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Baltimore Marathon

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Location:

Draper,UT,

Member Since:

Jun 11, 2009

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

5K- 16:37

6K CC - 19:55 

4 miles- 22:10 

10K- 34:38

15K- 49:57 

Half Marathon- 1:12:03

20K - 1:08:38 

Marathon- 2:35:49

Short-Term Running Goals:

Stay fit and have fun doing some local races.

Get my youth cross country team, www.racecats.org off the ground.

Long-Term Running Goals:

Feel energized. Stay healthy and balanced

Personal:

Four awesome kids ages 4, 8, 10, and 12 years old. Love to run, play, and write. Married to entrepreneurial Aaron.

Favorite Blogs:

Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Book Dissolved Lifetime Miles: 6539.00
Altra Intuition Lifetime Miles: 35.00
Race: Baltimore Marathon (26.2 Miles) 02:35:49, Place overall: 3
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
0.8026.200.000.0027.00

 

I have a lot to be grateful for today!  An 8.5 minute chunk out of my PR, $8K in prize money, and an Olympic Trials "A standard" qualifier in the BAG.  Here's how it all went down....

Woke up at 6 a.m., ate some oatmeal, a banana, a bottle of Gatorade, and forced down another half of a bagel.  Got ready and went to the runner suite around 7 a.m. to meet up with Carolyn and Steve.  Walked over to the race start and tried to use the restroom in the Hampton Inn right by the start but was kindly turned away and then enthusiastically invited (by the pub owner walking by) to use the restroom in Pickles Pub next door (Hampton Inn could take a lesson in PR from their pub owner neighbor).  Did a short, slow warm up, some stretching, and three additional potty stops.  Lined up right behind the two ladies I met yesterady, Iulia and Olena.  The race began and it was all smiles as a nice pack of 8-9 ladies went out together.

The first three miles were the steepest incline of the race, so Coach D told me to go out no faster than 6:00 pace.

Mile 1 - 6:05  Felt easy and comfortable. The slight breeze was negligible with the pack of women and a few men surrounding me.

Mile 2 - 5:59  Little less steep, still very easy and comfortable.  Legs started to warm up.

Mile 3 - 6:12  Little more steep.  Shared the lead with Olena Shurkno from Ukraine.

About half-way through mile 4, the course flattened out and transitioned into a pretty good decline which lasted for a good 5 or 6 miles.

Mile 4 - 5:47 Cruised on the flat, worked with the group.  Grabbed a cup of gatorade at the aid station and took a few sips.

Mile 5 - 5:36  Really tried to hold back down the hill as the pace felt super smooth and effortless with Olena on my heels and Everlyne Lagat from Kenya on my shoulder.

Mile 6 - 5:50  Flatter with a little uphill.  Everlyne took the lead and put on a few second gap.  I opted to stay within myself and follow Coaches orders not to go out too fast.

Mile 7 - 5:43  More downhill.  I tried to resist going faster while a "chase pack" of 6 women took off down a steeper section to go reel in Everlyne and left me in the dust to run my own pace.

Mile 8 - 5:43  Alone.  I started to notice the wind more now.  Funny, I didn't notice it much when I was running with the group.  Picked up my first bottle around 8.2 and took two good swigs of EFS liquid shot (which was duct taped to the side of my bottle) and a few swigs of water.

Mile 9 - 5:39  Tempted to just throw in a surge and go draft behind those 6 women and couple of men since they are just 10 seconds ahead and it would save energy to draft...but is it worth the energy it would require to surge?  I decided no.

Mile 10 - 5:51  A few men emerged and I attempted to draft behind them.  This is where I started really noticing the headwind.  Surely there had to have been some tailwind before this point that I was not fully appreciating because there was definitely headwind now.

Mile 11 - 5:44  Stuck with the few men while I watched that nice cozy looking chase pack of women a solid 20-25 seconds ahead of me.  I was unwilling to break my pacing plan to catch them and I was also unaware that Iulia was creeping up on me in the shadows.  Somewhere in here I took a sip of water from the volunteers handing out cups.

