Sunday, December 15, 2024

Palo Alto Double 2024: something new for a change!

This Saturday I did something I've never done yet in my 26-year running journey: two back to back races in the same morning. To be honest, that format didn't exist when I started focusing in road and running speed. That format has been invented 15 years ago by renowned Bob Anderson, who had brought so much innovation to fuel the development of our sport. Bob founded Runner's World in 1966, yes, almost 60 years ago! Bob has even a Wikipedia page to his fame!

So, what is that Double format about? Two back to back road races, the first leg of 10K at 9 am and the second leg of 5K starting at 10:45. The faster you are on the 10K, the more rest you have in between, but more energy spent too. It has a dedicated website as I assume Bob is the only organizer of races in that format. There area actually 5K/break/3K versions of the Double as well. Also, Bob has the top finishers of the first leg/stage, male and female, to wear a yellow jersey, like in the Tour de France!

I had registered to do my first Double last December but I was still digesting a super loaded season culminating in 34 hours at Spartathlon -- 6 marathons at once, way more than a double! -- and DNSed (Did Not Start) due to a last-minute family trip to DC for the holidays. This year has been terrible after breaking a meniscus in March and having to spend almost 7 months off running. I still have so much muscle to rebuild, and the knee is still prone to pain, recovery is a long journey and I did't have very high expectations. Although I was encouraged by at least breaking 40 minutes at the Silicon Valley Turkey Trot 10K, 4 days after running 100 kilometers at the American 24-hour Championships. I had looked at the top times for my age group and, for some reasons -- maybe aging! ;-) -- I remembered seeing the top mark set by a Kenyan at around 48 minutes. My dream goal was to break an hour, although that seemed not only ambitious given my lack of fitness as well as the weather conditions.

Waking up at 5:50 to get my breakfast 3 hours before the race I thought my post title would be: "Rain, not Shine!" The saying "Rain or Shine" seems not to apply too often in California as we get less and less rain, years after years so it's Shine 99% of the time. Agnès and I actually got both awaken at 3:30 am by the super unusual noise of thunderstorm here, and the rain was pouring. Upon picking my bib at 7:30 am, the rain was still going on steady, and wind gusts made the setup of the area super challenging for the organizers.



I was familiar with the 3.1-mile section used for the course as it is on my traditional Cupertino-Fremont-Cupertino 50-mile training ground. So I knew it included a dirt area which was going to turn to mud with so much rain. I didn't know how muddy it was going to become though, that was epic. Thankfully, only for a quarter of a mile, yet certainly impacting our performance for such a short and fast format.

An important detail to add: each of the legs could be run by other participants as a single race, meaning that not every participant was enlisted in the Double. 

As early bird, I had a great parking spot with direct view on the start/finish area. That helped maximizing the time I stayed dry and warm in the car. I get cold very easily so I had brought two sets of racing clothes plus two rain jackets and layers of polar fleece jackets, duh!


When I saw this rainbow forming thanks to the rain stopping 15 minutes before the start, I took it as a great sign for a good day and that it was time to get out to warm for 5 minutes. The asphalt was still very wet, it didn't take too many strides to tip my toes in the water... (Photo credit: Bob Anderson.)



The fast of the 10K was really fast, I got chicked right off the bat with two other gals passing me before the end of the first mile. The lead running was wearing a black singlet, I saw him coming back when I had just passed 2.5 miles (the 10K was a 3.1-mile out and back). The short dirt section wasn't too bad on the way out but already getting slippery. It got worse on the way back after 50 or so runners had gotten through it. Best was to run on the edge, in the grass or rather over native plants, which is still not ideal when going at full speed.

