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Philadelphia Marathon

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Location:

SLC,UT,

Member Since:

Apr 28, 2011

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

PR Table and Notable Races

Marathon:
2:21:12 (Chicago); 2:20:41 (CIM)

Half Marathon: 1:05:45 (Long Beach)
10K: 30:03 (Portland)

All race results:
2011 - 2012 - 2013 - 2014 - 2015 - 2016

Personal:

   

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Race: Philadelphia Marathon (26.2 Miles) 02:25:57, Place overall: 13
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Philadelphia Marathon Race Report

As everyone knows, I was going for the Olympic Trials qualifying time of 2:19:00. I was very confident going into this, as my training had been pretty much perfect, I was 100% healthy, and feel like I pretty much nailed the taper just right. When I went to bed last night, I felt like there was absolutely nothing I could have or would have done differently.

We woke up at 5am, went outside for a quick 3 minute shakeout jog, then hung out in our hotel room until about 6:20am. The temperature was 51 degrees when we woke up, which was really nice because it was 27 degrees the day before. It was also windy, which we didn't think was a big deal at the time. We made our way down Ben Franklin Parkway with thousands and thousands of other runners. The atmosphere was exciting. Checked into the elite tent, used the private bathroom (best perk of elite seeding!), and at 6:50am they brought us out to the course. We did a few strides, and literally a minute before the race, the elite coordinator introduced the OTQ pacers. What? We had not been told about this before, but it was a welcome surprise. The men's pacer was a small little Kenyan guy. Then we were off and running...

The start down the parkway felt amazing. A true big city marathon atmosphere. If you've ever been to or seen this area in front of the art museum, you would agree that this is simply an iconic road to start a big race on. It was very cool.

Everyone went out fast, and there were half-marathoners mixed in there, so I made sure to hang back and stay conservative. Just before the one mile mark, things thinned out a bit, I found our pacer and a pack started to form. Hit the mile in 5:11, but with all the adrenaline and loud crowds, that was about as slow as I could possibly go.

Then we found our rhythm. The next miles were 5:20, 5:19, 5:19, 5:14, 5:18, 5:17. Perfect. The crowds on Chestnut Street were the best I have ever experienced during a race. I tried to conserve as much energy as possible and stay tucked in behind some taller guys. The wind was swirling, seemingly coming from every direction, and it was obvious this would play a factor in the race.

After 7 miles, you leave the downtown area and hit the hilly section of the course. Splits here were 5:23, 5:27, 5:28. Exactly what I wanted - conserve energy on the uphills. Our pack was probably still about 7-8 guys at this point (the lead marathon pack was never in sight).

The next 3 miles were mostly flat, with some gradual hills, but nothing too challenging. Hit 5:12, 5:17, 5:16 - then the half-marathon in 1:09:33. Right on the money!

Not many guys running with the OTQ group made it much past halfway. The 14th mile was 5:11, and it was already down to 3 - the pacer (who didn't talk much but was doing an awesome job), myself, and Karl Savage (a local favorite and former 4-minute miler). We just kept rolling and I was feeling good - 5:17, 5:16, 5:23 (up and over a bridge with the 2nd 180 degree turn). Just before we hit 17, the pacer told me he was done and couldn't go any further. He wished us luck. I said "Are you ready to do this Karl? Its just us now" I think he said he was ready, and within 20 seconds he dropped and I never saw him again (he ran 2:35).

Now it was on me to make this happen. It was go time, now or never. I controlled my own destiny. No crutches, no pacers, not really even any competitors around. I think I was in 6th or 7th place.

The next 4 miles were 5:18, 5:18, 5:22, 5:22 - the latter two having more uphill than I anticipated. The 30K split was 1:38:51 (sub 2:19 pace), and my 20 mile split was 1:46:05, just a few ticks off the 1:46:01 that I had written with a sharpie on my arm. This was exactly where I wanted to be... on pace at 20, and now I could do what I was trained to do - drop the hammer and catch everyone in front of me...

