I'd run too-Kim probably would not have wanted us to sit home and be depressed but it's pretty darn hard not to. Forget trying to put down a decent time after this mess.

To add insult to injury- Sunday is Mother's Day. Mother's Day is hard for me but I can't imagine how painful it's got to be for Kim's mom to have to bury her daughter at this time. No parent should ever have to endure that.

Saturday-
I get to the island-ravenless. Sadly, this raven's wings just weren't going to fly. It's sort of hard when you carry a rock like that in your heart. At about 10k in I just felt like complete crap warmed over. Stomach was nauseous and after lap 3 I seriously thought it would probably be better to just drop out and let this one go. Instead of my usual picking up and flying in the 2nd half,  I just felt worse. 2nd woman was a long way back but inside I just didn't care- I was pretty much numb and indifferent most of the day anyways. I decided to just run through it and just win the darn thing for Kim's sake then sneak off and go home. I finished and then did a quick disappearing act. I had to go and deal w/ this nauseous stomach and go somewhere discreet to "erase the blackboard" as we say in ultrarunning. Blackboard erased, I felt a little better. I ate my usual oatmeal breakfast too so why my stomach revolted is a fine mystery. I just went on a quiet cooldown off  toward the opposite end of the island. Reporters and the news crews were there and that's one of the reasons I disappeared after the finish. I just did not want to be approached-I thought, "Interview Slava (men's winner), he's an elite and top masters stud, please just leave me in peace."


After I finished a cooldown lap, Misha-the race director (nice guy) came up to me apologising that it appeared some little brat had stolen the women's first place medal. Awesome I thought to myself, "I'm already having an incredibly sh!tty (pardon my French) day what more insult can we add to injury?" No hard feelings against Misha it was totally not his fault it was the fault of ignorant  parents who have no clue as to how to watch and discipline their brats. I'd have had my butt whooped if I had pulled a stunt like that as a kid! So he gave me some cash instead. He then took me over to the shirt pile to go and get my shirt. I had totally forgotten to get it after the race. He had nice tech shirts too.


My time was pitiful and in 15 days I doubt things are going to pick up to where they were before this race. So, I need to draw nasty conclusions here and make a decision.too.  I'm probably going to return my tickets to Riga in 2 weeks and not waste my time and $ on a trip that will yield no results. I go abroad to race for 2 reasons: A. earn smthg.  be that top 3 or top 6 depending on the race B.to run a decent time. I can live w/o A if I'm up to B but if I'm not up to either then it's not worth the trip. Marathon tourism is not my business.That's for the filthy rich who could care less how they do-not me at all. I may run the one here on the 22nd because I promised the guys on my club team one marathon this yr and and a team captain  would feel like a jackass to bail on them. So- no fast marathon this yr and probably never again.  I was going to try for another Elite Development start at Chicago and go back in 2012 since I can't run there this yr 4 weeks after the Worlds. That would be incredibly  D U M B on my part. I'm 36 next yr 37 and by then I'm sure my chances of a PR will be equivalent to that of there being a blizzard in Hell.




Monday, May 2, 2011

23-04 1000m

This is what I call the ultrarunner's DESPERATE attempt to get some legspeed pre marathon next month. I won this race last yr and used it as a glorified speed workout- ditto this yr. The plan was to run a hard 1000(women run the 1000 men the 2000) then jump in and runthe 2000 with the boys as a speed workout (medium fast in 7:30 which is what I did) and see how many I can chick while I'm at it.  I only get about a minute or 2 between the 1000 finish and the guy's 2000. The next day I had a 35k long run w/ a 6-7k pickup at the end so took the 2k like a workout not an all out.

Anna Smolina was there again and this yr she had a strong indoor season. She's a former sprinter w/ the 200, 400,and 800 being her events. She runs the miles in the winter too and we tend to take turns beating each other there. I have a hard time running well on the steeply banked tracks we have at all our indoor facilities. So, knowing that prizes were good at this race and therefore wanting to win, I decided that I'd not focus so much on my time but run tactical. Anna can have a monster kick at the end so, if I am going to have a chance I'm going to have to go in the midsection and try and open up a gap she won't be able to close in the last 100. 50 meters is not enough w/ this girl, I'd need to open it significantly more-yes she can kick. Pitting a sprinter/middle distance runner against an ultrarunner in a 1000m event is sort of a joke- sprinter has theupper hand.
So off we were. Anna went out ahead w/ another woman and I just sat on both of them and let them do the work. After 400m, the other woman dropped off and I was just sitting behind Anna. The pace seemed too easy, but I needed reserve for the 2nd half. 500m turnaround and I see 1:46! EEK- that is slow! After the turnaround, I tested the waters and moved. Anna responded but couldn't match that's when i made the assault-it was now or never and I figured i could hold on for 400. It was a risk but waiting til the final 150 would be suicide. I went-2:07 at the 600m and from there I just picked up to close the final 400 in 79 for a 3:26 finish( converts to about a 5:30 mile when I run sub 3:30). Anna was kicking at the end but I had opened  up a big gap at the 600 and she finished 6 seconds back.  I'm sure she will get me back next winter again esp post ultra season:) She will probably be waiting for me at the Kremlin Mile too if I run that in June.

