It's over, man. Let her go.

2013 Pittsburgh Marathon (kinda)

Recent EntriesHomeJoin Fast Running Blog Community!PredictorHealthy RecipesBaldnspicy's RacesFind BlogsMileage BoardTop Ten Excuses for Missing a RunTop Ten Training MistakesDiscussion ForumRace Reports Send A Private MessageWeek ViewMonth ViewYear View
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023
15% off for Fast Running Blog members at St. George Running Center!

Location:

Bliss,ID,USA

Member Since:

Jan 04, 2010

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Recover From Injury

Running Accomplishments:

In late 2008 I decided I needed to get in better shape and started running again.  I ran my first formal road race ever, a half marathon, in late 2009.

(unofficial) Track 1 Mile - 7:32 (4/24/2010)  6:56 (9/27/2010)

5k - 27:31 - Riverview Run on 06/11/2010
22:39 - Gatorade Steelers 5k on 09/04/2010

10k - 50:43 - Riverside Run on 04/10/2010

Half - 2:02:58 - Just a Short Run on 03/27/2010
1:51:47 - IKEA Montour Trail Half on 09/11/2010

Short-Term Running Goals:

2011 Races:

Sept 25 - The Great Race 10k (59:15)
Nov 5 - Dirt Monster 5mi (52:59)

2012 Races:

June 8 - Riverside 5k  (27:49)
Sept 2 - Gatorade Steelers 5k (route) with Steve!  (27:39)
Sept 30 - The Great Race 10k (route)  (53:48)
Nov 3 - The Dirt Monster 5mi (52:55)

2013 Races:

May - Pittsburgh Marathon (started, but DNF about the half way point)
June - Riverview 5k  - Bummed I missed signing up for this one. It's one of my favorites!
Sept - Gatorade/Steelers 5k. (Signed up!)
Sept - IKEA Montour Trail Half  (prob not, but leaving it on here)
Sept - The Great Race 10k (My Running 101 goal race)
Nov - Dirt Monster 5mi (Gotta do it again no matter what!)

Long-Term Running Goals:

Finish recovering from my injuries and build mileage.  That is all.

Personal:

My name is Wes, I'm married with two wonderful children. The nickname BaldNSpicy came from the fact that I have been balding for a (long) while now and spicy for my love of very spicy foods (Thai and extremely hot wings are my favorites).  If eating doesn't bring me near tears and leave me sweating, it's not worth eating.  :-)

Oh, and I'm also known for my doorags.

Favorite Quotes:

"Running without hills is like motorcycling without corners." - rAtTLeTrAp

"Excellence is not a singular act, but a habit.  You are what you do repeatedly." - Shaquille O'Neal

"A man can fail many times, but he isn't a failure until he begins to blame somebody else."  - John Burroughs

Favorite Blogs:

Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
NB 758s #2 Lifetime Miles: 596.90
Brooks Cascadia 7 Lifetime Miles: 165.17
Race: 2013 Pittsburgh Marathon (kinda) (10 Miles) 02:00:00
Slow milesFast milesTotal Distance
4.9010.0014.90

Well, I'm logging this as a race report even though it wasn't much of one and was a DNF, but the weather was gorgeous (mid 50s) so I felt foolish not to get out and enjoy it.

I decided last night that despite my lack of training, I'd at least show up at the start line and run as long as I felt good enough to run.  I had the bib, perfect weather, and needed to get myself kick started again.  I'm familiar with the majority of the course since it goes through a bunch of neighborhoods around downtown that I've run in.  I'd studied the course and had a few places I knew I could hop out and make it back to the car without much trouble.  I had the goal to cross all three rivers before quitting, but that was a stretch goal since it would mean a 9+ mi run which would definitely be a "long run" for me. So, I had the 5mi mark (first relay exchange and very near where I'd park), the 6.2mi mark which was right before the second river (but a pretty good walk back to the car), or the 9.5mi mark (the 2nd relay exchange), then walk/jog across the third bridge with a decent trek back to the car.  I decided to take it as it came.

The race is the biggest I've ever run (approx. 25,000) and it was pretty crazy.  I was placed in the last corral, but I ended up not being able to get over to it and so I just jumped in the fourth.  Race started at 7am so I got up about 5:30, was out the door by 6, parked by 6:15 where I normally park when I walk into work.  Walked the 1.25mi in and only had to stand in the corral for about 20 mins before the race started.  Decided not to jog it in since I knew I'd be standing around waiting anyways so no sense "warming up".  It took about 20 mins before our corral finally got to the starting line and then we were off.

