Friday, October 28, 2016

Race Report: Folsom Blues Breakout Half Marathon (2016)

I swear I blinked and this race/entire race experience was over. How the heck did that happen?? I can't even give you like a mile-by-mile account because it was over so fast and I barely remember the details.

As I said in previous posts, I like to run a half all-out 5-6 weeks before a marathon to get a sense of my fitness. So I wanted a race with a nice solid course (not necessarily flat but nothing crazy), high probability of good weather, well-organized, not too big or too small, and reasonably close to home. (At 2-2.5 hours depending on traffic, Folsom is probably right on the edge in terms of what I'm willing to drive to for a non-goal race.) Not breaking the bank ranked pretty high as well.

I'd heard a lot of good things about Lake Natoma Four Bridges Half, but lo & behold, when I looked into it, that event had been taken over and re-routed by Sacramento Running Association and rebranded with a Johnny Cash theme as the "Folsom Blues Breakout" Half & 5K. SRA is the group that runs CIM and a few other well known, well respected races in the Sacramento Area, and they have a reputation for doing solid events "for runners, by runners," so my interest was piqued right away by that. The date was a good fit in terms of building up to CIM, and after investigating the course (gently rolling but net downhill, paved & closed course, reasonably shaded) and seeing that I could get the early bird price of $45 if I registered before March (!), I was sold.


Bib lady ready to go (except for the bib)! If you run this race,
I highly recommend staying at the Lake Natoma Inn maybe 50 yards from the finish.

Unfortunately, race weekend ended up being a little crazy for me. After flying back from Texas on Monday, I felt like I'd never had a chance to really catch my breath. Several late nights and early-morning work calls meant I didn't get a ton of sleep. I spent most of the week feeling like I might be getting sick.

The Stanford game Saturday was scheduled for noon which meant I could actually go, but it also meant getting up early (again) to get ready for tailgating. We also stayed later than we should have, so by the time we got home and I got to Folsom, it was nearly 10 pm. After a desperate late-night dinner trip, I finally laid out my gear, double-checked the schedule for tomorrow, and hit the sack.

I was up at 5am & off to Dick's Sporting Goods two miles away to pick up my bib at 6am (thank you for having race morning pickup!!!!). They loaded the buses at about 6:30am and dropped us off at the start around 7am, where we were treated to a gorgeous sunrise & some spectacular views of the American River and Folsom Dam.

My plan was to run 1.9 easy miles before 7:20, hit the port-a-potties one last time, then jump in the corral. Unfortunately my race brain for some reason thought, "Eh, starting at 7:05 is good." But by the time I stripped down & dropped my bag it was 7:10, and as I started jogging back towards the course, I realized that the potty lines were looking reaaalllllly long. So I figured I better go ahead and jump in one of them. Long story short, people were taking a LONG ass time, the line was barely moving, and I was still several people back when they started herding people towards the corral at 7:20. I finally got my turn but I did NOT get any more time to warm-up, so rather than 1.9 miles, .3 had to do. Not ideal.

I wish I had more to say about the actual race, but it went by so quickly that most of it is a blur. I can tell you that the course was beautiful with lots of pretty fall foliage and a number of nice views of Lake Natoma, the American River, & the various bridges (at least three of which we ran over).


Negro Bar State Park, Mile 3


Approaching Folsom Boulevard Bridge, Mile 3


Relay exchange, ~Mile 6.5

The weather was perfect, and the course as promised was closed, smooth, gently rolling for the most part. It wasn't at all crowded, nor was I ever out running alone (which I hate in races). The event itself was spectacular and I will absolutely drive 2-2.5 hours each way to run it again.


Coming off Hazel Avenue Bridge, Mile 8


Crossing Willow Creek, Mile 11

I can also tell you that I have never had such mixed feelings about a race performance in my life.

The Good:

  • I ran my fastest half marathon in over three and a half years.
      Official: 1:42:46/13.1 miles/7:50 pace
      Garmin: 1:42:44/13.2/7:47 pace

      Overall: 70/1055
      Women: 19/630
      A/G: 4/93

  • I ran remarkably even splits start to finish:

  • In spite of some of the challenges I'll mention below, it was the easiest-feeling half both physically and mentally that I've run since probably my PR at Healdsburg four years ago. I couldn't believe how quickly the miles kept rolling by, and my legs never crashed or gave out, not even on that last beast of a hill. (It was not really a beast. It just felt that way after 100+ minutes of fairly hard running.) Like I said, I feel like I blinked & it was over.

