Race Report – Dirty Love 10K
Now with 2015 ### kicking
So, of the 300 registered only 220 showed up for the actual race.
Less people chickened out this year, but the treturous conditions still kept participants under 300.
It was 17 at the start of the race, we had an additional 3-5” over night on top of an already icy and snowy (about 6” when I tested a portion of the track earlier in the week) track.
It was a balmy 37 this time around, but the snow was a lot higher and heavier in this version, still thigh high from all of the accumulation over the last couple of weeks but thankfully some melted over the 24 hours preceding. Y'know, so it wasn't waist high.
Here is a video of the start of the race -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOtpKgBv_Co&feature=youtu.be. I’m at the front on the far left – grey top w/orange stripes, white hat w/orange and brown stripes, orange and brown gloves, black tights/shorts. Tough to make out anyone and given what I’m wearing I’m easy to miss. I must emphasize this was hands down the easiest part of the race. A quarter mile sprint in an open field to the bottleneck as we enter the single track trail. The field was primarily fresh, light snow that wasn’t filled with tracks – not too challenging to run through. Can’t say the same about the rest of the course!
I think I aced planning for this race outside of this 200 meter sprint. No video yet, but I think the guy was out there, so if I see it I'll post it. I'm the moron on the outside left not taking advantage of the foot prints in front of me from the leaders. I led the group on the outside and my heart was racing by the time I got to the bottleneck 40 to 50 or so back high stepping through the thigh high muck.
Until the final 50 meters the entire race is on this trail and it was fugly. Contrary to what I thought entering the race (I misread the map) there wasn’t a single flat stretch for more than about 50-100 meters except for the opening sprint. Just to give you perspective, the winner of last year’s race finished in just under 40 minutes, about 4 minutes in front of second place. The same guy won this year. In a time north of 51 minutes. The next four were spread out between 53:10 and 57:39, including one state cross country runner, before the steady stream started coming in at 59:06. Yes, you are reading those 10K times accurately.
I didn’t really know what to expect over the first mile as it was a foreign trail to me, but it was more challenging than I thought it could be. By my count, there four downed trees we had to jump, two creek beds to navigate, and the snow was packed in so tight in one spot that the only way to continue on was to jump over a picnic bench. Craziness. I’m just happy I took the initial sprint so aggressively because I can’t imagine the bottleneck that was going on behind me. I was in a pack of a half dozen ranging from 4th-10th throughout this first mile.
Due to my poor planning at the start I was MUCH further back this time around, but the way my heart was racing I wasn't too pissed about it. Gave me a chance to get things under control then make up for lost time later. Less storm damage than last year, so there weren't any trees to jump and the race planner's must have had some complaints last year as there were paths cleared to the bridges instead of running through creeks and jumping picnic benches.
The 1 mile mark is just before the one real nasty hill on the course when things start to spread out. This hill is a 20% grade and more than a ¼ mile long. Many chose to walk it while I chose a very slow trot just so I could keep the legs churning, but conserving energy as the packed snow was like quicksand – no way to maintain any level of speed here.
2014 MAC, you're an idiot. As the rest of my race report detailed putting forth any energy and effort to this monstrosity was just plain stupid. I'm not repeating the mistake this time. Shortly before the hill there is a flat with some space to pass so I really bolted through this spot knowing I was walking the entire hill. I'm sure it caused some eye rolls behind me, but - planning. This hill would be the last time anybody passed me this time around.
At this point was when I thought things would calm down on the course and time could be made up. Wrong. We veered off of the main trail I expected and took a subsidiary into a river valley. Several up’s and down’s and side hill runs on ice and snow as well as 3 or 4 bridge crossings with stairs on either side. By the time we were back to the main trail I was already getting a little sluggish. Cardio was fine, but my legs were not as I had difficulty maintaining footing despite this part of the trail being (somewhat) flatter. This is when I began to get passed by people.
Heh heh heh heh...silly, silly 2014 MAC. Prior planning prevents piss poor performance. This time around, I was the one doing the passing as I saved up my energy on the climb by walking. I paced the runner in front of me during any climbs, flats, turns, but the downs? I took off. The one obstacle I had to hurdle with each of these passes was the snow wasn't packed down during pass attempts. 40some people in front matted things down for the single trail, but the stuff was still knee-thigh high whenever I attempted to pass.
Going into the river valley I was 4th, and I was only passed by one person in there, but once getting out and others started picking up the pace I began to get picked off groups of two at a time. The first got me just before the first aid station at 2.5. I tailed them briefly, but then again instead of staying on the main trail I expected we veered into a subsidiary I was unfamiliar with. When we reached a steep sideways hill into a gorge I finally entered F this S mode. This was the first time I walked as there were steep, slippery stairs coming up out of the gorge so I took it as an opportunity to get my bearings back. I lost that pack of 2 then another pack of 2 caught me as I got to the top of the stairs.
Making mistakes is fine, as long as you learn from them. The flat near the 2.5 aid station was actually much worse this time around as it's near the main park road so all that thick, heavy slush/rock-like snow had built up there. I actually stopped and walked for a few steps because it was just that bad. The subsidiary trail that ended me last year was probably my strongest stretch this time around. I've re-ran that thing so many times after screwing it up last year I knew when to pick my spots. I chased a few down before the first slippery stair case then assertively attacked the stairs down before walking up and out to catch my breath. Then the moment I'm up and out I take off again instead of needing to ease back into it. I passed people throughout this mile and a half that killed me last year, being assertive everywhere but the 3 stair case climbs, which I used to get my heart rate back under control by walking.
