Dave's Addiction

Boston Marathon

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Location:

Mapleton,UT,USA

Member Since:

Aug 22, 2012

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

1:08:17 Drop 13 Half 2015

2:41:14 St George Marathon 2012

17:28 5k Rex Lee 2015 (but sub 16 inside some of my halves, downhill doesn't count)

Short-Term Running Goals:

2013 Races

2014 Races

2015 Races!

1/3 Snowman Half - 1:23:14 1st

Total Domination

3/7 Rex Lee Cancer 5k - 16:53 7th (5k PR)

Masters Domination

3/21 Running of the Leopards - 16:48 13th

AG Domination

4/11 Timp Shadow - 21:28 5th (1k PR)

Masters Domination

4/18 Salt Lake Half Marathon - 1:20:56 18th

AG Domination

5/2 Provo City Half Marathon - 1:16:12 4th

Masters Domination

5/9 - Dino Half - 1:15:20 1st (CR)

Course Domination

5/30 Timp Trail Half - 1:50 1st

Total Domination

6/6 Art City 5K - 17:20 13th

AG Domination

6/13 Drop 13 - 1:08:17 (PR) (CR)

Course Domination

Long-Term Running Goals:

17:00 5k

1:08 downhill half [done]

34:30 10k

Never get old

Personal:

Married, three kids, have a problem with going out too fast in races but it's too fun to quit

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Race: Boston Marathon (26.2 Miles) 03:07:37, Place overall: 3676, Place in age division: 354
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
0.5026.400.000.0026.90

I went to this race to have an experience, and I succeeded. It was completely different that anything I could have expected. First of all everyone treated the runners like royalty, no matter how fast. Before, during and after it was like we were honored guests coming to perform a great work. Everyone was polite and helpful, and I would be shocked to learn that a single crime occurred in the city Sat-Mon. I arrived Sat night late and the middle eastern taxi driver told me I should take the hotel shuttle, which I did not know about, instead of being his fare. This was just one of many incidents of helpful and honest people, Sunday was spent at the Expo and checking out the finish line, including a group photo of at least 200 of the Utah people at the marathon. How great was that? Monday came and I was greeted by a huge plume of black smoke outside my hotel window as I woke up. Really??! You have to be kidding. Then I realized the finish line was to my south and the window faced northeast. It was just a truck on fire on the freeway. OK, that was wacky. I ran to the busses and jumped on.The garbage bag I brought as a windbreak and solar heater worked out great,I  was perfectly warm up to the start.

I looked around for anybody familiar but I was unable to see anyone, then we went to the corrals. I remarked to the guy next to me that now that we could see a big sample of people as fast as us, it was obviously impossible to tell how fast someone is by looking at them. Then the elites showed up and I took the comment back. We were all towering giants next to them, with oaken arms and oversized heads. I toyed again with the thought of running up front with them for a mile or two but banished it right off because they were going to go out at 4:30. Turns out that Seth managed to pull it off (you rock Seth) and they were going out at 4:50, so I could have kept up for a mile or two. It would have been cool to have a Utah fist bump on the USA today site :)

The race started, and I was swept away as I knew I would be. I just swam in the river, gleefully watching the miles go by at a disasterous clip, 5:55, 5:41, 5:48, 5:51, kachink kachunk. Breathing was easy, but I could feel the muscles working hard on the uphills and I knew that I was running suboptimally. But I just didn't care. The crowds were amazing, I couldn't help but grin like an idiot and give two thumbs up all the way to Wellsley. But running the first 5 k 30 seconds off my record, the 10k 1 minute slower than my record, and the half 2 minutes slower, I knew I was in for destruction and death in the last half of the race. I backed off at the half to a more reasonable 6:30 and hoped for the best. Sadly, I had not been hyrating enough in the early part of the race, as I took nothing until mile 7 hoping to avoid overhydration but did not take into account the warm weather.

At mile 16 I felt the first warning signs of an empty tank as we hit the first hill. Just to be safe I walked a little, to avoid early cramping. I usually despise gels but at 17 I was willing to try anything to make it to the end of the race. I grabbed the gel and it tasted like ambrosia. That's when I knew I was in real trouble and should take it easy if I didn't want to have to use the Charlie card that was burning a hole in the plastic bag safety pinned to the inside of my pants. I started walking every two minutes on the hills, but managed to keep the average pace under 8:00 still. But by mile 22 the bonk was massive and I was climbing through the 8s relentlessly. I was determined to finish at any cost, even if I had to walk the rest of the way, and the remainder of the race was spent running to the edge of cramps, then walking to take the heat off. Everyone continued to yell encouragement from the crowd, which gave me no choice but to push back to running speed again. I had to walk up the massive hill at the overpass, and the huge mountain after the underpass was truly daunting.

I could not dishonor the race by walking on Boyleston street however, so I walked the hill up to the turn and went to a determined run. The finish looked so far away! About a tenth of a mile from the finish every muscle in my left leg seized simultaneuously and I almost went face first into the street. I somehow managed to keep running all the way to the line and gave a victory yell, then started walking (sort of since the leg was on FIRE) and hoping to find water and gatorade or anything at all. I was sleepy and disoriented, and had difficulty maintaining a straight line. The peaches were liquid gold. I had to lay down on the warm soft sidewalk for a few minutes but after the second offer of medical assistance I figured I should move on to the gym where my clothes were stored. That was the hardest mile and a half I have ever moved. But a glorious shower awaited, after which I was almost human, then I took the subway to the airport and bestowed the remaining 5 days of Charlie Card on a random stranger. After two more offers of medical assistance, a smoothie, a burrito bowl, and a 30 minute nap with my legs up agains a wall, I was back to (a very slow moving) normal and managed to snag the early flight back to SLC.

It's a good thing that marathons aren't 26.3, I think somebody would have had to carry me :) It was way better than a day at work.

Comments
From TBean on Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 14:19:48 from 63.241.173.64

hopefully, the joy of the first half made up for the difficulty of the second half. Good job finishing.

From Dave Taylor on Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 15:41:55 from 50.198.183.21

Oh yes, it was well worth it :)

From SpencerSimpson on Thu, Apr 24, 2014 at 21:37:23 from 198.228.201.169

Dave. Fun marathon Monday bro. It's amazing the energy I felt from the crowds. I don't think we will ever forget this. By the way, I guess I passed you at 1k to go. The marathon foto has a really cool pic of you me together. I know you were in the hurt locker pretty long and bad but great job on finishing. That course is a lot tougher than people realize. What a joy to have done it on this day. MIH

From Dave Taylor on Fri, Apr 25, 2014 at 07:30:34 from 174.23.75.17

All right! I didn't see that one. You're right, I was totally dead by then but didn't care because the day was so awesome! I got to be on street and see the whole thing - sort of like a parade in reverse :)

From Steve on Fri, May 02, 2014 at 11:34:16 from 50.203.18.187

Good race! Wished I could have ran it with you guys.

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