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2018 Biofreeze San Francisco Marathon race report (#tsfm2018) – SF, CA

2018 Biofreeze San Francisco Marathon race report (#tsfm2018) – SF, CA

Before last weekend, the only race I’ve really repeated in excess was the Chicago Marathon (2007, 08, 10, and 13). Now I can say the same for the San Francisco Marathon (2010, 14, 17, 18). It’s funny only because I don’t typically repeat races more than twice simply because there are so many races out there. I keep coming back to SF, however. It’s special, and I’m apparently more sentimental than I acknowledge. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

The backstory; alternate title: that freaking stroke

I’ve written about this in previous SF Marathon recaps, but TSFM — or these days, the Biofreeze San Francisco Marathon (BSFM) — holds a pretty special place in my heart. Back in the day, I decided to run the 2010 race for fun and made a quick trip in from Chicago to do so. Years later, for whatever reason (honestly, probably because I got an email about it), I applied to be a social media ambassador (SMA) for the ‘14 race, when I was still in Chicago — and before I knew we were moving here — and I was selected. Through that first SMA program, I met tons of folks who’d become some of my closest friends, many of my first California friends, and I’ve been in the race’s SMA program since then, going on five years.  

This year, I got notice that I had been selected to be part of this year’s SMA group sometime in late January, if I recall correctly, which was just great. I was super excited; I thought I’d finally really rock that super hard marathon this year (fourth time’s a charm) after surely having an incredible spring PA racing season with my Wolfpack team and destroying PRs in spring ‘18, just as I had in spring ‘17…

… and then the universe misaligned, or otherwise some weirdass, still-inexplicable shit happened, and I had a stroke on 2/4. I’ve written and talked about it ad nauseum now (understandable, I hope), and so once I got cleared to run, 4.5 weeks after having a stroke that could have killed me, or could have paralyzed me, or could have left me with any number of stroke-related deficits — but didn’t — after I got cleared to run, after taking off the most amount of time I had since mid-2010 (due to pregnancy #1), I registered for TSFM.

March 7 – first run post-stroke (pushing G)

As though it weren’t obvious, registering for a marathon a few months out, just 4.5 weeks after having a stroke, is an exercise in trust and blind hope. Let’s be honest: some will call that decision stupid. I understand. I think it’s all of the above.

The thing — and there’s always a thing, right? — is that training to run a marathon, the same marathon that I’d be doing any other year, was going to be an in for me, a way for me to taste the normalcy that was so weirdly and abruptly (and temporarily, luckily) taken from me in February. Registering for a marathon — and a “hard” marathon, at that — felt like taking a leap of faith, trusting that between mid-March and late July I’d get back to feeling like my usual running self. Plus, to boot, I was registering under an elite/subseeded status again, which stoked my ego just a little bit and made me feel that much more determined to see what I could do — safely, and under solid coaching from Lisa — between March and July. I saw my GP, had a conversation with her about it, and after a few weeks of pedestrian running, Lisa and I delicately entered the utter and exhausting grind that I just freaking love.   

 

April 5 – first workout post-stroke

 

March 25th – first double digit run (10 miles) and first time really back to climbing mode (PC: Saurabh)

With marathoning, we (royal we) always talk about trusting in the process. The process is this weird, sorta vague catch-all that can befuddle novice runners, of course, but also the most experienced ones in the room as well. There are many aspects to marathon training and racing that are, for lack of a better description, based in sound science, physiological principles that any exercise scientist or coach worth anything would agree upon. That’s the easy part.

The hard part is all the nebulous stuff, the stuff that’s sorta beyond description and well beyond being applicable to the masses — all the listen to your body or your mileage may (literally, figuratively) vary aspects — that can leave us questioning how much we actually know about how to do this stuff at all, much less how to do it well. We know a lot, but frustratingly, we also *don’t* know a lot, too. It’s an incredible amount of trial and error for all of us, to some degree.

Throw the curveball that is walking away from having a stroke out of fucking nowhere, and trusting the process and listen to your body, all the aforementioned gray stuff to marathon training, and training for this year’s SF marathon was unlike anything I’ve had before. Every day, every week, every workout felt like it was a massive experiment, a line in a Word doc that’d end with a question mark instead of a period. Would I be able to do this? In the mid-March to late-July timeframe, I went from literally zero miles and feeling so.freaking.sore after every single run, as though I were doing this all for the first time in my life, not my thirty-second, to feeling as strong and fast, if not more so, than I ever have.

As time wore on, it was as though the events that happened on 2/4 actually never happened, like it was some weird mindfuck that everyone in the world was in on; like instead, I just randomly decided to stop running (and lifting, and picking up my kids, and so on) cold turkey for no reason whatsoever for over a month… and then one day, I decided to start all over again.

less “comeback,” more “shit don’t squander this opportunity”

I can’t tell you how many times during my training that my mind would go to the stroke. If I do this workout, what if it somehow does something to my brain? Or I shouldn’t run predawn during the week because what if something happens to me? No one’s going to find me for a while. It’s too early. Of course, there was often the I had a headache yesterday; what if today’s run sets me over the edge? The last thing I did before I had a stroke on 2/4 was run. Correlation doesn’t equal causation, but… And on, and on, it went. There’s a reason I went to counseling over this mess, friends.

