Showing posts with label central park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label central park. Show all posts

Sunday, September 18, 2022

26.2 things to know about the New York City Marathon


The 2022 TCS New York City Marathon will be my fifth, going back to the first one in 2007. For those preparing now to live out the dream journey through the five boroughs of Staten Island, Brooklyn, Queens, Bronx and Manhattan, here are some things you need to know:

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

10 Years of Running

My 10 Favorite: Miles | Medals | Shoes | Bibs

Thursday marks my 10th runnerversary, and thanks to anyone who has been along for the ride. I never imagined I would still be doing this on that Friday of December 1, 2006. That morning, I moved into a new apartment on the Upper West Side of New York City, and it was freshly painted. While waiting for the movers to arrive with my stuff, I walked over to the bodega at 73rd Street & Columbus, to buy a few items. I stepped out, and was standing there at the intersection, with a full box of KOOLS in my hand, ready to light one. I had visited the apartment earlier that week, huffing and puffing up the steps to the third floor, overweight and a smoker for the past six or seven years, to meet the tenants who were moving out. They changed my world, without knowing it, because they told me they belonged to the New York Road Runners club and that they regularly ran and biked Central Park a block away. With that healthy thought in my head, I looked at that full box of KOOLS and I broke it in half, drawing curious looks from women who stood beside me. I went into my new apartment, met the movers, unpacked, and then immediately took the A train down to Times Square and bought a pair of ASICS at a Foot Locker. I went to NYRR.org and paid for a one-year membership. That week I started running hilly Central Park, and on that December 10th I ran my first race, the Joe Kleinerman 10K, finishing with a net time of 1:18:40 (12:41 pace).



I have thought about this moment for a long time, and in counting down the days to this special runnerversary I have been posting several top-10 lists of my favorite things over this past decade of running. Today, I am going to celebrate by running Central Park at 5 a.m., then running around the Washington Monument later in the day, then by popping a bottle of champagne and spraying it all over myself. I am also going to celebrate by posting my final top-10 list, so here it is: 10 unbelievable things that happened after I quit smoking and started running.

10. It taught me to be a finisher in life. Set a goal, work hard, persevere and finish. My first goal was to run the New York City Marathon within my first year as a runner, and I did that in November 2007. In the past month I finished my fourth NYC Marathon, and 17th full or ultra.

9. There are 137 bibs on my bedroom wall. They signify all the races I have registered for and then got up for early starts and put one foot in front of another until I crossed a timing mat. That has equated to thousands and thousands and thousands of miles I have run either in those races or in training. It means my heart has pumped blood in wonderful fashion amid all that activity. I owe a special thanks to the New York Road Runners, for conducting all those races I have run, and to the people who take care of Central Park and keep it so pristine and the best place in the world to run -- my track!

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Extreme Heat or Extreme Cold?

By Mark | After doing this @Marathoner stuff for nearly a decade, I decided to list as many pros as I could for running in the most extreme heat and the most extreme cold.

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Thank you, Mary - a true leader in the field

By Mark | Last Sunday, I finished the Japan Run 4-miler at Central Park, and it was a familiar scene toward the end. I was in my fourth mile, running down West Drive past the Shakespeare Garden...and a woman was running by me and all runners in the opposite direction, shouting "Good job!" as she ran.

That was Mary Wittenberg as I will always remember her.

It was my 116th race. The first one was in December of 2006, when I was a quitting smoker wondering how I would do in a Joe Kleinerman 10K around the park. The race director said to us runners over the loudspeakers as she completed her pre-race remarks, "Start easy and finish hard."

