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

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

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Race: Boston Marathon (26.2 Miles) 02:30:21, Place overall: 23
Running MilesSwimming YardsBike Miles
27.200.000.00

Well, I ran 2:30:21 today, so considering I thought my race at Philadelphia last fall was a complete disaster, you'd think I'd be pretty bummed about this one, right? Nope. This was a tough day, a historically brutal Boston Marathon, and I'm actually not disappointed. 

I'm just going to go through the whole thing from start to finish, partly for my own record-keeping. I want to remember all of this.

Pre-Race

My buddy Greg (who we were staying with in Cambridge) dropped me off ~6:45 at Copley Square... I boarded the elite bus and we drive out to Hopkington shortly after. Our bus was surrounded by about two dozen motorcycles who had blocked off every on-ramp on the Mass Turnpike. It was pretty cool - as if one of the other world marathon majors was going to attack us or something.

We got off the bus there were members of the media taking pictures as we walked into the Korean Church. This was unlike anything I had ever experienced and it was only going to escalate... in a good way.

Everything we needed was in the gym area of the church/school. Chairs and exercise mats to lay out and stretch on. They had Gatorade, food, etc. The talent level in that room was off the charts. I just hung out, mostly kept to myself, although I chatted with a few other runners - Scott Mindel (who I ran against in high school), and Camille Herron. Uta Pippig came over and asked me if I had run Boston before and when I said I hadn't, she asked if I had any questions about the course. She ended up spending 15 minutes giving me the most detailed course description ever - she is like an encyclopedia. My favorite part of the pre-race was that Joan Benoit couldn't decide which singlet to wear. You'd think after her storied career and experience, she'd have those things down by now. :-)

At about 9:15 I went out and jogged a mile on the little 200m loop that they had sectioned off for us. You could hear the low roar of the 27,000 runners nearby, but couldn't really see them. 

At about 9:45 they brought us all outside behind the church. I did a few strides with some of the best runners in the world. Yet through all of this, I wasn't getting nervous. I felt calm and ready. I felt like I belonged there.

With 5-10 minutes to go, they "parted the seas" and the 30-40 of us made our way alongside the first corral and up to the starting line. As we were walking up, everyone was afraid to be the first one, and I found myself all of a sudden at the front. I turned around and Geoffrey Mutai was right behind me. I put my arm around him and said "Geoffrey, they are chearing for YOU, not me, you gotta get in front of me, brother!" He said "OK man." So that is how we made our way up to the starting line - Mutai, ME, then everyone else. It was incredible. The runners in the first corral were cheering and giving us high fives. Helicopters were circling overhead. They were like a hundred police officers and race officials. An unreal setting. In that moment I felt like my hard work was already paying off - just to be a part of this kind of scene - to be considered an elite athlete at the Boston FREAKING Marathon. Its something I wish everyone could experience, because its really a cool thing.

We all did a few strides and the first timers (like me) commented on how the first 100 meters is REALLY downhill. Like, impossible to run it slowly.

The announcers introduced the top 5 runners, then we lined up. I figured what the heck - I'm just going to stand next to Mutai in the middle of the starting line. Its not everyday you get these kind of opportunities, so that is exactly what I did.

 

 

RACE

The gun went off and guys ran like idiots, as I expected... since most of us had numbers on the front and back of our singlets, I could see lots of #s in the 50s-70s chasing the lead pack. I immediately fell quite a bit back, yet looked at my Garmin after 2-3 minutes and I was running 5:00 pace. I dialed it back immediately. First mile was 5:13. Perfect.

 

The lead pack quickly disappeared, and I found myself running alongside Mike Cassidy (#23). We decided to work together and try to hit 1:10ish for the first half. We ran together for a few miles (maybe until 8K?) and then I never saw him again. Other than those 3-4 miles, I ran solo for the entire race. I'd pass people (and ended up getting passed by a few at the end), but otherwise ran completely by myself - just like all my hard workouts!

But the crowd - ohhhh the Boston crowds. Wow. Just unreal. I started hamming it up for them right from the start. All it takes is a little wave and some fist pumps and they would just go CRAZY. They helped me a lot. And I was surprised at how many people knew my name - there were a ton of "Go Jake Krong"s and people yelling out "Amsterdam NY!" (my hometown). Whoever you all were out there, if you are reading this - THANK YOU!