The Meh:

  • I really thought that based on my September 10K & the training I've done since, I had more in me. On Thursday I sent Coach Ashley the course map, elevation profile, & forecast (50s & partly cloudy, no wind) & asked her if she thought 1:39:xx was expecting too much, & she said she thought around 1:40 was not unreasonable.

  • I told her my main concern was how exhausted I was feeling from training & traveling & feeling sort of half-sick all week. She thought that between a short taper & race day adrenaline, I'd freshen up & have a little more zing in the legs come Sunday. That didn't happen, at all. I was so tired, and my legs still felt so beat up & tender from the volume & intensity of training, & it was pretty much lead boots from the get-go. My pace was right where I wanted it for the first few miles, but when it came time to start picking it up, my legs flat-out refused. That 7:40-7:50 range seemed to be all they had to give.

    (I know this might sound kind of strange after I just said it was one of the easiest 13.1's I've run in a while; the best way I can explain it is that the pace I was running did not feel hard and I had no trouble sustaining it all the way to the end, and from a cardio standpoint I think I probably had more to give, but from a muscle/neuro standpoint, I just couldn't get my legs moving any faster. I kept trying, and just nothing.)

  • I had another effing asthma attack around mile 7. Dammit. So that definitely did not help in the ratcheting down the pace department. Something sketchy has been going on with that lately so I'm definitely making an appointment with my allergist while there's still time to do something about it before CIM.

I really hate writing race reports that go, "Oh, it wasn't the time I wanted, but it was actually pretty good **under the circumstances**." That always feels to me a little too much like, "No really, I swear am way faster than that, and here are all the excuses for why I wasn't that fast today." Because real talk, nobody really cares what you can theoretically do under perfect circumstances, they care what you actually do on non-theoretical days that actually happen.

It also feels a little like settling ("I am fine with running a slower time than I think I'm capable of, because if not for x/y/z I am sure I could have and that's good enough"). That said, I was listening to something the other day about the difference between "settling" and finding a way to be satisfied with what is or has been. So, I'm not settling for 1:42. I still want to run another sub-1:40 and (gulp) maybe even one more PR before I run out of days where it's physically possible. But in the mean time, I'm trying to find a way to be satisfied on this day with running my fastest half in 3.5 years on trashed legs while trying not to die of hypoxia.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~LOGISTICAL STUFF~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

Location: Folsom, CA

Date: Late October (Oct 23, 2016 this year).

Field Size: 1055 in the half, 259 in the 5K

Deadlines/sellout factor: I don't think either distance fully sold out, but the deadline to register was 10/17. The incentive to sign up early is really all about the early-bird price; I signed up in February, so getting the half for a whopping $45 made me feel a little better about springing for gas & hotel.


Price: From the website:

Lodging:

There were special rates available for runners at several area hotels, as well as shuttle service to the start and back from the finish. I highly recommend staying at the Lake Natoma Inn directly in front of the finish line!

The Expo:

I don't think there was an expo per se, but there was packet pickup at Dick's Sporting Goods two miles from the finish in Folsom 3:00-6:00pm on Friday and 12:00-5:00pm on Saturday. I was VERY happy to learn that race morning packet pickup was also available at Dick's 6:00-6:30am, and parking/shuttle service to the start & back from the finish. This made everything super easy for me even though I didn't get into town until late Saturday night. (Also, there were donuts, bananas, and coffee at Dick's. I love it.)

Staging:

The start was on Folsom Lake Crossing Bridge (aka the "Johnny Cash Bridge") over the American River, which has some spectacular views of both the river and Folsom Dam.

Buses dropped us off near the start, and one of them also served as the sweat check/gear drop and took everything back to the finish for pickup. (Gear drop mostly involved a folding table, a box of trash bags, and a bunch of sharpies, but for the size of this race that worked fine. Bags were organized in piles by bib number at the finish and I found mine easily just minutes after crossing the line.)

