I have run Boston 11 times:1979 2:47, PR for me, cool, misty - Bill Rodgers set CR
in
2:09:27, Joan Benoit won women
1980 2:27:25, Career Record for me, hot, sunny, 68th
place,
missed qualifying for the Olympic
Trials by 5:31Bill Rodgers and Jacqueline Garreau won (not that
girl from MTI)
1982 2:31, Hot, sunny, 192nd place, Alberto Salazar out
kicked
Dick Beardsley ("The Duel on the
Sun") and Charlotte Teske won women
1984 3:02, Downpour - 2" of rain - My last chance ever
for the
Olympic Trials, I ran 25:50 for the
first 5 miles and 32:10 for 10K (both career records) but then
my shoes got soaked and I nearly froze
in the rain. Betty Blank and Kenny Moffett caught me and pulled
me to the finish. The Boston Globe
headline read "Geoff Smith wins Splashdown" Lorraine Moeller won
women.
1986 2:53, Hot, tailwind - Rob DeCastella said he lost 10
pounds
to train to win; Ingrid Kristiansen
won women
1988 4:03 Very Cold, rainy - Ibrahim Hussein and Rosa
Mota won
1992 4:37 Cold, rainy - Ibrahim
Hussein and Olga Markova won
1995 3:47 Ran with a friend - nice tailwind - Cosmas
Ndeti and
Uta Pippig won
1996 3:14 Muddy, with showers - 100th anniversary -
Moses Tanui
and Uta Pippig won
1998 3:01 Cool but pleasant - Moses Tanui and Fatuma
Roba won
1999 2:57 Warm, tailwind - I could have run much faster
but had
3 pit stops Joseph Chebet and
Fatuma Roba won
The most important factors are:
1. How to train for the event
2. How to prepare between now and then
3. What to do pre-race
4. What to do race day
Discussion:
1. How you train for the event
For my first 3 Bostons, I trained huge distances. I ran to
Carderock and back, to Columbia MD, to Fort
Belvoir, to Upper Marlboro -- anything to extend distance and
build confidence. Then in the middle years, I ran Boston just
in Olympic Trials years, since 1980 and 1984 were so emotional
for me. In the later years,
I ran lots of races to prepare. This year, I had some very nice
long runs, but not 1980-class; and some of the best speed
sessions ever (thanks to some fine training partners) In 1998,
I was in fine shape, but I ran the Towpath 5M Saturday before he
Marathon and then some more with my host upon arriving in
Boston. Too
much too late. Don't do that. Last year, I had more long runs,
with good company, and some good
races. Follow the theory of Periodization (Cycles)
A. Assume you can run 2 good marathons a year, with six months
in between
B. 1 month after Marathon I, e.g. November, being rebuilding
distance
C. 2 months after, add weightlifting and longer distance
(Lengthening Cycle)
D. 3 months after, run training races and harder runs, with
hills (Strengthening Cycle)
E. 4 months after, run fast races and add track speedwork
(Hardening Cycle)
F. 5 months after (1 month before), run lots of track
speedwork, interspersed with easy runs
on sot surfaces -- hard day, easy day or two (Sharpening
Cycle)
G. The week before Marathon II, run a speed workout but take
the rest easy.
2. How you prepare between now and then
If you don't think you have trained adequately for the event,
don't start now. It's too late to do any more training ...
except you could run a few 50m/100m/200m dashes on Friday to
perk up your legs.
Get more sleep. Drink more water and juice. Eat lightly
Thursday and Friday. Use all your stretching techniques. Keep
you legs up at work and home. Don't get angry or emotional about
anything - keep the adrenaline under control.
Don't fall in love the week before the race. I seem to do that
every year, and it's VERY distracting.
It's a challenge getting to Boston. Make sure all your
transportation and accommodations are lined up so you don't have
to worry. Wear your racing shoes in the days before the race as
a shakedown. Bring them wherever you go if you fly, along with
your other essentials.
Don't risk losing your race stuff. Pack today. Don't wait
till tomorrow.
Visualize the race. If you run today, think about the start,
the crowds in the middle, the finish. Imagine yourself
strong, swift, and brave. Practice running downhill at least
once. Oops - too late! But imagine yourself running downhill.
Get more sleep. Drink more water and juice. Eat lightly
Thursday and Friday.