Back to the race. Miles 2-9 were 5:19, 5:19, 5:14, 5:25, 5:16, 5:14, 5:23, 5:23. At 6.5 miles Andrea was there (along with our friends Greg and Sarah) and they had a gatorade bottle and cold wet sponge for me. This was very helpful. I was taking a sip of Gatorade at every aid station (getting most of it in my eyes, despite wearing sunglasses), and dumping 1-2 cups of water on myself. I was soaked early, but it was so hot, you had no choice.

Miles 10-13 were 5:32, 5:31, 5:23, 5:27. I hit the halfway point in 1:10:19. Just what I wanted. Wellesley was fun - I flexed my biceps, blew kisses to the girls, got them going absolutely crazy. I'm sure some great photographs are going to come out of this part of the course! :-)

Honestly, to this point it was freaking easy. I felt like I was jogging the whole time. Other than my feet were hurting. They hurt bad from about 15K on - a by-product of running in the heat, I think. But it wasn't conservative enough. It was hot out, really hot. And there was no tailwind - it actually ended up being an east wind (headwind - although maybe that was better for keeping cool?). I could tell I was getting too warm, so I dialed back the pace a bit. I knew it would going to be tough to run even splits. I told myself the new goal was to break 2:21:46.

Miles 13-16 were 5:30, 5:41, 5:31. Slower, but I still felt OK. I felt like I was running the right effort. Greg and Sarah gave me another bottle and sponge ~15.

Somewhere around the start of the Newton Hills, I threw up a little bit in my mouth. My stomach wanted nothing more. Andrea was ~17 and gave me another bottle and sponge. As I passed her, I told her "this is getting really tough!"

From 17-23, the throwing up in my mouth became a constant battle. If you've ever done that, you know how you just can't describe how disgusting it is. I honestly thought about dropping out around 30K. But then a huge pack of people cheered specifically for me (turns out it was Derunzo)... and I said "F this" I can't quit! Thank you Derunzo, you pulled me out of a bad spell.

At the base of heartbreak hill, Emily Bates was waiting for me. She ran up with me and poured water on me the whole time. She kept me focused - thank you Emily. After cresting the hill, I knew I'd finish, and just went into "long run pace survival mode."

Splits for 17-23 were 5:51, 5:58, 6:02, 6:13, 6:23, 6:02, 6:14.

All through this stretch, and for the last couple miles, I was pouring water on myself about every quarter mile. I couldn't go longer than a minute without over heating. Luckily, there were little kids with cold water bottles every hundred feet, it seemed. I probably used about 50 gallons of water today - sorry environment! I was completely drenched from head to toe.

The last 3+ miles were a struggle. Unfortunately I got passed by 4-5 guys and just didn't have it in me to respond. I was probably in 18-19th place with 5K to go, but dropped back to 23rd.

The crowds carried me. Every though I didn't have the energy to play it up for them anymore, they were still amazing. Loud, really loud. Splits for the final stretch were 6:18, 6:45, 1:28 (I clicked it at the "1 mile to go" marker), 6:38. Not exactly a fantastic finishing stretch down Boylston Street, but I was just happy to still be upright.

Post-Race

I ran through the line, stopped, and saw stars. Two volunteers helped me walk to the elite tent. They said they were impressed that I could even walk the whole way, because they had to get wheelchairs for most of the finishers ahead of me!

I got a few bags of ice and put them on my head, neck, and feet. Sat in front of a giant industrial fan for about 20 minutes and got my core temperature back down. I got a massage, slowly drank about 4 x 20oz bottles of Gatorade, then made my way out of there and found Andrea. All the while, I got a ton of supportive text messages and phone calls. My Dad called and said Mutai dropped out and the winning time was barely under 2:13 and the women ran ~2:32. That really put the day in perspective, compared to last year.