Speaking of speed, I had started at 6:14 min/mile like at the Turkey Trot but I wasn't able to hold the pace especially on this wet course. Also, I hadn't run or exercise for the past 2 weeks first because knee pain after the Turkey Trot and 24-hour Nationals, then because of a super bad bite of one of my fingers, by our cat, which got so infected that I was put on antibiotics, I'm going to lose a nail and it was still bleeding and super painful while running this Saturday, 10 days later... Between that, the weaker glutes, the headwind on the way back, some slippery mud, it was challenging to hold a 6:30 min/mile pace. I kept pushing as hard as possible, not thinking too much about the upcoming 5K, yet I wasn't able to break 40 minutes in that first leg, not even close: 40:36, good for 8th place in the double. The black singlet runner, Anthony Cortes, ended up in 2nd place actually in 34:26, behind Ethan Phelps in 33:30.

I went for a short jog to cool down then rushed to the car as the rain started resuming. How lucky were we to avoid rain during the 10K, what an incredibly timely lull! I changed entirely into dry clothes and put my multiple layers back on. 10K runners kept coming in for a while then there was a 1-mile kid race which was barely over when it was time for us to start the 5K. I did a few sprints to shake the legs off and had hard time getting close to the front line, with many kids at the front this time. With that confusion, the count down has already started when I realized I had forgotten to switch my two GPS watches on! (I run with a Coros which I bought last year for the battery life allowing to run Spartathlon without having to charge, but still use my former Garmin for overall mile logging. Coros also provides quite cool and useful fitness-related analytics.)

Similar aggressive early lead from Anthony again, plus the tricky slalom to pass the kids who started slowing down and gasping for air after a few hundreds yards. This time I wasn't even able to hold 6:15, yikes! As for the dirt section it had now disappeared under huge puddles covering the entire width of the trail. So much that, on my way back, I literally ran into a runner although I was already on the right edge of the trail. We ended up to a full stop, holding each other hands to avoid a frontal collision, fun! There was also this participant running with his dog and the dog on leash in the middle of the trail. Oh well, nothing critically important on the line.

The glutes were painful in the last mile as I was pushing again in the headwind and seeing the seconds passing as my time was getting dangerously close to 20 minutes with the finish line in sight... 20:08, that one was closer but still adding a few seconds above the one-hour mark. (Photo credit: Bob Anderson.)


A total of 1:00:44, good enough to keep the 8th place, and easily win my non-competitive age group.

Again, super lucky to mostly miss rain on that second leg as well, as rain resumed again on and off in the following hour we had to wait to get our age group awards. In the meantime I enjoyed a hot coffee, and winning a prize in Bob's generous draw.



Also ample time to meet and chat with new running connections. Here with Michael Collery, 70-year young!


Did I mention luck yet? Well, it didn't stop with that. On Sunday morning, Bob posted this on my Facebook timeline:

Good seeing you yesterday. Congrats on your performance yesterday. With 84% age-graded you were our overall winner. Your Double Victory Cup will be engraved with your name and sent to you. Happy holidays!


When there is a silver lining to aging... ;-) Thank you Bob and your race organization team: despite the interesting conditions, that was quite a cool introduction to that Do Double format. And always a pleasure and honor to meet you and your wife. Double kudos and fun!


PS: stopped by Sports Basement on my way back home to pick my Turkey Trot age group podium awards, thank you and great too see you again, Chris!


Saturday, December 14, 2024

2025 PAUSATF MUT Grand Prix schedule: at last!

I know, I know, this is coming late, especially for ultra runners who need to plan their seasons a year or more in advance, between the time it takes to ramp-up before a 100-miler for instance, and the big races whose registration opens, if not closes too, 6 to 8 months in advance!

It took so long this year that two volunteers even reached out to assist: special thanks to Bethy Ronces and Shiran Kochavi. I have to admit that one of the reasons for me to procrastinate was that meniscus fracture which got in the way of my passion for running. When it actually gave me so much free time... But the mind wasn't there. Anyway, that was an opportunity to share more about the complexity of the exercise although I realize I've written so much on the topic since I took over the LDR MUT Chair job from Bill Dodson in 2017.