That was Mary Wittenberg as I will always remember her.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

United Airlines NYC Half Recap

By Mark | Sunday's United Airlines NYC Half was my 22nd half-marathon and 111th overall race since I traded a box of KOOLS for a box of ASICS on Dec. 1, 2006. I finished this one with a net time of 2:40:10, compared to 2:26:01 in 2007, 2:46:51 in 2009 and 2:27:45 in 2012. It was perfect running weather in the 40s and a great event. Here's my recap of the weekend, and really it all comes down to that unmatched thrill of taking over Times Square:




Friday, December 5, 2014

ASICS Electro Jacket For Today's Space Age


I completed the #Orion 4:24 Flight Test Challenge in 17 miles, and in case you missed this original blog post you can see all the whys and whats below. I followed NASA's Orion mission in a few ways. One, there was a splashdown: It rained the entire 4 hours and 24 minutes, and alas I finally started landing in splash puddles around the NYC Financial District's uneven pavement at the 1:30 mark. Two, I did a first transit of Central Park after parking at 105th and Central Park West Drive, and then proceeded across 42nd Street to the West Side and then completed a large elliptical orbit of the Manhattan island. But most of all, I wore the latest in today's Space Age Gear.

Friday, May 23, 2014

Breathing and Running: What California Chrome and I Already Know

Wearing a strip while in Beijing, 2008 Summer Olympics
California Chrome and I have three things in common. One, we are both originally from California. Two, we both run a lot. Three, we both rely on nasal strips to reach our finish lines.

And that's all the comparisons, because California Chrome is a lot faster.

I am serious about the nasal strips and about the importance of breathing in running. If you look closely at my raceday pics, you can see that I brought a familiar companion along for my milestone 100th race last Saturday at the Brooklyn Half: my usual clear, small-medium Breathe Right Strip. The first thing I do before any run is wash my nose area thoroughly with a rag and soap to make sure there is no facial oil, and then I apply the strip on the bridge of my nose.

California Chrome wearing a nasal strip
The first time I did this was in early 2007 for a run around Central Park, and I realized that I shaved about 30 percent of my time spent on the 10K loop. The big difference I noticed was not when I put the strip ON, but when I took it OFF; I gasped for air when I removed it toward the end of my run. The increased oxygen made all the difference in the world for me. There have to be many others who could benefit as well. I am amused by the conclusion by the New York State Racing Association that said "Equine nasal strips do not enhance equine performance..." California Chrome's handlers know the real story. They definitely help.

On the most humid days, the strip will eventually peel, but by scrubbing the area beforehand you minimize the chance of slippage later. It has been a solid gear item for me through 100 races.

Breathing is of vital importance in running, and you perhaps have seen considerable focus on the science of breathing lately within running journals. Competitor and Men's Health Mag each have articles the past month quoting Budd Coates, longtime running coach, four-time Olympic Trials qualifier, and author of Running on Air, a training manual on breathing and running. And you can read and watch for yourself as Coates gives advice such as this at Runners World in an adaptation of his Rodale book:
Let's start with a 5-count or 3:2 pattern of rhythmic breathing, which will apply to most of your running. Inhale for three steps and exhale for two. Practice first on the floor:
1. Lie on your back with your knees bent and feet flat on the floor.
2. Place your hand on your belly and make sure that you are belly breathing.
3. Breathe through your nose and your mouth.
4. Inhale to the count of 3 and exhale to the count of 2. You might count it this way: "in-2-3," "out-2," "in-2-3," "out-2," and so forth.
5. Concentrate on a continuous breath as you inhale over the 3 counts and a continuous breath as you exhale.
6. Once you become comfortable with the inhale/exhale pattern, add foot taps to mimic walking steps.
When you feel confident that you have the 3:2 pattern down, take it for a walk. Inhale for three steps, exhale for two, inhale for three steps, exhale for two. Finally, of course, try out your rhythmic breathing on a run—inhaling for three footstrikes and exhaling for two. A few key points: Inhale and exhale smoothly and continuously through both your nose and mouth at the same time. If it seems difficult to inhale over the full three strides, either inhale more gradually or pick up your pace. And lastly, do not listen to music while learning to breathe rhythmically. The beats of the music will confuse the heck out of you.
Wearing nasal strip for 2014 Brooklyn Half
I am trying to master that 3:2 breathing pattern, and I did pretty poorly during the second half of the Brooklyn Half. But I am going to work harder at it. In addition to being surrounded by this attention to breathing lately, I recently had an unreal experience in a New York City taxi that was driven by a yogi from India. He was playing sitar music as I got into his taxi, and I told him that I enjoyed it and to feel free to turn it back up. That led into a long conversation about breathing. He told me that breathing is the secret to my running, and that breathing is the secret to life in general.