I'm glad I stuck it out. 23rd place (8th American) at the Boston Marathon is pretty good. I can't be too disappointed, since we were running in historically tough conditions. You can learn something from every race, especially the hard ones. I obviously need to dial in the hydration/fueling strategy for the marathon (I only took one GU today - that was all my stomach would accept). In terms of eating/drinking before the race, I ate a lot more than I ever had before, and I felt really good in terms of energy at the start. I also really did a good job of pre-hydrating with electrolyte drinks. Andrea has been crucial in helping me out with this aspect of preparation. And a final thought... I think we need to stay in Utah or the west coast for my next marathon because flying east isn't working out for us! :-)  I know I got myself in better shape this spring than I have ever been in my life - I'm going to switch my focus to shorter races for a while now and pop some fast times this summer with the aerobic base I've built. Then, re-visit the marathon in the fall.

Tomorrow we'll go out to visit Saucony HQ, then do some sight-seeing if my feet allow it. They are pretty blistered. Otherwise, I feel alright.

Thanks to everyone for the support! It means so, so much to me.

Thanks especially to Andrea and my parents. You guys are my rocks.

Greg took some fantastic photos... I'll post more as they pop up on the web - like I said, I think there are some good ones floating around out there from the start and those first 15 miles. If anyone recorded the webcast / TV broadcast, I'd love to see it when we get back to Utah.

Full Picasa Gallery - more pictures... 

 

Comments
From Jacob Flaws on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 12:57:19 from 91.19.154.250

Looking forward to this RR! Congrats on the top 25 finish!

From Bonnie on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 12:58:44 from 128.196.228.134

So proud of you Jake ... I want the last 5K ... just because you were tough as nails and a hero in my book. HUGS.

From jun on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 13:04:08 from 205.158.160.209

Wow, way to push through. You are an animal. When many of the front guys go slower than 2:15 goes to show just how brutal it was out there.

BTW, I saw you on the screen for about 2 seconds within the first couple of miles.

From Lulu Walls on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 13:06:45 from 155.100.212.98

Holy crap Jake! How do you puke and run that fast? Katy wants to know how much you aspirated :)

From RAD on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 13:33:53 from 98.202.23.178

Awesome...just awesome! Top 25 finish and puking to boot. You ARE the man Jake!!! Recover well and enjoy your ice cream. You deserve it!

From Derunzo on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 13:34:44 from 24.218.176.97

Jake.... Great Marathon! I was screaming your name at mile 19 in the middle of your rough patch. "Go Jake! This is why you run all those miles"!

From Rob on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 13:43:57 from 72.254.84.106

Nice job Jake?

From Dan Varga on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 13:46:13 from 65.44.116.4

Congrats on the top 25 at Boston! Incredible. And through that heat and getting sick. Thanks for inspiring us.

From TBean on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 13:53:01 from 63.241.173.64

Great accomplishment. WOW top 25! Looks like there is even room for improvement.

From Bret on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 13:57:49 from 96.45.118.12

Congrats Jake - very impressive - way to tough it out and come in the top 25. Great work!

From BrandonD on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 13:58:06 from 67.214.231.170

Amazing in the heat Jake! Congratulations!

From JD on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 14:09:26 from 70.96.78.149

congratulations! sounds like an incredible experience!

From Alana on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 14:20:35 from 174.252.59.132

Awesome Jake. I recognized you at the 10k and you looked great. It was a hot day for sure. Congrats on finishing a tough race.

From steve ash on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 14:48:59 from 64.134.236.254

Jake, You are a rock star in my book man. Nice work.

From runningafterbabies on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 14:52:24 from 208.54.36.159

So proud of you for sticking it out! That was a hard one!

From TheMr.K on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 15:36:32 from 198.228.212.249

Awesome report. I got anxious for the start just reading it. Congratulations on an awesome run and an awesome experience.

From Dorsimus on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 15:45:21 from 209.23.248.163

What you couldn't hear (but could hopefully somehow feel) were the cheers from those of us stuck in an office glued to our computer screens watching video, keeping tabs and checking results. Top 10 Americans in the most iconic race in the country. Are you kidding me?!! So cool, way to stick it out in tough conditions. Congrats man.

From Lily on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 15:45:41 from 67.199.178.210

Jake!!!!!!!! Oh my! You ran awesome for such extreme temps! I am so proud of you. I had the throw up every couple minutes in my throat at St. George. Bad experience and so hard and SOOOOO GROSS! What a stud. Way to stick it out and WAY TO GO DERUNZO and crew! Sometimes that's all we need is a little encouragement and we can go on! Woot woot!

