Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Bleeding nipples

Maybe not the best title for a posting but I guess I should be just proud of reaching another mile stone in my running career: I ran until my nipples bled. What's next? Toe nails falling out? At least my knees held up really well. Let me start from the beginning, though.

Medals!
Photo by MarathonFoto
As my seventh NYRR race of the year (not including the two I had to forfeit because of my fractured toe) I ran the second to last race of the 5 Borough Series, the NYRR Bronx 10 Miles. It's a familiar route since I ran the exact same race at the end of September of last year as well. What I forgot, though, was how semi-hilly it is. It's not bad but it really got to me this time. My goal was to cross the finish line in under 1:10 hours, i.e. sub-seven minute pace, something that was predicted I would be able to pull off. If only my mind did not play tricks with me I probably would have done it. The thing is... those hills are murderous after running nine miles as fast as I could. I had to do something that I promised myself I would never ever repeat again after last year's Staten Island Half: I walked. At the end of mile nie I was fighting myself but the weenie in me ruled supreme and I slowed down to a walk up the hill. It wasn't a long walk, maybe 30 to 45 seconds (time is something funny when you are exhausted) but I did it again for another 15 seconds or so on the last hill, half a mile before the finish line. In the end I definitely lost at least a three quarter of a minute. I admit, walking felt great and I was able to run even better after those breaks, but still... after all I did rather well. I finished in 1:10:38 hours (argh!!! If only I didn't walk!!), placed 401st out of 9,462 finishers, 54th out of 701 in my age group, and 6th out of 81 New York Flyers. That gives me an average pace of 7:04 minutes per mile (I can't believe I walked!) and I improved my last year's time by 3:21 minutes. Next year again. I have to focus a lot more on endurance to get through longer distances just as easily as I get through 5 and 10ks. Just to remind me in the future about walking and to avoid it, here are my splits:

  1. 6:35 (too fast!)
  2. 6:49
  3. 7:01
  4. 6:57
  5. 6:54
  6. 6:45
  7. 7:13 (the slow-down was caused by turning the corner into a steep-ish incline)
  8. 7:01
  9. 7:15 (exhaustion set in)
  10. 7:46 (too much walking but very strong finish)
Finished! Literally.
Photo by MarathonFoto
After the usual going out a tad too fast I did quite okay for the first 10k of the race. My original plan was to run a 6:50ish pace bu doing the first 3 miles at 7 minutes, the next 3 at 6:50, the next three at 6:40, each, and the last one in whatever was left in me. Maybe my problem is getting a bit too caught up in keeping up with the "guys" at the start. Most of the time now I start in the front coral with all the people who can run this course in under an hour and I always tend to be front-ish with the fastest of them. For the future I should take note and stay more in the middle or towards the end of the first coral so I get to run with the folks that are more like me, pace-wise, that is. I will learn some day!

All that said, it was a great morning out in the Bronx. We had 10,000 starters thereabouts and when I was waiting for the start and turned around to look back the entire Grand Course as far as I could see was filled with runners.

Still setting up
Ah, I guess I have to mention my nipples. At around mile six I always get a cup of water and douse myself to cool me down. This time I did it twice, spilled quite a bit of Gatorade over my shirt, and sweated a lot. That created the perfect environment to chafe both of my nipples to a point that they started to bleed. I didn't realize that until much later after the finish when I saw a red dot on my shirt, wondering what happened there. Once at home, taking a shower was excruciating because the salt from my sweat irritated the wounds even more and now I am sitting here in front of the computer, two days later, with really itchy nipples. Not sure what to do next time. Either stop pouring water over me and leave that for after the finish line or putting a band-aid over them.

Now that my knees and hips seem to be holding up just fine I created a plan for what to do with winter this year. I am quite excited about this since I had to sit it out last year and so this is what I have planned so far:


* Last two NYRR races to get guaranteed entry into 2015's NYC Marathon

I'm also planning on volunteering for the NYCRUNS Brooklyn Marathon to pay for my NYCRUNS races.

I am back! And we all keep on running!

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