We take our breathing for granted 99.9 percent of our lives. The miracle is happening as you read this and your lungs expand with each inhale and then settle with each exhale. Take a very deep cleansing breath in through your nose right now and close your eyes, your back straight wherever you are. Then slowly exhale. Feel how amazing your body is. Now imagine you are focusing the same way when you are running.

I suggest you read those articles above and give thought to how you breathe. I can do a better job at it and I believe it will lower my times further. For me, the Breathe-Right Strip always has been an example of giving myself a better chance of maximizing my flow of oxygen into my lungs and through my bloodstream. I am glad to see that California Chrome will be allowed to wear his nasal strip at Belmont for a Triple Crown bid, and I know that the bottom line is getting as much air in and out as possible. Said Coates:

"You want as much in and out as you can, as easily as possible."

How do YOU breathe while you run?


Monday, May 12, 2014

Lookdown Survey Video: ASICS Dominates The Field

I have read in the past that one out of every two pair of shoes in the 50,000+ TCS New York City Marathon field is ASICS. I actually believe the percentage is higher -- 66% I think, so I decided to start putting this to the test in what will be a series of 2014 Lookdown Survey Videos on this blog.

Here is the first randomly shot iPhone video, while 8,000 of us were being herded toward the start of Saturday's UAE Healthy Kidney 10K, another weekly New York Road Runners event at Central Park. It is MORE than 66% ASICS shoes in my immediate area (7 of 9), including my own ASICS GEL-Cumulus 16s. I used the x2 slow-mo in youtube and captured stills below for further detail and comment.



The first glimpse is of a flash of purple-hued ASICS, along with my black ASICS GEL-Cumulus 16s (you know what they look like from my previous blog posts here). . . .


Brooks on the left, I believe, and the other two are ASICS...


The green ASICS on the left are already counted above. Immediately to my right are Nikes because I could identify the red swoosh. The aqua-hued shoes on the far right were unidentifiable to me after looking at the frames over and over, possibly Sauconys, so I was going to list those as undetermined...



...until I looked at my frames on the iPhone, which was clearer resolution. So I blew this up in Photoshop and sure enough, those are also ASICS:



The blue on the left are already counted in the second photo above. Immediately ahead of me in the black capris is an ASICS runner. And I initially listed the dark shoes in the upper left as undetermined although I suspected they were ASICS. . . .


...and then again I took a closer look at the iPhone frame by frame and it was clear as day. Those dark shoes in the upper left are indeed another pair of ASICS -- maybe Kayano 20s like mine:


So that's 9 runners, 7 ASICS, 1 Nike, 1 Brooks. And in this case we were going to start running very soon so I urgently took this at the last minute and on the move. It was very clear looking around me that almost everyone seemed to be wearing ASICS.

Again, I don't claim this to be scientific but I will be doing these Lookdown Survey Videos occasionally throughout the year at our NYRR races and I think it will become clear. ASICS provides me with running shoes to test from time to time, some I buy. The company has nothing to do with this video series; it's just something I want to do out of my own curiosity. I went through a long stretch of only Brooks Glycerins for a few years, and I've tried all major types. I'll wear ASICS for my 100th race this Saturday.

Undoubtedly the numbers are more spread out at the head of the pack, where there are many runners endorsing various shoes, but I am focused on the field in general and don't feel that the elites at the head are representative nor relevant to this type of survey in terms of runner volume. If you want to know what shoes runners are wearing in races, look at all the corrals and just compare.