The port-a-potties were actually on the "race" side of the start line, which I didn't realize until it started getting close to to race time & the organizers started desperately trying to herd the runners out of the potty lines and to the other side of the starting line. The potty lines actually ran the whole width of the course, so they actually couldn't start the race until people cleared out. So, that whole setup seemed a little weird to me. (Though, it could be that they simply can't put them on the other side of the bridge. I don't know enough about how port-a-potties work. All I know is that the lines were concerningly long, and YOU try telling a runner s/he can't hit the potty one more time before running 13.1 miles.)

The finish was right in front of the Lake Natoma Inn, & was pretty well organized and easy to navigate as far as my experience went. The only slight issue I had was finding the bus back to Dick's Sporting Goods, but it was fine once I remembered that I'd seen them on a particular side street that morning.

The Course:

Oh, you guys. This course was very nearly everything I want in a half marathon course. Smooth concrete roads. Closed course. Gently rolling, with nothing particularly steep or particularly long. A handful of aid stations serving something with calories in it. Not too many turns. Lovely fall foliage, with the occasional breathtaking view. Given the location and the date, it's a pretty darn good option if you're looking for a fast race.

(If I'm going to be SUUUPER picky, there were a couple of aid stations that were on the outside of a turn rather than the inside, which meant if you wanted to grab a cup you had to go way off the tangent. Yes, I am anal enough about both tangents and fueling that it bothered me a bit, just because it seemed like it would have been just as easy to put the table on the other side of the road. But we're talking a few seconds here.)

Now, is it a time trial-fast course? Ehhhh probably not really. None of the hills are very big and it is slightly net downhill, but if it's your last chance for meeting some kind of high stakes time trial standard, there are a couple of *slightly* longer uphills that could ruin your day. (For example, the winding approach to the bridge in the Nimbus Dam area that crosses the American River, and that really demoralizing last .2-.4 right before the finish.)

Personally, though, I think I do a little better with some variation in terrain, so I would absolutely 100% consider it a good option if I thought I was ready to PR.

Swag:

Logo tech shirt & finisher medal, plus post-race snacks & a free beer. (I don't know what the beer was because honestly the idea of alcohol after running hard for 1.5+ hours is nauseating to me.)

If you decide to run:

  • It didn't sell out this year, but if you sign up early, you can save yourself some big bucks.
  • Lake Natoma Inn. There is no question here. Just book it, as soon as you think you even *might* want to run FBB.
  • There is race morning bib pickup, but if you go ahead and get your bib the day before AND book the Lake Natoma Inn, you are basically guaranteed the smoothest race day experience possible.
  • Get in the potty lines early.

Overall Assessment:

I LOVED this event so much. A great course, super well organized, and $45 to sign up early? Yes please! Sure, if pressed, I can come up with a couple of TINY, WEE little quibbles, but in terms of the things I actually care about when I really, truly want to run a fast race, FBB scores pretty highly. Yes, it is kind of a drive for a half, but I'm willing to do it occasionally for a great race where I'm looking for a fast time.

6 comments:

  1. What a lovely course! I'm like you and I don't like it when I run a race that I feel isn't reflective of what I'm capable of doing. It's especially galling when people try to comfort you and tell you that one day you'll get x:xx time and you have to explain that you've already have achieved that time in a prior race.

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  2. Oh, good job! Nice report. I know it wasn't a PR so that is a hard pill to swallow, especially when your training is going so well. You must put it in context of the current life stresses and fatigue and realize that dang it you were tired. Plus, you are obviously saving some of that PR magic for the marathon itself. :D

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  3. I ran Folsom Blues too, and although I've ran that trail many times (have family in the area), it's always been at my easy/long run pace. This was my first time racing on those rollers and I'll admit it was harder than I thought it would be. But I'm thinking like you that hopefully it's good practice for CIM. Sounds like you did really well.

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  4. Sounds like a great race experience even though you didn't get a PR. I think it's a very positive indicator for CIM! Congrats!

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  5. Congratulations! I think you might have tired legs from training, that's all - you'll be even faster tapered.

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  6. Its nice that you all had a great marathon experience. The main motive of any marathon is that, you live your life in a health way. So, hope that you all keep yourself fit and fine.

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