But before I had a chance to take a swing, the hammer hit me. And so did the wind hammer - the wind was now blowing directly from the east (straight up headwind) and while not an absolute killer, it was very noticeable while running solo and having no one to tuck in behind.

I tried to fight it. And my 22nd mile was 5:32. Slowest of the race, and it was a gradual downhill. I just couldn't accelerate on the downhills. My hamstrings and calves were knotting up. But all hope was not lost yet. I heard someone tell me I was in 6th place sometime during this mile.

Then the $h#t hit the fan. Or it hit the wall. The wall that I tried to convince myself didn't exist started to show itself in an ugly, nasty way. The 23rd mile was 5:58, but after running sub 5:20 pace for 21 miles, that felt like I wasn't even moving. Like I was running in sand. And it was about to get a lot worse...

At Utah Valley, when I hit the 23 mile mark I told myself "only 15 minutes to go!" and absolutely crushed the last couple miles, running some of my fastest splits of the race. The story of these last miles couldn't have been more different...

My form was completely broken by this point - I was hunched over and not running smooth at all. It was a struggle to move. And then I started getting dizzy. Maybe it was just a lack of mental focus - I don't know, but my head was spinning and I just felt awful. I hit an aid station and walked through it. This is when I was supposed to be clipping off 5:05 miles, and it was like I was running the Wasatch 100 miler! Walking?!?! Oh man. The 24th mile was 6:22. So now I'm at women's OTQ pace!

I'm at a point that I have never experienced before... fighting to stay upright. Mentally, checked out and I know I'm not going to get re-engaged in this race. Runners coming the opposite way (the second half is an out and back) were so supportive and encouraging. I just couldn't rise up and run fast like they were telling me to. I was stumbling around, weaving back and forth across the road. Its funny to think about this now... but it wasn't funny at the time. I considered just stopping and waiting for Andrea, thinking that maybe if I rested for 15 minutes, I could bring her in at 6:20 pace. But at the same time, I just wanted to get off the course in one piece, and I didn't want to risk upsetting her if she saw me in a bad state and ruin her OTQ chances, so I soldiered on... stopping to walk at every aid station and about every 2-3 minutes otherwise... I was Gallo-walking! Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhh!

Mile 25 was 7:04. Cool, now I'm at race-walking OTQ pace. Guys are flying past me. I go from 6th or 7th place to 13th. During this mile I tried to high-five Andrea's dad and I completely missed (by about 4 feet). My depth perception was gone. I had officially hit the wall.

The last 1.2 miles took me 9 minutes and 31 seconds (7:55 pace). With a little over a quarter mile to go, I saw my sister and a ton of my friends from college who had come out to watch. I gave them all high-fives and just shrugged my shoulders. I think they were surprised to see me looking so terrible, because they had seen my 30K split and didn't expect the blowup any more than I did.

The finish was anti-climatic. Not the 2:17 and and OTQ and "Ryan Hall style" celebration and getting draped with the American flag like I had visualized on every early morning run and hard workout for the past 4 months. I just crossed like any other runner, having experienced the "other side" of the marathon that so many others have gone through. A rite of passage of sorts. 

I drank 3 cups of Gatorade, then threw it up. Went to the elite tent, changed my clothes, and went back to the finish to watch Andrea come in. I had my phone, so I told my sister to text me when she came by. I got the text when the clock was at 2:47-high, and Andrea came in just over 2:49. She looked strong as she crossed the line. I immediately wrapped her up in a big hug and told her how proud I was of her and how much I loved her. As I wrote about on our blog the other day, the journey is what really matters, not necessarily the outcome. She asked me how I did, and I saw the pain in her eyes when I said 2:25. She knew better than anyone how bad I wanted this and how hard I had worked. It was almost tough to admit to her that I had run so slowly.

