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May 16, 2024

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Location:

Tucson,AZ,USA

Member Since:

Aug 30, 2007

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Age Division Winner

Running Accomplishments:

PR's

5K: 21:26 (2005)

4 mile: 28:10 (2005)

10K: 43:33 (2010)

10 mile: 1:13:35 (2009) (1:12:15 split in 1/2 marathon, 2011)

1/2 marathon: 1:34:31 (2011)

marathon: 3:19:15 (2013)

Short-Term Running Goals:

 

3:20 marathon - Eugene Marathon, April 28, 2013 (can I say I really want a sub 3:20? but I will be happy with 3:20-3:23) -- whoohoo!

Some good intermediate races 15K - 1/2 marathon, to gauge my fitness level (done this, hit a 1:34:35 1/2 marathon in March 2013, on a hilly course)

Going after my 10 mile PR in Fall 2013

Maybe some good 10K races after the infernal Arizona summer is over! 




Long-Term Running Goals:

I want to be one of those runners who is still running in their 80s (or 90s?).  You know the ones, who look all grisley and fit?  That is what I would like!  Until then, I just want to work hard and be as fast as I can, for as long as I can.


Personal:

50 year old, trying to defy gravity and time

Used to be faculty at the University of Arizona (biostatistics).  Currently manager of the statistics and data management group for companion diagnostics (biomarkers) at Ventana Medical Systems, Inc. (Roche diagnostics).  We evaluate protein biomarkers that can be used to direct drug therapy that would be most effective based on individual characteristics (personalized medicine).

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Easy MilesThreshold MilesMarathon Pace MilesTrack speed mileageHill mileageTotal
7.004.000.000.000.0011.00

11 miles, 1:29:48.  28:20 wu/29:06 cd.  Cruise interval workout: 5 x 1000m w/200 recovery (4:18-4:22/K pace, 6:56-7:05/mile) + 3 x 200m w/200 recovery.  I call this my "internal garmin calibration" workout.  Greg *always* has me run this workout 4-5 days before a race.  I had to teach this morning, and had some meetings in the early part of the afternoon, so I actually did this about 2PM ... not an ideal time because I can't eat before I run, so was kind of hungry around lunchtime ... but skipped lunch.  Good news was that I was able to run down to the track a little quicker than I usually do, because my legs were more warmed up, just from walking around for 8 hours.  I usually do my "track workout" warm up, where I jog to the track (~3 miles) and then run 800-1600 meters worth of strides before the workout.  Today I did more of my "pre-race" warm-up where I run easy for 1.5 miles and then run hard for 1.5-2.0 miles instead of doing strides.

Splits: 4:22, 4:18, 4:22, 4:20, 4:20 w/average 1:10 recovery + :46, :47, :46 w/average 1:07 recovery (man do I suck at these or what???  A mediocre 400m runner could run 400m by the time I run my 200's - and I was running hard!!).   It was windy, not quite as bad as last week, but these were slower than last week so it did not really have much of an effect.  I was really trying to remind myself - you need to run 6.2 miles at this pace (twice as long as today) with no 200 m breaks ... seems a little intimidating to me. 

I hope you are doing well, very busy day today with work, so I will read you blogs later.  Happy running!

Comments
From redrooster on Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 19:12:36 from 67.40.119.216

great workout, you will maintain the pace in your 10K, no problem. look forward to reading your report. win one for the professors!!

From Bonnie on Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 19:17:24 from 64.119.33.134

ha ha ha, I will do my best, though I don't know about winning. Hows the semester going? How are the grant reviews with new page limits? Easier to score or harder? I know they are much harder to write! I am not looking forward to my first study section with new grant format and new scoring system ... I am sure to flub it up ;-).

Good luck with your base-surviving-the-rest-of-the-winter training -- that is what I do in the brutal summers here.

From redrooster on Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 19:28:30 from 67.40.119.216

unfortunately this review cycle still has the nasty long proposals, the new ones won't arrive til April/May. sigh. I am really tired of study section. full time, 3 times a year is just too hard, especially for a small fry like me with a high teaching load and small lab group. oh well, our meeting this February is in San Francisco so I don't have to make the long trip to DC. NIH is nice enough to schedule the winter meetings in CA now, but I would rather go to San Diego than San Fran!

From auntieem on Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 19:39:52 from 24.17.177.218

It DOES always seem incredible that the practice pace is the race pace minus the "breather" breaks. But that is what race day adrenaline is for. Sounds good to me; can't wait to hear about it! Have fun.

From vinh on Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 07:25:20 from 75.77.22.187

Great workout Bonnie! You are going to do great on your upcoming race!

From Carolyn in Colorado on Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 10:53:17 from 24.8.167.243

Well, you won't be racing 400m runners in your 10K, right?

I think that you're strong and in great shape and you will have an amazing race.

But just to clarify, you run 1.5 miles easy and then 1.5 or 2 miles more hard before a race?

From Snoqualmie on Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 11:21:22 from 24.18.192.33

The magic effect of race day always surprises me. Hopefully you will get a surprise too!

From Bonnie on Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 11:45:03 from 64.119.33.134

Thanks everyone ... magic of race day indeed!

Carolyn, yes, depending on how long the race is ... the shorter the race, the longer my "fast part" is. Not race pace, but hard. It both warms you up and keeps you from running the first 1/2 - 1 mile too hard (or at lea

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