Did I already mention that?
3. What to do pre-race:
Pick up your packet and chip on SATURDAY if you can, because the
Expo is more crowded on Sunday. It's easy to walk for hours at
the Expo. It's inspiring to hang out with Bill Rodgers, Rosa
Mota, and Khalid
Khannouchi. You can pick up lots of lagniappe (New Orleans talk
for free handouts) and get lots of athletic drinks, sports bars,
running magazines, and Mrs. T's Pirogues. You can also learn
much at the pre-race clinics. You can also beat up your legs
walking around that concrete floor. So if you go on Sunday, go
early.
Then go back to your hotel or host and take a nap.
Scope out the finish area. Sprint once under the finish banner
on Boylston St, with your friends taking photos.
Scope out exactly where to catch the bus. It's farther east now
than last year.
Decide where and how you will meet your friends and family post-
race. Pick a restaurant
or covered area. Remember, it's a massive cluster array after
the race, and you can't cross Boylston Street because of the
barricades.
If you go to the pre-race dinner, please expect long delays for
insufficient food. If you don't go to dinner, there is an open
market for the free tickets that come with your packet. If you
opt for your own food, be sure it's not heavy, spicy, greasy,
or unfamiliar. Trust me on this. I personally like shredded
wheat, oatmeal, whole wheat bread, tomatoes, raisins, dates,
bananas, oranges, honeydew ... but that's just me.
If it looks like it will be hot, drink a gallon of water on
Sunday. Get a good night's sleep.
4. What to do on race day:
I have a secret. On Sunday, I tuck a plastic bag with a extra
shirt behind the bushes or a tent just after the finish line.
That way, I can finish, change clothes quickly, and watch
finishers for a half hour rather than
hustling to get my gear.
Bring a bottle of water. Get to your bus. It's no fun waiting
in line. In 1984, I waited in the rain for the bus with Ron
Ponchak, who had trained all year for the race. It was raining
so hard, and he was so miserable, that he turned around and
went back to his hotel room. (That was the Splashdown year.)
For this Monday, The Weather Channel says Scattered Showers, hi
56 degreesF, lo 43 degreesF See
http://www.weather.com/weather/cities/us_ma_boston.html
Too bad today's weather won't prevail (Partly cloudy, hi 48
degreesF,
lo 33 degreesF, wind 7 mph.
Be VERY aware of weather predictions once you're in Boston. I
like it hot & sunny, but most other people like it chilly. Wet
is awful. Get a couple of plastic trash bags to shelter you in
Hopkinton and to wear before the start.
The bus ride is fun but too long. I like to tell people that I
go downtown and jump on a bus, then they drive me out to the
distant suburbs, kick me off the bus, and make me run back.
There are no bathrooms on the buses. Fair warning.
When you get to Hopkinton, the buses pull into a circle in front
of Hopkinton High School. You can wait at the high school till
about 11 am, then you must check your bag onto the appropriately-
numbered bus. That bus will take you bag back to Boston, where
you'll pick it up after the finish line. Depending on the
weather,
you may wish to wear a disposable warm-up layer and discard it
at the start.
An alternative approach is to check your bag early, then walk up
Hayden Row or one of the other side streets toward the starting
line, and find a friendly house. The people in Hopkinton are SO
NICE on Marathon Monday. You might want to bring a DC race t-
shirt to give your random hosts, if you choose that
approach.
Secure you chip and double knot your shoes. Trust me on this.
Don't wait too long to get to your corral for the start. It's
unnerving to struggle through a crowd and climb over a railing
right before the start.
Then you wait. At 11:55, the wheelchairs go off. At 12:00
noon, the cannon fires, and the elite corral (numbers 1-499)
opens, followed by 500-999, 1000-1499, 1500-1999 etc.). You can
go to the front of your corral, but play fair -- if you're sick
or hurting, move back one or more corrals.
You'll cross the starting line roughly 20 seconds per corral
after the cannon. Your chip will record your personal start time.