After the race we met up with all our friends and family. They knew we didn't hit the times we wanted and were very supportive and cheered us back up. After a while I came back to life and started to feel better. We got some cheesesteaks and Dairy Queen, walked around for about 4-5 miles, and had a nice afternoon - it was good to have time with friends to take our minds off the race... and laugh about my 8 minute mile finish!

For such an incredible field of runners, the results across the board were not that great. The women's winner ran amazing, but none of the African men even broke 2:19, and none of the American guys qualified for the trials. I think the wind really kicked a lot of guy's butts over the last 10K.

I did everything I could, and it just wasn't my day. I wouldn't have changed anything about my training... I wouldn't have tapered differently... and I wouldn't have raced with a different strategy. I hydrated well during the race at the aid stations and I took my gels, so I was fueled perfectly. I have no regrets about anything. I don't even regret making this such a "public" goal. If you want to achieve great things in life, you have to push it to the edge, and sometimes that means you will fall short of expectations, especially when they are very high.

I'm burnt out on writing now... I think I'll have some more reflections on the race tomorrow, but I wanted to get this up tonight.

I'm not going for a last-chance last-chance qualifier in the half-marathon in Vegas in two weeks... it crossed my mind for a split second, but I think I need to take a break, then start from scratch again.

I feel blessed to even be in the situation where a 2:25 marathon is a complete disaster with an EPIC blowup over the last 4 miles! That says a lot about how far I have come this year. This has been the most amazing year of running of my life, and I believe my ceiling now is a lot higher than I ever thought possible.

When talking to my parents after the race, they reminded me of a very fitting quote from Bill Rodgers: The marathon can humble you

I'll bounce back, stronger and faster than ever, you can mark my words on that. And now I don't have to go for 2:19 all at once - I have years to get there, and before that - knock down my PRs at shorter distances.

Quick thoughts on the Philly course - crowd support is amazing for the first half of the race, then its pretty lonely until the very end. In terms of the difficulty of the course - we definitely underestimated it. Its not a Chicago/Berlin/London pancake flat course. The hills are a lot more significant than we gave them credit for and I guess if there was any aspect of the race that we were under-prepared for - that was it.  

[Day after thoughts... I think electrolyte depletion played a role in my demise... some thoughts on that here.] 

A lot of very good professional photos from the race. Some more below...

From 2011 Philadelphia Marathon

From 2011 Philadelphia Marathon
 

From 2011 Philadelphia Marathon
 

We're keeping this poster, and we're going to cross out 2012 and write in 2016!

 

Comments
From DaleG on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 11:25:15 from 184.223.135.169

You both gave it your best shot and I am still impressed by your efforts. Well done!!!

From MichelleL on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 11:55:35 from 218.219.224.25

I was watching, watching the great splits, and so sad to see it unravel at the end. O for 3 today unfortunately. You guys are still young and still have a long running career ahead of you. Your attitude is inspiring :D

From Bam on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 12:02:41 from 86.40.3.113

Well done, both of you. Fantastic effort. You've banked those miles and the experience. Get some ice cream down your necks and relax. Outstanding effort and I'm sure that both of you will be runners who will make the breakthrough to the next level. And I'm positive that both of you will make that breakthrough sooner rather than later. Once again, sterling effort. Be proud of yourselves; you're a credit to your families.

From Russ on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 12:15:15 from 24.72.198.228

Great job to both of you - I was watching the splits come in and was so excited. Glad to see you both gave it your all and have no regrets - you are both amazing runners.

From JulieC on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 12:57:58 from 67.41.189.197

WAY to stay on pace!! really Jake it helps me to know that even fitter people like yourself can feel what I felt at SGM---- although the goal was achievable for you (and will happen soon), it makes me think a bit more at the power of stars aligning on that day when it all comes together as planned, but the races that turn out slightly different, define us. How do we overcome? how do we turn it around and move forward? WE do and as runners we never give up our goals. Of course your time is wonderful to me. Your courage and your readiness to put down the hammer....I get that. And then the unexpected... the walking...fatigue...WELL DONE REALLY. Glad you have family to celebrate with : D.

