Return to the Riverbank Run 25K

Among my big goals last year, was to set the American record for the 25K road race at the Amway Riverbank Run in Grand Rapids, MI. The other two were to win the overall age division at the USATF Master Grand Prix, and to run a sub 3. I got two of the three, but fell short at the Chicago Marathon in October.

Finishing last year’s Riverbank Run

This Was Not Supposed to be a Rebound Race

Although I did get the record at the Riverbank Run (by a full minute) it wasn’t a perfect day, with temperatures in the 60s, and I took a hard fall in the 2nd mile when another runner clipped my heel. I ran 1:40:39, and felt that I might have another minute with better conditions and no mishaps along the way. So last fall when I got a complimentary entry for winning my age group, I signed up immediately.

Everything training-wise was on track through March but at the end of the month I decided to try a new training system. The thought was that I could use the extra input from a professional coach instead of relying my own methods, which have worked but maybe I could squeeze out a little more. The results were less than perfect, three weeks into the program I felt overtrained and tweaked my hamstring. I was pretty disappointed to miss the USATF 10K championships at the end of April.

Fortunately, I healed up quickly and was only out for a week, and was able to cross train through most of it. Hopefully I didn’t miss much. However, I did feel off with the reduction in mileage and uncertainty of whether I would even be able to line up in Grand Rapids.

Travel Deja Vu

The logistics of this trip was almost a carbon copy to last year. We traveled on Thursday evening, which turned into Thursday night and just like last year the flight was delayed a couple of hours. We got into Grand Rapids after midnight and didn’t get to the hotel until well after 1 am. That wasn’t ideal, and I slept poorly, maybe getting 5 hours in before awakening.

We scouted the course in the morning, and I did a short shakeout run starting at John Ball Park, near the 3 mile point, and then visited the Lake Michigan shoreline at a county park about 45 minutes away.

Lake Michigan from Rosy Mound Natural Area

Wooded sand dunes at Rosy Mound Natural Area

We were really boring and even ate at the same restaurant that we did last year. It had good food, friendly service, and it was close to the hotel, so why not?

Even though I was tired all day, and wasn’t sure how much fitness I had lost over the past couple of weeks, I was encouraged by the weather which promised to have near perfect temperatures, with some wind. I set out to break 1:40 and to run a string of sub 20 minute 5Ks to accomplish that. The plan was go out and hold the pace for as long as I could.

Race Day

Fortunately, I slept well, as well as possible on the night of a big race, but did wake up frequently in the early morning hours.

The morning was cool and cloudy, threatening some rain which never really materialized, but it was also breezy with steady 7-12 mph winds coming from the northwest, and stronger gusts here and there–especially in the downtown area along the river and between the tall buildings.

I took an easy warm up, but it was intermittent because downtown was so crowded. Spent some minutes looking for the gear drop area, which I didn’t find (note to self–read the map/instructions even if you have been to the race before). So I ditched my gear bag under a bush near the finish. Jogged to the start area, and was shocked that we had just 2.5 minutes to start! (note to self, check your watch!)

It had started misting about 10 minutes before our start so I kept my arm warmers and gloves on. I wasn’t sure what the race would be like and hoped it wouldn’t rain the entire way.

In the days and hours before the race I was excited but more tempered than last year. I felt less pressure, like there was nothing to lose, but also less tested and unsure about my fitness. In 2023 I had already put up some good numbers by May topped of with a 92% age grade at the USATF masters 10 mile the previous month. This time I had not raced in 8 weeks, and was coming off a dinged hamstring which compromised training. Overall I was less psyched, but the day was good so I was ready to stick to the plan of sub 20 5Ks.

The Race

We were off and I found a groove and space right away. After that quick first turn onto the downhill toward the river, I checked my watch, which read 6:10 pace. So I let up a little. By a half mile I could tell the arm warmers wouldn’t be necessary so I pulled them off, and tossed them to Tamara, who was standing just short of the mile marker. Split 6:20 for mile 1. A little quick but with the net downhill, it was right on and I felt decent.

I found my pace in miles 2 and 3, and only checked splits at the mile markers. We ran by John Ball Park, where I did the shakeout on Friday, and I found the 5K marker on the road. Took my split there, which was 19:57, so right on. The effort felt typical for when I travel to sea level–fast (borderline too fast) but intuitively sustainable.

As we headed west out of the park and residential area to the more rural Butterworth Road I could see a large pack of 50 or so runners strung out some 20-40 seconds ahead, while I was more in a no-man’s land with a runner or two here and there, spaced 5 or 10 seconds apart. On the first hill (about 3.5 miles in) a couple groups of runners went by–I ran with them for a bit but, their pace seemed faster like low 6:20s instead of mid 6:20s. I did not want to flame out at 15K and chose to keep the effort even. With a headwind, this was the more conservative choice. On the top of the first hill a bystander said we were about in 100th place. (Looking back my guess was somewhere around 105th or 110th).