From Billy Jacobs on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 15:45:47 from 71.199.42.106

Way to go Jake. Killer performance in those conditions.

From Kelli on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 15:49:17 from 71.219.98.16

OH, gotta love the Boston crowds! I am glad they were there for you, along with so many friends! Nice job toughing it out in the heat. When I saw the winning time, I knew it must have been a bit ugly.

Great perspective on it all. Enjoy the rest of your vacation there, hopefully the feet will not bother you too much.

NICE JOB, JAKE!!!!

From Andrea on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 15:56:50 from 50.138.183.237

Next marathon we are staying on the west coast!!!

Seriously, since when is it 87 degrees in Boston on April 16? That doesn't even make sense.

You ran great today - I am so proud of you. I honestly think that you run best in the 30-45 degree range. It was totally brutal out there. ALL ABOUT RACE, NOT TIME. You were 23rd place in Boston Marathon, the most prestigious and significant marathon in the world. And to really get the chance to see what it's like as a true elite is priceless. Something you will always remember.

You have some definite damage to do now in the shorter distances for the next few months. So RECOVER and then I'm excited to see what you can pull off in a half marathon after this super strong build-up.

From Chad Robinson on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 16:01:01 from 50.73.39.89

Fantastic rece Jake! That marathon can be one tricky mistress and it didn't dissapoint today. I am certain you read it already but the Science of Sport guys had a great write-up on Boston. It was a day that punished surges and rewarded the steady pace. Nice job on recognizing your limitations and staying within yourself. I'm sure your dream marathon will come soon enough. Keep at it and enjoy some vacation.

From Jake K on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 16:13:18 from 50.138.183.237

Thanks so much everyone! I just updated the report with some new (pretty sweet) photos.

From Carina on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 16:13:35 from 174.255.128.209

Jake, amazing!! I'm glad you got the elite treatment you deserve! And to finish 23rd in Boston is something to be extremely proud of for sure! You are a hero and an inspiration!!! So proud!!!!!!!

From Rob on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 16:19:28 from 72.254.84.106

You know it's a good report when it makes the reader cry just reading it.

From Jon on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 16:19:45 from 74.177.96.130

Awesome, man. I mean, just the picture next to Mutai makes it worth it. Then to run 23rd place- awesome. Congrats on a fun, very challenging race.

From Jon on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 16:21:28 from 74.177.96.130

Hey, you even outran your bib, too!

From allie on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 16:32:20 from 174.23.152.106

congratulations, jake. you'll need to get a poster-sized print of that starting line photo. awesome all around.

From MatthewVH on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 16:45:27 from 69.27.9.106

I've never followed running events before now, but I checked in this morning to see how you were doing/did. I could see you hit your half way goal dead on, but also could tell the heat was getting to ya in the second half. Very impressive and way to represent UTAH!

From Susannah on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 16:51:43 from 98.202.87.3

Great job!!! It's exciting to read about getting the elite treatment before and after the race, and how you stay motivated in the race, especially at mile 19!

From SlowJoe on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 16:57:31 from 69.131.141.92

You ended up beating Mutai anayway, great race. Awesome write up as well, enjoyed it. Congrats!

From Conner Mantz on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 17:48:17 from 75.169.95.124

Amazing job! Especially for the weather.

From DaleG on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 17:51:18 from 152.216.11.5

Jake, you did great today, despite the horrible heat!!!

I recorded the marathon, so let me know if you'd like to satop by sometime to watch it.

You got some great face time standing behind Mutai before the race.

From Fritz on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 18:23:58 from 65.116.116.6

That start line picture is AWESOME. And of course you in perfectly in terms of running ability and looks. :) Maybe I should get out the bic razor.

Can't wait to hear more about your adventure. Enjoy the rest of your trip.

From Laputka on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 18:26:18 from 98.202.142.68

Thank you for sharing all the details. I felt like a got a glimpse of what is must be like to be an elite runner. Congratulations. 8th American is something to be proud of!

From ACorn on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 18:51:25 from 24.2.76.146

What an experience! Looks like you had a lot of highs and lows, can't wait to hear more about it. You're a warrior! Huge congratulations Jake.