From SlowJoe on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 14:18:38 from 75.109.104.60

Sorry you didn't get the time you wanted. With the improvement you've achieved just in the last year, I bet the time will be yours for the taking if you still want to run in the trials 4 years from now. Nice job, you've been fun to watch.

From Burt on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 14:47:12 from 72.223.93.131

Great attitude. Let us know when the full report is up.

From Ben VanBeekum on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 14:58:11 from 70.103.189.14

Jake

You are my inspiration man!!

Still a great time on a rough day!! Glad to see the positive attitude. Hats off to a great first year of Marathoning!!

From fiddy on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 15:00:01 from 97.126.211.192

I have three thoughts.

1. One bad day is not going to undo all that training. It's going to pay off eventually. Trust me, I've been there.

2. No one in the field broke 2:19 today!

3. Maybe too much of a taper?

From Rachelle on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 15:36:00 from 66.7.127.115

Great attitude about the race. You put it all out there and you will OTQ. Today was just not the day. Stay positive and know that you have so many people supporting you.

You are both an absolute inspiration to the running community.

From Oreo on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 15:52:30 from 174.27.141.95

Awesome race - great time. No worries man - you are still in the upper echelon of Running. All props.

From Jody on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 16:18:46 from 75.141.131.35

Great job! We don't always get to realize our goals the first time out, but YOU WILL. Great attitude and great things are ahead. I am just lucky enough to watch them unfold.

From Tara on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 16:37:19 from 75.169.159.43

Very inspiring Jake. I love that you are positive. Great things ahead for you, for sure.

From rockness18 on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 16:38:00 from 69.183.246.183

Great run- love how you left it all out there!

From Fritz on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 16:51:32 from 65.100.192.74

You went for it. That's all that matters. Enjoy your vacation.

From Hamdog Alum on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 18:22:55 from 68.185.190.140

Way to run tough Jake! I'm sorry you didn't accomplish your goal, but you have so much more to be thankful. The process you went through to get yourself to this level is also quite amazing!

From seeaprilrun on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 18:23:39 from 68.103.252.193

Great job today and outstanding attitude! I admire that you went for it, and you will get it. You will get it! No regrets, that's awesome. One magical day "going for it" is going to pay off bigtime. Have a wonderful time and I am looking forward to the details!

From sflores on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 18:24:55 from 98.204.193.19

Good race!!!! Sorry to hear you didn't finish hard as planned. I am glad you listened to your body and didn't over do it! I heard 2 people died at the race near the finish line!

Congrats on a great race!

From Jake K on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 18:38:38 from 74.92.85.81

Thanks for all the comments everyone. Full report is up now.

We need to go get some more food now!

All the support means a lot to me. I was running for all of you guys today, and feel like I let y'all down! :-(

But this is part of the process, and it will make the jump to the next level even sweeter.

From DaleG on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 18:55:27 from 184.223.135.169

You didn't let me down. I'm proud of both of you.

From Rachelle on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 20:13:00 from 66.7.127.115

All I can say right now is thank you! Thank you for inspiring so many, for being so humble, and for being such an amazing emample.

You didn't let anyone down. And your attitude towards it only proves your amazing character. You WILL OTQ, you will.

From Superfly on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 21:16:03 from 74.211.21.81

Good job man! Your journey has been motivation to us all. The marathon is pretty ruthless. In 10 marathons one might only get 1 or 2 great outings. I've had more than my share of bummers. Wind always kills too. Recharge yourself and don't jump back into hard training. That's an injury waiting to happen.

From Michael Finch on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 21:29:32 from 75.169.202.195

Hey! My name is Michael Finch, I run XC at pine view high school. I just want to say how much you inspire me. I've been reading your blog for a while and have learned a lot from what you write. You ran a great race for how you felt and i'm impressed with how you took it to only motivate you to do better with your running. You are an amazing runner!