Still feeling fresh near mile 3 of the Riverbank Run.

The fifth mile had another long hill and a few rollers but the effort did not feel bad. Then we made a turn to the SW for a few miles with some long downhills. 10K split was 39:55. I guy who seemed to be close to my age pulled up and drafted off me for a bit, I dropped back and we ran side by side for a couple of miles. At an aid station at 8 miles I slowed to get my gel and he gapped me. Pulling away a few seconds a mile. Oh well.

I felt I was on that edge and we were barely half way into the race. Just before 9 miles we crossed the Grand River, going through a scream tunnel of sort. A local high school cheerleading squad. They had a lot of spirit was the noisiest part of the course.

Turning left on to the park drive it was quite the opposite. No fans, just quiet. Here y0u had to watch your footing. The road was fairly narrow and crowned, with a rumble strip in the middle, and it had lots of patched roadwork. Footing was best on toward middle the either side of the rumble strip. This is a nice stretch, it’s nearly flat, but its also a bit lonely. Crossed 15K in 59:44 and for the first time I felt decent about possibly breaking 1:40. I just needed to run 40:15 for 10K.

I passed one or two runners here, and maybe two or three passed me. The masters runner who had gone by was a good 20-30 seconds up. Still in the park at 20K, passed that maker in 1:19:49, so losing out on my little sub-goal of running each 5K split under 20. Mentally the 15-20K stretch is the most difficult part of the race. I was also feeling it physically and just tried to focus on little landmarks a minute or two ahead. Focus on that point, reach it, find another, repeat. Just after 20K we run back onto the newly paved road that leads into the city. It’s wide and smooth, much better footing and you can focus a bit more on pace and effort and think less ab0ut the surface.

They had a timing mat at the half, and I while I was feeling the pace it also felt sustainable. I could hold this for 2 more miles and still have a kick at the end. I passed a runner and encouraged him. A half mile later he came back and encouraged me. I mentioned that I was aiming for the record and he said “let’s do this!” and we ran together heading into the city. With about a mile to go there is a hill that climbs some 60 feet over a third of a mile, I anticipated it and ran within myself. My (right) hamstring started to cramp a bit (note the left was the one that acted up a couple weeks before), so I had to ease my pace until we made the turn and headed down. The tightness dissipated on the flat and down, but now we were running into a stiff headwind. I held on as best I could as my compatriot pulled away. So I was back on my own. However, I was able to increase my cadence and lengthen my stride as we wound through some twists and turns. I knew I had the record and was fairly certain I’d be under my goal of 1:40. Tamara was cheering at a corner, about 400 m from the finish and that also gave a boost.

Crossed the line in 1:39:50, running that last half mile or so at 6:12/mile pace. And that extra effort is what kept me under 1:40. A new American record!

After the race!

20 Years a Comeback: Part I

This is partly recycled from a few years ago when I chronicled my earlier running path over the decades and phases of my life. However, I am revisiting the story because it has now been 20 years since I found my way back to running and racing following several years of injury and unfortunate events.

Y2K The Crumbling

First, I guess you have go back 25 years. After four years of steady decline, I enjoyed a nice resurgence at age 40. I built a base and stayed healthy and managed to achieve my primary goal that year of breaking 4:40 in the mile, and beating the local favorite in the Amherst, MA Masters Mile that summer. And for the next two years things went pretty well, I ran a marathon, won my age at Bolder Boulder in 2000, ran dozens of races, and stayed healthy. Until I didn’t.

By late spring of 2000 I was nearing the end of the second year of a post doctoral research fellowship with the USDA in my hometown of Fort Collins, CO. Everything seemed to be going great. The research was interesting and rewarding, and I was actually getting paid a decent wage for the first time in my career. We had one kid getting ready for kindergarten, and another precociously about to start pre-school before turning 3.

I was just wrapping up a spring of racing highlighted with a 27:13 8K at the Drake Relays road race and winning my age a month later at the huge Bolder Boulder on perhaps the hottest day ever for the race.

I was enjoying my post doc, doing research on bird repellents and bird behavior. I had a couple of publications and was just setting up for a new three-dimensional phase of the research in the lab. However, I found that there would be a gap in funding and no guarantee that that the project would even continue. With a family to support I had to take an offer with a nearby private company specializing wildlife toxicology and disease.

There were parallels, and the CEO, Dick, promised that I would be able to continue with the repellent research. So, with some trepidation, I took what was seemed to be effectively a lateral transfer into the private sector.

I hated it immediately.