From Kelli on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 18:56:29 from 71.219.98.16

Jake and the Kenyans!!! SO COOL! Utah is proud to call you OURS. (I know some other states want to claim you, but they can not!)

From Jody on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 19:07:19 from 96.46.73.2

Jake - Congratulations! A tough day today and you hung in there and battled. What an amazing experience you were able to partake in and share. Enjoy your time in Beantown and thanks again for inspiring.

From baldnspicy on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 19:49:40 from 72.77.105.46

Wow, totally incredible experience and killer pictures!! How sweet would that have been to be standing next to Mutai on the line, though. I'll bet you two exchanged some friendly (Top Gun quoting) banter:

Mutai: You up for this one, Krong?

You: Just a walk in the park, Geoffrey.

Congrats!!

From Toby on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 19:51:50 from 199.101.229.6

That was a FANTASTIC race report Jake! It was awesome to cheer you on from my computer screen.

For us *mortal* folk, it is *your race* that I visual while I run. The helicopters, reporters, signs, smoozing with world class runners, tip top treatment, etc. Thank you for bringing it to life! You are a TOP world class runner. All your miles and hard work have brought you to that level and you DESERVE it. Congratulations!

From Jake K on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 20:14:06 from 50.138.183.237

Its really crazy looking at the overall results. Gebre ran 2:04 last year and 2:22 this year. Holy cow. I'm surprised he even finished. The guys who beat me mostly went out in 1:12-1:14. The guys who went out in 1:09-1:10 died a death even worse than me... a lot of drop outs and 15-20 minute positive splits. Carnage!!!

From DaleG on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 20:25:21 from 152.216.3.5

It was almost agonizing watching on TV and seeing everyone struggling.

From jtshad on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 20:26:39 from 12.189.157.238

Nice job running strong in tough conditions and getting a top 25 finish in Boston! You did indeed beat your number and represented you, Saucony, FRB, etc. well!!

I remember riding the VIP buses in 2009, it was incredibly cool how the motrocade raced out to the start under escort!!

Have fun at Saucony tomorrow. Great race.

From Vis on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 20:30:08 from 208.88.8.22

Way to run the race that was given.

That starting line pic is a framer.

From Rachel on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 20:44:47 from 71.35.30.102

Congrats Jake, thoroughly enjoyed reading your run report and photos! AMAZING day!

From Adam RW on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 20:48:27 from 155.101.152.123

Jake, That has to be one of the most inspirational posts I have read on the blog. I hadn't heard all the details about the weather until later in the day. Only seen the splits and was hesitant to check back. Once I heard about the heat and after reading your tail about how you triumphed over it I can see all your hard work and dedication has truly paid off. Thank you for being an inspiration to all of us both in work ethic and in attitude. GREAT JOB!

From Kelli on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 20:59:14 from 71.219.98.16

Hey, Jake, do you know where the guy finished who raced out of there like no ones business the first 15-20 minutes? He was a bigger guy wearing all gray, white American (I am pretty sure they said he was from Colorado)? It was kind of funny listening to the commentators talk about this guy and what the heck he was doing way ahead of the pack. I wish I had remembered his name so I could look up his finish time (if he finished!)

From Superfly on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 21:14:52 from 74.211.21.81

Your high finish is a life long tale you'll always have. PR's and faster races will come in the future. Way to gut a tough one out. It was fun watching you finish live!

From Tina on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 21:21:29 from 75.169.7.23

Amazing job. It's hard enough just to jog in 85+ temps, I can't even imagine the strength and metal toughness it takes to race like you did in those conditions. Top 25 in Boston is super impressive.

From JamesH on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 22:41:13 from 208.117.127.7

Great job. Very impressive.

From JPark on Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 23:26:54 from 174.52.34.169

Congrats Jake! You're amazing! Way to put up such a good time on a hard course and such hot conditions. Be proud and savor the experience.

From BrandonD on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 05:53:51 from 67.214.231.170

That picture on the line deserves a large framing, so awesome. Congrats again Jake!

From flatlander on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 06:58:59 from 76.31.26.153

Congratulations, an inspiring report from an inspiring runner.