opening the gap
getting the job done
 2000m chicking  some guys
coolin' down





Sunday, April 17, 2011

Kirzhach Half Marathon 16 -04-11

Up at 5:15 for this  one so I could have breakfast and get the first round of caff down to wake me up before I had to leave at 6:45 to meet my friend Dima from our running club who was picking me up. We left just after 7 so we could get to the start by 9 ish. the Bus that takes runners to the start leaves at 10. At 8:30 I downed a 5 hour energy. Despite falling asleep just past 11, I woke up at 4:30 and barely dozed before I had to get up. Caff was a must.
We got to Kirzhach just after 9, got our numbers and got the bus just after 10. The start is in the place where Yuri Gagarin's plane went down in 1968. We all went over to the memorial to pay respects. I pplaced 2 flowers on the memorial and was off to warm up.

The half start was at 11:15. This year, I decided to take the first 10k nice and slow  because this is a hellaciuosly hilly course on really crappy roads and most of the evil big climbs are in the first 10k. Last yr those  hills kicked my ass! Once I got through the 10k I decided to go to work- pace dropped to  4.10 and I just parked there til 17K when I decided to floor it and went3.58, 4.03,4.02,4.09(hill in last K) to the finish. Despite not having any water on the course this yr, I sliced 3 min off my time from last yr! I typically run this 3 +min slower than my flatland time which is a very good sign. I'm in far better shape than I have been in the spring for several yrs. I need to be smart and stay healthy touch wood before the marathon next month.

about to chick some guys toward the end:





I won this one again like last yr. Masha Milevskaya was the 2nd woman. She's also in our club and a very good runner and has run 17 min 5ks. She hasn't raced in a couple yrs and it was good to see her back!
On Sunday, i deliberately skipped the 20k and ran a 30k long run instead so my legs would be fresher for this race. 3 half marathons inside 13 days is just not where I cared to go. Below- kicking it into the finish.



Weather today was perfect at+5-7C and some clouds. I'll attempt a half for time on May 7th on a flat fast course if the weather in May is still cool. that will be my final race before Riga in the 22nd. Riga will likely be my only marathon this yr because of my ultrarunning obligations in July at the World Cup 50K Series then the 100k Worlds in Spetember.
Now it's just training til the end of the monthwhen I'll jump into a 10k on the 30th for speedwork.
Masha and I cleaning house today:-)  ,1, 2 overall and in our age gp.



Thursday, April 7, 2011

Yuri Gagarin Half Marathon Zvezdniy Gorodok 3-April

This is typically the season opener and the first good weather race of the season. The weather was excellent this yr looming about 10-12C sunny with little wind. The course was in excellent condition except for the 1600 or so meters we ran near the start finish that were under slush, melting ice, and puddles. Last yr, I ran this just over 1:30-but the course was measured correctly. This yr,I came up just over 1:30 BUT the course was over 300m LONG! These kinds of things frustrate the hell  out of me and it's one of the reasons I run my most important high end races outside Russia. Last year my overall pace was about 4.20/km  this yr 4.11 ( about 6.40 miles).

I  had no idea how things would go as I pretty much sat out the winter by default. After the 100k, I spent over a month just recovering and that dragged on well into December. Usually, I race a hilly 15 k in early Dec. then 2 weeks later do a 20k (usually by then on snow) in order to maintain fitness in the offseason. Well, the 15 K was 3 weeks after the 100k- scratch that-no need to tear something not yet healed on the hills and it was unlikely I'd place so I sat that out. By week 6 the 20k approached-my legs were beginning to finally feel normal again but I wasn't sure I was up to being able to win that race (best prizes only for the winner in this one) as I'd done 3 times before plus, did not want to invite injury so that got sat out too. Well by then all that was left was to run the 3000 in the Russia Belarus Ukraine Moscow St Pete Tatarstan Masters Meet (oh yeah great after an ultra let me try and SPEED...NOT)that weekend. Sure, I won my division was 2nd overall but my time- a career worst! Oddly enough 6 days later my legs came around and I turned out a halfway decent mile. The next day I was going to race a 5k- we had an ice storm and many trains were not running and our driver also opted not to drive....God kept me out of that one. January, February, and March are dead months here with little to no action. I got in 2 more 3000s (one win at the Moscow masters in Feb and 5th in the University Championships in March) and just 2 mile runs in Jan /Feb. I don't consider this anything serious. I trained through the winter,yes, did speed, distance, sitting on roughly 80 mile weeks, but no racing. Well...there was the snowshoe....