I think two out of every three runners is in ASICS at our NYRR events year-round, including the TCS NYC Marathon. Look around at the feet around you and see for yourself.

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

100 Races: It's Party Time

Brooklyn Half Week is here, and that means my 100th Race! This is a big milestone for me, one I have coined as #Rundred -- when you hit triple digits in official/scored races. Now that the UAE Healthy Kidney 10K is in the books with a 1:07 finish, I thought I would paste all the New York Road Runners results since I started running in December 2006 and add any other races along the way. This is what 99 races looks like heading into Saturday's party, and shortly I am going to blog about 100 things I've learned.


It all started with a 1:18:40 finish in the Joe Kleinerman 10K, once around hilly Central Park on a cold and sunny day on Dec. 10, 2006, nine days after I quit smoking. This list is all my scored/official races, so I did not include a couple of marathons that I ran on my own or the #12RunsOfChristmas, etc. It includes the NYRR 8K in March 2008, when ice at Central Park meant it had to be a "fun run" but was still included as a qualifier for the NYC Marathon. The Emerald Nuts Midnight Run on the last day of 2010 is included, because it is a NYCM qualifier but not scored. For the record, I also ran the Emerald Nuts Midnight Run on Dec. 31, 2007, but I'm guessing we did not get credit for it that year.

NYRR's introduction of "My NYRR" in 2013 made it a little trickier to just string together these results, so I had to delete some columns from the 2013 section, and they also no longer include the NYC Marathon with all the other NYRR results now so I had to add that one to 2013. To see specifics on my 14 marathon or ultra finishes, you can go to my Marathon Maniacs page. Here's the Hot 100:

2014 - I started running for ASICS and got to run a mile with Ryan Hall!
http://web2.nyrrc.org/aes-programs/results/vars/spacer.gif
Race Name
Date
Distance
(miles)
Net
Time
Pace
per
Mile
Overall
Place
Gender
Place
Age
Place
April 27, 2014
4.0
40:44
10:11
5966
3433
281
34:29
48.88 %
April 6, 2014
4.0
42:42
10:41
4434
2478
182
36:09
46.62 %
April 5, 2014
6.2
1:08:03
10:57
6963
3862
280
57:36
46.62 %
February 2, 2014
4.0
43:35
10:54
4835
2623
185
36:54
45.67 %
January 26, 2014
13.1
2:43:44
12:30
3883
2357
215
2:19:52
42.34 %
93 ASICS LA Marathon in March

2013 - Ran NYC Marathon for first time in 5 years
Race Name
Date
Distance
(miles)
Net
Time
Pace
per
Mile
Overall
Place
Gender
Place
Age
Place
December 14, 2013
9.3
1:51:17
11:57
4059
2109
153
October 13, 2013
13.1
2:37:57
12:04
6356
3686
265

October 6, 2013
13.1
2:37:45
12:03
5233
2777
217

September 29, 2013
10.0
1:56:39
11:40
6071
3547
256

September 22, 2013
1.0
8:36
8:36
4125
2484
150

September 15, 2013
18.0
3:58:19
13:15
4958
2526
247

September 7, 2013
4.0
43:01
10:46
4232
2165
138

July 21, 2013
6.2
1:18:46
12:41
6285
3624
224

May 30, 2013
3.0
37:48
12:36
4635
2631
122

April 21, 2013
4.0
44:34
11:09
5511
2971
223

April 6, 2013
6.2
1:13:15
11:49
7274
3946
250

February 3, 2013
4.0
49:43
12:26
5199
2706
198

January 27, 2013
13.1
2:35:26
11:52
4570
2836
247

January 5, 2013
6.2
1:10:17
11:21
2855
1634
139

78 Fort Lauderdale/A1A Marathon in February
77 New York City Marathon in November


2012 - 3 marathons including my first outside of USA (Paris); beat ITB Syndrome
Race Name, Date
Dist.
(miles)
Gun
Time
Net
Time
Pace
per Mile
 Overall Place/
Total
Finishers
 Gender Place/
Total
Males
 Age Place/
Total in
Age Group
76 ING NYC Marathon Tune-up
September 23, 2012
18.0
3:53:32 
3:49:07 
12:43 
4107 / 4326 
2210 / 2280 
200 / 211 

