Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Saturday, May 17, 2008

A week ago, we went to the Kentucky Scottish Weekend...

My aunt Bea and uncle Jesse have directed the Kentucky Scottish Weekend for 26 years. Last Saturday Liz and I took the girls down to check the event out. It was the first time any of us had gone. The trip promised to be fun filled with seeing family and watching a unique brand of Scottish entertainment. So away we went.

Before I get into the pictures I have to thank a stranger who really came through with a "kick save" for us while we were driving to General Butler State Park in Carrolton, KY where the festival is held. We were on KY36 about 10 minutes from the park when we encountered a ROAD CLOSED sign. We hadn't seen any detour signs along the way so this took us by surprise. I pulled off the road to call ahead for suggestions when a truck pulled up beside us. The driver said, "I don't want to be nosy but are you going to the Scottish festival?" We said yes. He said "Well follow me, I live around here and I will lead you most of the way..." And so he proceeded to take us over windy, narrow back roads with steep drop offs and no guard rails. Liz had her eyes closed the whole time. About 15 minutes later we were back on normal roads and just a few minutes from the park. A traffic jam created a second reroute. At this point the kind stranger said "Follow me, I'll take you the rest of the way." He ended up leading us right to the park. This is one that I will definetely pay forward. Needless to say we took the interstate home.

Liz and Anneliese go for a train ride


My sister, Shelley, volunteered for the event and hung out with us for a bit



Cousin Robin and Emmeline hanging out




Aunt Bea and her good friend Cass enjoying the band Mactalla Mor


Cousin Pam and Anneliese chatting with a singer from Mactalla Mor after the "congo line" ended


The pipers of Mactalla Mor


The event featured something for everyone. Dancers. Music. British car show. Athletics. Border collies. Good food. and more.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

The mini by numbers...

I'm a numbers guy. Growing up I was the king a baseball stats. I guess that is why I gravitated towards sales, sales is very numbers driven. Having said all that I figured I would paint a numerical picture of the mini since a picture is worth a thousand numbers.

From
Summary number of finishers: 30081
number of females: 15747
number of males: 14320
average time: 02:29:34

My Mini results
YEAR *** OVERALL *** DIVPL *** SEXPL *** TIME *** PACE
2008 *** 5609 *** 701/2084 *** 4373/14320 *** 1:54:24 *** 8:44
2007 *** 10249 *** 1102/1936 *** 6999/13972 *** 2:08:31 *** 9:49
2006 *** 9425 *** 1019/1818 *** 6677/13309 *** 2:03:45 *** 9:27


Pictures from the race are now posted at . Search for "500 Festival" and type in bib #14341. There are only a couple decent pictures from the crop this year.

Saturday, May 3, 2008

500 Festival Minimarathon Race Report

Ok, warning up front I tend to get long winded in my race reports so read on with caution and note pictures will be added as the week progresses.

The evening before the race we joined a group of 30-40 NF Endurance Team members for a pasta dinner and sharing stories. There were some familiar faces and some new faces. Several people in attendance had no direct connection to NF, they were runners who decided to run for a great cause. Our eternal thanks goes out to them. Steve Kendra, NF Endurance Team Director, and his staff put together a nice welcoming event for runners and their supporters. I always leave these dinners with even more drive and resolve to help wint the war against NF.

For any of the race car fans who might read this, check out http://www.racing4research.org/ to learn about the Children's Tumor Foundation link to the Porsche team that participates in 24 hours at Daytona. Attendee Jill Markland brought this to our attention. Read a poem about Jill's son Jesse, a three year old with NF, by clicking on the word poem.

On to race day...

I woke up at 4:45 this morning after a rough night of sleeping. I slept solid from about 10PM to 2AM and then woke up about every half hour. I had the same dream twice about my cell phone, which I use as my alarm clock, running out of battery power and causing me to oversleep. I actually ended up getting up a few minutes before my alarm went off. A quick shower, bagel and to tall glasses of water and I was out the door.

I arrived downtown at 6:15 and scored some free on street parking. I made my way over to Military Park to meet with a group of runners who have shared our training experiences through the Runner's World website. We chatted for a bit and then took a group photo. By 7AM I headed over to the Westin to meet the NF team for a morning picture. As I got to the street where 35,000 runners would be starting the race at 7:30 I noticed the distance between my start corral of E and the hotel. I didn't think that I would be able to get over there and back in time so unfortunately I had to miss the NF team picture.

I lined up with about 1000 or so runners in corral E in an A-Z system. We were probably about 5000-6000 people back from the starting line. I said a prayer and waited anxiously for the start of the race. Within minutes the race was underway.