Mile 12 - 5:54  The synergy (and wind breaking) of the three men had dissolved.  As soon as I hit the lap button I realized they were running too slow for my liking so I left them.

Mile 13 - 5:45  Thats better.  One of the guys came with me and we ran literally stride for stride for a mile or so.

I picked up my second bottle and took a few more gulps of liquid shot and some water then I offered my bottle to the guy running next to me.  He took some gulps and tossed it aside.  We came through the half marathon point together and the clock said 1:16 (I assume it was high 1:16).  Right after the half, Iulia Arkapove from Krygzstan (the course record-holder) came up on us and blew on by.  Where'd she come from?  She must have run a much more conservative first 10 miles and then started pouring it on because she had to have been doing 5:30 pace when she blew by us.

Mile 14 & 15 - 11:38 (5:42 pace) Where'd the 14 mile marker go? No split there.  The guy I had been running with fell off pace and I was back to my lonely self again watching Iulia pour on the heat and continue to pull away from me.

Mile 16 - 5:52  Wind and lonliness.  This is where my race began.  Coach told me if I could stay in control and run within myself (no faster than 5:45 pace on on the downhills and flats and no faster than 6:00 pace on the uphills) until mile 16, I'd have enough in the tank to pick off a few girls in the final 10 miles.  He was right!  At this point I think I was in 7th place and already starting to see the 6th place girl coming back to me.

Mile 17 & 18 - 12:09 (6:04 pace) I missed the mile marker again.  The uphill began again as I passed Alice Ndirangu from Kenya and Yuhunlish Delelecha (do not ask me how to pronounce those names because I do not know) from Ethiopia.  5th place now.

Mile 19 - 5:57 Hoping and praying for that podium finish I started to see two more lil' Africans up ahead and worked towards reeling them in.  The wind was not in my favor though.  Darn wind.

Mile 20 - 6:12 I put my head down and pushed with all my might up the most brutal, steepest section of the entire course which just so happened to also bring a massive head wind with it.  I finally crested the steepest part of the hill and overtook Everlyne, whose 85 lb., 5 ft. frame was nearly blowing away in the stiff headwind.

Mile 21 - 6:02 The uphill relented a bit but not the wind.  I threw an invisible lasso around Salome Kosgei from Kenya who also appeared to be blowing backwards an inch with each stride as I started tugging myself in.

Mile 22 - 6:15 Now I was nearly blowing away as well and Salome was trying with all her might to stay on my heels.  Not a fun mile.  Grueling.  I nearly came to a complete stop at the aid station with my last water bottle and liquid shot.  I took as much as I could and kept pushing forward.

Mile 23-26 (final 4.2 miles) - No splits.  Garmin said 6:01 average pace.   At this point in my race I was beyond caring about mile splits anymore.  I felt pretty disheartened by that last 6:15 mile split so I decided to just keep my head up and maintain that 3rd place position.  I realized that the other two girls in front of me had at least 90 seconds on me at this point and my wheels were falling of (or being blown off by the wind, rather).  My right calf was becoming unbearably tight and my hip flexors and quads were nearing their maximum level of punishment for the day as well.  Salome hung on to me until about 22.5 miles at which point I used the downhill to open up a gap.  The final few miles were downhill but into the wind as my respiratory rate shot through the roof and I ran the fine line between maintaining my position in the race and passing out.  Actually I don't think I was actually THAT close to passing out but at times I wondered if I was hyperventilating.  Spectators were probably wondering why I sounded like a suffering wildabeast panting down the street.  Once I got onto Eutaw Street it was just a few minutes to the finish line.  All the cheering and energy near the finish gave me energy and I became pretty emotional and asthmatic in the final stretch.  Within view of the finish line I looked up and saw 2:35:29 on the clock.  In one last effort to keep it under 2:36, I threw a grueling surge and the next thing I knew I was finished, walking with wobbly knees and then being hugged by Carolyn Mather who said I ran 2:35:49!  WAHOOO!!!