Early in my training, I was nervous and often would make it a point to run in very crowded places — places and times that I’d usually avoid, for that very reason — with the thinking that oh shit if something happens, people will be there to help me. It’s all relative, I know, especially in the world of stroke survivors, but it took me a while to regain my confidence when I ran: ironic only because it’s through running that I glean confidence in the first place. (In the world of stroke survivors, I am as lucky as they come; it’s not lost on me. However, knowing my luck isn’t easy, either. I’m not complaining at all, but I hope that this back-and-forth can give you an idea of what the mental trauma was/has been and how/where running has intersected my “grieving” process, if you want to call it that. This sport has given and given to me, and this has become especially apparent to me in the past six months).   

As is often the case with these things, time helped considerably. Each week and month I became farther and farther removed from 2/4, the less I thought about it. Friends and acquaintances would ask “how things were going” or “how I felt,” and my answer was always the same (great, thanks, like I’ve never been better). Flip as it might have been, my curt response was proof positive to the world, at large — anyone who cared, anyway — and to me that I was fine now; that yes, 2/4 happened, but it was over and done and I had luckily averted catastrophe somehow. I wanted it behind me forever and ever.

In the weeks and months following 2/4, once I began running again, I was in my element and poring myself into training for the distance that is so brutal but the one that brings me such a huge ROI. Most importantly, I was excited, I was healthy on all accounts, and I was having a blast with all the training and racing leading up to The Big Day.

letting gratitude permeate your training will do wonders. you heard it here first.

This is all to say that by the time BSFM weekend rolled around, I was ready. In talking with Lisa pre-race, we believed that I was in great shape, arguably PRable even, and when asked whether I wanted to go Big Time or merely have a confidence booster for a race, I didn’t hesitate. I wanted to run hard and fast because I knew I had it in me.

I guess more than anything, this year’s race — which would be almost six months to the day since the stroke — was going to be one of the most symbolic and meaningful 26.2s I’ve run. I owed it to myself to perform to the very best I could.

Expo fun on Saturday

After a short shakeout at home early on Saturday, I headed north to work the expo at Fort Mason, as I typically do each SFM weekend. Like last year, I’d be helping at the next year’s early bird registration area, which I find super fun and energizing. Really, it boils down to loving talking to random strangers about running. I had a good time working with my fellow SMAs, and I think the best thing all morning was helping an 86 year-old man — who was running Sunday’s first half — register for next year’s first half. He had asked me to help him, and I thought he wanted simple, general guidance. Instead, I did his entire registration for him, and when the confirmation screen appeared at the end, we both whooped and hollered and gave the other a huge hug. (Others nearby asked me if I knew him. Not at all! How awesome that an octogenarian was going to be running a HM the next day though and had every intention of running next year’s, too?! That’s my dream).

folks waiting in line to get early bird pricing for next year

 

all business, no fun, with Tatiana and Jason

Lisa came right as I was about to leave, and one last pre-race strategy sesh solidified everything we had talked about earlier. The race was mine to have; the training was there. My knowledge and experience would help me, even with this year’s new course, and I’d ostensibly know when and where to push and pull back. Again: I was ready. Quiet confidence. Keep the thing, the thing, and just go do the thing. It’s that simple.

 

all smiles and super comfortable in my linen pants that feel like pajamas

A nice change from years past at SF was that I’d have the great company of my two teammates, Julie and Oscar, at the race. They’re both much faster runners than me and had goals for the race that were basically not even in the same galaxy as mine, but no matter. They’re both great humans and humble and talented athletes, and having their company pre-race at the VIP lounge and in the subseeded section was going to be awesome. We were all ready to have a great race day.

Not long after leaving the expo, and after going to Dateway to pick up my Safeway vegetarian sushi to complement my veg pho from San Jose, I went to Erin’s, per yoosh for SF race eve. We go back to Chicago, circa 2010 during Boston training, and part of what makes my SF race experience so lovely each year is staying with her and catching up. You’d think that our ~50 mile distance wouldn’t so heavily preclude us from seeing each other, but then you’d see our schedules, and you’d live in the Bay Area and understand the epic level of shit that is the traffic between SF and SJ, and you’d understand. Anyway. I wouldn’t be nearly as enthusiastic to come into SF, go to sleep at 8pm, and wake up at 3am if I weren’t doing that all at her house. Plus, we run by her place around mile 19.5, so I almost always get to see her mid-race. I love her so much.

this is not Erin, but this is her dog, Stella, who was sitting on my lap on her couch

I was in bed by 8pm, and aside from a few quick wake-ups when my family called me or when I had to pee, I was out until 3am: good enough. A quick bowl of oats with pb and soymilk, part of a banana, some tea, and a PRP later, and I was in a Lyft by about 3:50am to get to the Ferry Building by 4:15 for a 5:30 race start.