Before the start the guys were asking what I planned to run-had no idea been off basically since november as far as I'm concerned-probably a mild tempo run and that's it. Well, I figured just shoot for 4.20s it's still early in the season. I went out 4.37 first km  mostly because I was focusing on not busting my ass on the snow/ice slop in the first 400m. After that, I dropped to 4.10+-1-2 sec. I thought I'd gone out too fast but I felt comfortable at that pace and wasn't getting lactic buildup so I figured I'd try and see if I could hold that. that was pacing to come out roughly1:28 smthg though and I had doubts I'd be up to that this early in the season. At 4k I was 4th woman just chucking along at my 4.10 pace feeling ok. At 5k I passed number 3 and kept going. I saw number 2 just ahead and caught up and ran with her a bit between 6-7k but it felt too easy. I saw the pace dropped off to a slacker's effort at 4.19. I decided to risk it and go back to 4.10 and pass her  and hope I could hold it the rest of the day. I did. I just parked in autopilot at that pace pretty much the whole race. The rest of the day I just kept moving up, catching the next group, running w/ them til they dropped off then going after the next group of guys to chick ( I'm not very nice:)) and soon it was a little game of how many guys I could chick along the way. First lap after running back to that 400m ice /slop stretch I see it's nearly 10.7km(bloody effing hell...the course is LONG goddammit anyways and I'm pacing for a decent time too)lap 1- 45 min. Ok 400m back out the slop path for lap 2. Ok 4.19 between 10-11km thank you poopy slush then it was back to cruise control in the 4.10 neighborhood. Coach was out there w/ my drinks :) and off I was to the 3rd turnaround. Along the way i cought more guys and we ran together between 4.06-12 pace til just past 15k then they fell back and i was getting lonely. With just over 5k to go 3rd woman was about 80 seconds back so I hauled ass to open up a bigger gap and got within about 50m of the next guy group.I knew I wouldn't be able to go balls out into a nice kick at the finish because of the slop in the last 400m so I decided to push the pace while the opportunity was there. I had about 3k to go when i really could have used a swig of my drinks but Coach could not get that far down the course so I decided to just suck it up and push the pace in the last 3k. Hell, after running a 100k 3k is nothing. Actually, the half seemed very short. Paced even all day and probably would have been up to a marathon in the 3 hour neighborhood because my legs were fine. I've been doing 30-35k training runs nearly every weekend during the winter to build endurance and compensate for lack of racing and alleviate boredom. I then hit the track midweek.  It's still early to be doing 40-50k long runs but those are coming in the late spring early summer!

                                              running along the course
Coach said it looked like I was just taking it too easy though. LOL I didn't kow what to expect but running in the 4.10 range this early in the season has never happened. I hit that or better uauslly only in May before the marathon. In 2009, I had an even split day like that in the half 2 weeks before my 3rd palce finish and near PR in the Riga Marathon (which I neg split that day). So, knock on wood, I need to stay healthy and would like to try and chase down that 2009 performance before I get too damn old to beat it. Last yr my halves sucked in the spring because my right ass still hurt from my priaformus and back issues. Still light yrs from my half PR though grrr.
Next weekend I go to Kirzhach for the Half but just to get in a good workout. This is a hellaciously hilly course that you don't run for time. Last yr I won, but this yr we will see. Coach is having me carefully select races to allow for proper recovery and maximise results in prep for the rest of the season. Most of my work will be in the 2nd half of the season this yr.

Finished 2nd woman and got a nice TV/DVD player to take w/ me on all those long boring train and plane rides:) Prizes here are always good for the top finishers. When I won in 2009, I got a new plasma TV.
                                                                  finish

Here is a link to pix and video. They got me in the end of the video at the finish. The lady recording results at the finish commented on my "scary shirt" -I was in my RUN OR DIE gear and I said," Well I have to scare off the competition somehow!"

http://www.schelkovo-net.ru/index.php?p=news&area=1&newsid=709&name=foto-i-video-42-i-probeg-pamyati-yu-a-gagarina


Monday, March 7, 2011

Reunion With an Old Long Lost Love- SNOWSHOEING!