 I went right off to pee in a cup (drug testing) and then back to the tent where they had our bags.  Got dressed, talked to a couple of newspaper guys, and found Aaron.  We ate some BBQ brisket sandwiches and shrimp salad and drank LOTS of fluid.  I texted Coach and a few other people, got some ART done on my poor legs, and went to the awards ceremony.  As we were waiting for the announcer to announce us I talked to the ladies from Ukraine and Krygyztan (their friend, Lyubov Denisova from Russia knew some English and could translate to them).  The funniest part was when Lyubov asked me if I have kids and I told her three.  She translated that to Iulia and Olena and Iulia was like "OUGHMPH!!!" with the funniest jaw drop and shocked eyes.  Hahaha.  I told her she should have some too since they've actually made me run faster!  She resolved to have twins next year.

All things considered I feel really grateful for such an awesome race and huge PR.  The wind was not in our favor but I was blessed with the strength to push through and hang on for a respectable time.  On a flatter course with perfect weather I am certain I could run faster, so its encouraging to look ahead and feel optimistic about the future.  I also see lots of room for improvement in my training and am looking forward to making the necessary changes for the next marathon training cycle.  Aaron was a huge support to me this weekend (and this entire season) as he built up my positive self talk and confidence and today as he was out there on the course at many points cheering me on, checking to make sure my bottles were placed in clear view on the tables, and shooting pictures.  Coach De Reuck (and Colleen) have been a HUGE asset and support over the past several months as they coached and encouraged me all along the way.  I also really appreciate the support and encouragement from my teammates on the Running Republic team, all you FRB-ers, as well as my family and friends who send me positive vibes of energy with your thoughts and words.  Also thanks to my Mom, Alyson for flying to Denver from SLC to watch our kids for the weekend, running them around to their various activities, being misguided by the Garmin and chasing after the kids through the mass of soccer fields while trying to get to Abe's game in time, and even juggling all three kids at Church!  Impressive that she still has the energy and patience to do all that even at age 61!!!  Go MOM!  I promise we wont ask you again.  :)  Thanks, everyone!!!

Aaron made an awesome post of the race in pictures here...check it out.

 

Comments
From Rob Murphy on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 21:27:18 from 24.10.248.6

Wow! That was one disciplined, tough, and gritty performance. Watching you achieve these breakthroughs recently has been so inspiring. Your mind must be completely spinning contemplating what might be possible for you in the next couple years. Very exciting times for the Kennard family!

From Bonnie on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 21:27:45 from 64.119.33.134

What an amazing race report Nan! Congratulations again and I hope you enjoy the rest of your trip!! Very very excited for you!

From AmberG on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 21:39:28 from 75.162.136.133

CONGRATULATIONS NAN!!!!! I am so happy for you and your amazing PR and incredible 3rd place finish! Like Rob, I think your breakthrough's are inspiring, , , beyond inspiring, heroic! You've proven that you put no limits up for yourself, nothing is impossible! I bet your kids are sooooo proud!!!!! YAY :) I can't stop smiling for you.

From Toby on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 21:44:50 from 66.133.97.196

I could only dream of running a race of that caliber! You totally deserve every bit of glory! Go USA!

From allie on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 21:54:42 from 174.23.232.22

nan - so incredibly happy for you and your amazing accomplishments this year. thanks for the great report - i was smiling the whole time i was reading it. it's so exciting! you ran such a smart race and i can't even imagine how much extra strength it took to fight off the relentless headwind. i can't tell you how much i admire your determination and your ability to give it everything you have and then some. truly an inspiring performance today.

(and $8,000 -- yeah baby!)

From Adam RW on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 22:12:11 from 24.10.132.131

WOW! Congratulations!