Race day

Luckily, I had earned enough credit through my SMA efforts to earn a spot for my teammates Oscar and Julie; my friend, teammate, and training partner Janet, who’d be biking the course; Coach Lisa, who’d also be biking the course; and me at Marketbar in the VIP lounge area. Like last year, it was an awesome set-up: real bathrooms; a heated venue (it was “feels like 49” when I left Erin’s!); a full spread of food, beverages, and libations; our own separate gear-check, the whole shebang. I couldn’t have asked for a better pre-race environment.

motivational signage in the VIP area
sauntering toward the Ferry Building at 4am like it’s completely normal
the calm before the storm; if you zoom, you can probably see the race’s starting arch
Market Street and the Embarcadero

I can’t say enough how lovely it was to share the race morning jazz with my teammates and with so many other SMAs. Some SMAs I hadn’t really gotten a chance to talk to the day before at the expo, like Elysha, Ron, Scott, and Charles, so we had a good time bullshitting for a while, staying comfortable and seemingly carefree. Around 5:15, Julie, Oscar, and I casually walked out for some last pics with Lisa and to go toe the line. It was cool, probably in the low 50s and pretty humid, with the GGB enveloped in thick fog, and not a ton of wind like last year. As far as marathon mornings go — and in late July, no less — it was perfect.  

not a care in the world minutes before beginning the marathon (PC: Charles)

 

GO TIME with my teammates

And we’re off

A 5:30 start time promises that you begin BSFM in the darkness, which can be a little off-putting if you’re not used to it. Fortunately, the first few miles along the Embarcadero and through Fisherman’s Wharf are all flat, punctuated periodically by trolley or train tracks that necessitate a bit of attention to your footfall. This year’s race changes meant that only the full marathoners were starting at 5:30 (and more or less right at 5:30, since runners were released from the corrals pretty shortly after each other), which was a welcome change from years past. It seemed like right away, I was surrounded by 100+ much-faster-than-me runners right off the line, most of whom were from the A corral behind me. I saw Lisa on the sidelines early, maybe around mile 2 or 3, as well as another Wolfpack master runner, Bob, whom I didn’t know was running (and actually had never met before). That’d mean there were four of us running that day, which was awesome!

The first hill is right around mile 4, as you approach Fort Mason from Fisherman’s Wharf, and even with that longish ascent, I was feeling solid. My pace locked in early around 7:31/33, which was right on the low end of where I wanted to be for the day, with the goal time range being something like a 3:17-21. As far as I can remember from SF ‘17, I was running much more evenly and consistently early at this year’s race and honestly felt really good, almost as though I were moving in slow motion but still posting low 7:30s (#thankyoutaper).

slightly new course who dis

The 2018 BSFM course changes

The 2018 new course manifested right before the GGB, at about mile 5. In years past, runners would ascend a fairly long and steep hill to get up to the bridge and onto the roadway. Then, after an out and back on the bridge, after looping the turn-around at the vista/overlook in Marin, runners would exit the bridge and begin their travel on Lincoln, through the Presidio, towards GGP.

With the GGB Authority revoking roadway privileges for BSFM, it meant that this year’s marathoners only were allowed to run the bridge but had to stay on the sidewalks on the outermost periphery of both the northbound and southbound sides. Simply stated, that meant that for miles 5 and 6, we marathoners sorta approached the bridge from below (by way of Crissy Field) and then double-backed to climb a different access road to the bridge. I feel fairly certain that this way was the same path that we had raced during ATB12k in June (though in reverse), and it may have even been the same path as we traveled in the Mermaid 10 miler back in 2015 or even Nike Women’s half in ‘14. At any rate, these new climbs still afforded quite lovely views of the bridge (encased in fog as it was), and the climb, while long, was still quite enjoyable. I saw Lisa right around mile 6, during one of the steeper parts of the climb to get onto the bridge’s sidewalks, and I was feeling strong and just having a great time only steps away from getting onto the bridge.

working our way up (PC: Lisa/WRC)

 

Hi, Lisa! about to backtrack and head up onto the GGB (PC: Lisa/WRC)

Unlike in many of my other previous marathons, I was happily going along and doing my own thing. Part of that was necessity — my buddy Don was pacing 3:15 and was far ahead of me, and a guy I recognized from Modesto ‘16 was pacing 3:25, too far behind me — but a bigger part of it was comfort. I was happily chatting with other runners who were in my surroundings (including a guy from Alabama who had come to run SF as his 35th marathon) and just taking in the experience. When we were still in Crissy Field, I tucked in with a group of guys to help block some of the wind, but by the time we made that double-back near the bridge our group had disbanded. It was fine.

SF runners/racers have strong opinions about the bridge and running on it. The novelty of it is neat, sure, especially if you don’t live in the Bay Area, and when the race announced that only full marathoners were going to be running on it, many people online seemed livid. I totally understand it from a safety standpoint, and truth be told, I felt safer running on the sidewalks (which are a bit elevated from the cars and have some pretty significant barriers between them and the roadway) than I ever have on the road.  

The thing about the bridge, however, especially in the early morning hours, is that it’s often foggy, rainy, windy, or all three, and that can spell disaster real quick when you’re trying to run fast. My one and only goal for the bridge was to avoid stepping on anything metal or shiny — slip hazards like hellllllllllllll — which often meant that my footing felt more like prancing and less like actual running. Added to that was having to periodically duck around the support beams that line the outside of the bridge (and being startled by seeing a random cop just hanging out there!), making my hips kinda get more plane-of-motion activity than they showed up for that day.

Once we got off the bridge in Marin, around mile 8, we ran through the vista point’s water station as we’ve always done but then ducked around the vista via a literal dirt path. Doing so would essentially allow runners to go under the bridge and then re-enter it, on the southbound side, via a paved access road. Again, as far as I can tell, this access road was the same one we climbed circa mile 1-2 of ATB12k in June, that good ol’ long ascent that everyone hates so much. Virtually at the top of that access road was mile 9, and we thus began our trek back over the bridge, on the southbound side, which somehow felt like it had far harsher conditions than that on the north. (I actually thought to myself over there, well, I haven’t had a cold or blustery marathon in a while; it’s probably time). The wind was whipping hard enough, and it was sufficiently foggy and wet, that I actually felt cold while running in a singlet for probably the first time since moving here. That’s the bridge for you!