From Tara on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 07:48:33 from 75.169.147.99

That was a great race report! What an incredible experience you will always remember. I know you will have many more to come. I followed via texts and was so excited for you. I hope we get a chance to see those pics! You are amazing.

From Nate on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 08:00:48 from 67.20.216.17

Love the race report!! On the Universal Stream the whole time they were introducing Mutai you were right there over his shoulder looking ready to run for a good minute. TV debut!?

From jsh on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 08:35:48 from 63.253.43.114

Super impressive performance in brutal conditions! The atmosphere alone sounds worth the trip and it seems like you really soaked it in. Congrats.

From Paul on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 09:08:48 from 207.224.39.118

Nice work, and way to persevere and battle out there. Lots of guys out there running 10+ minutes slower than normal, and the heat must have amplified any mistake 10-fold. Congrats on a good placing and on having an memorable experience.

From MarkP on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 09:16:58 from 75.169.14.5

Always impressive. Another incredible job!

From scottkeate on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 10:06:25 from 216.49.181.254

Fantastic race, Jake! What an amazing experience to toe the line with Mutai and the other elite athletes. I loved that you pulled him to the front. That picture of you front and center will be a classic in your family archives forever.

Thanks for inspiring all of us to run. You may also want to consider a career in writing--you're race recaps are great.

From Dave S on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 11:00:46 from 69.170.115.216

Great job! Loved the report and the great photos. I watched the internet feed and you got a lot of good face time there at the start next to Mutai.

From sflores on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 11:50:07 from 65.202.194.210

Jake, Kick please do not swear time!!! good job.. I kept tabs on you and jeff (jshad)! Congrats to both of you, awesome race and times!!! crazy hot yesterday, can't imagine how brutal that was on your body!

From I Just Run on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 13:57:27 from 67.79.11.242

Most Excellent Race Jake ... Be proud of what you accomplished !!!

From Jake K on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 14:28:58 from 50.138.183.237

Hey guys - I do want to respond to a lot of these comments, but your support is so amazing and overwhelming that I don't even know where to start right now...

Seriously - you guys are the best. You better believe that I was thinking of this collective group when those thoughts of dropping crept into my head - I was like "no way - I have too many people pulling for me!" Whether you were out there on the course, or following from home, you were with me out there, pushing me, and for that I can't thank everyone enough.

Can't wait to run some shorter races in cooler temperatures... a nice 5K never sounded so good as it does right now :-)

From seeaprilrun on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 18:06:59 from 68.102.128.85

Incredible run in the heat, and incredible race report! It was a real boost to my day to read this. You are a FREAKING elite runner that just rubbed shoulders with the world's best at Boston! That is F'ing awesome!

From C James on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 18:39:44 from 76.79.51.26

Jake it has been inspiring reading your posts for the past few weeks! Congrats on a great race!!

From Scott Ensign on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 18:44:27 from 70.58.98.19

wow incredible race, great report and pictures. big congrats on a top 25 finish. that is amazing!

From Rachelle on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 19:09:23 from 66.7.127.115

Awesome report Jake. You are so incredibly humble and I absolutely look up to you in so many ways. So so cool to be honored as an elite athlete and to finish in the top 25. You should be incredibly proud.

Recover well and next time I see you can I get your autograph? Seriously...you freaking got to hangout with Mutai and Camille Herron.....I need you to rub some of that luck off on me. :)

From MichelleL on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 20:20:29 from 42.98.255.35

Hey Jake--inspiring report, if anything it should be twice as long :D Way to dig deep and minimize the damage the heat did to your race. I loved reading about your elite experience. I know you want to keep to the west, but doesn't this make you want to come back and try it out at 45F? You and Andrea are an inspiration to us all and the blog is blessed to have you!

From Dan on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 22:08:32 from 24.209.83.20

Awesome race man, it was great to meet you- you totally Earned this. Sweet pics too!

Get another ice pack, and yes, throwing up in your mouth puts anyone in a funk!

From Teena Marie on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 22:41:46 from 174.27.199.63

LOVED your report!!! And those photos ... WOW!!!! Seriously!!!

A huge congratulations. As always, I am in awe!

