Craig's Running Blog

Boston Marathon

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Location:

Sandy,UT,USA

Member Since:

Sep 15, 2007

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

50K: 6:15 at Moab Red Hot 50k+ (ouch)

Marathon:

St George - 2:44 (2010), 2:47 (2004), 2:48 (2006), 2:50 (2010), 2:51 (2008, 2009), 2:53 (2007), 2:54 (2005, 2001)

Boston - 2:50 (2008)

1/2 Marathon:

Hobble Creek - 1:12 (2010), 1:15 (2009)

Provo River - 1:16 (2003, 2004, 2007, 2010)

Provo Halloween Half 1:14 (2011) 

Moab - 1:18 (2008)

Ogden 1:17 (2010), 1:19 (2009)

Painters (St George): 1:18 (2011), 1:20 (2009, 2010) 

10K: 34:22 (Des News 2009)

5K: 16:32 (2003), 16:33 (2004), 17:11 (2007), 16:32 (2008, aided), 17:29 (2008), 16:25 (2009, aided), 17:25 (2011), 16:06 (2011, aided)

Short-Term Running Goals:

2011: Complete my first Olympic and Half Ironman triathlons

2012: Break 2:40 at St George

Move into endurance mountain biking and trail triathlons (xterra, etc) 

Long-Term Running Goals:

Keep running. Move into triathlons and get stronger. Keep succeeding at half marathons and the occasional marathon.

Personal:

I know Sasha from the CS program at BYU. We both graduated in 1997. He probably doesn't remember me, because he was definitely more vocal in class and among the students than I was.

Married to Teresa with 3 kids: Anders (4), Kristian (9), and Zoe (12).

Fluent in Danish, but there is obviously very little need for that.

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Race: Boston Marathon (26.2 Miles) 02:50:30, Place overall: 474, Place in age division: 357
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTrainer 1 MilesTrainer 2 MilesRacer MilesTotal Distance
0.0026.200.000.000.000.000.0026.20

Ran it with Lance Armstrong, and pulled away a bit at the end. Details...

I could not believe the number of people at this race. The last count I heard was over 27,000, which is the second largest Boston marathon ever. The 100th running of the marathon peaked at over 36,000.

I was staying downtown at the Hilton. Mark (http://reddragon.fastrunningblog.com) got us a room with his miles. He told me that he tried to pay for a second room and they wanted over $900 a night for it over the marathon weekend. Wow. His wife, Elizabeth, sent some fruit and tea/juice to us the day before, which was nice to have in the room. She also sent us a post-race chips/beer/rootbeer package. I called Teresa and told her about it, and she said (in typical Teresa fashion): "I wouldn't have thought of that." Funny. But make no mistake, Teresa supports me in crazy ways that most spouses wouldn't put up with. I can train and/or race anytime/anywhere and know that she will never have an issue with it.

The night before the race, I went to the hot tub on the 7th floor and hung out with other runners in the hotel. There were all types in there- the older novice that was out of his league, the young hero who was going to run it hurt, and the veteran who had all the answers. I let them know that I was going to run it with Lance Armstrong, since our goal times were the same. They wanted a report the next day after the race, so I guess I was committed.

We boarded the buses at early in order to make the 10:00 start. The suggested 6:45 time seemed excessive, but then I saw the massive number of runners lined up for the buses. We waited in line through about 3 waves of buses before we got on ours at 7:05. When we departed on our bus, I looked out and saw that the lines were even longer than when we first got in them.

We hit some nasty traffic on the highway out to Hopkington right before the turnoff. The roughly 30 mile ride took us 90 minutes. When we were stopped in traffic with the other buses, some runners got anxious and had to relieve themselves off the side of the road. At first it was only guys, but then some girls did it too. There was no good tree cover. I saw one girl get done with her business and then wag her butt back and forth to air out. Mark and I had a huge laugh over that one.

I don't know if it was nerves or what, but we got to the start and waited in lines to use the portable toilets twice. I was so hydrated that I would have to stop on the course about mile 9 to go again, which is somthing that I always try to avoid. I called Traci and Natalie (a couple girls I train with) to see where they were. They told me, but the number of people made it too hard to find them. Anyway, the toilet lines ate up about 45 minutes, so by that time we had to get moving over to the start. We through our drop bags in the proper buses and headed across town to the corrals. I was in the first corral, while Mark was in the third. We did a couple laps on a side street, stretched for a second, and then said "good luck" and made our separate ways. I spend a few minutes trying to find Walter in my corral, but I couldn't spot him.

The start of the race was kind of silly. They were introducing some of the elite runners, but there's no way anyone in the race could see them. I guess that was more for the spectators benefit. Then they did the Star Spangled Banner bit and we were ready. The next thing was weird- they anounced "Now for the start of the race, Walter Brown...". I guess he was the guy that fired the gun. Did I hear that name wrong?

I didn't have a watch on for this race, so I started off running by feel. My ankles were very tight and sore, but I felt great apart from that. It would take 7 mles before that pain subsided. I don't know what the deal is with that, but I need to work on strengthening the ankles. About mile 2, I noticed the guy in front of me looking over to his left. I looked to see what he was starting at, and it was Lance Armstrong. I could have easily missed him early on in the race because there were so many runners. He seemed to be going too slow, but I learned later that he was just running conservative in the first half. I hung wth him for about 5 miles, but then I got anxious and pulled ahead. By this time, I was really feeling good, and I would continue to feel good until about mile 22.

The girls at Wellesley were crazy. I had heard about them, but I wasn't prepared for the sheer amount of noise. I had heard that they compete for kisses, but let's get one thing straight- that wasn't going to be my thing. I saw a couple runners from Japan stop with their cameras. I noticed a few other runners stop for a hug or a kiss on the cheek. About half way through the line of girls, I came up on this sign that said "Kiss Me! I'm Mormon!". Well, at that point it's just mandatory, you know.

I came across the half mark at 1:25:16. That was conservative, so I needed a good negative split to break 2:50. Fortunately, I was feeling good and I knew I could stay strong for at least another 8 miles.

About mile 16, I started hearing chants for "Lance!", so I knew he was right behind me. He came up beside me, which gave me a little motivation to pick it up. The cheering increased 2-3 times as we approached the crowds and they saw him. That crowd support boosted me up the hills. I noticed the hills, but I hit them strong and felt good at the top of each one.

At mile 22, it started to get tough. I was kept pulling ahead of Lance by about 100 yards, only to see him catch up again. I was passing guys left and right. It was about a runner every 5 seconds. At the dip at mile 25, Lance pulled ahead again and gave me the motivation just to keep pace with him. I ran right behind him through the last couple turns and into the final stretch, where I got some time on film. I reached deep at this point and found some energy to pull ahead, trying to come in under 2:50. I crossed the line at a gun time of 2:50:53, and I knew it didn't take me more than 30 seconds to cross the start. Sure enough, my official time was 2:50:30. A good effort for Boston, especially considering I can't shake this cough left over from a cold I've battled for the last 2 weeks.

Comments
From Cody on Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 21:02:07

Let me be the first to congratulate you on a well-ran race. Very good pacing!!!!!

Good Job Craig!

From Jody on Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 21:02:58

Congratulations on a great race!

From Jon on Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 21:44:12

Awesome job- I was watching the 5k splits for you the whole way, cheering you on. Nice job- you beat a Tour de France winner!

From Jon on Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 21:44:47

Just curious- you'll have to tell us in your report if Lance had an entourage and if they ever got you on camera passing him!

From josse on Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 22:02:59

That is so cool I watched the video. You looked super strong.

From Christina on Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 22:04:14

Awesome job Craig!

Jon--they do have a clip of Craig passing Lance. He is in a red singlet:

http://wbztv.com/video/?id=61668@wbz.dayport.com

From Brent on Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 22:18:54

Sweet, run with Lance and great time at Boston, priceless.

Stay Kool, B of BS Rools out

From Superfly on Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 22:57:12

Great job. What a story to tell...

From Jon on Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 22:59:44

Sweet- you're famous! Did you talk to him much!

By the way, kudos for a very consistent pace your whole way- almost no slowing down at the end!

From Craig on Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 23:07:54

Jon, to answer your question: Lance didn't have an entourage like I had heard he did at New York. He had a couple guys running with him the whole time. The others faded in and out (myself included), so he had between 2 and 10 guys around him at any one time. He went to the side of the road to grab his own water and basically just acted like any other runner on the course. At the end, he looked a bit embarassed to have his own "tape" to break. Almost like he just wanted to cross the same line with everyone else.

From nfroerer on Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 09:33:46

Nice run Craig. That's pretty awesome!

From James on Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 22:08:56

Good job on your race. And you even got to run with the genetic freak!

From Jon on Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 22:25:36

Nice race- you ran a very smart race to start slow. Are you going to do it again?

From Tracy1 on Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 22:45:50

Great report Craig, so I take it you kissed the mormon? And the runners, including women on the side of the road? What a relief..!..Too funny!

Again, nice job!

From Aaron on Wed, Apr 23, 2008 at 11:19:50

Sounds like an awesome race. What an experience to run along side Lance. Great report!

From Jen Bullen on Fri, Apr 25, 2008 at 13:47:59

Hey Craig,

Chad and I had a great time reading your blog about Boston! You ran a great race and you'll get tons of mileage out of that story! Let's hang out sometime I'll be in Ogden and Chad's probably running the 5k. Did you ever get signed up for the 1/2?

From Andrea on Fri, Apr 25, 2008 at 14:22:31

Hey, Craig! Way to go! You're my new hero. I can't wait to hear more about the whole experience. Johnny and I burned a DVD for you of the Lance footage we saw on TV -- some great shots of you.

I'm so sad I didn't go to Boston this year -- the weather conditions were ideal. D'ya wanna run Boston again next year? I'm planning to go. :o) No girl kissing for me, tho.

Enjoy a little time off and I hope to see you at the stretching seminar tomorrow.

From Craig on Fri, Apr 25, 2008 at 14:55:58

Thanks, Andrea. As always, your enthusiasm is contagious. I enjoyed it so much, I may carve out some $$/time and run it again next year. ;)

Jen! You found the blog! I didn't get signed up for the 1/2 because it filled, but I am running the second half of a 2-person relay. I'll definitely see you there. Question for you- are you interested in running the Wasatch Back Relay this year? We need about 4 girls on Andrea's all-girls team. Do you know anyone else you run with out in the Eagle Mountain area?

From MichelleL on Mon, May 12, 2008 at 10:47:00

I just read your race. Good job with it! I have been having some pain on the inside of my legs by the ankles and I have been getting deep tissue massage there. I am so sorry you didn't get into St. George. Are you doing Ogden?

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