From Paul on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 22:38:53 from 174.27.187.235

Amazing race, and congrats! You deserve it, and I look forward to seeing what you can do in the future. Definitely an inspiration to me and to us all. Enjoy your $8K. :-)

From Nan on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 22:39:08 from 65.111.68.2

Wow, such quick and enthusiastic response! Thanks everyone! You're awesome! Aaron took some awesome pics and just finished posting them on his blog too, if you're interested http://www.aaronkennard.com/2010/10/baltimore-marathon-in-pictures-with-an-obvious-bias-towards-nan/

From Superfly on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 23:21:30 from 208.117.127.110

Wow! Seriously amazing.

From Holt on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 23:23:07 from 71.213.84.126

Very Inspiring! Congratulations on reaching such an awesome goal and running very well even in conditions that weren't that great. And nothing screams out hitting the big time like peeing in a cup!

From Jon on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 23:24:34 from 98.71.191.82

Just enjoyed reading your whole report and looking at Aaron's pictures. But I can't believe you forgot to wear your Superwoman cape... cause if anyone should, it's you! Congrats on the PR, money, and especially the OTQ. Now go qualify for the Olympics!

From Danny on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 23:47:21 from 24.19.35.209

Way to go Nan!!! It sounds like you played it smart, and even enjoyed the journey a little from what the photos show. Amazing!

From rAtTLeTrAp on Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 23:47:43 from 76.121.76.165

Way to give it all you got Nan! Congratulations!

From ArmyRunner on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 00:14:54 from 99.72.211.28

Wow! That is an awesome race report and what a great race. You are an inspiration to the rest of the FRB. You will have everyone single FRB member behind you cheering loudly to make Team USA that is for sure. Congrats!

From DonGardinero on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 00:48:36 from 75.162.187.188

So very awesome!!! What a great and detailed report. Thanks for sharing. Congratulations on all fronts today.

From Burt on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 00:57:40 from 68.225.214.248

One of THE best performances on this blog EVER. An Olympic Trials A Standard! Ditto to everyone else's comments. Question: (You may have answered this already, but my memory is weak.) You mentioned getting surgery on your shoulder after this marathon. How will that affect your training for the Trials?

From Kelli on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 01:10:01 from 71.219.65.246

YOU ARE AWESOME! I love that you let everyone know you have 3 kids AND that they made you faster (I actually read that in an article somewhere once, something about the hips).

CONGRATS, this is a HUGE day! So, what on earth will you do with $8,000??????

From Lily on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 01:16:48 from 67.199.181.73

Nan, you are my hero! I knew you would do well. You are such a strong runner. Awesome awesome awesome!

From Calvin on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 01:40:34 from 66.182.67.50

Super cool Nan! Thanks for sharing the write-up with us. Huge congratulations!

From MichelleL on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 01:47:44 from 67.41.166.190

Wow Nan, that is so awesome. I can't wait to see what you can do without wind.

From catherine on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 10:40:54 from 69.169.157.242

Nan - Thanks for the great report. You inspire us all to want to be better! I'm so glad you're on the blog and that you share your experiences so freely. You're the best!

From catherine on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 10:46:25 from 69.169.157.242

Oh - and the photos are awesome. You have crazy muscles.

From Kelli on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 11:28:04 from 71.219.65.246

Oh, I thought the same thing about the CRAZY MUSCLES!!!

From jtshad on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 11:36:00 from 69.20.183.178

Congrats on a strong, superbly run race and the OTQ! You are an amazing runner who is truly an inspiration! Keep running strong and we all look forward to seeing what more you can do in the future!

From Kam on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 13:07:49 from 174.23.181.203

Amazing, Nan. Way to represent for Bountiful.

From Seth on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 13:15:49 from 199.188.28.8

Very nice work! Congrats on your OTQ, PR, & $8k. Your commitment and tenacity is awesome!

From rockness18 on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 14:53:59 from 75.16.162.204

Awesome!