Enough chatting, let's disclose that 2025 calendar, then some commentaries and rationale. Where S: Short L: Long | E: East W: West
  • 1. S | E | 1/11: ITR No Hands Half
  • 2. L | E | 2/1: PA Jed Smith 50K
  • 3. S | E | 3/22: ITR Knickerbocker 35K
  • 4. S | C | 4/5: Brazen Diablo Half
  • 5. S | W | 4/20: CTR Horseshoe Lake 30K
  • 6. L | W | 5/10: PA Quicksilver 100K
  • 7. L | E | 6/7: PA Silver State 50K (NOT 50M)
  • 8. L | E | 6/14: Cool Moon 100M
  • 9. L | W | 8/3: Scena Skyline 50K
  • 10. L | W | 8/16: Tamalpa Headlands 50K [National]
  • 11. S | W | 9/6: PA Stevens Creek Reservoir Trail Half
  • 12. L | W | 9/27: Scena Dick Collins Firetrails 50M
  • 13. S | W | 10/4: PA Star City San Bruno Mountain Trail Half
  • 14. L | W 10/11: BAUR Ruth Anderson 50K & 50M
And now for the design notes:
  • MUT stands for Mountain, Trail and Ultrarunning, three different sports into one! Not to mention that ultrarunning spans multiple terrains (trail, road, track), an infinite range of distances beyond the marathon mark, two key formats (distance or time-based), flat or hilly course profiles. Just that variety should be enough to explain why we have 14 events. If that seems like a lot, we had more than 21 when I took over, even when the only focus was on Ultra...
  • Back in 2018, working with our previous scorer, Nakia Baird, we started integrating Trail (sub-marathon) and Mountain events. We then started this year, 2004, to group a sub set of 4 these events into a "Sub-marathon trail" sub-series. We are expanding that list to 6. And will add the missing specific rules to govern that sub-series into our rule book as soon as possible. Note that, while the "shorter" sub series is scored separately, all events get scored into the single original and overall MUT series (shorter and longer events together).
  • Our USATF Pacific Association geographic area extends from San Luis Obispo, California, in the South East, to Reno, Nevada, in the North East. While most of our participants and participating clubs tend to orbit the Bay Area, we want to give opportunities to all our PA members to race closer to home: 5 events in the East, across Short and Long formats, 1 more Central (Mount Diablo) and 8 around the Bay.
  • Then a range of very traditional events in respect to the ultra pioneers who made our Pacific Association such a renowned player in ultra running, as well as newer and popular events.
  • 5 events put by PA clubs. For the other organizations, note that it takes investment from them to comply with eligibility criteria to be included (paid USATF sanctioning, course certification for Road races, certificate of insurance, USATF membership, Safe Sport training and certification, discounts offered to previous year champions, potential accommodations to ensure enough PA members can register). Not every organization is up to it, we are grateful to these partners and individual Race Directors stepping up years after years!
  • On the SilverState / Cool Moon back to back. Not ideal after SilverState got moved due to permit reasons. But it's their 40th birthday milestone and PA Club-organized which has priority. Short of tapering, a 50K at altitude can provide some acclimatation, right? Not everybody has to run the 14 events either, you need at least three scores to be eligible for an award, and we'll pick your best seven scores at the end of the season.
  • You'll also note that we are blessed with a local National Championship again this August, such a treat, huge kudos to Victor Ballesteros, the Race Director. Make sure not to miss the opportunity to grab one of the many national honors available across the 5-year deep Masters age groups.
  • The rest of the calendar is designed not to overlap with other known MUT Nationals. As for avoiding conflicts with our other LDR Road and XC Grand Prix, yes, that's an intent, but that makes the overall design way over-constrained, mathematically speaking.
With 2025 and our first event around the corner, I'm posting this on Facebook for those still on that platform, if some have questions. Also sharing the calendar with the team Captains and will update the official website tomorrow.

Friday, November 29, 2024

20th Silicon Valley Turkey Trot: sweet sixteen for me!

After running 100K last weekend, my first real ultra of the year after the 6-month hiatus due to the breaking of my meniscus, I was much apprehensive to get back to the speedy format and exigence of a road 10K. Last year I was still digesting my 152-mile Spartathlon and sub-par 105-mile mark at the 24-hour National 4 days earlier, good excuses for not breaking 40 minutes and not getting on my age group podium on the last year of the M55-59 bracket.

