Shamrock Marathon Race Report
Posted in Personal by George
Hey everybody, I just ran the Shamrock Marathon this past Sunday, the 18th of March, and I thought I’d mention how it went on gimme-five since I haven’t written anything on here in a while. I know this doesn’t fit in with the usual gimme-five banter, and my time isn’t as fast as “Shaniqua’s” marathon PRs, but oh well. Enjoy.
Shamrock Marathon Race Report
After months of training, the day of the Shamrock Marathon had finally arrived. I awoke at
After the alarm rang, I jumped out of bed, went to the bathroom and brushed my teeth and put in my contacts, and walked upstairs to my training partner Ben’s room, so I could let Jessie sleep a bit longer. I ate a few whole wheat pitas with Smart Balance peanut butter, some whole grain bread, and a banana, along with a lot of water.
At about
At 7:30, Jessie, Ben and I checked out of the hotel and started walking over to the starting line, which was only about a half mile from our hotel. The race began at 8, so Jessie held our stuff and we warmed up an easy mile at about
A few minutes before the race began, I stripped down to just my singlet and shorts. I was thinking about wearing a long sleeved shirt or a hat or gloves because it was only about 33 degrees, but I was so amped up standing on the starting line that the cold really didn’t bother me. It felt like 50 degrees, and I felt fine. I walked around and wished the rest of the guys in my training group, Team Blitz, good luck.
Finally, the gun went off and the race began. A large pack of runners surged to the front, and I found myself running all alone on an island, with no one very close to me. The first mile was little fast –
I had no idea what the next few mile splits were, unfortunately, since the race organizers had the first five or six miles mis-measured. Luckily, a pack of guys from behind me had begun getting closer to me, and I began running more relaxed so that they’d be able to catch up and I’d have people to share the burden of the wind at a turnaround point. They eventually caught up to me at mile 6, which I hit in 33:54, so I was definitely running a good pace at that point and had a bunch of people to work with to continue running fast.
From mile 6 to the half marathon mark, the winds were pretty brutal. I shared the burden with a group of three other guys by trading the lead every mile or so, but even with people to block the wind, holding pace was tiring. I still managed to get to the half marathon point in
The winds continued to haunt us, however, as one of the guys running next to me dropped out at the half marathon point. The other two stayed with me, but definitely left me in the front to do a lot of the work for a larger portion of miles 13-18. At mile 18, I started feeling like I was falling apart, and the two guys I was running with breezed past me, and I went from running
I thought I was doomed at that point, because once my pace starts slowing dramatically over the course of a mile, I usually crash and burn. But fortunately, I was able to hold off disaster. I told myself if I could hold
The end of the race goes along the boardwalk of
When I crossed the finish line, I felt incredible. I glanced at my watch and saw the time:
I stumbled in the direction of Jessie, who was waiting for me with food, warm clothes, and much needed walking support. She helped me over to the medical tent, where my achilles got bandaged up, and then she helped me walk to the food and beer tent where I would sit with her and my fellow members of Team Blitz for the next few hours.
Team Blitz, the team I race and train with, did really well. Trevor Cable was our top finisher in 2:28 high for 7th place, followed by Tommy Antenucci at 7th place in 2:32 mid, followed by myself at 10th place in 2:34:18, then Sherif whose last name I do not know since I just met him a month ago in 2:48, then Ben Beiter in 2:48 just behind Sherif, and Josh Haney in 2:55. Everyone was psyched about their time, and we were even able to win the team marathon title and our B-team got 3rd for the team marathon competition. It was an awesome day.


March 20th, 2007 at 10:07 pm
nice run and it is cool that you got quoted for the paper.
March 21st, 2007 at 10:40 pm
Thanks! Yeah, I was psyched about it!