Pictures to come soon, but I made it!! I finished the marathon on Sunday, and not only that, but finished with a new personal record, shaving off 11 minutes and 23 seconds off of my time from last year. Not bad considering I wasn't sure I'd be able to finish. AND of course we raised over my goal of $1750 by the marathon to defeat blood cancers - better than any finish time I can think of!
Video of me crossing the finish line, about 45 seconds in - black pants, bib on the leg, purple shirt and sunglasses.
But, of course, battling blood cancers was the real reason I was on that race course. Check out this Twin Cities Marathon "Faces in the Crowd" video clip of my teammate Tyler, who is a blood cancer survivor and completed the marathon on Sunday.
The weather could not have been more perfect. Last year, I was focused on avoiding the pace bus that picks up folks slower than the minimum pace (13:44 per minute.) This year, I just had a blast - a smile on my face almost the whole way through, giving high-fives to little kids along the marathon route.
I had a much better pacing plan than last time, actually figuring out my run pace (as opposed to trying to derive it from the overall pace, as I was last year) and striving for negative splits (running the first half of the race slower than the second.) That didn't quite happen, but I did start out more slowly than I did last year, and if I run again next year, I will certainly work to improve my negative split plan. An additional bonus - since I was coming up on a mile every 12 minutes or so, and I had to vary my pace every mile, the negative splits pacing also kept me occupied and less focused on 26 miles.
Also, this year I was taking salt tablets, which I think greatly reduced the quad and glute cramping I experienced last year. Last year, I didn't start my run/walk until mile 10, and this year, I only ran the first mile straight through (slowly - but still couldn't slow down to the pace in my pacing plan!!). Mississippi River Boulevard proved to be the toughest (and slowest) segment of the course, from the Franklin Av bridge to Summit Av, only because of the huge hills there. Sure enough, my quads and even calves started to threaten to cramp. I walked whenever I felt them start to seize and made it through ok. I cruised through the miles 21 through 25, compared to last year!! I couldn't run my three minute segments, so I'd just walk until I felt the cramping pass, and then try to run another 30 seconds or minute, or even 15 seconds, until I felt my legs threaten to cramp again. Anything to keep on going!
Overall, highlights included:
- Seeing so many friends along the race route! Especially Kate and Pat with the bullhorn (around mile 9), Karl (around mile 15), Al, Jen, Anna and Liam, and Tony (around mile 19), and Michelle and Jeff (around what, mile 21? 22??), and TNT friend who was a race marshall, April, around mile 19.
- Seeing my awesome coaches and teammates along the race route!
- Watching first-time marathoners rock it out.
- Spectators who stuck around for us back of the pack folks. You guys are SO AWESOME.
- Favorite spectator sign: "26.2. Because 26.3 would be crazy."
- Seeing Alan Page, Minnesota Supreme Court Justice and former Purple People Eater, play his tuba around mile 2. (I voted for you, Justice Page!)
- The "Return the DVD" people collecting DVDs in front of the Basilica, around mile 1.
- Running behind a guy that had "The Penguin" logo pinned to the back of his shirt.
- Seeing all of the TNT cheer teams along the route! Go green and purple!!
- Watching 70+ year old runners pass me. Wow. Pretty cool. I hope I'm entering marathons at that age!!
- Enjoying a couple sips of some kind soul's birthday beer, set out in little cups like a water station, around mile 24 : ) Have no fear - it was literally about two sips.
- Giving little kids along the route high-fives.
- Being cheered on by little kids who can't even read yet.
- The race volunteers - race marshalls, volunteers who hand out gatorade and water, EMTs - are just incredible. I never got through a water/gatorade station without someone hollering "GO ERIN" : )
- Seeing all of the other incredible charity teams members and their cheer stations along the route. Folks fighting MS, the Childrens Tumor Foundation, American Cancer Society, all incredible folks and athletes running in their name. Very cool.
- Playing on my iPod as I ran down the last .2 miles to the finish line: "Tubthumping," Chumbawumba. Wow, that song takes me back.
And, for a bit of humor, how I was certainly feeling Monday and Tuesday:
All in all, a fantastic race and another wonderful marathon experience. Thank you, again, for all of your support. You're fantastic!
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