From Oreo on Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 09:27:49 from 206.81.136.61

Thanks for being positive! You are a Rock Star for shizzle. Great race - thanks for sharing it with the blog-o shpere.

From Scott Wesemann on Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 14:07:11 from 75.162.69.65

WOW!!! Excellent report and pictures. Top 10 is freaking awesome! I am very inspired by your training and what you have accomplished. Congrats on your race.

From Steam8 on Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 14:16:15 from 166.70.55.77

You are AMAZING!!! AMAZING!!! AMAZING!!! I didn't realize you were an elite marathoner when I met you on Sunday! WOW...I can't believe you ran a 2:30 in that heat! Unbelievable!

From JulieC on Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 15:55:59 from 67.41.188.106

I told my family to watch for you--- in ORANGE : D. Glad you did wear orange. So happy for you under the conditions-- top 25 is so INCREDIBLE at Boston. sorry about the vomit.

From rockness18 on Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 17:36:00 from 75.11.49.132

Awesome report, great attitude, fantastic pics- what an impressive race and experience for you!

From Hamdog Alum on Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 18:17:42 from 24.240.65.116

I finally got a chance to really sit back and read your full report. It was truly an amazing thing to not be intimidated by the best competition in the world! A sign that you're there. You've made it to the top, now you just need a nice flat cool temp marathon with low winds! You are a great competitor, way to hang tough out there.

It was truly a historic Boston and one anyone who ran Boston will NEVER forget!

From Jake K on Thu, Apr 19, 2012 at 09:38:07 from 155.100.226.54

Here's a writeup on the guy who took the lead early, since a lot of people are wondering who that was:

http://www.letsrun.com/2012/randall-0418.php

He was like a foot taller than me and blew past me at the start... I was just thinking - "I am gonna roll that dude down later"... I didn't realize he took the lead!

I definitely want to run Boston again. Once Andrea decides she wants to run it, I'm in for another round!

The Science of Sport blog did some great analysis of the race... they also said the effective heat on the course was ~90-95 degrees. So for anyone who ran that is bummed out at all - don't be. It was brutal. This one just needs to be chalked up to a learning experience of historic proportions.

From Paul on Thu, Apr 19, 2012 at 09:57:14 from 207.224.39.118

It definitely looked epic and historic. On the scale of the 2007 nor'easter, but with more vomiting.

From Tom Slick on Thu, Apr 19, 2012 at 11:53:54 from 69.171.160.29

Way to go Bro-Jake! You are a man amoung men, a class act if you will. You must return to Boston and make another shot at the first spot....you've got the talent now you've just got to beat the heat in the street!

From Adam RW on Thu, Apr 19, 2012 at 11:55:28 from 155.101.152.123

He has a pretty cool story and the Suess quote is perfect...

From Kelli on Thu, Apr 19, 2012 at 12:26:53 from 71.219.98.16

Thanks for sharing that story! I was bummed when I deleted the marathon and then could not find him! What was his finish time? Sad that he struggled that last 20 miles, that is a LONG time to struggle.

He ran Pikes Peak the same year as Scott! I will have to ask Scott if he remembers him. We did not get to see the lead men finish, when did not get to the finish line FAST enough after seeing our husband's off at the start.

From Kelli on Thu, Apr 19, 2012 at 12:29:17 from 71.219.98.16

Ignore my question-I see his finish time. I had forgotten by the time I finished the article that it had said the finishing time in the first paragraph. I will blame it on the diet Mountain Dew-shoulda had the real thing today apparently.

From Sasha Pachev on Thu, Apr 19, 2012 at 14:27:11 from 67.222.225.187

Solid time for the conditions, especially since you were not trained for them. 23rd overall at Boston is a great step forward.

Some thoughts in heat running and marathon endurance.

Heat running is a different sport, it tests your health on a deeper level. In my experience, you can hydrate and refuel all you want, but external support can carry you only so far, you have to have 95% of your resistance inside. I would compare fueling and hydration to tube feeding and other forms of life support. The curve goes like this - normal, then capable of surviving through life support, then no matter how much support you get you die regardless. So if you find yourself surviving off life support, the question is not "how do I improve the quality of life support", but rather "how do I get myself to live without it". I hit that stage when I am in shape for about 2:35 marathon - if I refuel well, I run 2:35, if not 2:40 or slower. But if I am in shape for 2:27, I just run 2:27, with or without fueling, it almost does not seem to matter.

