Justin Park

Utah Valley Half Marathon

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Location:

Sandy,UT,USA

Member Since:

Oct 05, 2009

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

PRs (all aided)
- Marathon - Pocatello 2012 - 2:26:10 (1st overall); St. George 2012 - 2:24:08 (7th overall)
- Half Marathon - Timpanogos 2012 - 1:08:51 (2nd overall); Hobble Creek 2012 - 1:08:27 (3rd overall)
- 10K - Deseret News 2005 - 32:39

Other
- Ran track and cross country in high school
- Did not run in college
- Veteran of 14 marathons and numerous half marathons
- Ran the 2010 New York City Marathon as a charity runner with Team For Kids. Finished 2:33:51 (83rd overall). The entire experience from the fundraising to the race itself was absolutely incredible!

2014 TENTATIVE RACING SCHEDULE:
TBD

Short-Term Running Goals:

Run 6-days a week and maintain a decent base level of fitness. Upwards of 50-60 per week would be great. Adjust to my new work position, use time wisely, and keep negative stress at bay. Hopefully make a good run at Ogden this spring.

Balance family, work, running, and the other important things in my life.

Long-Term Running Goals:

Enjoy running and continue doing it consistently. Stay healthy and avoid injury as much as possible. Have fun!

Continue chasing PRs while I still can, particularly in the marathon and half marathon. Explore new races, improve training, build friendships, and learn from the wisdom and experience of the numerous great runners here in Utah. Run well into my old age.

 

Personal:

I live in Sandy, UT with my wife (Lindsay) and 2 kids. I love running the roads through my neighborhood and near Little Cottonwood Canyon. I also do a fair amount of treadmill running at the Life Centre Athletic Club. Aside from running, I love road and moutain cycling.

 

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Asics Bandito (Sept '09) Lifetime Miles: 164.40
Brooks PureFlow (Blue - Jun '12) Lifetime Miles: 1070.40
Adidas Aegis 2 (Jun '12) Lifetime Miles: 708.90
Asics Hyperspeed 4 (Sept '11) Lifetime Miles: 114.85
Nike LunaRacer (Aug '12) Lifetime Miles: 148.60
Nike Free 3.0 V4 (Jan '13) Lifetime Miles: 383.45
Adidas Energy Boost (Jun '13) Lifetime Miles: 872.10
Saucony Ride 7 (Oct '13) Lifetime Miles: 943.80
Brooks PureFlow 3 (Apr '14) Lifetime Miles: 603.10
Saucony Kinvara 4 (Apr '14) Lifetime Miles: 251.75
Nike LunaRacer 3 (Jul '14) Lifetime Miles: 174.05
Saucony Zealot (Jul '15) Lifetime Miles: 300.75
Asics Nimbus 17 (Jul '15) Lifetime Miles: 258.95
Adidas Adios Boost 2 (Jul '15) Lifetime Miles: 264.65
Race: Utah Valley Half Marathon (13.1 Miles) 01:12:30, Place overall: 9, Place in age division: 2
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
8.0013.100.000.0021.10

UTAH VALLEY HALF MARATHON

Here's a short recap: I'll admit I was a bit disappointed with the way this one turned-out. Though this race was just three weeks after the Ogden Marathon, I felt like I had recovered fairly quickly from that race and that the last couple weeks of training had been pretty good. A little over a month ago, I ran the Provo City Half Marathon in 1:11:20. I felt the course profiles of that course and UV1/2 were similar and that my fitness now is a little better than it was then. So my goal coming into this race was to go sub-1:11 and maybe break my course PR from 2 years ago of 1:10:38. Thought that would be doable, but it just wasn't in the cards. Can't really explain why, other than the fact that there must be some underlying residual fatigue in the legs from the marathon.

The field of this race was deep with great runners. I had no expectations of placing in the money (top 5), but figured a top 10 was possible. The race started and as expected, all the fast dudes took to the front (Jake, Riley, Jon Cotter, Trevor, Matt, Mike, etc.). After a mile, I was in about 10th place about 5 seconds back of Matt and Mike who were running side-by-side. They were both looking great. Somehow I think the tunnel threw off my Garmin (it gave me a weak signal notice). It didnt't ding the 1st mile until 30 seconds after we past the sign. I didn't look at it one time during the rest of the race. At about the second mile mark, I moved up along side of Matt and Mike figuring it would be a good thing to work with them. At some point around mile 3 or 4, the photographers snapped a good shot of the three of us running next to each other. We weren't moving super fast, but the pace was honestly starting to feel a bit fast for me. It became apparent to me my legs were lacking pep and mentally I was thinking this wasn't going to be a great race. We pressed on and started hitting the downhill miles of the canyon. Mike and Matt were looking great. I was breathing a bit hard. Matt seemed to be breathing too, but he was still conversational. I could hardly tell Mike was breathing at all. About mile 6, I decided to fall back a couple steps and ride their wake thinking that it might help me come into a better rhythm. It didn't. Before long I was drifting off that back and they built about a 10-15 second gap that held for a few more miles. I didn't have any energy gels onboard, so I grabbed one from a volunter about the 6th or 7th mile. It seemed to help a little. Towards the end of the canyon, Matt started pulling away from Mike. Man, he looked good. Now out of the canyon. I could see several bodies in the distance in front of me. Mike was about 10 seconds up on me, Matt was pulling away. There were three other dudes in white shirts up a little ways (incluidng Trevor) who I suspected Matt would catch. I could even see Riley's blue singlet off in the distance. Mike started to come back to me and I suspected I would eventually catch him. About the 11-mile mark I did. I watched as Matt methodically picked-off the 3 white-shirted guys. Mike was never far behind me. I never looked-back, but as on-lookers would clap and yell for me there was never a long pause before I'd hear them doing the same for him. I tried to remember back to our old HS cross-country days and wondered if it came close down to the wire if he'd out-kick me to the finish :). He just about did. I knew he was gaining on me that last 100 feet and though I beat him to the line, he couldn't have finished more than a couple seconds behind.