Looking back I could have gone back to the USDA to finish the final three months and to apply for the extension to the fellowship. I definitely should have but I decided to make the best of the new situation, with the hope it would get better. I was a Ph.D. with years of experience, but they immediately put me under the wing of 25 year old woman with a B.S. degree and a bad attitude toward men. She did get canned after a number of months, but even then things hardly improved. Within two weeks the CEO told me to stop thinking about doing any of my previous research, that my time was all his now. And so it went for 15 months.

After some 12 years of being fairly independent at work, doing my job without someone breathing down my neck, I had lost control of my destiny as a scientist, and I had to do what they said and they way they said to do it. My stress levels were off the charts, and within a month of starting my new job I was a basket case.

I continued to run but by the end of summer my knees were bothering me on every outing and I was not doing quality workouts. Maybe 30 miles a week, mostly just running. I jumped into a couple track races and and 5Ks over the summer, and in the fall I did run two cross country races. However, my body was rebelling due to stress, poor sleep, and general unhappiness with what my career had turned into. The running suffered, my mile time that August was 6 seconds slower than the previous year, and by fall I was running 5K a good 30 seconds compared to what I had done in early summer, before making the switch.

In spite of the decline in performance, running was a good stress release and I frequently took my lunch hour (timed to the minute) by going out for a 4-6 mile run on dirt roads near the lab. Although that was a relief, my knees hurt on every run.

2001 was no better, and actually worse on my knees. I stepped back even more on training over the winter and focused on work and family. I’d get out a few times a week and got in some cross country skiing on weekends. I had gained about 10 pounds over the previous year, and ran Bolder Boulder off of 20 miles a week, running two and a half minutes slower than the exceedingly hot day of 2000 (fitness-wise close to a 3 minute drop). Over the summer I did improve somewhat, but could only muster a 37:40 at the Colorado Run (more than two minutes slower than I had done a couple years earlier).

Within months of starting that job I started making applications for other jobs. In the end I had helped bring in over $200K in grant money to the lab, and the agreement had been to raise about half of that in a year. At the time I did not know that the grant money had already been awarded to the lab, but after 15 months of unhappy tenure there, Dick the CEO brought me into his office and laid me off, saying that I had not done enough for the grant writing, saying with a straight face, “We have hit an economic downturn, due to 9/11,” (this was just two weeks later) and he added. “You just didn’t get the job done.”

Actually Dick, I did get the job done. You were just a greedy and deceitful psychopath.

Although it was a huge relief to be away from that company and its toxic atmosphere (he had fired about a third of the professional employees in my time there) there was some damage. Two weeks later, while I was still waiting for the first unemployment checks to keep our family afloat, a former coworker drove up to a local race with a new car. Another part of the deal when I first signed on was that I was to get 7% of the grants as a bonus. The coworkers got the bonus, I didn’t.

Fortunately, I landed a new job at Colorado State University within a couple of months and we did not have to move.

2002-2003 Knees Are Shot

In 2001 I hit a career rock bottom. For the better part of 20 years I had worked to be a research biologist, working as a technician, getting a masters, working in the field and as a research associate at a major university, years getting a doctorate, and scrambling as a post doc. I felt I had been on the cusp for several years, but the other side of that was an abyss.

I took the first job that was offered, it was a down grade really, as an environmental policy/writer position. But it would pay the bills and ultimately lead to a more stable, (usually) less stressful lifestyle. No more paper chase, get grants, and publish or start over. I still have some regrets about making this shift in mid-40s, and do miss the excitement of doing research (sometimes it was drudgery, particularly the publish part).

Nevertheless, at the end of 2001 I embarked on a new career path, but I soon moved up, getting a team lead position after just a few months on the job. However, my running had yet to hit the bottom.

Sometime around the end of the year, I was on an easy but snowy 45 or 50 minute run along the foothills and I twisted my foot on a slippery rock. I heard something go pop but it not hurt that much until I got home. That injury to my posterior tibialis only compounded the knee problems. While recovering from the twisted foot I spent some time in the gym and did some leg weights, thinking that would build up my quads and ease the knee pain.

After a couple weeks, and cross country skiing while on my first work trip to Alaska, I resumed some easy running. Maybe 10 days later on a blustery January day I decided to hit the track and a set of 200s at a moderate effort, maybe starting at around 40 seconds and bring it down to 36 or so. Not that hard, starting at about 3K race effort and finishing at mile/1500 pace. On last repetition two, in the set of eight, my knees tightened up and got sore.

That little session pretty much ended running for nearly a year and a half. Actually, it wasn’t just that session. The prior year and a half of personal stress, unaddressed knee problems, and the tendon tear to set it up.

I rested and waited for three weeks with not much improvement, so I went to the orthopedist, who was getting up in years but had been world renowned in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s. His first response was that maybe I should give up running and take up kayaking–which was sort of funny, he had said much the same in 1984 when I visited the same clinic for a lingering hip/piriformis issue.

