Monday, May 25, 2009

Under Pressure

Today's Marin Memorial Day 10K is another Pacific Association race. As such, I have pretty modest goals. This is a lightning-fast course with runners to match, so I'd like to finish in the top 100 and run under 37:30. My greatest hope is that my club, West Valley Track Club, will field a master's team. I've never run as part of a team even though I've been a member of West Valley since 2006. We never have five runners 40 years of age or older, so my times don't get counted as part of a team score.

A few weeks ago Todd Rose indicated that we would have enough for a master's team. I called Tony Fong (M49) last week, who said he was running as well.

Excited about the team element of today's race, I should be calm and relaxed. I know I won't place in my age group, and the flat course should help my time. As I park my car, however, I feel nervous and intimidated. Everyone seems to wear team colors of some type, either race clothes or warmups, and everyone is so fit. Runners are warming up and taking sports drinks. This shouldn't be a surprise. This is a very competitive race, but I shouldn't let that affect my mind set.

I leave my car and find Tony. He's with Aaron Pierson (M46) from our team. Tony says we'll have six or seven master's runners, including Aaron. I make my way to the registration, noting that today's conditions are perfect: temperature in the mid-50s, no sun or wind, with a monotone cloud cover ensuring cool temperatures throughout the race.

As the race starts I settle down. A huge crowd in front of me fools me into believing that I'm running slow, but my first mile split is 5:40, which is normal. Around the fourth mile Maggie Visser (F40) passes me, cheered on by many of her Impala supporters. She widens the gap, and I figure she'll finish well ahead of me as she did at the Devil Mountain 10K (see "When It Rains, It Pours") three weeks ago.

Eventually I establish equilibrium with her and then start gaining. During the sixth mile I am just a few feet behind. As the end nears some Impalas yell to Maggie, "Track 100 meters ahead!", referring to the track that ends the race. I pass her, looking for the finish. Unfortunately, the track is much further than the distance given by the Impalas, and I've gone in to my kick way too early. I manage to keep my pace and even accelerate a little at the end, finishing in 37:17 (officially 37:22) with Maggie one second behind, as shown in the photo on the right.

It amazes me how close Maggie and I have been over the last three years. Here is a list of races that we have run simultaneously since August 2007:


  • Alameda Run for the Parks 10K, August 2007: Me (36:34), Maggie (36:40)
  • Across the Bay 12K, March 2009: Me (46:36), Maggie (46:39)
  • Devil Mountain 10K, May 2009: Maggie (36:40), Me (37:42)
  • Marin Memorial Day 10K, May 2009: Me (37:22), Maggie (37:23)

I don't have much history to refer to, as I didn't run track in school where I could have routinely matched up with another runner. I am closing in on 80 races, though, and there's no one whose performances resemble mine more than Maggie's.

Maggie is a much superior runner to me. Her performance places her second among women 40-44, while mine ranks 11th for men of the same age category. Maggie wins $55 and her performance is age-graded at 84%, which ranks as a national-class runner. My age-graded performance is 78%, which ranks as a regional-class runner. Eighty-eight runners finished under 37 minutes.

I'm happy with my race. I finished with my third-best 10K and fastest since 2007. I placed just outside of the top 100 at 101. My satisfaction is lessened by the fact that West Valley did not field a masters team. My time was third-best among masters West Valley, but we only had four runners. I guess I shouldn't be too surprised. Even with my sporadic attendance at Pacific Association races, I'm one of the stalwarts of the team in my age group.

Later I find that my time was ninth-best among West Valley runners and as a result I'm part of our "B" team. West Valley's second team finished eighth among 12 teams. At least I'm on a team, even though it isn't the one I was expecting to join.

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