Looking
back April
35 years
ago -
1979 – I ran 127 miles and took 7 days
off during the first full month of outdoor track during my freshman year at
Billerica High School. I raced six
times, mostly in dual-meet races. I
started the month with a third place 2 mile versus Central Catholic
(11:47). Five days later I lowered my PR
by nearly a minute running a 10:50.4 and placing fourth in a meet against Dracut
on our home track at the Marshall Middle school. Two days later I ran a 11:00 2 mile against
Tewksbury and followed that up a week later with a 10:58 versus Wilmington. After that I ran a 2:25 for a half-mile leg
in the Class Relays. I closed out the
month with an uninspired 11:18 2 mile in a dual meet against Andover. In all I scored 14 points towards my
letter. I’m not sure how many points you
needed but I ended up getting the outdoor track letter (a large green
“B”).
30 years
ago –
1984 – I only ran 255 miles with five days off due to a badly sprained ankle
during the start of my sophomore outdoor track season at the University of
Lowell. I opened the month with the
Fitchburg relays 5,000 meters. We used
to call it the “iceberg relays” because it seemed to always be cold and rainy at
this early season meet. Dennis
Simoniatis and I planned to tie, doing the race as a hard workout. We ran splits of 4:41, 4:48, and 4:38 for a
5k of 14:32. Twelve days later I ran my
first 10,000 meter track race at the BC relays.
My goal was to break 30:30 which was the qualifying standard for the NCAA
National championships (D2). I ran
splits of 4:44, 4:50, 4:49, 4:50, 4:52, 4:56, and 70 for a 30:12. That put me over a minute behind the winner
(Sapienza 28:55).
25 years
ago –
1989 – I lowered my mileage down to 328 for the month, mostly because I was
aiming for a good run at the Boston marathon.
This was my first shot at the marathon and I trained very hard with a
goal of breaking 2:15. The week prior to
the marathon I headed to New York City for the second annual Ekiden Relay. This was a big money race that had teams from
each of the 50 states and some international teams. Somehow I ended up running the shortest leg
of the relay a 7.5km (4.41 miles) dash through Central Park. I ended up running the 2nd fastest
time of the day 20:44 (4:42 pace), our team took 4th place and I came
home with $3,000. The others on the team
were Tim Gannon (14:10 5k), Paul Gorman (10.1k = 9th pl), Dennis
Simoniatis (9.3k = 2nd pl), Wally Collins (10k 30:12, 10th
pl). Nice days later I lined up at the
start of the Boston Marathon. This was
my first and only Boston and my first Marathon, although I’ve done 46 races of
the marathon and beyond since then. I
joined 5,122 others on a 67 degree day.
I felt great through 20k, and still pretty good through 30k, but the last
10k was just brutal. My splits were
31:10, 32:10, 33:10, for the first 30km.
The last 12.2k took me 45:32 (5:59) pace but it was a lot worse than it
sounds. I staggered across the line and
was promptly escorted to the medical tent and from there to the hospital. Over 10 pounds of IV fluid later I was
released. Ouch! I ended up finishing in 2:22:03 for
17th place.
20 years
ago –
1994 – I only raced twice during April although I managed 368 miles with no days
off. I was recovering from a sprained
ankle and back woes which kept my racing limited. I supported U-Lowell at the Alamo Alumni race
in Boston. It was sunny but windy and a
chilly 40 degrees. I ran an uninspired
24:37 to take 10th place. I
stayed away from running until the 23rd when I went to the Mount
Misery trail race in Lincoln MA. The
trails were in great shape, but the field was very small (26 finishers). I ran with Petey until the last quarter mile
then took off to win in 43:22 for the 7 miles race.
3 comments:
This is awesome!
Cool read.
Some very familiar names in those Alamo results!
DD, really interesting stuff!
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