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2018 Inaugural Food Truck 5k Race Report – San Jose, CA

2018 Inaugural Food Truck 5k Race Report – San Jose, CA

The first race in my inaugural SV Half marathon weekend was Saturday’s Food Truck 5k, scheduled for 3pm on Saturday afternoon, beginning in the Arena Green area very near the SAP Center. An afternoon start time typically all but promises GI catastrophe for me, so I tried not to worry too much about it and figured if nothing else, this was a no-pressure event for me; more than anything, it would be a fitness check. Lisa suggested that I race the 5k to see what was there, to see how my fitness was coming along in the 4 ½ weeks of running that I had been doing post-stroke, and then on Sunday, I’d take the half easy and use it more as a glorified long run. This approach jibed well with me, and when Saturday afternoon presented with glorious 80-degree, sunshiney temps — perfect for life, less than ideal for racing a 5k —  I just hoped for the best.

this is what the medal looked like. (src)

Because my six year-old was coming with me to run the kids’ race later that afternoon, and because we had barely made it to the starting area on time (after coming from a morning birthday party), my warm-up was virtually non-existent. Again: no pressure, no matter. I rendezvoused with the lovely Paula, who’d be hanging with A during my race, and after some hellos and pictures with the rest of the RR ambassador crowd, we lined up at the start and waited for go-time.

birthday party in the morning, race in the afternoon. A wore her racing gear all morning 🙂 (PC: Esther)

 

a slew of the RR ambassadors in front of the “We Run San Jose” sign pre-race. (PC: @pavementrunner)

 

and in front of the start/finish banner. Not sure why it was printed backwards. (PC: @pavementrunner)

Never before have I begun a race by chasing after an ice cream truck, but at the inaugural Food Truck 5k, I absolutely did — and it was as fun as it sounds.  We began the race situated pretty squarely in the middle of Arena Green, and as soon as the race began, we made a couple quick turns on the streets before picking up the Guadalupe River Trail and heading north.

thanks for the free pics, Amazon!

On the course, before getting onto the GRT, I encountered some of my Wolfpack teammates serving as course volunteers and monitors, which was great. I’ve run on the GRT roughly a bajillion times, allowing me to know exactly where we were at any given time and where we were (likely) going, for better or for worse; sometimes I think it’s almost more helpful to not know where you’re going because you’ll be less tempted to zone out. The course stayed on the GRT and turned to return south before too long, and with the way the course was structured, inbound runners could (somewhat) see those outbound, at least when the tall grasses weren’t blocking the view.

party on the GRT (PC: WRC)

I tried hard to pace myself with the 5k, after basically doing no speedwork or even remotely fast running yet in my fitness build-up post stroke, and I’d say I failed pretty miserably at this valiant attempt. My paces crept catapulted upward, and when it got hard — which of course it did — I just tried to stay mentally engaged. I mean, seriously, I’ve been reading so much about mental fortitude lately; it was high time to apply that shit!

smiling because it makes my RPE easier. it’s science.

Somewhat miraculously, I never felt like I was going to start dry-heaving from the morning’s birthday festivities (I was all but convinced that the morning’s cake and pizza would make another appearance), nor did I embarrassingly shit myself mid race, so as far as the bodily harm realms were concerned, I did pretty well. I tried to smile through the discomfort, the feeling that I was no where near the shape I’d like to be in (which, newsflash, of course I’m not going to be there right now, given recent life events… c’mon, self; be realistic!), the randomly hot 80 degree afternoon, everything. Again: so much running lit I’ve consumed recently all talk about the effects that simply smiling during hard efforts can have on one’s rate of perceived exertion, so it’d behoove me to do it, even if it was all a fascade.

but then sometimes I’d forget to smile and my furrowed brows break the fascade. it’s ok. racing and running and getting into the shape that you want to be is hard (gratifying) work.