As we exited the bridge, circa mile 10.5, we had just a few more course changes to maneuver. In years past, when you exited the bridge, you’re right back on the road and begin making your way up and then fiercely down Lincoln, a paved road. This year, when we exited the bridge, we were diverted to another dirt road with another climb before eventually merging over and hopping into Lincoln around mile 11. Once there, we began the screaming downhill as we inched our way closer to GG park. We had more dirt in this year’s marathon than ever before, which, with it being SF and all (and home to some of the most world renown trails) was actually kinda cool, if not a bit unexpected.

off the bridge (see how foggy it was!?) and on some dirt, again, before taking up Lincoln

I had been feeling good, had been running pretty consistently, and had been doing my nutrition like clockwork: an SiS gel every 4 miles and alternating among one with 75mg caffeine, one with electrolytes, and one that was “just” a gel. I grabbed water and horrible-tasting orange nuun at the aid stations and pace wise probably felt the most comfortable that I ever had in this race. Everything was good and fairly predictable, aside from the few course modifications.

For some reason though, it was around mile 11 that I was beginning to feel off, as though I were working much harder than I actually was. I tried not to dwell on it — if you’ve run a marathon, you know that how you feel can vary tremendously from mile to mile, somehow oscillating between euphoric joy and catastrophic, existential depression (just me?) — and I figured it was some moment that’d surely pass. I redirected my thoughts and focused on trying to open my SiS with very wet hands, getting it all over my shorts in the process, and rode out the long downhill before climbing into the park. Focus on the task at hand was the only thing on my mind — take the SiS, use gravity on this descent, stay strong, remember that nothing is catastrophically wrong –and again, I just waited for the random wow this feels really hard today sentiment to pass. It had to; I still had two hours of running ahead of me!

Into the park, with one more change

Virtually steps after I entered the park, around mile 13.5, I saw who I thought was Lisa in the distance (facing runners around mile 17.5) and I heard an ERIN! and saw Janet on her bike. I was thrilled to see her because it was probably seconds before that I had begun fantasizing about how today felt like a better day to run a half than a full due to the weird off-feeling that had manifested and just wasn’t going away. I may have even mentioned something to Janet as I passed her, something along the lines of this may be a rough one for a while. Again, I was trying not to dwell on the feelings for too long, but it had been nearly a 5k since those thoughts first surfaced, and they still hadn’t passed. I was beginning to get a little nervous.

hi, friends!!! (PC: Janet/Lisa/WRC)

 

sorta but not totally committing to waving (circa mile 14?) (PC: Janet/Lisa/WRC)

In years past, the park was always a twilight zone for me. We marathoners drop about a 10k in there, zig-zagging and going across nearly the entire thing, and it typically gets boring fast and makes me lose my entire sense of direction for some reason. As I was trying to get out of the funk that appeared at mile 11, I told myself that there’d be enough ascents/descents in the park to keep things interesting and that maybe that was all I needed to get a second wind and out of mental purgatory. Instead, for some reason that’s still inexplicable to me, my left glute felt like it had completely shut down, making me feel like I was dragging ass (literally, I guess). I had noticed that my left hamstring felt weirdly tight earlier in the race but chalked it up to nothing, just a weird bodily feedback I got thrown mid-race, since I haven’t had any issues with my butt or my hammy at all for many years. I wasn’t cramping or anything like that, and my stride didn’t feel completely horrible; my body just seemed like it was having an off day and that my butt decided it didn’t want to show up to party for another 13 miles. Cool!

I had some decisions to make. Nothing felt catastrophically wrong; nothing was broken, breaking, torn, or ripping; I wasn’t having some existential crisis; I didn’t feel like I was mentally checking out; I just felt off. I did the only thing I thought I could do, which was drag my ass along for the ride and try to hang. I used gravity when it was advantageous, didn’t clock watch, tried not to dissociate, didn’t dwell on it, and simply went. Somewhere in the park, probably around mile 15-16, I’m pretty sure I slapped my own ass (#classy) to see if I could wake things up a bit; mid-race, any strategy is a good strategy, right?

Soon after my body was making it clear that it felt off, I ran into a sea of runner humanity whom I definitely wasn’t expecting. More of the changes to this year’s race included different start times for the half marathoners: 6:30 for the first half and 6:45 for the second half. Because of the way the full course overlapped with the two half marathon courses, it meant that faster full marathoners would run into the 2:45 HM runners. I went from having virtually the entire road to myself in GGP to having to zig-zag and Frogger-style run through virtual rows of HM runners and walkers five-plus across. Talk about serendipity; if I were having the race I had trained for, I would have pretty pissed to have to dodge and weave incessantly. I still did, don’t get me wrong, but I tried to take the momentary pace reprieve as another opportunity to regroup and wait for the redirection to manifest (again). In doing so, I ran into Bertrand doing the half (a nice surprise), near my mile 17, and slowly began working my way through the various day’s HM pace groups, starting with 2:45.

