This is the time of year I usually
write at length and in painful detail about how a 12 year old beat
me—again—in the Tour of Anchorage, our local ski marathon.
Historically, regardless of the distance I sign up for, I find myself
toiling up the final climbs to Kincaid stadium quick on the heels of
some kid who, with a quick glance over her shoulder, smirks and
accelerates away. I was determined this year to put the trend to
rest. But rather than train harder I decided to not participate,
which turned out to be a lot easier. Ha, little twelve year olds!
Just try to beat me as a I amble back and forth between the couch and
the fridge! Your little pre-teen hands will be too tired from all of
the skiing to steal the last cookie from me like you have stolen the
sweet taste of victory oh these many years!
Really, though, if there was a year to
skip skiing the Tour, this was it. While the lower 48 states have
been struggling through the coldest winter in recent memory, we
transitioned into spring sometime last January. What snow that fell
melted to ice, or disappeared all together. The Tour race directors
ended up shortening the Tour course, unable to work with the
available base over much of the usual trail. And rather than getting
in the necessary base miles on skis, I made the early mental
transition to running. In this case, that meant signing up for a
weekly coached speed session on the track.
I've never run track and never done
speed work, so I didn't really know what to expect. What I was not
expecting was the 12 year old who weekly leaves me choking on his
dust yet still manages the energy on every lap to spring and try to
touch the banners dangling from the pedestrian bridge. I just can't
escape it. Where do these kids come from?
After a few weeks of intervals at
various distances, last week we did a timed mile to check current
fitness and better determine what pace we should each be running the
workouts at. This was probably my first timed mile since . . .
middle school? I was not sure how to pace over such a short
distance, but assumed I would figure it out, and I headed off at the
gun at what I hoped was a speed I could just maintain over four laps.
I finished in 6:11, a few seconds behind the 12 year old. I paced
well, doing a one-second negative split over the first- and
second-halves of the run. And I feel confident that I could have
done it faster. I wasn't at my limit, and next time I know I can
push a little harder, shed some seconds, hopefully break 6:00. But I
felt good about my effort just the same.
Or I felt good about my effort prior to
doing some research that put the whole thing in perspective. The
following table may help.
Let me summarize. That 6:11 mile I
ran? The one that I think I could improve upon by, say, 11 seconds
or so? The pace that left my breathing ragged and in the red zone
after one quarter mile? That same pace—if I could have maintained
it—would have found me stumbling across the finish line some 23
minutes after the world record holder in the 100 km. But here is the
thing. I couldn't have maintained it for another mile, much less
another 61. It frankly astounds me what people can do. Some folks run 26.2 miles at an average pace that I can't even reach
for fractions of a mile. Mind boggling.
Maybe it isn't fair to compare myself
to world record setting runners. Let's face it, if your name appears
on the same line as the world record in, say, the 10k, you're
orbiting in an elite sphere peopled by a distinct minority. What
makes the record special in the first place is the very fact that the
vast majority of people—people like me—can't get close to that
level of performance. But that is the neat thing about running. A
400 meter track is a 400 meter track the world over (disregarding, if
you please, any differences due to elevation), giving each of us an
opportunity to measure ourselves against the best in the world each
time we set off for a lap.
It also might not be fair to measure
myself against younger runners in the prime of their fitness. After
all, I would be willing to wager that half or more of those records
were set by 12 year olds. And if the last few years have taught me
anything, it is that you can't compete against a 12 year old. Best
just keep my head up, run my own race, and hope for the best.
Scott I feel your pain... I remember (anything but fondly) the days of high school soccer, where my sister (4 years younger and also a pesky pre-teen) joined our team and ran circles around me (literally). Needless to say my soccer career was cut short.
ReplyDeleteHi Leah. Just think where you could be today if she hadn't driven you from the soccer field!
DeleteHi Scott -- not sure how to reach you, so going this odd route. I just wanted to thank you for coming to say hello at the Native Heritage Center. It means a lot to me that you stuck around to introduce yourself. Thanks so much for reading, happy travels, and look me up should you find yourself in Seattle.
ReplyDeleteHi Pam. Thanks for going the old route and taking the effort to track me down here. And be careful offering anyone from Alaska the invitation to look you up in Seattle! Its a city we find ourselves in all the time!
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