Less fatigue excuses at least this year, but I still decided on wearing my knee sleeve to protect from the inflammation. It was actually meant to be chilly so I opted for long sleeves, tights and gloves which felt comfortable while waiting at the start but way too much once at full speed. Because full speed that run was about.

Driving with Agnès and Anouchka, we were the second car to get to the City View parking at 6:50 am, talk about early... turkeys!

I jogged to the start to snap a few pictures then to the finish/festival area to get more water, then back to the car to take a few layers off. It was below 40F when we left home but, after last weekend's atmospheric river, not a cloud on the forecast for this Thanksgiving: perfect weather to host 20,000 runners on that 20th edition!


It was my 16th consecutive run including 2009 when I entered the USATF-sanctioned 5K and clocked a 16:36. This year, the elite 5K was back, starting 5 minutes before the popular races. The elites ready to fly, with Race Director, Chris Weiler, better get out of the way


A selfie with Carl and Leslie Guardino, the original founder of this amazing tradition which led to more than $20 millions raised for local charities.


I was 3 to 4 lines behind the start and the first 200 yards turned to be rather hectic, slaloming between rather slow participants. Before the first turn, about 1/3 of a mile in, I managed to have a glance to my GPS: 6:15 min/mile, oh my, I had never ran that fast this year! With so many people ahead, I thought I was running at 7 min/mile...

One of our friends, Nathalie, was volunteering at the aid station after mile 1, in Japan Town, and snapped that picture of me wearing the hard working mask...


Typical of me, I had all sort of negatives thoughts in my mind, that this pace wasn't sustainable, the glutes felt tights, I was going to blow up sooner than later, I should have picked shorts, etc. Yet, I was stunned to clock a few more sub 6:30 miles so I kept going, being passed by some, and passing others.

At mile 1, Agnès looked much happier, didn't she?


Quite a few 5K runners turned off the left as we approached the end of the third mile but there were plenty ahead, on the 10K.

On the 4th mile, Thibault, the son of my friends Luc and Anne, caught up with me and we ran the next mile together, both pushing hard. He passed me but I passed him again around the 4.5-mile chip timing mat, and he stuck with me in the final long straight stretch.

With half a mile to go, we passed a runner who seemed he could be in my age group. He reached out after the finish, he was actually 56.

I kept the pedal to the metal until the very end and was really happy to break 40 minutes this time: far from my best but 39:27, good enough for 3rd in my new age group. What I'm the most proud of is to see my average stride back to a healthy 1.32m while keeping a cadence of close to 190. It looks like I didn't lose everything after all, yet I know I have to build back more muscle to avoid another injury at that speed.



I have to say that there was quite some healthy competition in our group: the winner was Thomas Tayeri in 36:09, wow! I'm blown away by his Athlinks stats showing amazing PRs all in his very late 50s.


I actually chatted with second place in our age group, Raymond (Ray) Rodriguez, who is 63 and clocked 37:39!


Big goals for next year, if my knee, and everything else, holds until then... For 25 years I thought I was invicible but not anymore!

Thibaut had started and finished behind me but got a better chip time of 39:22! There are gone my younger years! ;-) 

At the finish line, I was navigating between two groups: a francophone one with friends from Santa Cruz.


And IBM colleagues whom I was trying to gather on Slack as we had a team of about 65 this year!


It felt so great to run fast again, I had no idea I still had these 6-minute miles in me. Like still being able to run 100K last week after such an injury and losing so much leg muscle, that felt surreal too. And encouraging for the future. It was great to see and meet friends and make new connections. To be part of such a lasting and healthy tradition. To run in such wonderful weather. And to think that there should be more miles and Turkey Trot editions in the future!

And speaking of editions and as a bonus, my traditional collection picture, now at 4 by 4. See you next year, that event will be of age as we say!