His advice was to take NSAIDS for a few weeks, ice it every day, and come back in four to six weeks if it doesn’t get better. I followed two out of three but forgot to schedule another appointment. So I just spent half a year before going back in. I just stopped running, and did little bit of light skiing, and some cycling or swimming. Passively biding my time with the hope that things would improve. I would try to run a little bit, but not regularly, maybe 20-30 minutes here and there, and my foot and knees did not improve much.

When I finally did go back, the doctor was incredulous that I hadn’t been in sooner. He prescribed some anti-inflammatory medications and up to 12 weeks of PT, which I did in two bouts a couple months apart.

The PT helped some, but only marginally. By the end of 2002 I had run maybe 200 miles, the lowest since high school, and gained the 10 pounds I had lost in the summer of 2001.

After a year of not being able to run I still followed the sport, but now as a fan. I missed it and there was no end in sight.

Much of 2003 was a blur with work and family life. Every two months I would have a one or two week trip to Alaska, and the land was growing on me. My co-worker (and tormentor) Pat had grown up in Anchorage and thought his hometown was great, the cosmopolitan epitome of the state. The Interior and Fairbanks, where I was spending half my time, were the desolate pits. But I found the openness and big sky of Fairbanks to be somewhat appealing.

In 2002 and 2003 I got most of my exercise by bike commuting. It was 6 miles to the campus and our office. It would take 18-20 minutes to get there, mostly by bike path, in the morning. With a 200 foot elevation gain back home, my ride on the return was more like 25 or 30 minutes. I rode in 3-4 days a week, as long as the weather was good. On weekends I rode on the back roads and trails in the foothills for an hour or two. The running was not coming around but cycling actually felt pretty good.

Over a couple weekends in the spring of 2003 I did some long hill climbs with a runner friend who also did some cycling. I left him in the dust on the climbs and he encouraged me to give cycling a try. I was not planning on hard core mountain biking or road cycling, but checked the race schedule and found some summer hill climbs at the ski areas, 5K to 8K and climbing 800 to 1000 meters. My debut would be in mid-June at Winter Park.

At about that time I had two friends, from out of town and completely separately ask the same question almost word for word.

“So it looks like you’re done for good with running?”

I was disappointed to hear them ask that but seeing how I had hardly been able run for 17 months, I can see why.

My friend Tim, the second person to ask, had just traveled from Oregon run Bolder Boulder as a destination/bucket list race. Coming from sea level he thought the event was incredibly difficult, if not horrific. I had a couple beers with him and his wife as we swapped stories. The next day, slightly hung over from the two pints (they were strong pints I might add). I went out for a ride to Horsetooth Mountain, it was a 2000 foot ascent from our place, with the last 3 miles climbing some 1500 feet on a steep trail.

Near the top, at about 7000 feet of elevation, there was a particularly steep pitch on the rocky trail. I stalled and couldn’t get my foot out of the clip fast enough and fell over, cracking my wrist. I was in a cast for 6 weeks, thus ending a mountain biking hill climbing career that never began.

Now what?

I said the heck with that, and started running again. Just easy miles at first but jumped into the Father’s Day 5K in Fort Collins. My kids ran the 0.5K fun run and had a blast. With my blue cast I ran a 19 minute and finished with a smile.

The road back was not smooth. I ran about 20 miles a week, and some days my knees were okay, but then they’d ache for a few days and I would have to rest or cross train. I did a couple 5Ks that summer, running an 18:26 at sea level in Anchorage, now 2 minutes slower than I had done three years prior and an 18:30 back in Denver, a slight improvement if you account for the mile-high elevation. After three or four months of running, I wasn’t back but feeling better.

At work things were heating up as we were preparing our revisions for an environmental impact statement. We had a big week-long meeting in Fort Collins with government agencies, and that was the most stressful week since I had started. I got home that weekend and had a sore throat, and my defective-pock-marked tonsils were swelling. So I went to the doctor, thinking it was strep throat. I tested negative and the doctor sent me home. Overnight my tonsil grew to the size of a ping-pong ball, nearly closing my throat. I had to go to the ER and have the abscess drained, with no anesthesia. That was the most painful minute in my life!

I had to stop running, and had my tonsils removed two weeks later. In early November. Having your tonsils taken out at age 45 is rough. I had to isolate at home for 15 days. I couldn’t eat any solid food and could barely sip a warm or cold drink, jello and ice cream were the only caloric foods I could take in.

Fortunately, the work schedule was not too hectic after my extended break. I was able to start running about a week before Christmas. I had lost about 10 or 12 pounds following the surgery, and an added bonus was that I felt without the tonsils partially obstructing my throat I could take more air with each inhale. On New Years Day I ran a local 5K in just under 19 minutes. I had no base but felt pretty good. I did not know it but that was the beginning of my comeback.

Looking back it’s interesting that it took a fall off my bike and a middle-aged tonsillectomy to get back on track for running.