Knowing that I had another 9 miles to go, with climbing and descending for 7 of those, was mentally exhausting to think about as I was waiting for the funk to pass. My butt still wasn’t feeling like it was showing up for some reason, and while quitting sounded attractive, there was no way I’d do it in the absence of a real, warranted reason. Slowing down significantly wasn’t going to help, either. I did the only thing I could do, which was simply to keep going, staying HERE as the scribbles on my left hand reminded me to do, and trust that the funk had to pass eventually.

Much to my surprise, after I had passed 2:45 and then a faster HM pace group, and after the 3:25 marathon group passed me (shit!), we popped out of the park around mile 19. For the first time in my four years of running SF, we didn’t loop around Stow Lake! Apparently I had completely overlooked this omission from the course map. For once, I felt like the GGP portion of the marathon flew by. Sunny was right at mile 19, near Haight, right when we exited the park, and her darling self was a welcome sight to behold. I knew that I’d see Erin soon, near Haight/Ashbury, and I told myself that a huge descent awaited me and that maybe the funk would fiiiiiiiiiinally lift.

Haight-end and just hanging

Hope sprang eternal from mile 11-onward. I heard Erin around 19.5 before I saw her, and as always, it was so great to see her (and Stella’s) friendly face, even if I wasn’t feeling too hot. Shortly after I saw her, I came upon the Biofreeze-themed aid station this year at mile 20 — an obvious nod to the race’s new title sponsor for the next three years. This huge Biofreeze station had several volunteers out literally spraying (or rubbing?) down runners’ affected body parts, which seemed really peculiar (or awkward at best and dangerous/precarious at worst, especially if they got the Biofreeze on the roads). I get it, but…

comin down Haight and seeing Erin and Stella is always a highlight (PC: Erin)

With the adjusted start times for the half marathons, what usually would be a pretty empty and open Haight Street was much more crowded than usual, which of course has its own set of advantages and disadvantages over the final 10k of a marathon. I tried to use all the people around me as a distraction and as something to focus on — pass that person, then go pass that person, and that girl up there? You could probably pass her — instead of fixating on wondering why I was feeling so off. Haight presents runners with a barreling downhill, so aside from chasing people down, I tried to focus on using gravity advantageously, and when I was redirected off Haight, to stay steady on the ascents. My nutrition was still running like clockwork every four miles, and in the few times that flats presented between ascents and descents, I tried to open things up a bit, though I was still running fairly exclusively by feel.

Somewhere around mile 22 or 23, I began doing poor mental math and some bargaining. I was still feeling pretty off, try as I might to turn things around, and I knew we would be climbing through about mile 24. Ok, so if I run 9 minute miles, or maybe even 10 minute miles, that means that I could finish in  … yeah. That conversation. I considered the merits of purposely slowing things down and maybe just shooting for a 3:30, or maybe even a 3:35, or my new BQ time since I’d be aging up in November, though for the life of me, I couldn’t remember if it was 3:40 or 3:45. I’m proud to say that I dug my head outta my ass and just kept going, continuing to pass HM runners around me, and stayed the course by running on feel. For whatever reason, I apparently wasn’t going to have it in me to run the time that I was capable of running that day, but the more I lollygagged, the longer it was going to take me to finish, which wasn’t a desirable option. This wasn’t an issue related to mental toughness or lack thereof, poor fitness, or bonking; it was just a stupid off day that happened on the wrong day that week. boohiss

Aside from my usual nutrition every 4 miles, in the back ~5k or ~8k of the marathon, I took advantage of the random opportunities for real food that unofficial aid station tables offered: orange slices, pretzels from a PBR station, and watermelon. In fact, I’m pretty sure I didn’t chuck that last piece of watermelon until about mile 25.9 or so. Words can’t describe how wonderful the pretzels and watermelon tasted, though I admittedly had to turn off my head telling me I was going to contact a norovirus. So far, so good…  

And finally, after we cleared the last hill around mile 24, the Strava table brought the energy just like they did last year, and seeing Gregg in a unicorn suit around mile 25.5 was awesome (and his high five just perfect). Probably seconds after seeing Gregg I saw Janet on her bike again for the first time since the park, and the last thing I remember her yelling was “you’re so close!”. I tried to continue digging and picking it up as much as I could muster, and the green finish line arches crept ever nearer, slowly but surely.

around 25.7ish, maybe. we pass AT&T Field around 25.5 or so. I love that it looks like the HM runner woman in front of me is on her phone. (PC: Janet)

 

as seen from about mile 25.9. if you look closely, you can see the green finishing arches in the distance. (PC: Janet)

And like that – it was over. A high 3:26, just a little slower than last year’s SF, my slowest marathon that I’ve raced in many years, but damn, one of the most meaningful.

all smiles right after finishing. say hi to the bay bridge behind us; it looks a little different from how it did at 4am! (PC: Janet)

We done!

Happily — enthusiastically, really — I can say that the new full course measured much closer to 26.2 than the old course (coming in around 26.3, which is understandable, instead of 26.6+). Shortly after I finished, a woman from NY came up behind me and said that she had been hanging with me since the park (which was forever ago!) and that I kept pulling her along — so much so that she wanted to thank me! —  which made me smile. Solitary sport, my ass.

