Saturday, December 17, 2011

High Point Marathon with Julie Smith

Started training with Julie the 5th of July, her goal was to run and finish the North Carolina Marathon in High Point in November. This was not a first marathon for Julie, it was going to be number three but the first in 5 years. Her first marathon was a trail marathon which she finished in 5 hours 20 minutes, her next marathon was Ellerbe marathon the following March which she ran in 4hours 52minutes, talk about finding a hard marathon to run.

So the training started and like all schedules we had to work around a few things; a work schedule and two young kids, but we got the training done. Monday to Thursday Julie ran on her lunch break and then we did our long run on Friday or Saturday with Sunday being a recovery day or rest day.  The first week mileage was 23 miles and we built up to 43.

The good thing about running a home town marathon - there is no travel involved, you get to sleep in your own bed and eat as normally as possible. The marathon itself had been moved from the spring to the fall which put it in competition with a lot of other well established fall races. So what was the weather going to be like? Well on the morning of the race, start time temperatures were about 34 degrees and were to get up to 55 for the high.

The plan was for me to run with Julie and try to keep her at 10 minute mile pace; did not do a good job in the opening mile, I knew we were going out fast and told Julie to slow down a few times but still went through the first time in 8:43. I remember telling Julie: “you will pay for that later.” To my surprise Julie maintained a sub 10 minute mile pace for the first half of the marathon; in fact we were running 9:44 per mile but the next few mile where going to be hard. The other advantage of a home town marathon is you can train on the course. Both myself and Julie had run the first 16 miles of the course two weeks before; it also helped that I had run the course twice before.

So Julie was running great until the 18 mile mark, then that first mile started to tell, but to her credit she never stopped once to walk and crossed the line in a new PR of 4:33

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