From seeaprilrun on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 15:38:33 from 68.103.248.145

Awesome race report! I was so excited and totally pumped for you! Wow! A-standard and amazing, tough performance. You have HUGE amounts of talent AND grit and what a lethal combination it is! Thanks so much for sharing your race report and training and letting us follow your incredible running journey! I will be jumping up and down and cheering for you at the trials(my sister lives in Houston and I will be there!)

From Lindsey Dunkley on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 17:32:01 from 75.169.139.160

You did sooooo GREAT! Not that I am surprised...you have worked so hard and are in amazing shape. I am so happy for you and all you are accomplishing. YOU ARE JUST AWESOME!!

From calliej on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 18:14:34 from 97.126.147.28

You are awesome!! You are an inspiration to me!

From Fritz on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 19:34:19 from 65.100.192.74

incredible race. nice work!

From Scott Ensign on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 20:39:14 from 67.41.172.107

way to go Nan, I am so happy to see you meet your goal and get the qualifier. the OTQ are going to be a blast! Enjoy the glory and the money and some rest, you deserve it. big congrats!!

From runningafterbabies on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 21:40:22 from 67.161.249.168

That was such an awesome performance, Nan. I'm so glad all of your hard work translated into a race you deserve.

From Smooth on Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 21:47:09 from 67.41.235.104

WOW!!!! HUGE HUGE HUGE CONGRATZ Nan! What an outstanding, disciplined, strong, incredible performance! You are AWESOME on so many levels! THANK YOU for sharing your triumphant victory!!!! :)

From Oreo on Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 10:11:10 from 206.81.136.61

Unreal race out there today!! Awesome report - thanks for putting that up. You are roll'n keep it going!! Inspiring...Thanks.

From jess1 on Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 10:56:54 from 74.179.27.56

Congratulations Nan. I tell ya, rain, snow, sleet - I can take it - but wind, wind stinks. Good luck on the next round of training. It is so fun to watch your successes!

From Jason McK on Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 11:43:39 from 63.255.173.99

Very impressive! Congratulations on a huge PR and OTQ! You must have an amazing coach and great genes as well - for the miles you've put in (compared to others) your race times are awesome...

From Sasha Pachev on Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 13:08:07 from 192.168.1.1

Nan - congratulations again.

After reading the report, I am estimating this was probably worth a solid 2:32 in ideal conditions. Here are some encouraging points I find in this performance:

a) You achieved it off relatively low mileage over a relatively short period of time - I see no weeks over 300 miles.

b) This actually goes along with a) - you were being limited by breathing in the last few miles of the race. That is a sign of a tired heart, not low fuel or worn out neural drive, and is much easier to fix that the other two - just run more miles in moderation at a comfortable pace, even as slow as 8:30 will do the magic. Maybe even add some heart friendly foods. I had good results with a diet cleanup - after I did it, my heart never had to work hard to support the best the muscles can do, unfortunately the muscles cannot use the heart to full capacity, but that is another topic.

So I am thinking 2:27 in the Trials is a possibility, which has never failed to make top 3.

Congratulations on the special honor of being drug tests. Many runners put value on medals and awards as a symbol of status, but to me, the obvious and loud symbols give way to the more subtle ones, such as: a) running alone with the trooper b) with a mile to go realizing that a good kick is worth a lot of money, and c) the ultimate honor of being suspected that you used drugs because you ran so fast.

More important, good job to teaching Yulia and Olena about what is really important, and good job on getting into the position to do so where they would have enough respect for you to listen. Here the way I see it. Samuel the Lamanite had to climb on the wall to share an important message. For you, a fast marathon is that wall.

On a side note, I used to train with Lyubov' Denisova's husband Maxim over 20 years ago. We did many workouts together. He is one funny guy, a real life comedian without trying.