  
75 NFL Back to Football Run
August 30, 2012
4.0
45:52 
42:22 
10:35 
2693 / 3446 
1468 / 1685 
70 / 85 
36:09 
46.5 % 
74 Run to Breathe
July 21, 2012
6.2
1:15:02 
1:06:57 
10:47 
3951 / 4840 
2204 / 2470 
155 / 185 
57:37 
46.5 % 
73 CPC Run for Central Park
July 14, 2012
4.0
46:02 
42:32 
10:38 
4123 / 5073 
2366 / 2622 
182 / 202 
36:36 
46.0 % 
72 Achilles Hope & Possibility
June 24, 2012
5.0
58:37 
54:47 
10:57 
2356 / 3382 
1307 / 1673 
105 / 131 
47:08 
45.2 % 
71 Portugal Day
June 17, 2012
5.0
57:14 
52:11 
10:26 
3642 / 4425 
2472 / 2749 
205 / 227 
44:54 
47.5 % 
70 Brooklyn Half Marathon
May 19, 2012
13.1
2:38:57 
2:29:15 
11:23 
12839 / 14187 
6761 / 7110 
335 / 363 
2:09:44 
45.6 % 
69 UAE Healthy Kidney 10K
May 12, 2012
6.2
1:17:28 
1:10:21 
11:20 
7204 / 7934 
3968 / 4191 
271 / 294 
1:00:32 
44.3 % 
68 NYC Half
March 18, 2012
13.1
2:52:00 
2:27:45 
11:16 
13623 / 15376 
7007 / 7476 
528 / 565 
2:08:26 
46.1 % 
67 Joe Kleinerman 10K
January 7, 2012
6.2
1:34:54 
1:29:33 
14:26 
5261 / 5313 
2770 / 2779 
201 / 202 
1:17:04 
34.8 %
66 Miami Marathon in January
65 Paris Marathon in April
64 MLB All-Star Game 5K in Kansas City in July
63 Harrisburg Marathon in November


2011 - No marathons this year but maintained a base year-round
Race Name, Date
Dist.
(miles)
Gun
Time
Net
Time
Pace
per Mile
 Overall Place/
Total
Finishers
 Gender Place/
Total
Males
 Age Place/
Total in
Age Group
62 Emerald Nuts Midnight Run
December 31, 2010
4.0
MQ MQ 
MQ MQ 
0:00 
   
   
   
  
  
61 Ted Corbitt 15K
December 17, 2011
9.3
1:51:23 
1:46:33 
11:27 
3942 / 4290 
1960 / 2043 
138 / 144 
1:32:09 
44.6 % 
60 Join The Voices! 5M
December 4, 2011
5.0
54:25 
52:06 
10:25 
4010 / 5006 
2165 / 2437 
158 / 175 
44:50 
47.5 % 
59 Portugal Day
June 19, 2011
5.0
1:06:08 
1:00:25 
12:05 
4365 / 4643 
2824 / 2925 
244 / 250 
52:25 
40.6 % 
58 NYRR Celebrate Israel
June 5, 2011
4.0
52:10 
46:21 
11:35 
4582 / 5182 
2578 / 2761 
186 / 202 
40:12 
41.8 % 
57 Brooklyn Half Marathon
May 21, 2011
13.1
2:46:49 
2:38:00 
12:03 
5611 / 5921 
2806 / 2885 
135 / 142 
2:18:33 
42.7 % 
56 UAE Healthy Kidney 10K
May 14, 2011
6.2
1:18:45 
1:13:02 
11:46 
7065 / 7564 
3767 / 3920 
249 / 257 
1:03:21 
42.3 % 
55 Japan Run 4M
May 8, 2011
4.0
53:24 
49:04 
12:16 
4755 / 5073 
2610 / 2690 
199 / 204 
42:34 
39.5 % 
54 NYRR 4-Mile
April 23, 2011
4.0
49:29 
44:07 
11:01 
4578 / 5161 
2617 / 2790 
167 / 178 
38:16 
44.0 % 
53 Scotland Run
April 10, 2011
6.2
1:20:51 
1:12:38 
11:42 
7998 / 8493 
4394 / 4518 
284 / 291 
1:03:01 
42.6 % 
52 NYRR Manhattan Half
January 22, 2011
13.1
2:52:14 
2:46:15 
12:41 
4286 / 4369 
2646 / 2676 
204 / 208 
2:25:47 
40.6 %