From flatlander on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 21:35:30 from 76.31.26.153

Good job today and good report. Very informative that nobody (US or otherwise) hit a US-level OTQ today. Thanks for all the inspiration on the blog and for all the links to good running articles.

From Aaron Kennard on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 21:54:50 from 98.245.117.176

Jake, 3 things:

1 - Awesome perspective

2 - It's great how open you are with your goals and insights, that will continue to take you to amazing places I believe.

3 - STUPID WIND! I think I understand more than I want to how tough that last 10K into the headwinds was for you. And it really is pretty cool from another perspective how a 2:25 is a horrendous blowup for you, because for most of us mere mortals that would be an incredible accomplishment.

From Adam RW on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 22:12:49 from 67.182.248.141

You've done so much more than any of us could ever hope for and though I know that is no consolation thank you for sharing the whole thing with us.

From JulieC on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 22:17:05 from 67.41.189.197

I honestly say I feel your every emotion about the race turnout. I had tears in my eyes reading your take on the feelings of the last few miles. As you know I was very sad my last few miles. Nothing can prepare you for THE unexpected WALL. VERY HUMBLING!! I hope to join you on the STRONGER FASTER COME BACK : D

From Oreo on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 22:51:32 from 174.27.141.95

time for D mtDew..awesome again.

From jun on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 22:59:06 from 174.23.175.249

Yeah, you'll be there in 2016, there's no doubt about that. I'm in awe of your attitude so close to the finish of that race. You guys are amazing and it's not because of your running, it's because of your character. Thanks for the write-up, it was amazing.

From Claudio on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 23:02:20 from 12.30.250.2

It was a rough day, and you still had a very fast time - but as you say, it really is more about the journey than the finish and outcome. So congratulations on your great journey - so far, as it's certainly not over!

From runningafterbabies on Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 23:52:28 from 71.195.219.247

I admire your attitude, Jake. You always see the glass half full and find a way to spin things I a positive way. I think the hardest thing about marathoning is that everything can look so good on paper, but a lot of times it comes down to the external factors out of your control- wind, pacers dropping out etc. It gave me chills when I read about the last couple miles of your race. Not a lot of people in this world understand the feelings you felt and the strength and courage you showed. Otq 2016.... Here you come.

From MarkP on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 00:06:31 from 97.117.104.229

Wow! I mean WOW! That was thrilling! You guys are awesome. Great job pushing through. I can't wait for PART II!

From Bam on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 01:43:19 from 86.40.245.5

It's 6:30 a.m. over here and I've not long got back from my morning run and I'm sitting here reading this with tears streaming down my face.

There's something about you, Jake. You don't see it often in people, but when you do, it smacks you in the face - hard.

Your race report sums up your character. The honesty humbles me. Your love for Andrea is beautiful and special; for you to be thinking so lucidly about her when you were on your knees - wow, lad. That's real love.

Look after yourself and Andrea. Have a break and then get back at it. Everybody on this site knows that it will happen for you and Andrea. Just be patient. Best wishes.

From Jake K on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 06:51:06 from 74.92.85.81

For the third time, I just want to thank everyone again. Reading through all the comments again this morning makes me feel good, and takes away the sting of what happened yesterday morning.

Just a few thoughts (not that I was thinking about this race at all last night or anything! :-)

James - I don't think I over-tapered. I followed the exact same plan at Utah Valley, but actually ran more miles over the last 3 weeks this time around. I felt as fresh and bouncy in the couple days before the race as I ever do.

Clyde - I will definitely not be rushing back into things too soon. My ability to recover is incredible (I don't even feel bad right now.... probably b/c I jogged the last 5K!)... but if I want to make the next jump, I need to re-start from (a new) baseline. I don't plan on running faster than 8:00 pace for about 2 months. I don't think there is anyway I will run a spring marathon, so there's no rush to ramp things up too quickly.

Bam - one of my friends who reads my blog (but isn't a member) referred to you as "Irish Emeril Lagasse". Haha I loved that!