It can be really frustrating to have an “off” day, but of course, they happen. We marathoners hope that they don’t happen on race day simply because we aren’t presented with many opportunities to go race this behemoth distance all that often — what, with taking a proper amount of recovery and all — but it can happen. It’s kinda part of the gamble. The nice thing is that this distance easily lends itself to giving you the opportunity to have an A, B, C … Z goal, so even if you don’t realize The Big Sexy Goal, you can still realize something, which is satisfying. I had an off day on race day — maybe because I had raced W2W the week before? Maybe because I was tired or needed to taper better? Maybe because I took the front half too aggressively? I got nothing — which is annoying, sure, but it’s ok. Again: it happens.  

While SF 18 is my slowest marathon in years, and that’s frustrating to me because of all the obvious reasons about the shape I believe myself to be in and yadda yadda yadda, honestly, I finished the race really, really happy. Promise. I know I put in great training, and those effects aren’t going to simply vanish overnight. The prospect of continuing to build this fitness is kinda exciting, to be honest. I still have five months left in 2018 and the rest of my life to build on this stuff! Extra exclamation mark needed for emphasis!!

At the VIP party, as I was talking with my teammates about it, I said that I’ve been doing this stuff long enough to know that I’ll be let down/upset/angry more often than not if I tie my happiness or satisfaction up into my race time. I absolutely wanted to race faster, and I believe that it’s in my wheelhouse to do so right now, but it didn’t happen on Sunday, and that’s ok. Races unfold in weird ways sometimes; no pity, tears, or sorrow is necessary. It happens. We can analyze and dissect to the ends of the world — and sometimes, doing so is necessary to unearth something more nefarious or detrimental at play, like iron issues or simmering injuries or whatever — but sometimes, I think the best thing we can do is shrug and say eh.   

that beautiful post-marathon, post-free-massage, post 3am-wakeup look

When the race got strangely tough beginning at mile 11, I reminded myself that I was the happiest person on the course, that no one was happier to be racing in the streets of SF than me, and I completely believe it. Six months ago, my life was very different. Text messages post-race from friends that talked about how far I had come this year brought me to my knees because it’s so true; I can’t talk about this year’s SF race without also acknowledging the very important Bigger Picture that has been this year. At SF, I felt like my fitness was there for a much faster race and for a sizable PR — neither which happened — but it’ll come. Until then, I’ll just keep putting in the work and be grateful as hell for whatever I can do on the day.

Typically, mid-race at SF, I always question why I train so hard to run such a hard marathon course, but honestly, it’s so fun — even when I don’t feel great, the time flies by — that I kinda can’t imagine *not* doing this marathon every year. This year’s SF marathon — my fourth iteration of this marathon, my 32nd lifetime marathon, just shy of 6 months after having my stroke, and my 20th Boston qualifier — was incredibly special to me on levels that are hard to comprehend and explain.

I couldn’t be more ecstatic to be able to do this stuff. The last six months have been very hard, but I’ve come far.

What a day for my team! So proud to call them teammates. Oscar earned 7th and a great BQ; Bob earned a BQ and redemption after a DNF in Boston; and Julie earned 2nd and a BQ as well! BQs for all! (PC: WRC)

I am so, so profoundly lucky.

Thank you. 

32nd marathon – 20th BQ – 3:26 – 5/292 AG – 417/5300 OA – 36/1713 F

——————–

Postscript:

  • Is it hilly? Obviously. My Garmin had over 2,000’+ climbing for the full. Strava leans closer to 1,300-1,500’. It would behoove you to train on hills. Everything is runnable, however.
  • What’s the weather? It depends. Early in the marathon, it’s often overcast, foggy, and windy, if not also raining. By the time you make it into and out of GGP, the sun has usually come out. It’s almost 100% better weather in SF in late July than anywhere else in the country at the same time of year. Post-bridge, the weather was pretty overcast and cool (hello, race day perfection).
  • Can you BQ here? Sure, if the course plays to your strengths. I think there were about 320 runners who qualified this year (out of the 5,000+ who ran), so it’s not a BQ factory in the same way that CIM or Chicago is, but it’s not impossible.
  • Why is it so expensive? Because it’s SF. Everything is expensive.
  • What are the runner premiums? Typically, a medal, a long sleeve tech tee, and maybe free pictures, depending on the year. Otherwise, the normal stuff, *plus* a well-organized urban marathon.
  • What haven’t you told me yet about your race? That I had The Greatest Showman soundtrack in my head incessantly for most of it. We are glooooooooooooooorious!
  • Should I do it next year? Yup. c u there  
2018 Wharf to Wharf Race Recap – Santa Cruz-Capitola, CA

2018 Wharf to Wharf Race Recap – Santa Cruz-Capitola, CA

It seems like no matter where you live, there’s That One Race that everyone raves about, the one that everyone says is their favorite, that you’ve absolutely gotta do, gotta put it on your calendar and register the moment it opens so you’re sure to be part of the fun. Since moving to the Bay Area almost five years ago now, I think That One Race has been both CIM, on the long side of things, and Wharf to Wharf, on the shorter side.

Of course, I already raced and wrote about CIM back in December, but until last weekend, I haven’t been able to race at Wharf to Wharf simply due to timing. More specifically: it’s always been on the same race weekend — hell, on the same day — as TSFM. This year, however, due to WTW always being on the fourth Sunday in July and TSFM going to the (random and rare) fifth Sunday of the month, I was finally able to register to run both.

