The Army Run in Ottawa is probably the fastest growing race
in Canada. This year there were 22,000 participants between the 5km and
Half-Marathon. It was an opportunity to
represent the Canadian Armed Forces, visit family in Ottawa, and connect with
friends. It’s a great race as Canada
comes out in force to support the Cdn Army but really the Cdn Armed Forces in
general.
I was coming off a solid week and change of building for
Kona with 570kms of biking put in over the last week and a bit. I knew I was
not in top running shape coming into the race. I have been fighting a chest
cold for about four weeks so I knew a PB was most definitely not in the cards
for the day. The chest cold coupled with
some serious bike mileage was sure to have wrecked some havoc to my body.
Today's Support Crew: Pre-race with Dad, Mom, and my oldest sister Kelly |
I flew into Ottawa on Friday and then did race package
pick-up on Saturday morning. I expected there to be at least a little line-up
but there were none. Great! The expo was well not much of an expo at all. It
was actually quite disappointing when you compare it to the expo at the Ottawa
Race Weekend.
Sunday morning I was up early for breakfast and then retired
for another hour. Dad, Mom, Kelly, and I headed downtown at 0730hrs (for a
0900hrs start time) and were shocked by the number of 5km participants still
getting downtown (the 5km race started at 0800hrs). I lined up in the blue
coral right at the front. I wanted to get out front fast and then quickly settle
into a pace. My rationale for getting out front was to get away from any
crowds, test the legs and lungs, and then settle into my own race. When the
Howitzer went off it was a bolt out of the starting line up Elgin and onto
Wellington St. As soon as I was up and onto Wellington street I backed off the pace
and started settling into my pace. It took me about 2kms to settle in a bit and
let a few of the faster runners pass. Normally I would attack and try and go with
them but I knew today was not that day.
Me leading the charge off the line. The lead lasted for all of maybe 500m before Dave and Nick went flying by! |
My right quad had been really tight on Saturday’s interval
run (2 x 3kms at HMP) so I was anxious to see if that would start to tighten
up. And of course that is exactly what started to happen…it would continue to
tighten up even more as the kms ticked by. I felt a little restricted in my
breathing, the legs felt fatigued, and the right quad tight, so I knew it was
going to be a bit of a battle to stay engaged. I enjoyed passing the “Soldier
On” personnel and passing along my words of encouragement. It’s great to see
our injured soldiers (“Soldier On”) out and physically battling through their
injuries. I just felt fortunate that I could run and share such a great
experience with these amazing folks. One individual in particular deserves
recognition and that’s MCpl Chris Downey. The Ottawa citizen did up a great article the
other day on Chris. As if the battles Chris has gone through are not enough
Chris elected to run the ½ Marathon on Sunday while dragging a tire with him.
This is one tough guy.
So who really cares about my race. This race was not about
me, but rather the fine folks that serve our country on a daily basis. I am
just privileged to serve alongside many of them. I stayed pretty consistent for
pace for the majority of the race and was thankful that Jason Dunkerley (a visually
impaired athlete ) and his guide passed
me at around the 10km mark. I paced off him for the next 7km and then finally
closed the gap and opened my own in the last few kilometers of the race. I was
pretty spent after the race. Legs are even more sore and tired now. Happy to
have put a 1:18:15 in the books but it’s always a bit of a hard pill to swallow
knowing that you didn’t do as well as you could have. I just have to keep
reminding myself that this was a “fun” race. A good tempo run with 10,000 of my
friends. The focus is Kona.
Post Race with Jason and his guide. Congrats to Jason on a fantastic first 1/2 Marthon Race. |
Not bad for
a training race. 12th Overall and 1st in the M30-34.
Big Congrats to Dave Lacombe and Alex Boule on their 2nd and 3rd place overall finishes in the race. Two first class CAF athletes.
Awesome race, Joel - solid training day for you. And also great to get out and participate, and support the cause. Looking forward to tracking your progress in Kona in a few weeks!
ReplyDelete