The start was cool, but wasn't real exciting for me since I knew I wasn't going to finish.  I did have some friends that were running both the full and half, so I was excited for them and mentally wished them good luck. The first mile or two were no problem.  I had to stop at a POP just shy of the 2mi mark and lost about 3:00 waiting for that.  Not sure why it took so long when there were only 2 guys in front of me, but oh well.  A lady hopped in behind me and made a comment that the guys line would be quicker. I'd thought so too, but just like at the grocery store, I'd picked the slow line. She thanked me for being quick when it finally got to be my turn. LOL

Headed out and enjoyed the bands, the costumes, gave lots of high fives as I plodded along.  The pace was pretty easy and slow with so many runners around me.  It would have been very frustrating if I had wanted to go faster.  I know for all the speedy folks, it doesn't matter, because they don't have anyone in front of them, but if I had been trying to BQ, I would have been frustrated trying to get around people.  Some places during the course were quite narrow, especially downtown with all the spectators.

I walked a little off and on after 3rd mi, then as I got to the 6mi mark, was walking more. I was almost to the 10k mark and the point of no return if I headed across the second bridge. There really wasn't much of a place to pull off since security was tight, and as I looked across the river, I could see the runners headed back up river so I decided to head across.  I was a bit shocked to see that the course didn't take an immediate left to go back up river, but took a slight right to head through the West End.  Oh boy, this was definitely longer than I had thought. But I couldn't really stop and turn around and walk back to the car at that point.

I continued on, walking more and running less.  All the toes on both feet seemed to be on fire from the ball of my foot out and my feet were definitely getting tired and sore.  I finally made it to the relay exchange, went far enough past it where I could pull off, and called it a day.  Almost 10mi exactly according to the Garmin, and almost 2hrs.  Walked back to the finish line (1.2mi) and sat down on the lawn to watch the big screen of the finishers.  After watching a friend from work finish the marathon, I started back to the car (another 1.5mi).  Loosening up the shoes while sitting there helped, but man they sure hurt!  I was sore and tired, but satisfied I got out there today.  After a little rest and a nice soak in the tub, I'm still sore the day after, but it was worth it.

Didn't notice until this evening that I've gained about 17 lbs since the last time I weighed myself, probably 4 weeks ago!  I was shocked...I guess that's what a lack of physical exercise will do to a guy.  Time to get in shape for a great fall race!

Edit:  Forgot to add the awesome quote I read from the back of some guy's t-shirt.  I was behind him long enough to read it, but I know I won't get it perfect.  It had the author's name and birth/death dates, so I'm thinking it may have been someone he knew, but maybe this is well known and I'm just now discovering it.  Anyways, this is what I remember it as saying:

"Not every run has to be a personal best...you've already won by showing up." 

There's something in the middle that I forget now, but you get the point.  Anyways, it made me feel better having made the decision to show up and get in a run knowing I wouldn't be going home with a finisher's medal or anything tangible to show for it.

Brooks Cascadia 7 Miles: 14.90
Weight: 187.00
Comments
From Burt on Mon, May 06, 2013 at 18:37:30 from 72.223.88.98

Nice job getting out there. I'm right there with you on the weight gain. Time to get it under control.

From Steve on Mon, May 06, 2013 at 18:41:11 from 50.29.206.9

If you cannot say anything else, you can certainly say that you had a Pittsburgh Marathon experience. I think that it sounds like it was an interesting trip. I hope that you are starting to feel better. Looks like you have a nice base to get working on the fall race.

At the very least, your post was entertaining to read! Thanks for the narrative.

From SlowJoe on Tue, May 07, 2013 at 04:31:05 from 96.61.24.215

Nice going - let the (partial) experience fuel the fire, and you'll get the full experience next time.

From baldnspicy on Wed, May 08, 2013 at 20:28:38 from 209.73.151.137

Thanks guys. Good thing I didn't go all 26.2 miles. Could you imagine the length of THAT report?! :)

From rAtTLeTrAp on Thu, May 09, 2013 at 13:41:03 from 174.233.135.68

I was hoping you'd try the Gallowalking thing from the start, but you are definitely a winner for showing up and participating to the best of your ability! That's what really counts. Hang in there, you'll nail it in time.

Add Your Comment.
  • Keep it family-safe. No vulgar or profane language. To discourage anonymous comments of cowardly nature, your IP address will be logged and posted next to your comment.
  • Do not respond to another person's comment out of context. If he made the original comment on another page/blog entry, go to that entry and respond there.
  • If all you want to do is contact the blogger and your comment is not connected with this entry and has no relevance to others, send a private message instead.
Only registered users with public blogs are allowed to post comments. Log in with your username and password or create an account and set up a blog.
Debt Reduction Calculator
Featured Announcements
Lone Faithfuls
(need a comment):
Recent Comments: