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2018 Matt Yeo Memorial Aggies XC Open race report – Martinez, CA

2018 Matt Yeo Memorial Aggies XC Open race report – Martinez, CA

October 20, besides being my dear sister’s birthday, was completely full, one of those 4:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. type of days. My Saturday morning began how many of my Saturdays have begun of late: with a PA cross country meet, this time the Matt Yeo Memorial Aggies XC open, up in Martinez at the Regional Shoreline Park. I had never done this race before and knew nothing about the course, so I looked forward to doing something new-to-me. Mixing it up in training and racing is always a good thing in my book. Plus, how fun would it be to run “the greatest cross-country race in the world or at least America.  If not America then certainly one of the top-10 open cross-country races in Martinez, CA,” as the race’s site suggested?! I mean, it’s not every day you get the opportunity to do something of that magnitude, right?!

G’s preschool had off that week, so my typical running schedule in advance of the XC race was altered slightly: no big. I ran more stroller miles that week than I have in months, and she loved it, so all was well in the world. I didn’t do any workouts that week (not wanting to attempt one with the stroller during the daytime, and alternately, not wanting to do it at 4am, in the dark, by myself), so I told myself it all meant that I’d be going into the endeavor on fairly fresh legs: or as fresh legs as one can have in the thick of marathon training. I didn’t have any particular goals for the 4.2 mile XC race but to run hard, have fun, and make the hour drive each way worth it. Knowing that we would be fielding two complete men’s and women’s teams meant that it’d surely make for a social morning, too, which I always love.

a week of running together seemed to make the little one really happy

My teammates were spot-on: the course was super flat (probably the flattest XC I’ve run on) and definitely had the potential to be fast. During our warm-up mileage, in which we ran one of the two-loop course, we scoped out what we’d be encountering: a grassy field start; a little bit of asphalt; loose gravel; sand; some tanbark stuff; a couple little bridges; and some potentially-precarious footing on rocks that abutted the slough. Not too bad for 4.2 miles! The temps were quintessentially perfect for autumn racing — cool and crispy when you stood around, but just right when you were running — and the wind was variable. The course was open and exposed, making me kinda think of the Baylands over near Sunnyvale. Hopefully, the wind would stay home; otherwise, we’d be whipped around a lot without much reprieve. (foreshadowing!)

As we lined up on the grass, I positioned myself behind Claire and hoped, per usual, to avoid eating shit coming off the grassy starting line. I tend to get a little anxious at the start of these races, particularly if we’re beginning on the grass, because I’m afraid I’m going to trip, or be tripped, and just eat it right after the gun. The pictures are revealing, as I’m one of the last runners off the grass and onto the pavement (and definitely last among my teammates). I just tell myself that it’s strategic, that it helps ensure that I don’t go out too quickly. Sure.

get ready, get set … (PC: WRC)

 

go!!!!! I’m behind Claire, who’s the center-most orange singlet you can see(PC: WRC)

 

comfortably staying in the back and out of the way (PC: WRC)

 

ready to get off the grass (PC: WRC)

 

and WHEW! stable footing. for a second, anyway (PC: WRC)

My theory is that it always feels windy when you’re trying to run fast, and that seemed especially true during the race. (Fortunately, my teammates afterward all remarked that they, too, felt tons of wind. Hooray for it not being in my head!). I tried to hold steady in my pace and wasn’t clock-watching at all — instead, going by effort, as I’ve been doing more often than not during this training cycle and during XC races, in particular — and kept my eyes fixated on all the runners ahead of me. Our neon orange singlets make it especially easy to stay abreast of each other at any given time.

IDK where on the course this was, but at least we all know I was going in the right direction 🙂 (PC: WRC)

I eventually got that feeling somewhere around the halfway mark, as we were beginning our second lap, that I unfortunately went out too fast and was probably going to pay the price unless I could rally. ::plays the world’s smallest violin::  It’s a frustrating mistake to make for sure, so I tried to instead focus on all the runners around me and tried to not get passed by anyone. For a few strides anyway, I was right with Lisa (fresh off a surgery for a Jones fracture and using that XC race as her post-surgery race debut), but eventually she slipped away. I never saw Claire again after the earliest parts of the race, though Lisa and Anica were not too far ahead of me in the distance. Heather and Mona were somewhere in the mix, too, though I had no idea where because I couldn’t see them.

still going (PC: WRC)

Not clock-watching became especially useful here because I intuitively knew I was slowing down, and seeing it “officially” on my Garmin wasn’t going to help matters at all. I tried to focus on the effort and intensity and told myself that I’d be done in about 14 minutes, 15 minutes max, and to stay mentally with it. I can be uncomfortable for 14 or 15 minutes. That’s just 1 minute, over and over and over again. (I am especially fond of this mental game and play it often during hard workouts).  

finishing the thing, right before hopping back onto the grass. That’s my teammate Addison closest to me and Garrick behind me. (PC: WRC)

And like that, it was over. Racing is so twisted in that way, isn’t it? For me, it doesn’t matter if I’m racing a short XC event or a marathon; time flies by (though in the moment, sometimes it seems to stand still. It’s very Twilight Zone-y, being fast and slow simultaneously). We rounded a corner and transitioned from pavement, to gravel, to a grassy finish in the span of just a few strides, and right before finishing I saw several of my male teammates (whose race was later) cheering on the women, imploring us to find that last gear and to finish strong.