2010 - Fewest races, as I got hitched and settled into new house
Race Name, Date
Dist.
(miles)
Gun
Time
Net
Time
Pace
per Mile
 Overall Place/
Total
Finishers
 Gender Place/
Total
Males
 Age Place/
Total in
Age Group
51 NYRR Ted Corbitt 15K
December 19, 2010
9.3
1:55:44 
1:53:14 
12:10 
3397 / 3541 
1793  
134  
1:38:46 
41.6 % 
50 Brooklyn Half Marathon
May 22, 2010
13.1
3:03:25 
2:49:59 
12:58 
6905 / 7015 
3403 / 3423 
167 / 169 
2:30:19 
39.3 % 
49 Scotland Run
April 3, 2010
6.2
1:15:41 
1:11:07 
11:28 
7133 / 7795 
3908 / 4074 
241 / 259 
1:02:12 
43.5 %
48 Miami Marathon in January
47 MLB All-Star 5K in Anaheim in July


2009 - Proposed to Lisa at finish line of New Jersey Marathon
Race Name, Date
Dist.
(miles)
Gun
Time
Net
Time
Pace
per Mile
 Overall Place/
Total
Finishers
 Gender Place/
Total
Males
 Age Place/
Total in
Age Group
46 Joe Kleinerman 10K
December 6, 2009
6.2
1:09:48 
1:06:51 
10:46 
4139 / 4803 
2211 / 2401 
164 / 175 
58:28 
46.2 % 
45 ING NYC Marathon Tune-Up
September 27, 2009
18.0
4:01:22 
3:57:49 
13:12 
3521 / 3567 
1975 / 1993 
160 / 164 

  
44 NYC Half-Marathon
August 16, 2009
13.1
3:01:25 
2:46:51 
12:44 
9592 / 10195 
4879 / 5050 
430 / 446 
2:28:49 
39.7 % 
43 Colon Cancer 15K Challenge
March 22, 2009
9.3
1:40:09 
1:37:55 
10:31 
2035 / 2347 
1119 / 1216 
132 / 140 
1:26:51 
47.3 % 
42 NYRR Bronx Half-Marathon
February 8, 2009
13.1
2:41:44 
2:38:01 
12:03 
3513 / 3677 
2236 / 2291 
259 / 264 
2:20:57 
42.0 % 
41 NYRR Gridiron Classic
February 1, 2009
4.0
0:48:02 
42:15 
10:33 
4316 / 5270 
2478 / 2764 
268 / 294 
37:15 
45.2 %
40 New Jersey Marathon in May
39 MLB All-Star 5K in St. Louis in July


2008 - Best shape of my life, PR'd in two marathons (St. Louis & NYC)
Race Name, Date
Dist.
(miles)
Gun
Time
Net
Time
Pace
per Mile
 Overall Place/
Total
Finishers
 Gender Place/
Total
Males
 Age Place/
Total in
Age Group
38 NYRR Holiday 4-Mile
December 13, 2008
4.0
0:46:31 
39:11 
9:47 
3161 / 4880 
1702 / 2174 
168 / 205 
34:32 
48.7 % 
37 Joe Kleinerman 10K
December 7, 2008
6.2
1:05:15 
1:02:29 
10:04 
3319 / 4339 
1998 / 2339 
196 / 223 
55:05 
48.7 % 
36 Knickerbocker 60K
November 15, 2008
37.2
9:51:00 
9:51:00 
15:53 
78 / 80 
62 / 63 
17 / 17 