At the very end of the race, once we hopped off the GRT, as I saw another group of my teammates, one mentioned that he thought I could go get the third woman. Hearing those words — despite feeling tired, and hot, and everything else — apparently lit a fire under me momentarily. Sure enough, right after he said that, I was on the heels of the third woman, and with just shy of 10 seconds to the finish line, I somehow outsprinted her (Garmin says that 8 second sprint was a 4:33 pace!!). Isn’t that bizarre? Seconds earlier, I felt so tired and so hot and so out of shape and so this, that, and the other, but in the (literal) final moments of the race, I found another gear and pressed it mercilessly. This is what Endure and so many other books I’ve read recently are all talking about; we all have another gear, even when we’re sure we don’t. We do. We always do. 

I’m surprised our arms didn’t collide because we were both seemed on the verge of falling over.

Post-race, A and I hung out for a while, chatting with lots of other runner friends and milled around before the start of the kids’ race. For my effort — third female, 21:30 finish — I earned a Sports Basement gift card (adding to the one that I won in a random draw at the Meb event earlier in the week, woot!), which was totally unexpected and quite generous. I liked the participant shirts and medals — a detail that, admittedly, I typically don’t pay a lot of mind — and I look forward to actually wearing this race shirt on my training runs.

podium! or stage, same same (PC: @representrunning)

I had a blast at the Food Truck 5k, and I think it’ll be an event that just gets better each year. I thought it was impressively organized and well-run, and I expect the community interest will increase in coming years, too. I’m super grateful to have been able to participate in its inaugural iteration and to race it with whatever I had in my tank on race day. The community and SJ vibe was spot-on with this race, and I’m excited to see the event grow. 

My eldest and I had a blast chatting with new and old friends and checking out the many food and beverage trucks, in addition to the band and various vendor tables. It was a fantastic afternoon with beautiful (albeit warm) weather, and it looked like the community turnout was solid and enthusiastic, too.  I didn’t cool-down at all, save for sitting in the shade for a bit before the kids’ race, and before too long, it was A’s turn to run.

2018 Silicon Valley Half Marathon Week: MEB!

2018 Silicon Valley Half Marathon Week: MEB!

This year is my fourth year serving as a social media ambassador for Represent Running, JT Service’s race event management company here in the Bay Area. If you’ve read my blog at all since my family and I moved here in late 2013, you’ve read about RR races I’ve done before — the San Jose Race to the Row 408k (my favorite SJ race) or the East Bay 510k (previously called Let’s Run 510k). In addition to those two races, RR recently acquired the Across the Bay 415k up in SF (and this year, I’ll actually be in town and thus, able to run it, hooray!), and the newest addition to RR’s race repertoire came this year, just this past weekend, in the form of the Silicon Valley Half Marathon and 10k, Food Truck 5k, and kids’ race.

I’ll write about all the SV Half races in separate posts, but I first wanted to talk a little about the SV Half back story. From what I have gleaned in talking to JT about the subject and reading about it online, back in the day — well before my family and I moved here — Silicon Valley had a San Jose-based half marathon and full. (I’ve read that Dean Karnazes had his name on one here, but I don’t know if it was the same thing or something different). As I understand it, that original SV race went under — for reasons I don’t know — and in time, JT (and his company, Represent Running, which is part of the bigger Soul Focus Sports production) decided to resurrect it.

What’s interesting, in my opinion, about San Jose’s racing and running scene is that — quite frankly — I think it’s lacking. SJ prides itself on being “the capital of Silicon Valley” (I kid you not, even our trash cans say that here), and the city wants every.single.person here to know that SJ is the third largest city in CA and the tenth largest city in the nation. With over a million people living here, SJ isn’t small. There are tons of runners here, too — road runners, trails runners, and the hybrid types, too.