I have heard about or read about Wharf to Wharf since shortly after moving here from probably 284107 people. It’s a 6 mile, not 6.2 mile, point-to-point course that begins in Santa Cruz and ends in Capitola, all of which is a simple, 45ish minute, just an “over the hill” drive. I’ve run in SC several times now because of SIB, but I had never run in, let alone visited, Capitola. From what I gleaned from the collective masses who have done WTW, the course would take runners periodically in and out of neighborhoods very near the coast, and when you weren’t in the road in front of someone’s house, you’d be running adjacent to the coastline, likely offering you pretty views of the water and quite pleasant running weather.

…but really, it’s about the party and the people, as these things often are. The so-called “best little road race in California” caps registration around 16k runners (and sells out in literal minutes), and I’ve seen and heard it referred to as “Christmas in July,” homecoming, a reunion, the best race of the year, a 6 mile block party, the one race worth doing each year, and so on. Though it’s not a PA race, no doubt due to its proximity, its storied history (forty+ years and counting), the thrill of shooting for a top 100 placement, and the simple fact that most every human alive loves the SC/Capitola area, my Wolfpack team historically has always fielded a co-ed team there and this year easily numbered 40+ strong (probably our largest collective attendance at any event all year).

Talk about a fantastic first race back after running in the midwest for a month, right?

As Janet and I drove over the hill Sunday morning, we chatted about how we were feeling, our goals for the day, and for me, how I was feeling a week out from the San Francisco Marathon. By virtue of never doing a 6 mile race, WTW would be one of those cheeky, automatic PRs, which is both silly and fun. As I told Janet, though, I didn’t quite know how to approach the race. It’d likely be my last hard running before TSFM, and with the added benefit of being on the beginning-of-taper legs, but … was it prudent to try to “do something” with this race and distance? Would doing so potentially hinder my SF race in a week’s time? Or should this just be another workout-within-a-race, as was the case with the races I ran in Ohio just a few weeks ago? I really didn’t know what the best approach would be and figured (read: hoped) that I’d get that realization sometime in the next couple hours before go time.

My teammates and I warmed up for a couple miles over to the starting area, along the way bumping into and finally getting to meet the lovely Page (at last!), and there were people eeeeeeeeeverywhere. Where did all these people come from?!  It was impressive. I don’t think I’ve ever seen Santa Cruz so busy.

just a few of us who parked in the same general area. (PC: WRC)

 

the always-obligatory silly shot (PC: WRC)

 

warming up (PC: WRC)

 

warming up before heading over to the corrals (PC: WRC)

Marathonfoto was out taking pictures, Steph Bruce and a few other Hoka pros were warming up, I ran into tons more friends and teammates in the starting corral (a hug for you! And a hug for you! And a hug for you!), and before long, we were sardined into the starting area very near the Santa Cruz Boardwalk, and we were off.

one more group shot pre-race (PC: WRC)

 

run up to warm up (PC: WRC)

 

it’s always a party with these people (PC: WRC)

Most of my other teammates and I were smooshed into the Elite wave, which for me promised almost definitely coming off the line hot so as to avoid getting Lion King-style trampled by the sea of humanity surrounding me. My dear friends Meg and Janet, both WTW veterans of a million years between them, as far as I was concerned, described the race’s changing topography to me before the race, and both warned that everyone would come off the line hot, try as you might not to. Yeah… guilty. Unabashedly so.

My Garmin had about 250’ elevation over the six mile race, which in the grand scheme of things is relatively inconsequential, but of course, when you’re trying to run hard and fast and also carve out a little racing space for yourself, the smallest blips feel catastrophic. I don’t remember there being too many big hills — the largest/longest being later in the race, right around when Meg caught up to me and cheerfully said “this is the last one of the race, and it’s the longest!” before zoom-zooming off — but I definitely concur with others who have said that while WTW hills pale compared to those of TSFM, for example, this ain’t a pancake flat course.

I think part of the magic of WTW is its fanfare. In addition to the 16k runners and walkers actually doing the race, much of the course is lined with spectators — folks whose homes we’re running past, tons of bands, children handing out leis, people at a farmer’s market — and I didn’t detect much in the way of animosity. Naturally, closing down city streets can be a huge PITA to residents, and I’ve helped at or run enough races to know that some people get rather salty on the subject. Not so at WTW. Surely no doubt because the race has been around for more than four decades, presumably at the same time of the month each July, people along the route appeared to have grown to know, expect, and shoot, dare I say embrace the chaos. I saw a local newspaper’s report that said that WTW weekend brings in something like millions of dollars to the local economy, too, which dear god–for a 6 mile race?! That apparently every runner in these parts of California loves?! That’s pretty good in my book.

Because I’m so unfamiliar with where we actually ran, I can’t offer much in terms of a scenic play-by-play. It was super fun to be surrounded by so many runners I knew, though, both on my team and from others, making it feel like I was running alongside, in front of, or behind someone I knew for the entire journey. I’d pass someone I knew, and then soon enough, someone different would come up and pass me; it was like a reunion-on-the-go of sorts. Honestly, it was a blast.

For this race, the top 100 male and top 100 female finishers each earn a ¼-zip jacket made by California-based Rabbit, making “earning a jacket” something of a pursuit for the race’s fastest runners. New for this year, too, was a complimentary membership to PWR Lab for the top 100 finishers. Each year, the 100 finisher time threshold changes — which makes sense, right, because it’s dependent on who shows up that day and how fast they all run — and importantly, it’s based on gun time, not chip time. This helped to explain the sardine formation in the Elite wave at the start; no one wanted to lose precious seconds! As I was running, I tried to get a feel for how many women were in front of me at any given time, but I had no freaking clue. After all, I could only see so far ahead due to the course’s turns and bends.