  
35 ING New York City Marathon
November 2, 2008
26.2
5:51:45 
5:13:27 
11:57 
32064 / 38096 
22241 / 25216 
3426 / 3810 
4:43:17 
44.0 % 
34 NYRR Grand Prix Queens Half
September 14, 2008
13.1
2:25:32 
2:22:55 
10:54 
2407 / 3059 
1592 / 1888 
176 / 207 
2:07:28 
46.4 % 
33 Run for Central Park
July 19, 2008
4.0
0:43:27 
38:13 
9:33 
2790 / 4613 
1772 / 2325 
192 / 253 
33:58 
49.6 % 
32 Hope & Possibility 5M
June 22, 2008
5.0
0:52:05 
49:49 
9:57 
1015 / 2043 
627 / 974 
75 / 109 
44:16 
48.1 % 
31 WABC Fight/Prostate Cancer
June 15, 2008
5.0
0:54:13 
49:45 
9:57 
3828 / 5515 
2739 / 3462 
327 / 402 
44:13 
48.2 % 
30 Healthy Kidney 10K
May 17, 2008
6.2
1:10:35 
1:02:07 
10:01 
5019 / 6282 
3075 / 3441 
289 / 329 
55:12 
48.6 % 
29 NYRR Brooklyn Half
May 3, 2008
13.1
2:20:24 
2:15:46 
10:21 
4957 / 5839 
2991 / 3294 
282 / 320 
2:02:07 
48.4 % 
28 Scotland Run 10K
March 30, 2008
6.2
1:06:45 
59:56 
9:40 
4811 / 6977 
2967 / 3669 
281 / 362 
53:16 
50.4 % 
27 Colon Cancer Challenge 15K
March 9, 2008
9.3
1:43:11 
1:37:54 
10:31 
2888 / 3286 
1628 / 1757 
194 / 204 
1:27:33 
47.0 % 
26 NYRR Bronx Half-Marathon
February 10, 2008
13.1
2:21:00 
2:20:32 
10:43 
2891 / 3265 
1952 / 2113 
235 / 254 
2:06:24 
46.8 % 
25 NYRR Gridiron Classic
February 3, 2008
4.0
0:47:37 
41:26 
10:21 
3967 / 4940 
2360 / 2669 
284 / 325 
36:49 
45.7 % 
24 NYRR Manhattan Half
January 27, 2008
13.1
2:26:00 
2:18:58 
10:36 
4255 / 4997 
2782 / 3116 
345 / 391 
2:05:00 
47.3 % 
23 NYRR Fred Lebow Classic
January 12, 2008
5.0
0:56:54 
53:21 
10:40 
3789 / 4425 
2152 / 2351 
272 / 295 
47:25 
44.9 % 
22 St. Louis Marathon in April