Something I wouldn’t have anticipated loving about XC is the male/female race segregation. At any other race, where we’d be comingled, I’d never have the opportunity to cheer for — or to be cheered by — my male teammates, aside from a mid-race side-five or momentary holler. XC gives us an opportunity to experience that camaraderie, and honestly, it’s awesome. There’s just something really special and heartwarming, for lack of a better word, to be encouraged by people who a) are doing the same thing as you and b) know, appreciate, and identify the feelings that you’re experiencing at that moment (discomfort, excitement, that whole gamut that racing can engender). Certainly there are probably logistical constraints that necessitate men and women racing XC separately, and maybe it’s also dictated by USATF. Whatever. Consider this my soft-plea for you to go join your local running team and to go race alongside them. It’s a gamechanger, truly.

the CD party is always a good time, too

 

we cool down; they warm-up

Aside from my idiotic pacing at this race, I’ve zero complaints. The course was beautiful, I had a blast, I got to run hard, and it was a great way to begin my weekend, even with the hella long drive. Post-race, my teammates and I logged some additional cool-down miles, and before long, I was on the road to return back to the south bay. I had a full day and night of Girl Scouts of Nor Cal functions, and unfortunately the poor luncheon attendees probably got to experience the joy and smell that is Erin post-XC. I reapplied deodorant, and I’m pretty sure I at least wiped off all the dirt from my ankles, anyway. That’s gotta count for something.  

I’ll probably only race XC a couple more times this year between now and CIM (and there are still plenty of opportunities for you to race, local friends!), but I’ve really enjoyed what I’ve done this year so far. It’s a completely different type of running and racing, and it’s as hard as it is fun, which is to say, a lot.

I can’t recommend it enough.

oozing love. join us. we’re a blast. (PC: WRC)
2018 East Bay 510 10k race report – Berkeley, CA

2018 East Bay 510 10k race report – Berkeley, CA

October is super packed with running stuff, which makes sense with CIM being in early December. Between the usual XC action and supporting my friend, Stephanie’s, inaugural 10k in her community, I also returned to the East Bay 510k race in Emeryville in mid-October. It was the day after the WDR 10k, so it was going to be a different experience from the get-go. Last year, I won the 10k in the throes of a workout; in 2015, it was an entirely different race (and I was newly postpartum/coming off an appendectomy/runaway IUD removal surgery). Suffice it to say that the 2018 iteration would be different, indeed.

I typically don’t race back-to-back weekends, much less back-to-back days, but mid-October presented me with the opportunity. I had paid for my entry to Stephanie’s race, and as a social media ambassador for Represent Running, my 10k entry was comped to the 510 race. It’s hard to pass up free, ya know? Plus — more importantly — I genuinely enjoy RR’s races and feel like they’re well executed and organized, super fun, and a fantastic way to see lots of familiar faces. Even if I wasn’t going to race it race it, I’d still have fun. That would be without question. Local (or local-ish) races are my jam.

Coach Lisa and I planned to approach the 510 a little differently than usual, particularly because I was going to be racing the day before. The original plan was to race the WDR HAM and then do the 510 on Sunday as part of a LR effort, not going much faster than just under sub-8 minute miles… or whatever.  We figured a long warm-up (about 5 miles, so most of the course in reverse), the 10k, and then another 4 miles or so. Meredith and her teammate, McKayla (sp?) met-up with me at Ikea (near the finish line), and we ran to the start, picking up the lovely Paula along the way and seeing off the 5k runners.

putting the “self” into selfie with Meredith and McKayla

I felt pretty good for having raced the day before, with the only noticeable niggle being some tired hammies from running hard on the WDR’s descents. I ran into my RR ambassador buddies in the starting area — having missed the group picture, per always — and some Wolfpack teammates, Stephanie and Kristina, and before long, we were rollin’. (Seeing Katie, from she.is.beautiful, on the mic race morning was also super fun! These races are so reunion-esque; I love it).

As much as I can recall, the 2018 510 course was the same as it was in 2017; the biggest difference was that this year, we weren’t running into a wall of wind for the entirety of the race (hooray!). Aside from getting out of the gates faster than I would have planned (6:5x, I think), I hung and stayed pretty steady near 7-teens. I wasn’t clockwatching, nor was I really going for a high placement or finishing time or anything like that. I just wanted to cruise and make my drive north that morning worth it (true story). I could see my teammates, Stephanie and Kristina, not too far ahead of me for just about the entirety of the race, and I don’t think I passed, or was passed by, anyone after mile 2 or 3. I just kinda held steady and stayed there, dropping the pace ever-so-slightly on the back half.

sideway arm shimmy shuffling circa mile 5

All told, I felt pretty solid during the 510, even with the WDR still obviously in my legs. I told myself that I could definitely bring the pace closer to what Coach Lisa had suggested (7:5xs) but for whatever reason just didn’t or couldn’t. I just did my thing and went with it. I finished faster than I did the day before at the WDR and as the 8th woman, and afterwards, Meredith, McKayla and I went out for some more easy CD miles. It was a lovely morning, and my legs felt really, really good, all things considered.

the finishing shot, a la Meredith

The 510 was the last of the races in the Run the Bay series, so if people participated in the other races — virtually or IRL — they earned their RTB series medal. Folks get super jazzed about that, and I think that’s great; whatever gets you out the door, ya know? Just like the day before in Belmont, Emeryville on Sunday gave us fantastic running/racing weather and another little mini-reunion with lots of runners whom I don’t get to see too often otherwise. Races are really awesome in that way, I think; you have the opportunity to show up and work hard, and then afterward (or before, or during — whatever you want!) you can play and have a good time with buddies. I love it. Work hard; play hard. Can’t go wrong.

loving on Paula post-race. It was so great to share some warm-up miles with her that morning.

I don’t have any more double race weekends on my calendar before CIM, thank goodness, and all that’s left between The Big Day and me are some more XC races and a half. It’s hard to believe that we’ll be closing out October so soon — and thus, that much closer to The Big Day — but man, it’s exciting. I am so, so lucky that I get to do this stuff.