We couldn't sleep past 6am this morning, so we woke up and turned on the news and saw some good video of us running. We looked great in the first mile! :-)

I added a few pics of the race action that I got from Andrea's parents.

It would be great to get together for some EASY runs w/ more folks from the blog over the next couple weeks when we get back to Utah next weekend. Some of the group runs that started to happen this fall have been one of the best parts of this whole thing, and we want to keep that going.

PS. I still haven't had any diet dew, but my college friends think the lack of mountain dew over the past 2 months was my downfall!

From allie on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 07:20:47 from 24.10.191.18

great report, jake. thank you for sharing your journey in such detail, even when it became painful. i love your positive attitude and your honesty about how you felt before, during and after the race. i'm sorry about THE WALL -- i'm not sure anything hurts more, but it happens to every single marathoner at some point. like you said: "a rite of passage." it's just great to read that you are okay and are moving forward with the same attitude and determination as before. that says a lot about you, and that passion is certainly going to take you far in this sport. there is no doubt that you have "it" -- and those thousands and thousands of miles are going to pay huge dividends for you. this was just one day.

enjoy the recovery time and the 8:00/mile phase. i suggest we throw in more gallo-walking on thursdays (just so we can be prepared for anything) ;)

From Paul on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 09:01:28 from 24.10.141.104

Sorry it was not the race you wanted, but great job and great attitude. As an objective observer, I think you did everything right (or at least nothing wrong). Your training build-up was perfect, no injuries, no setbacks, great volume, great workouts, great mix of races. The taper was appropriate. Race-day you didn't do anything dumb, went out pretty conservative (most people do the opposite). Your goals were realistic, based on your recent half marathon. But it just wasn't your day. Marathons are weird like that. The wind surely factored in for the last 10K, when most people are hanging by a thread anyway. With marathons, there has to be a bit of luck involved, to go along with the training and natural talent. Both times I qualified, I had lucky days with perfect conditions and tailwind, and that fact is not lost on me. But when you race enough marathon, you get those "gem" days. You also get some stinkers.

Anyway, keep up the good attitude, take some time off, and get some ski days.

Interesting that the winner at Philly was the same guy who won Utah Valley...

From Paul on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 09:06:06 from 24.10.141.104

Oops, I misread the initial results...Cheruiyot was third...but he did just win Indianapolis two weeks ago, so he was probably a little tired.

From Holt on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 09:43:30 from 204.113.55.41

Jake...

What a gallant effort. So sorry that that it didn't work out. But I love your effort, your training, and most importantly your attitude. Mike, from my team, introduced himself up in the comments a little, and I would have to say that he really does think your "all that"! Everyday he is like, "Coach, did you see JakeK's workout today?!" But you know what is really interesting... you don't just inspire guys like him, you inspire an old guy like me too.

From jtshad on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 09:49:27 from 204.134.132.225

A great report of a strong but challenging race. Your training and mental approach to this race was very impressive. As Clyde indicated, having that perfect day at a marathon is hard to find. You will rebound to future success.

Enjoy the vacation in NYC.

From Rob on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 09:56:10 from 204.15.86.95

Thank you! For being human.

From Susannah on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 10:10:20 from 155.97.6.155

Great job and great race report! You are definitely right that you had done everything you needed to and were well prepared. Its good to see that you still kept a positive attitude despite a rough finish. Good luck to you in your recovery and in future training!

From rockness18 on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 13:10:23 from 69.183.237.0

Jake, I'll post comment #42 :). Don't worry about the start. I didn't want to throw your focus, so purposely kept it brief. You've been a real inspiration in your training- looking forward seeing what you accomplish in 2012!

From Seth on Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 21:16:38 from 67.177.36.131

Great effort! You still have lots of chances to reach your goals and I'm confident you will. Keep running smart and enjoy the ride!

From RAD on Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 00:16:13 from 98.202.23.178

Good call on the Dairy Queen! :) All amazing, fantastic athlete eat there after a race!