Russian Snowshoe Festival -
It's been nearly SIX years to the date since my last snowshoe race which was at US NCs in Anchorage in 2005.  I started snowshoeing Fairbanks, AK in the fall of 2000 and loved it. It's a flippin' hard sport but fun to do. When I moved to Moscow, I asked around everywhere if there were ANY snowshoe races to be had in Russia and each yr I asked I came up TOTALLY DRY. I still continued to train on my shoes when we had good quality dumps here in the woods, but it drove me nuts that I couldn't get out to race on them. Sure they have big races in Europe namely France and Italy (if you have the cash to go for a weekend that is). So my poor snowshoes sat in the corner all looking sad and wanting to go outside and play again :-(  It's actually a great strength workout and when I lived in Alaska, I'd get on them once or twice a week on my so called easy days and go...up and down the hill or mountain I would go, take them off in April then fly like a bird on the road from the gains in leg strength. Ah to be so lucky again to live in the mountains:(

So last week, Dima- one of the guys in the running club said they were actually going to have a snowshoe! I just had to go-had to find a way namely a ride since the location was a good couple hours out of town and I didn't fancy not having a place to change out of my wets and into my drys after the finish nor did I fancy the prospect of hauling all my gear+snowshoes out to the sticks. In Alaska I just threw the gear in the car and went. After the finish I stripped out of my wets in the nice warm CAR and even at -40 is was not a problem and I never froze.

So I lucked out got a ride and went! How I would do after a SIX YR hiatus was yet to be seen but I didn't expect to do great. They had a professional and an amateur category. Profesional meant you got prizes for top 3 and it was a race. The other variant was non competitive. I risked it and signed up for the professional-sport division understanding I could very well get my arse kicked and handed to me on a silver platter. I never quit training on the shoes just haven't RACED nearly since Moses parted the waters. Dima even warned me there were top pro type rogainers, climbers, and skiiers (great I AM going to get my arse kicked). Oh yeah and I was the OLDEST woman in the professional division. Christ, I'm 36. I could see if I were 45 being the oldest. Do women just stop competing at 30 or so???There were guys older than me but no women!!


The course was probably one of the most technical ones I'd been on-12km of 75% singletrack much on virgin snow with tons of hairpin turns,ups and downs (3 of which I decided would be easier to just slide down on my arse) -not a fast course by any means. The ups and downs were manageable but the turns really slowed you down. There were a couple creek jumps(hint run on the snow covered logs so as not to fall into the creek DOH), and logs that had to be ducked under. I fell a few times, just got back up wiped the snow off my rear, and kept going. Lot of  ppl were doing face and arse plants. That's just the way it goes. Well in the first 3 k I stuck behing the 2nd woman on most of the technical stuff. I lost her following an arseplant in one spot then at 6k things opened up onto a singletrack on an open field.It was here I started reeling guys in one by one(most of which went out on those first uphills running hard as opposed to power walking the steep stuff to save yourself for later).  Well at 800m to go I passed a guyI just kept slowly creeping up on since the field. 200+m ahead I see another person-still too far to know if it was a guy or girl. I crept up and saw it was the 2nd woman so I just sat on her heels on the final singletrack w/ 400 or so to go. I was hoping for just enough wide going into the finish to pass her. Passing on the singletrack is fatal- it would mean using lots of energy,losing time too because you'd sink in to your knees or higher. So sit I did, problem  is when we finally came out of the woods there was probably 10m at most left to make a move and move I did and she got me by a lean! I can't ever remember remember having a finish that close-not even on the track. In 2009 I outkicked a woman in the 800 w/ 60m to go but there was over a second between us-no lean involved here. Top woman was 3+min ahead then 2 and 3 together and they said 4th was a good 15min behind us. Over 120 ppl showed up about 40 or so in the professional division.I was 11th overall if you include the boys in the overall and 3rd woman.


The race was very well organized and the course was clearly marked. We were well fed (kasha and HOT tea at the finish to warm up). I seriously hope we see more of this kind of thing arond here. Snowshoeing is still a developing sport here as Russia is still primarily a SKI country in the winter. It would be nice to see things change.
Pix are down below. I will add more as I get them. There were 3 tv channels out there one of which interviewed me and lots of ppl taking pix.

http://www.risk.ru/tags/3685/

snowshoe

snowshoe