Don't get sucked out by the fast early pace. Last year, I ran a
5:34 first mile but ended up with a 6:50 per mile average. Not
smart. The first two miles are downhill, however, so you
should take advantage of them. Then it's level, downhill,
level, uphill, downhill, WAY uphill, downhill, and finally
level. The early drop is 300 feet, Heartbreak Hill regains the
300 feet, and the last 5 miles drop 300 feet. So it's net
downhill. Your thigh muscles will take a beating. If you've
been training downhills, you'll be more prepared for the
fatigue; if not, at least prepare yourself mentally. Run as
gently as you can the first 8 miles, till you get to the
flatlands near Ashland. There, the crowds begin to gather --
about 1 pm. From there, the crowds thicken, and they will pull
you along. If you can get to Wellesley safely at 13, you have
half the course behind you. Still be running gently. You'll
cross 128, a concrete bridge; this is jarring on the legs. Then
you'll see the Newton Fire Station.
The course turns there onto Route 9 and the hills begin. Draw
energy from the crowds up Heartbreak Hill. They will have
oranges, water, Gatorade, and cheers for you. Concentrate on
economical hill-climbing form.
Don't let the hill fool you -- it flattens out three times
before pitching up again. Use those flats to recover
your stride. Then at the top, watch for Bill Rodgers' store on
the left, across from Chestnut Hill Reservoir. That's the top
of Heartbreak Hill, 21 miles.
Carefully cross the railroad tracks. Now the race begins.
There are high-rise apartments on both side of the street, so
lots of spectators. Use their energy. Lengthen your stride a
little to take advantage of the long downhills the last 4 miles.
When you see the Bank of Boston, read the clock -- it's your
current time. When you see the CITGO sign and the Prudential
Tower in the distance, use them as your markers. That's where
you're heading. When you pass the CITGO sign, you have about
1.5 miles to go. Now, if you have another gear left, it's time
to use it.
Depending on your place in the pack, you may be able to pass
100-200 runners in the last 1.5 miles (who haven't read this e-
mail). But pacing the early part of the race and not
overworking your quads is the key to running a good pace at the
finish.
The course gets really nice after you pass Fenway Park on the
right and the Massachusetts Avenue Bridge overhead. Watch for
the monuments on Commonwealth Avenue. Then abruptly, the course
turns right at Hereford Street, past the Lenox Hotel and the old
Eliot Lounge. After two blocks, the course turns left and you
are in the Super Bowl of running, the last half mile on Boylston
Street. Look all around you and soak in the crowd's applause.
It's all just for you. For the last half mile, you can see the
finish all the way. You will pass and be passed, and perhaps
make some lifelong friends that last half mile. Then -- the
finish. Under the scaffolding, your chip clicks your personal
and overall time. Then the struggle to stay erect begins.
I love people, so I prefer to grab some water, a plastic
blanket, and my secretly-hidden t-shirt, then watch
finishers for a half hour while stretching and rubbing. Then
I'll go back into the line, get some food and more drink, turn
in my chip, GET MY MEDAL (DON'T FORGET), and get my bag from the
bus from Hopkinton.
You might want to go straight to the line. Then go meet your
family or friends (remember where?) and relax while telling
Tales of the Hunt.
Beware: Boylston Street is an urban canyon, high rises on both
side. Boston is much farther east than Washington, so it gets
light a half hour earlier and DARK a half hour earlier. By
4:30, the buildings on Boylston cast shadows and it gets
chilly. If you're a later finisher, you'll want to hustle into
to warmups
quickly. The buses are an inefficient way to distribute bags,
but they are the best available option. Changing areas are
limited. If it's rainy and cold, your fingers will be less
dexterous, so put gloves on first. Then change your top so your
body core get warm. Your legs were your prime movers for 3+
hours, so they will stay warmer
longer. If it's wet, change socks and shoes right away to avoid
hypothermia. There is excellent medical support. I hope you
don't need it.
At 6 pm, the Awards Ceremony in the Copley Plaza Hotel is an
inspiration. You'll see runners from all over the world
receiving their prizes. Be there if you can.
At 7 pm, the post-race party at the Transportation Pavilion is
just great. You can watch the race on big-screen TV, starting
from the warm-ups all the way thru the finishers. If you are
not going to the post-race party, please give me your tickets.
I have lots friends in Boston whom could use your ticket. Put
those extra tickets into my envelope #1920 at registration ;-)
Only half-kidding.
Dance the night away. Work up a sweat. Your legs will feel
better for it on Tuesday. Wear your medal everywhere you go for
the next week.
I'll see you all there, then back in Washington on Saturday at
Golds Gym and Earth Day.