I'm glad you have the perspective to see how absolutely crazy it is to have a 2:25 be a disaster. My heart was breaking for you as I read that last 10K - I think the marathon monster has chewed many of us up at that point.

What a great journey you have had this training season, and I love that you can see how much more you can gain over the next ones as well.

I'm just SO absolutely impressed with both you and Andrea! What superb athletes you are, and an inspiration to us all to keep that positive attitude and tenacity! Even if I just long to finish over an hour slower than that :)

From Jon on Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 09:25:23 from 74.177.97.245

Jake- I'm still impressed. We definitely more from the races when things don't go as planned than the perfect races, and it sounds like you're doing just that from this experience. We were rooting for you and are bummed the OTQ didn't work out, but like you said, you've got a lot of time to keep improving and try again. Best of luck!

By the way, walking in 100's is one of the perks!!!

From JG on Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 13:14:44 from 71.57.246.108

Awesome job Jake, you are an amazing inspiration to so many people! The last 10k is always an unknown when you are putting forth a max effort, to be on pace at 20 is a tribute to your training. As Fiddy pointed out, nobody in the field hit the mark you were shooting for! You were perfectly prepared & I dont know of any traing plan that would have anyone in the field prepped to conquer a headwind in the last 10k at that speed unless they were a 2:10 marathoner! Hold your head high, your day will come!

On another note, you may want to experiment with Endurolyte capsules by Hammer. Everyone is religous about racing with gels, but not electrolytes ... And cramping is a clear indication they were in deficit. If gels are like fuel in your gas tank, electrolytes are like oil to your motor ... If you run out, it is too late, aka game over.

Enjoy your Thanksgiving, we all know you will be back with a vengeance & strike when the iron is hot!

From Scott Wesemann on Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 14:12:08 from 205.158.160.209

Wow, what an experience! I saw your time and knew you had been hoping for a sub-2:20. I have no doubt you will bounce back and reach your goals. I enjoyed the report.

From Jake K on Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 15:59:24 from 75.193.147.199

JG - The electrolyte thing is actually something we thought about, but too late... and I didn't want to try something new that I hadn't experimented with in training. I really think it was my downfall, not the wind, not fatigue. My whole body just cramped up... not just my legs. It was unlike anything I had ever experienced before.

From crockett on Wed, Nov 23, 2011 at 15:29:44 from 71.36.83.141

Very inspirational writeup. To me, an amazing performance and challenge. Wow. Yep, electrolytes could be it. I now take an S-cap right before a race of any distance.

From Lily on Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 00:00:46 from 67.199.178.210

I remember once Walter Brown talked to me about trying to stay electrolyte balanced so we don't finish a race with our backs forcing backwards. We should finish upright... it all comes with time and more experience in the marathon distance. To most of us, you still did very very well. I know you trained for this, there are so many factors and the stars kind of have to align. No worries, you will come back stronger and all the more determined. I know you will.

From Kelli on Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 23:32:08 from 71.219.83.156

Well, at least you went and got some ice cream. But, seriously, I need to show you two how to really eat ice cream! Those cones are so small.

Sorry about how the race turned out for you, not really sure what else anyone can say. Nothing, I guess. You were ready, that is one thing I know. It is interesting how this race turned out for so many of the elites, there was something in the air for sure. Some bad JUJU.

Enjoy some rest, you are seriously the craziest runner out there. I can not believe the miles you run. Where do you find the time? Oh, wait, you run twice as fast as the rest of us. ;o)

From Nate on Wed, Dec 07, 2011 at 13:34:11 from 67.20.208.205

Jake-

Sorry this is so late, what an inspirational/positive write up for such a rough day.

Setting such high goals always have a large change of failure/I've experienced it both in running and my academic career. But I'm right with you, I'm not a public person but making goals public adds a layer of accountability that is a real benefit to keeping you honest with yourself.

I see big things in your future races and thanks for the support you toss my way

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