From RAD on Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 14:45:13 from 67.172.229.125

Amazing Nan! Simply Amazing!! CONGRATS on a huge performance and all that comes with it. I love Sasha's comment "the ultimate honor of being suspected that you used drugs because you ran so fast." You are a wonderful inspiration, keep up all the hard work - can't wait to see you in the trials. I'm also in the crowd of "holy muscles, girl!" NICE!!!

From peaks on Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 15:16:11 from 173.165.132.1

Congratulations Nan! Very inspiring report! Posts like this make this site so helpful to everyone...much appreciated. Best wishes...

From Faceless Ghost on Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 22:38:20 from 69.169.157.242

Awesome job!

From James W on Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 17:35:11 from 12.151.72.1

Wow - amazing! Congratulations on a great race, with a good chunk of prize money to boot!

From Jon on Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 22:58:48 from 74.177.117.232

Sasha- I'd hate to see your definition of high mileage weeks... :)

"a) You achieved it off relatively low mileage over a relatively short period of time - I see no weeks over 300 miles."

From Lily on Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 23:02:18 from 67.199.181.73

LOL@JON! ahahahaha

From Nan on Wed, Oct 20, 2010 at 08:11:44 from 24.8.144.22

Jon-I'm pretty sure he meant months there. LOL

THANKS EVERYONE for the kind words and support!! I love FRB because there are SO many people who "get it" and appreciate all the effort and faith it requires to commit to and accomplish a goal while improving yourself all along the way. You all are an inspiration to me as we travel through this journey of "fast running" together. :)

Burt-I didn't mention it but since you asked, I've decided to put off the shoulder surgery and do it at another time. Mostly because its going to cost me $12K+ and 1-3 months of no running, so its going to take some budgeting and planning. For now I will keep it on my "to-do" list and just keep the shoulder strong to help avoid the simple slips.

Kelli-From what I've read the childbirth boost is maintained from an increase in blood volume after pregnancy which lasts 6-9 months postpartum and then normalizes. My personal benefit from having children is the increased confidence in my body's strength (gained after three amazing pregnancy and birth experiences) and also my "Mom" lifestyle that requires planning, keeping to a routine, and staying as organized and scheduled as possible (things that benefit running goals too.)

Thanks again, everyone.

Happy running!

From Kelli on Wed, Oct 20, 2010 at 13:45:46 from 71.219.65.246

I read something about childbirth doing something to our hips, I am going to see if I can find it! But I do agree with everything you said (especially the confidence in what the body can do---childbirth is no easy task). On the down side, being a mom is very tiring and finding the motivation to be as dedicated with the training as you are (as well as the time) is not so easy! Those women with zero kids do not have to struggle with all of the family juggling, sick kids, sleepless nights, etc.

You are just amazing and an inspiration to all of us moms out there, young and old alike!

From josse on Sat, Oct 23, 2010 at 00:42:38 from 75.196.174.134

WOW!! great job I loved the report.

From Burt on Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 20:02:24 from 206.19.214.144

So we go rum-bum-bum-bum

Yeah we rum-bum-bum-bum

Feeling hot hot hot!

From Bec on Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 17:39:15 from 67.172.233.189

Very, very impressed Nan. You are a running icon. I think it's awesome that your husband and family give you so much support. Good luck with your upcoming training. Wow, just wow!

From Burt on Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 17:46:01 from 206.19.214.144

Bec - did you even read it?

From Kevin-Miler turned Marathoner on Tue, Nov 09, 2010 at 18:04:53 from 162.129.44.19

Nan--your story of the run is very inspiring. I, too, ran the Baltimore Marathon--it is local for me. This was my first marathon after running the half in Baltimore last year and a few other long races in between. It is inspiring to see the consistency you had. It is also inspiring to see that even someone who finished an hour before me had some moments that you describe as brutal, alone, or otherwise less than perfect in some way. It reminds me that as I try to move from a good time to a Boston Qualifying time that I should not expect to reach a point where it becomes easy--instead I should expect to reach a point at which it becomes possible as long as I set my mind to it. Keep up the great work.

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