For some reason my chip didn't work, so my result didn't get captured, but it was about 1:12:30.

8 more easy miles after the race to just get some more mileage.

Great races for several bloggers including Matt (5th overall; very awesome), Mike, Jake, and Trevor. Real excited to see the damage Jake and Riley are going to do at Duluth in a few weeks.

For me, my next race will likely be Hobbler Half on July 13th. So we'll see what a few more weeks of training will do. I'm thinking about looking for something shorter (5-10k) around the 4th of July for a little speed stimulus. Would love suggestions for a good one if anyone has any.

P.M. - 50 mile ride to the top of Guardsman (Big C) and back. Love that ride. First time to Guardsman this year. Looking forward to many more.

Saucony Kinvara Proto-type (B) Miles: 21.10
Comments
From Dave Taylor on Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 07:48:42 from 174.23.76.241

You were looking good to me at 8!

You could try the Freedom Run 10K, it has a nasty hill at the end that is an excellent stimulus.

From RileyCook on Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 09:04:21 from 132.3.57.79

Nice race Justin. I agree with your pre-race assessment that you can run faster than you did. Your fitness is certainly there to run 1:10, it just wasn't your day. In fact I thought for sure either you, Matt, and/or Nate were going to pass me at the end there!

But I wouldn't worry about it. You've increased your volume it seems in the last two weeks and that could've played a factor as well. In the end though you got a great workout in and you are going to run a great time at Hobbler.

From Jake K on Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 09:25:26 from 67.177.11.154

I think its really hard to go much faster than top-end marathon pace, even in a half-marathon, in the 2-4 weeks after a marathon. Even when the muscles recover, there is definitely underlying neural fatigue, and that system takes longer to regenerate.

The Murray 5K is a circuit race on July 4th and will probably be very competitive.

Good to see those 50 mile bike shakeouts coming back!

From mike⇒nelson on Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 12:42:57 from 173.14.226.146

It was great sharing some of the race with you. 3 weeks out from Ogden - it's still in your legs. You're 50 mile bike ride after the race makes me ill. I sat on the grass and ate ice cream all day!

From Sasha Pachev on Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 13:08:55 from 69.28.149.29

Justin:

An all out marathon can drain the adrenal glands to the point that it takes them a month or more to recover. It does not always happen, but it can. When it does, you find yourself unable to hold pace in shorter distances - sometimes you cannot even hit the right pace from the start. You will notice that your HR is normal at slower speeds - 20 seconds per mile or so slower than normal half-marathon race pace, but you just do not have the drive to push past it. To recover from it you just lay low on speed workouts/tempo runs - you can still do some, but you cut them short, or run them slower, very unambitiously, and you need to get as much sleep as you can - at this point sleep is worth gold.

Your time has now been fixed. I got an e-mail from the timing company explaining what happened - there was some electric interference that confused the timing system when the first runners in the half-marathon were crossing the finish line. They have now also fixed the results of everybody that I know was not recorded correctly.

From Sasha Pachev on Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 13:11:23 from 69.28.149.29

One more thing - do not use Garmin on a certified course with mile markers!

From Jake K on Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 13:24:56 from 67.177.11.154

Agree on that Sasha - the adrenal fatigue from a marathon takes some time to bounce back from. I think that's why its actually more common to see people run strong marathons back to back in a short time frame than someone coming off the marathon and popping a really good 10K or Half-Marathon right away. You can hold the aerobic effort, but its so hard to push past it for a sustained duration.

From Dave Taylor on Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 13:36:01 from 63.255.191.163

OK now I am really getting excited to race Walter this weekend :)

Not as excited to try Justin at Hobbler :[]

From Superfly on Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 13:54:20 from 74.211.21.81

Still solid man. Get some sleep!

From Matt Poulsen on Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 21:29:48 from 98.202.242.213

You totally amaze me, Justin. A 50-miler after all that! Nice work.

Still a respectable race, Justin! If I had a marathon in my legs from 3 weeks ago, I would not be able to do what you did. I know it's not quite what you wanted, but your fitness is excellent, and you'll crush your next 1/2.

I really enjoyed running with you during the race.

From SpencerSimpson on Tue, Jun 11, 2013 at 08:41:06 from 216.63.106.159

great report and I cannot conceive how one can do a 50 mile climb/ride after racing a half?! I am with Mike, ice cream and sitting on the grass...

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