-- Race #367 | 60th 10K

Fat Ox 24-hour Nationals 2024: building back, many steps at a time!

This was bold: I did run a short ultra training run early January but eased up on a nagging calf injury, ramped up training in February to prep for the 50K Road Nationals in March only to snap and break a meniscus one week before. My 2025 season was wiped out, with a surgery (arthroscopy) done in Paris four months later and the surgeon asking that I only return to running in September. 6 months off, I wish there was a measure of the muscle loss to see how far behind I'm despite some cycling and strength training at the gym. Short of such benchmark, I've completed 5 training marathons in the last 6 weeks at the local track, and managed to improve the pace consistently. Yet, there is a huge difference between jogging a marathon and getting to run for 24 hours... And yet, returning to a National Championship on the West Coast, that was too tempting. Especially as there was nobody entering my age group so it meant no pressure but to use this race as a test.

With the lack of preparation, a 100-mile buckle was on the dream list but, yet, seemed too far fetch and risky. I was hoping to run at least 2 marathons though, maybe 3. What I wasn't prepared for was to use the whole 24 hours so I booked a return flight for 11 am on Sunday morning (race started and finished at 8 am).

To make the trip even shorter, my flight out of SFO got delayed 6 hours due to an atmospheric river and I got to my hotel room at 2:45 am, barely sleeping 3 hours. Again, thankfully, it didn't matter as much since I wasn't planning to run for a day.

I left the hotel barely 1 hour before the start, with a 25-minute ride to the venue. With that late start, the breakfast buffet was already open for a change: I had brought my own breakfast but I grabbed a plate with eggs, bagel, bacon and a cup of coffee which I gave to the a homeless on a bench outside the parking lot. He was stunned by that bit of early Thanksgiving!


As opposed to the pouring rain at the start last year, the weather was perfect for this edition. On the warm/hot side between 11 and 3 but manageable. Still feeling a bit sleepy before the start...


Apart from 2 miles at 8:54 min/mile, I ran the first 31 around 9:15-9:30 min/mile. I was screwed (no crew) so lost 1 minute on mile 32 and 33 to refill. I wanted the stay under 10 min/mile for the first 50 miles but had to slow down a bit after mile 40.

A few pictures from friend and USATF official, Lin Gentling. Respectively at 8:44, 8:51, 8:59, 15:01, 16:11 and 16:19, a sunny day!







Meanwhile, the race was raging at the front, both in the Men and Women, with half a dozen trying to make Team USA for next year's World Championship in Albi, France. I got lapped by Michael Degeorge and Sage Canaday just before closing my 5th lap, then subsequently on lap 10, 15 and 20. I estimated they were running around 7:30-7:20 min/mile, which was really aggressive (7:30 corresponds to 192 miles in 24 hours!). Sage looked easy and in control, letting Michael set the pace. As for the women, I got lapped by 4 of them at the end of my 6th lap, that was really fast too!

I could feel some minor pain in my left knee, just enough to think about it and holding the pace. Around mile 10, the pain disappeared and I started to think I could go really long for a big change. Although I had never tried before, I decided to run with a knee sleeve to keep the inflammation at bay as long as possible. That generated some friction behind the knee but it was tolerable and I kept it for the whole day.

After he got off the racing circuit for 7 years, it was great to see Isaiah Janzen again. In addition to social media, we had met at the 2016 North Coast 24-hour (I ran 120 miles that year, and my 133-mile PR in 2014). Isaiah lapped me 4 times in my first 50-mile, as well as Thierry Joffrain, a compatriote I met at Spartathlon last year, who has lived in Texas for 30 years.

Isaiah still pushing it on the 24th hour!

Thierry taking a brief instant to change before running through the night.


A fixture of our long distance Nationals, Ed Rousseau, just turned 85 and, mostly power walking, was on a mission to set a couple of M85-89 American records on 100K and 24-hour (two new marks set by Jimmie Barnes at Jackpot, last February).