The key to running strong at the end of a marathon, especially a hot one, is overall good health. Any hidden issue will be exposed and will come to bite you. You might not be able to detect it with an exam or a lab test, but the last 6 miles of a hot marathon will reveal it. Sometimes you may just need to guess and say, I'll make this change, and you luck out and get to the bottom of the issue. In my case, my heat tolerance improved noticeably when I replaced red meat in my diet with more fruits and vegetables.

From JulieC on Thu, Apr 19, 2012 at 14:59:18 from 67.41.188.165

thanks Sasha. Well written. It makes sense to me. It is always the last 6 miles as the indicator---if the first few miles were done correctly and not overzealously in heat or otherwise.

From Sasha Pachev on Thu, Apr 19, 2012 at 17:24:49 from 67.222.225.187

Julie:

To a certain extent, yes, but I do not believe it is possible to go out way to fast if you are properly trained and are in good health. Consider this, we'll take near world record as an example, let's learn from the best. A 59:00 half marathoner can run 2:04. So for him a perfect start is 1:02 for the first half. Try as he might, on a day of perfect fitness the worst he can do in the first half to ruin his race with a fast start is 3 minutes too fast because that's all he's got for the half. So as he goes out the gate, he is already moving his legs pretty quickly just to his the target pace. If he is fit enough to run 2:04 off 1:02 start, he will probably run 2:05 off 1:01 start, and 2:07 off 1:00 start.

So I would assert that if he opens with let's say 1:00 and runs something like 2:15, he was just not fit enough to run 2:04 marathon-specific endurance-wise even though his half gave reasons to believe it. Why would a guy that runs 100+ miles a week not have that endurance? Maybe because he is overtrained, or maybe undernourished, or maybe there is something wrong with the blood sugar that day, or glycogen storage the week before, maybe there is a tight muscle that does not matter in the half, but becomes a monster after 18. I would argue that if he went out at any pace honestly believing he could hold it for 26, even remotely believing, but then lost 15 minutes in the second half, barring the low mileage/being undertrained aspect which is unlikely if you can run the half in 59:00, we should be looking at his health, not at his pacing.

Speaking of runners that average less than 50 miles a week over the course of the year, there is a common theme. Every time you hear them explain why they slowed down drastically in the second half they will say they went out too fast. That might be technically correct, but an important question is not asked. How in the world did I manage to go through the first half so drastically fast? Why did it not hurt, why did I feel the pace was conversational, how could I admire nature at that insane speed? The answer to that, of course, is that the speed was not insane at all, it was perhaps even too slow, but the runner lacked the fitness to maintain it for 26 miles. So my answer to "I went out to fast" is "If you could do it at all, it was likely not too fast. Maybe too fast for the day due to your current lack of health and fitness, but not too fast long-term. See what you can improve in your training and lifestyle so your second half can be as fast as your first".

From Rossy on Fri, Apr 20, 2012 at 12:13:19 from 166.250.10.164

Great race, pics (that starting line one is beyond awesome), and report! You are a rock star Jake, congrats!

From Benn Griffin on Fri, Apr 20, 2012 at 19:40:56 from 72.79.211.5

Inspiring bro, excellent job! You are a role model for everyone here! Hard work does pay off!

From JG on Sat, Apr 21, 2012 at 07:57:07 from 71.57.246.108

Fantastic race Jake! I love how you lined right up with the world record holder! :) It was great meeting you Sunday & joining you for a short jog in the park!

From jtshad on Sat, Apr 21, 2012 at 21:12:16 from 69.20.183.178

I met Glen Randall at the PowerBar party on Monday night. Kinda quirky but a nice guy, more focused on mountain running and finding a grad school to get his PhD in physics.

He did not tell me about leading the race!

From Christi on Tue, Apr 24, 2012 at 17:38:56 from 174.56.35.183

Congrats on such an amazing race!!! You ran smart and tough!! Loved reading the race report and seeing the awesome pictures-great job!

From MaryMary on Thu, May 03, 2012 at 23:23:12 from 99.185.60.234

You were FAST in the HEAT! Great race report!

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