Based on conversations with my teammates and a cursory look at previous years’ finisher times, I thought I may have a chance to break into the top 100, but if this race was anything like the PA races, it would be iffy at best and leaning toward “unlikely” than otherwise. More than anything, I wanted to stay present in the current moment of racing — going so far to actually write HERE on my left hand as a physical reminder of the sentiment — and to run a strong effort from start to finish without mentally checking out when shit got uncomfortable which, assuming the earth was going to continue to spin on its axis that morning, would surely happen at some point or another.

Of course, there were uncomfortable moments, particularly on some of the late-stage long ascents, but I feel pretty happy with how I managed my expectations and how I kept attempting to rally on the descents — use gravity here! It doesn’t matter if you’re tired; you’re freaking going downhill! Don’t be a baby!! — to make up for time. It’s so easy to dissociate, but I’m not convinced that that’s the best way to race. Sometimes discomfort can be illuminating.

And before too long, we were at mile 5, the beginning of a basic all-downhill final mile into the finish line. I had been passing women, others had been passing me, and one of my teammates, Mitch, was within view and practically close enough to me that we could have finished the race together holding hands. I willed myself to stay near him and to finish strong, on super tired legs, and to keep the turnover high for the downhill mile. Seeing and hearing Sara (with her newborn!) around mile 5.5 screaming at me that I looked strong, along with my constant reminder to stay mentally engaged, helped Mitch and me finish practically alongside each other as we hurled ourselves down Cliff Drive.

teamwork makes the dream work (PC: Bill Campbell, right before the finish)

 

It was pretty funny to compare notes after the race. We both thought the other felt far better than she/he did. Dark specs have a way of hiding total discomfort! (PC: Bill Campbell)

Like that, I finished and flew through the women’s chute — something like 40:57, a 6:49 pace — and a very pleasant gentleman handed me a hot pink rectangular ticket with #94 on it and instructed me to go get my jacket. 94?! holyshit I eked out a top 100!! What a surprise!! Moments later, it was more hugs for you! And a hug for you! And a hug for you! as I continued to run into more friends and teammates, all of us absolutely sopping with sweat and the humidity that we had apparently absorbed from the morning’s overcast skies. I spent a good while catching up with Michael, who had asked about my stroke and how everything had been going for the past ~6 months with running and training, and between talking with him and his GF, chatting with pro Steph Bruce (who had placed 4th and was first American woman overall), seeing TSFM ambassador buddy Elysha, and then meeting up with more teammates and friends for more pictures, my little heart was just on overdrive.       

so very awesome to momentarily congratulate Steph in person for everything she has accomplished since we were last together for the Hoka Women Who Fly experience in October ’17 (PC: Lisa)

 

all smiles with Janet, Kim, and Meg at the finish (PC: Meg)

Don’t get me wrong, earning a jacket was cool and such an honor in such a fast field. (Fun fact: finisher #100 for the women’s side was my 6 month pregnant friend Connie! And the top 100 men cut-off at like 5:45 pace [holyshit!]). Running a good-for-me time a week ahead of my target marathon was a nice confidence booster, too. Being able to race in a pretty location is always enjoyable as well.

What made this race — really, the whole morning, from start to finish — was being able to do it and share it alongside so many friends and teammates. People so often say that running (and/or racing) is this singular, solitary pursuit, and this race experience flies squarely in the face of that accusation. This race is all about the community — the people who organize it, the residents of both towns that runners veritably take over for several hours on a Sunday morning in July, the many non-profits that directly benefit from the race’s funds, the businesses who see increased sales each year over race weekend, the running teams from high school through post-collegiate who use the race as a backdrop for a reunion, whatever — this race screams  community from start to finish. The beautiful scenery, the fun vibes, finishing next to the beach, the rainbow arches that demarcate each mile marker — all of that stuff is fun and special, too.

But the community.

the gang’s all here (PC: WRC)

 

top 100 M/F (PC: WRC)

The community!

Perhaps fittingly, then, a handful of lady Wolves and I ran back to the start, another 6.66 miles, just furthering my claim here that the race is all about your people and your company. (Plus, it seemed a better use of time than waiting to be shuttled back). I have so few opportunities to race and train alongside many of my teammates, so being able to do that for a long while, several times, over the course of the morning … again, my heart. So full. So happy.

 

figuring out how to get back that doesn’t involve salmoning with Claire, Mona, Janet, Sandy, and CT(PC: Janet)

 

figured it out! (PC: Janet)

 

finishing a CD holding hands (PC: WRC)

At this point, I’ll keep my concluding ruminations short. In a nutshell:

Do this race.

Put the registration time and date on your calendar, and F5 for all you’re worth.

Get some buddies to do it with you as well.

Make a day or a weekend out of it.

Revel in the race’s simple logistics — bibs get mailed to you (at no additional cost), you get your shirt once you finish, along with a little goody bag — and enjoy the bigger picture of the morning.

Race it hard, or jog or walk it.

Six miles is a good distance because it necessitates training, but it’s also not a distance whose training will necessarily dwarf your other responsibilities in life for a few months.

However you do Wharf to Wharf, do it. Enjoy it. It’ll be hard not to.

4 sleeps til the SF Marathon!