Keeping myself sane!!!

Layton Marathon

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Location:

SLC,Ut,USA

Member Since:

Jul 31, 2009

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Boston Qualifier

Running Accomplishments:

It was an evening in November 2005 that I'll never forget...I was nearing the end of a long term relationship when I needed to unleash some pent-up anger.  I was driving past a baseball park near my house, when something told me to park my car, and just RUN!!  It wasn't long before I moved on with my life and continued running for new reasons.  I now run because I am truly obsessed!  It is a way of life, and I feel incomplete without my weekly runs.  I have completed 28 half marathons, 78 marathons, 7 ultramarathons, and a few other distance runs.

Pr's:

5k:  18:37 Willow Canyon Fun Run  2010

10k:   39:26 Salt Lake Track Club Winter Series 2012

10 Miles:  1:02:15 Emigration 10 Miler 2014

Half Marathon:  1:22:01 Provo Canyon Half  2011

Marathon:  2:56:52  2017 Utah Valley Marathon

50 Miles:  9:22:03 Antelope Island Buffalo Run 2011

100 Miles: 30:40:28 Wasatch 100 2013

Short-Term Running Goals:

Qualify for Boston

Run 100 mile ultramarathon

Sub 3 hour marathon

Beat my old pr's

Long-Term Running Goals:

A marathon in each state, a few ultramarathons....

Personal:

I have a wonderful wife, Melissa, who does not understand why I would want to punish my body with running marathons, but she is very supportive.  She patiently awaits my arrival at the finish line of most of them.  I slipped on a shirt at the last mile of the Ogden Marathon in 2008, that asked: "Melissa, will you Marry Me?"  It was a wonderful moment!

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Race: Layton Marathon (26.2 Miles) 03:20:20, Place overall: 8, Place in age division: 3

It was easy to see early on that this would be an interesting event for me.  I forgot my Garmin, so I knew I'd be running blind.  This also being a new event; I expected there to be some 'hiccups.'  There were some indeed!  The race started about 15 minutes late, which was not a big deal for I have dealt with worse.  What really messed things up for me were to find out after the race that they had lost my drop bag.  I had a premonition this would happen, and should have heeded its warning.  The worst part of it was the response I received from the race director: "Well, that's just the nature of the marathon."  Responses like that, without any form of apology or sympathy is about the easiest way for me to black list an event from future participation!  I'm hoping I can get a hold of him in the days to come, and see if they did ever find it.  I can replace most of what's lost, but it was his attitude that perturbs me the most!

Now, on to the race details...We parked at Ellison Park in a field to catch the bus bound for the starting line.  There were about 6-8 busses lined up curbside to the park, and I was able to hop right on one.  One thing that entered my mind upon seeing how few busses there were was a couple of prerace e-mails that had been sent out.  The participation had been capped at 1200, and they had anticipated it completely filling up.  What I didn't realize is that number was for the total of all four distances: 5k, 10k, half marathon, and full marathon.  So, this ended up being a fairly small marathon.  No big deal, as I enjoy marathoning both big and small.  The ride to the start was uneventful, but sure felt never ending!

The start was about a mile north of the Field Garr Ranch on the east side of the island, and followed a mostly flat, but gently rolling roadway. The only real climb (and not much of one) began around mile 7, peaked at mile 8 and had dropped back down before mile 10 as we headed out the causeway.  The causeway was definitely the longest stretch for me, which lasted about 7 miles and felt like running on a treadmill.  Oh boy, doesn't the Great Salt Lake smell so wonderful?! It was completely level, and seemed to go on forever!  From here, the course lead us alongside corn fields and eventually through residential areas.  The last of about seven turns beyond the causeway sent the runners in the final stretch to the finish in Ellison Park.

Without my GPS, I just ran on how I felt.  I did ask another runner at 13 what the elapsed time was, so he told me 1:37.   So, I certainly slowed WAY down in the second half!  My legs were definitely feeling the wear and tear of this year's running season.   I have a couple of half marathons this month, which will sign me off from running races until early next year.  (Unless I find myself having withdrawls before then!)

Comments
From ryandla on Sat, Oct 09, 2010 at 19:22:57 from 174.23.125.123

nice work - i am always hesitant to sign up for an event in the first year. seems like the race organizers always need a year or two to figure things out.

From Scott Ensign on Sat, Oct 09, 2010 at 20:24:57 from 65.100.210.69

nice job beta testing a new course and with no watch. looks like an interesting experience. The causeway sounds (and smells) especially nasty. I just put this on my list of races "never to do". :-)

From allie on Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 12:55:49 from 174.23.232.22

great job yesterday. i saw you finish and you looked good.

as for the lost drop bag -- no, that is not the nature of the marathon. i hope you can get everything sorted out with that.

i received this response when i questioned them about my 5k time: "well, sometimes if you stand too close to the mats, the timer will start before you start running." basically i was told it was my fault and they had no interest in making the adjustment. anyway, i probably won't be back next year either. and it's not that i think it's a bad event - i think everything went quite well for a first year race. what bothers me about it is that it seems like they are only in it to make money and nothing else -- evident by their attitude toward the runners of just shrugging things off like they can't do anything about it. if they were truly there to put on a quality event for the runners, they would be doing everything they could to ensure their runners were happy so they would come back next year and help grow the event.

i guess i am just bitter because i paid $55 to run a 5k :)

From Mikal Epperson on Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 16:30:54 from 207.200.116.9

ryandla- So true, so true! It's definitely a risk!

Scott- I was kinda bummed not to have my trusty Garmin, but it was probably a good way of forcing myself to see what I'd do otherwise.

Allie- Thanks for yet again a nice post from you! I have yet to meet you in person, but I can truly say that you come across as one of the nicest and most down to earth elite runners around! I'm sorry the race didn't quite turn out how you wanted it to. I have no doubt you will break 18:00 in the 5k distance. Your list of running accomplishments attests to this! I agree that they need to work on satisfying the runners. If they don't, they will only create a bad reputation and it will further limit their organization's success.

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