2007 - First full year of running, signed up for every race I could & chugged water
Race Name, Date
Dist.
(miles)
Gun
Time
Net
Time
Pace
per Mile
 Overall Place/
Total
Finishers
 Gender Place/
Total
Males
 Age Place/
Total in
Age Group
21 NYRR Hot Chocolate 15K
December 1, 2007
9.3
1:38:42 
1:35:16 
10:14 
3880 / 4773 
2059 / 2323 
213 / 237 
1:25:11 
48.3 % 
20 Race To Deliver
November 18, 2007
4.0
0:42:37 
37:35 
9:23 
3097 / 5213 
1807 / 2486 
177 / 233 
33:24 
50.4 % 
19 ING New York City Marathon
November 4, 2007
26.2
6:23:41 
6:08:25 
14:03 
36986 / 38607 
25255 / 26072 
3814 / 3909 
5:35:55 
37.1 % 
18 NYC Half-Marathon
August 5, 2007
13.1
2:31:48 
2:26:01 
11:08 
8671 / 9927 
4789 / 5164 
459 / 501 
2:12:27 
44.7 % 
17 Naples-New York Park to Park
July 14, 2007
6.2
1:03:45 
58:55 
9:30 
2728 / 4566 
1786 / 2392 
173 / 234 
52:46 
50.8 % 
16 WABC Fight/Prostate Cancer
June 17, 2007
5.0
0:53:07 
47:55 
9:35 
3297 / 5010 
2508 / 3280 
306 / 394 
42:55 
49.7 % 
15 Japan Day
June 3, 2007
4.0
0:39:58 
37:01 
9:15 
2507 / 4599 
1776 / 2558 
176 / 257 
33:09 
50.8 % 
14 AHA Start! Wall Street Run
May 22, 2007
3.0
0:35:28 
27:51 
9:17 
3631 / 6672 
2506 / 3635 
485 / 706 

  
13 Healthy Kidney 10K
May 19, 2007
6.2
1:02:21 
57:11 
9:13 
3576 / 5419 
2450 / 3087 
236 / 308 
51:13 
52.4 % 
12 NYJL Mother's Day 4M
May 13, 2007
4.0
0:38:09 
36:54 
9:13 
1659 / 3194 
1111 / 1581 
98 / 144 
33:03 
50.9 % 
11 NYRR Brooklyn Half-Marathon
April 14, 2007
13.1
2:22:35 
2:19:03 
10:36 
4125 / 4853 
2588 / 2831 
258 / 284 
2:06:07 
46.9 % 
10 Scotland Run 10K
April 1, 2007
6.2
1:05:57 
1:01:17 
9:53 
4316 / 5721 
2721 / 3178 
271 / 320 
54:53 
48.9 % 
9 NYRR 8K Run
March 17, 2007
4.9
MQ 

0:00 
   
   
   
  
  
8 Colon Cancer Challenge 15K
March 11, 2007
9.3
1:38:31 
1:36:15 
10:20 
2025 / 2403 
1235 / 1341 
135 / 143 
1:26:46 
47.4 % 
7 Salsa, Blues + Shamrocks 5K
March 4, 2007
3.1
0:31:51 
30:17 
9:46 
1902 / 2874 
1244 / 1618 
128 / 159 
27:07 
47.5 % 
6 NYRR Gridiron Classic
February 4, 2007
4.0
0:49:17 
43:05 
10:46 
3837 / 4482 
2267 / 2501 
244 / 256 
38:35 
43.6 % 
5 NYRR Manhattan Half
January 21, 2007
13.1
2:34:22 
2:30:03 
11:27 
4108 / 4404 
2649 / 2777 
328 / 340 
2:16:06 
43.5 % 
4 NYRR Fred Lebow Classic
January 7, 2007
5.0
57:03 
54:01 
10:48 
3636 / 4181 
2177 / 2364 
255 / 274 
48:23 
44.0 %
3 Oklahoma City Half Marathon in May

2006 - Bought my first pair of ASICS, joined NYRR and started running
Race Name, Date
Dist.
(miles)
Gun
Time
Net
Time
Pace
per Mile
 Overall Place/
Total
Finishers
 Gender Place/
Total
Males
 Age Place/
Total in
Age Group
2 NYRR Hot Chocolate 10M
December 16, 2006
10.0
2:10:55 
2:07:07 
12:42 
3945 / 4034 
1971 / 1996 
207 / 210 
1:54:44 
38.6 % 
1 Joe Kleinerman 10K
December 10, 2006
6.2
1:21:13 
1:18:40 
12:41 
4731 / 4910 
2552 / 2610 
300 / 305 
1:10:28 
38.1 % 

Question: How many races have you run? What does it mean to you to be able to look back on your previous races?