Where the mismatch occurs is that for a city as big as SJ, with as many people living in it as there are, and with as many runners who live and run here that we have, SJ’s race market is really pretty small: or at least that’s been my observation in the past almost-5 years I’ve lived here. That’s not to say that there simply aren’t road races here because there are at least a few; it’s just that I’m genuinely surprised there aren’t more races held more often. Sure, there are running races held at various parks around town throughout the year, but there simply doesn’t seem to be too many big-scale, shut-the-streets-down, community-encompassing events overall. Maybe the permits are too expensive? Perhaps the neighborhoods fight the proposals? I have no idea. In fact, I can only think of a few races held on city streets: the 408k is one; the SJ Giants race is another (also managed by JT’s team); and the San Jose Rock and Roll event weekend is one more. I think there’s a neighborhood 5k in Willow Glen each year, too, but I’m blanking on anything else. I don’t know why this is the case, and realistically speaking, this is all based on my perception and observation. Maybe there’s a lot more out there that I haven’t encountered yet. For a city that’s as big as SJ, this relative dearth of road races surprises me.

And therein lies the opportunity. This year’s inaugural Silicon Valley half marathon, 10k, and Food Truck 5k was veritable years in the making, and among the many incredible things that the event brought with it was the small detail that Meb Keflezighi — yes, that Meb — was a founding investor. To help kick-off Race Week, RR hosted a community run at Santana Row’s Lululemon the week before, on Saturday, and then on Race Week Wednesday, RR hosted another big community run out of Sports Basement Campbell.

The difference: our friend Meb would be at the Wednesday run, and the community would be able to come run with him, get autographs and photographs, and hear him talk.

Though Meb wouldn’t be running with us come SV Half race day — he was going to be in Boston, preparing to run the Boston Marathon on Patriot’s Day as a fundraiser for Team MR8, in memory of Martin Richard — Meb would be in SJ to come share in the excitement of the inaugural SV Half weekend of events.

 

MEB! (source)

The turnout at Sports Basement was incredible: standing room only, easily 150+ people, what looked like an entire high school track team, many of my Wolfpack teammates, several folks from the Too Legit to Quit crew (who’d be serving as pacers come race day), tons of people from the community, just a huge swarm of Meb acolytes. What’s more, easily 75% of the people who showed up went out for the group run, an easy 5k along the Los Gatos Creek Trail. That’s a lot of people on a pretty narrow, two-lane bike path, and it was just perfect.

running always calls for jazz hands, esp when with CT and new friend, Leah! (PC: WRC)

 

paneling with JT and UCan (PC: WRC)

 

it’s like Meb’s one of us! (PC: WRC)

Once we returned, Sports Basement treated us to snacks and adult beverages, and Gen UCan (who sponsors Meb and which would also be the on-course beverage at the SV Half) was offering samples as well. The audience got some great group selfies with Meb, and before long, Meb had a casual conversation with us and entertained some audience questions and some from facebook live sent in from people across the country. Someone asked if he thought racing marathons or parenting is harder; his response: marathoning is part-time, even at the pro, full-time level. Parenting is full-time, around the clock. (Truer words never spoken, especially coming from a father of four!). Respect, man.

he talks; we listen.

 

the gang’s all here. (PC: @pavementrunner)

After the brief discussion, we got another opportunity for pictures and autographs, and you can believe that my little runner heart was just beaming at the opportunity to talk to Meb one-on-one. I remembered reading his autobiography a while back, right after it came out, and for this special occasion, I bought his more-recently-released Meb for Mortals training book so he could sign it (no shame in my game!). We talked for a minute about goals and training — he asked me for advice for Boston when he realized that I had run more marathons than he had (insert cry-laughing emoji here, for sure) — and he wished me well in SF in July.

MEB! SO EXCITING!

I had always read and heard that Meb is such a cool, down-to-earth, class-act type of guy, and I couldn’t agree more. I loved that he was supporting my new hometown’s newest race, and I love that it was Meb who was doing it, not some other pro athlete. (Don’t get me wrong; I also really like certain other pros. That said, Meb is in a class all himself).

HOORAY AND THANK YOU

 

my worlds were colliding: running, racing, books, and my 6 year-old’s headband I grabbed before leaving

The opportunity to meet and run with Meb in advance of the inaugural SV Half weekend was fantastic, and I’m so glad I was able to take advantage of the opportunity.