My plan going into the race was to get through three stages. The first part would be through mile 5 or 6 where the band Sign on the Door would be playing. The second stage was to get passed the track to a bar called the "Hi Neighborhood" near mile ten where bikers have traditionally handed out dixie cups of beer. The final being the last 5K or 3.1 miles of the race.

At about 1/2 mile in I saw Steve and he ran with me for a stretch while taking some pictures. He pulled off to meet up with other NF team runners and I rolled on. The first mile was packed wiht people which led to a 9:00 minute pace. I felt good and strong and ready for a great day.

Mile two is flat and starts at a right turn passing the zoo. I stepped up my pace and finished mile 2 in 8:10. That pace was only possible because I was fortunate to find a couple of gaps to move through the crowd.

Mile 3 was the fastest of the day and the only sub 8 minute mile. I ran 7:50 ish. My legs were really starting to feel loose.

Mile 4 can only be described as grid lock! I was back arounnd the 9:00 minute range. At this point I passed two ladies, one whose shirt said Shake and the other whose shirt said bake. In true Ricky Bobby fashion I gave them a "Shake 'n Bake ladies" to which they responded "Shake n' Bake."

Mile 5 I was on the look out for sign. No such luck I reached the mile 5 sign in 42+ minutes. I was hanging on to a 8:30 avg. pace.

I rounded the next corner and was headed to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for a lap around the historical oval. Today started out as an overcast day which was fine by me but the sun was threatening to peak through the clouds as I neared the track. My best hope was that it would stay neatly tucked in the clounds until after I was off the track. The track is particularly unforgiving on a sunny day.

Before I reached the gate to the Speedway I looked to my right and saw Sign on the Door. That provided a nice boost. I surged across the street to give them a holler "Sign on the Door rules!!!" and a high five. In turn I got a shout out over their loud speaker "Ladies and Gentlemen, Don Hahn." Thanks Mark and Greg!

The track was of much significance today. I dedicated the two miles that I would be rounding the oval to a young man named Drew who has NF. I read about Drew and saw an Atlanta tv news piece about him through a link on the NF Endurance Team website. Drew and the Tumornators are doing a lot to raise money and awareness for NF and Schwannomatosis research. As you can see from the video linked above, Drew has endured many surgeries. I didn't feel like there was anything of substance that I could say to him and his family other than our prayers are with them but I felt like I needed to contact them and make this gesture that those miles would be for him!

I have run the Minimarathon for 3 years now. Today the sun stayed behind the clouds for the first time for me and I covered those 2 miles faster than ever. Drew keep up the fight! You are an inspiration.

The course bottlenecks as runners leave the Speedway. Back out to the main road and around the corner to the 15K marker. Still feeling strong!

I hit the 10 mile mark in 1:26, I had started to fade a bit. I reached the "Hi Neighbor" for completion of stage 2. No bikers handing out dixie cups of beer this year. The humanity. I drudged on for the final 5K.

At mile 11 Steve met up with me to run a little bit more. Again a boost a tough time in the race. So close but still 2 miles to go. Steve chatted with me and helped me hold my pace until the 12 mile marker and the final turn for home.

I had nothing left for a kick for that last mile. Nothing in the tank. I kept putting one foot in front of the other. I reached a water station with 3/4 mile to go and walked through as I drank my water before going back to the less than aggressive pace I had been mustering the previous 1/4 mile or so. Liz and the crew were along the final stretch to give me the final pick me up that I needed to dig in and get to the finish. Which I did in 1:53:47 according to my watch. A new course record for me by about 10 minutes and several minutes faster than the PR that I set at Sam Costa in March.

Turned out to be a great day for racing!

Thursday, May 1, 2008

The Expo

Tonight we ventured to downtown Indianapolis for the first of 3 trips in 3 days. Our purpose was to stop at the Minimarathon expo for packet pickup. Packet pickup is the time when runners get a goody bag that includes the race number, timing chip, race day instructions and a mix of other items. This year the goody bag include the standard long sleeve race tee-shirt, a yellow and white running hat, and a smattering of advertisement brochures. I was happy to find out that I am seeded in corral E this year based on the qualifying time that I submitted. I'm not sure exactly how many people are in each corral but it will probably move me atleast 2000 people closer to the front over last years G corral seeding.

The Expo is an event in itself. Dozens of vendors are there with running related products (or not running related products). Seyferts provided free snacks and IUPUI handed out band aids among others in attendance. The Expo is fine but it is slight in comparison to the Chicago Marathon Expo that I attended in 2005.

We have some pictures, taken by Liz, of me and two members of my curb crew...






Tomorrow night is the NF Endurance team dinner. Pictures to follow.