I ran with them for about a half mile, but it became evident their pace was just too vigorous for me as I slowly lost touch. We reached another gorge right before the mile 4 aid station and this was when the next pack of 2 got me. I again walked up the stairs to get composed again then tried running with them.
At this point we finally reached a part of the course I was familiar with. It was a challenging section, but mentally I knew it was coming so I handled it better than the previous challenging sections. As we ducked and dived through another river valley I conserved energy on the uphill portions better and exploded on the downhills to catch back up to them. Once done with this section there is about a ½-3/4 mile stretch that is generally a little more uphill than down and this is when I slowly lost touch with them.
This is probably the hardest portion of the course to manufacture pass attempts, so this time around I ran through the mile 4 aid station to get ahead of the small pack ahead of me with the goal to catch the next pack before the steep dive around mile 5. I was able to get by all but one but that one I didn't get around was a good person for me to pace off of anyway. He was a little more conservative on the downs, but given how slick they were this was probably a good thing. He also dragged me up the climbs as this is when I usually slow down. I knew I needed to stay on his hip because immediately after the roller coaster is the one spot to really try to pass someone before the steep down after mile 5. I picked him off there then was able to pick up the pace and set my sights on the next pack for the mile 5 dive.
As we reached the end of it before diving back down the big hill (similar to the one we went up at mile 1) into the final mile another pack of two caught me. I was able to hang with these guys though. One passed me about ¼ mile before the hill but I was able to hold the other off.
Probably my most proud moment of the race this time around. I reached a pack of 4 right at the top of this hill then blew right by them on the first 2 of the 3 downs. That allowed me to really attack the last down, the biggest, as I was able to stay in the packed down single track instead of tredging through the thigh high stuff to pass so I could get the next pack in my sights.
Once getting to the bottom and getting to the final tight mile I decided to just go stride for stride behind this guy as it was VERY tight here. During the two down hills I paced him I tended to catch back up to him after he gained separation and I knew the dive into the finish was downhill so I planned to pace off him then blow by him at the end. The plan worked well, this was probably my best mile of the race, but I didn’t realize just how little room there was at the end.
Knowing how little room there was at the end, I was more aggressive during this stretch. It's tight...very tight, but there are spots to attack at the bottom of each down's as long as you keep your balance. Of the 3 person pack I picked off one right at the bottom of the first down then I got another at the same spot of the second down. That left the lead female in front of me. There is a very slick climb right before the final dive back to the lodge, so I let her get some separation on me there knowing I would build momentum on the way down and could make one final pass as we came out of the woods.
As we came out of the woods it was two tight turns and then a 30-50 meter sprint. I picked up momentum coming out of the woods and was about to pass him until I realized the tight turns, I had to lay off the gas and kinda hurdle a snow mound to prevent losing too much speed but by this time I needed to really dig deep to get past this long legged beast in the final sprint as I had lost all momentum. Another 10 meters and I probably had him, but he got me by 0.10 seconds. We separated from the other guy in the pack who finished 5 seconds behind.
Mother f'ers changed the finish! I had her setup perfectly only to realize the finishing mats were setup right at the bottom of the hill as we came out of the woods, about 50 meters shorter than last time around. Oh well, she got me by two seconds.
Official time – one hour two minutes eleven seconds, 13th overall and 2nd in my age group. I never thought I’d be happy with a 10K time this high, but…given the conditions (and after talking with the others afterwards), I couldn’t be happier. It was excruciating. As those that regularly do half marathon’s told me, this was indescribably harder than any of those they’ve ever done. But it was a freaking blast. And I can’t wait to do it again.
EAT #### 2014 TIME! 58:50, 3 1/2 minutes faster. 28th instead of 13th and 6th in my age group (I'd have won both the older and younger age groups though, ha!), but chatting afterwards there were a lot of new faces this year. Fast faces apparently, many of them fessed up to chickening out last year at the last minute, but despite the heavy snow battled through this year because of the warmer air temp's.
I'll admit the 2014 challenge was more physically demanding, but I think this year was more of a mental grind. Last year, you knew every step was going to suck. I didn't help matters by just wearing old trail shoes. This year I made that correction with yak traks, but mentally...this year was so much harder. Unlike last year, not every step sucked. HOWEVER, the steps that did suck were terrible and worse, unexpected. No idea how many turned ankles were made out there on the course, but I'd be surprised if it were less than a dozen. I am aware of at least a few that DNF'd because of them. Mine are feeling it today, but I was able to instinctively adjust when it happened to minimize the damage. Gonna need a few days off though. I did make a couple of mistakes that almost turned into REALLY bad mistakes, but thankfully I was able to control myself before falling off a cliff. Passing people on the down's was the correct move, but I struggled with a few because adjusting your stride going from the thigh high stuff to the packed down path again was difficult. I over corrected a couple of times and kinda zig zagged to regain my footing and both times there were steep cliffs directly to the right of me. Good thing I left myself with a few feet of room for error, so when I mis stepped I was still 18-24" from certain doom, but still...scary stuff. Probably contributed to me being happy I got stuck behind that guy on the roller coaster, so I didn't do anything dumb.