As for my race, it went pretty well. First off, the course is mainly one big rectangle with a little zig-zag thru a neighborhood near the end, then a couple turns into the school lot and down to the track. Two long stretches of over a mile each to really settle into a suffering pace. The winner, Ali Kalilli (spelling?) ran it in 17:13. I was right on his heels holding second thru the first mile then he opened a gap. He hit mile 1 at about 5:27, I was at 5:31. Right after that his gap started to grow. He maintained about that same pace (average for 17:13 is 5:33). As for me, I started to fade. The next two miles I was at around 5:46 and 5:53. One guy, who I could tell was in my AG (40-49) passed me at about 1.5 miles in. His gap grew, then stayed the same. I thought I may catch him later, in the last 1/4 or so, but I had nothing. In fact, another guy was gaining on my and I was doing all I could to keep him off. I hit the track a few seconds before Ali was finishing. I crossed the line at 17:47. I was surprised as my PR is 17:37 and didn't think I would even make it under 18 considering how thick and humid the air was.
About the Cannon that they used to start the race.. It was a little sad, but if you recall, you may know about a runner from Byron that died a couple months ago after finishing a marathon (Lake Wobegon Trail Marathon). His name is Paul Melby. There were a ton of people at the race/Team R.E.D. members wearing shirts with Paul's picture on it as this was a special race for them. Before the 5k started, Tom O'Leary began with a few words about Paul, how his goal this year was to qualify for the BOSTON Marathon--which he did at Lake Wobegon. Tom had us pause for a moment of silence in Paul's honor, then introduced Paul's family, wife and 3 small children, and said that they would be starting the race off with the Cannon. They looked in good spirits, but I felt horribly sad for them and almost teared up myself. However, it made me feel grateful at the same time that Jace and I can race, run, play together, etc, and I have a lot to be thankful for. Still, that didn't stop me from thinking about how his family must feel with him gone. They didn't waste any time though--we heard them light wick and after a few seconds- BOOM GOES THE DYNAMITE! It was just a small cannon with an barrel opening no bigger than what would shoot out a ball the size of a racket, maybe a tennis ball. My right ear was ringing for the first block of the race. Strange feeling, but nice for them to start the race with a bang...
RESULTS will be posted HERE at some point.
2 comments:
Nice job to you guys! I have no idea how you ran that fast as humid as it was yesterday. Maybe you are secretly training in Guam? Again, well done.
Did I say yesterday. Dang, it was Saturday morning. Humid, but not as bad as Sunday morning.
Post a Comment