EARLY MORNING IN THE DESERT |
The race is held in the McDowell Regional Park and consists of two 3.65 mile trail runs sandwiching either an on road bike or off road bike leg. I chose the on road option of approximately 24 miles. The annual rainfall in the Phoenix metro area is about 7 inches/year, but when there is a hint of a storm the local media launch into overdrive. In this case they were predicting that a major storm would start Saturday and rain through Monday with 100% probability. They were wrong. While the clouds threatened, the rain really didn't hit until Monday noon.
I had been slowly getting back into training but had worked back to only about 7 hours per week. Just enough to make such a race distance as the Desert Du feasible. Most of those training hours were spent swimming, some biking, and a little running so I was appropriately apprehensive regarding the race, especially the run portions. So I planned on "completing" the event not "racing" the event, something that is not natural for me. I even chose to not wear a watch so that I would not get carried away. I was wrong.
I started out on the run near the back and was holding my slow pace as planned until a guy with the number 68 on his calf went past me. OK, why not try to stay in sight of him? After a while I thought, OK why not pass him? And that was the end of the "completing" versus "racing" strategy. Post race I found out that my split was 29:55, good enough for a 8:12 min/mile pace. Not fast, but faster than my planned 9 min/mile pace.
FINISH LINE IN SIGHT |
Returning to the trail run my legs were ever so clumsy and with the reality setting in that I was indeed not "race" ready, I chose to walk the rockier and steeper uphills. My second run turned out to take 32:58, good enough to average a shade over 9 min/mile and stay ahead of the guy with 68 on his calf.
JUST THE TWO OF US |
As an aside: My total consumption during the race was 12 ounces of "Perform" sports drink. This is consistent with a cool and overcast day (60 degrees), and that the body muscles and blood naturally contain all the energy you need to compete for 2 hours.
Glad I did the race, knees are very sore. Guess I have to put some more time into training as there is only 2 months until the St George Half.
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