Michael and Sage ran the first 50 miles around 6:36. By then, the sun was blazing and I believe the temperature was close to 80F. They were carrying ice bandanas to avoid the overheating. As I recall, Sage too the control of the race afterwards, keeping a strong pace although I felt he had slowed down when passing me. Sun set was around 5:20 and it cooled down quickly after that.

I jogged the last 10 miles of my first 50 for a total time of 8:19. While the knee was still holding on well, my glutes were really tired, having forgotten what it takes to run for so long without walking. I felt obliged to cover at least 100K to make the trip and the age group title more worthwhile. Like last year, I teamed up with Rich McKnight who helped me shave one minute and a half off my walking pace (from 18:30 to 17).


I hate walking so much, that did help a lot. We talked about running, racing, society, politics. Let's say it was great to exchange perspectives but we didn't solve the current conundrum... This meme came up in my feed this week, not a bad one to capture the overall state of our society, amplified by our so-called social media. To me the real fracture is on short versus long term perspective on economic equity and sustainability in particular. But I digress...


Progressing in the late afternoon, the sun finally disappeared not without some breathtaking visual effect, well done!



The infatigable Jester, Ed Ettighausen, was running the non-championship 24-hour and logged another 100-mile!


Speaking of infatigable, what about the non-stop live coverage from Mountain OutPost, which included Zach Bitter, AJW (Any Jones Wilkins), Jamil Coury.



At least, with darkness, the board was now much easier to read that in the sun:


Rich was going for 100 miles over 48 hours, I had enough at 100K myself, didn't want to get too crazy on the knee yet. Completed lap 63, mile 63.2, in 12:18. I tried to take as much heat as I could in my body, from the heated tent, before spending the next 8 hours in the car. Rather uncomfortable night, I had to start the engine to heat the seat 4 times during the night (50F outside), yet much easier than walking all night like last year...

Not proud of the result on paper, and even worse for the UltraSignup ratio (44.3%, yikes!) but, given the context and circumstance, I believe using only 12 hours was a reasonable decision for me. It actually gave me a chill to see Sage suffering from hypothermia in the early evening; he would end up dropping at 86 miles, so long for the qualification (Michael ended up with 59 laps).


Janelle Stark, coached by the great Zach Bitter, was on world record pace for most of the day and took the lead after Sage stopped. She ended up with 137.4 miles, and 2nd overall. Kayle Frederick sprinted the last 5 laps to make the qualification minima by 0.4 miles, with Lana Haugberg missing it by 0.6 miles!



Also coached by Zach, Philip Sebastiani ended up taking the overall win with 142.3 miles, 3 laps short of the Men qualifying bar of 145 miles (but an overall win was great enough to qualify!). It was impressive to see him giving it all, logging a few sub-9 miles in the last hour.


Sho Gray took 2nd in the Men with 137.4 miles, followed my Isaiah, 125.5 miles, and Thierry, first Masters, with 120.6 miles. Oh, and Ed logged 77.1 miles which should be just enough for a new age group record for 24 hours!



USATF official liaison and friend, Lynn, was gracious enough to hand me the medal and patch so I could drive to the airport before the award ceremony. National champion patch #21, what would we do for a piece of fabric! ;-)



Although he had a later flight, Thierry tagged along for that ride to the airport. Lynn was the only official this time, she was busy monitoring the race, and taking pictures of us, which she shared this week.



Before leaving, selfies with local legends, Zach and AJW!



As I write this report less than 24 hours after stopping last night, on Sunday, the knee seems fine, phew! If anything, the glutes and hamstrings are sore from that longest physical effort of the year but I managed to run 3. miles on Monday and some strenght training at the gym on Tuesday, taking Wednesday off before the Turkey Trot on Thanksgiving. At least there is that for the 2024 season, with prospects of rebuilding for 2025! Many steps at a time, but not more than what makes sense... When ultra running is definitely an experiment of n = 1...

PS: the words I used in my Facebook post... Tasting the ultra waters again, it feels surreal between all the experience coming back but also not knowing what I'm doing, or supposed to do...