RoxyIN

RoxyIN

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Aramco Houston Half Marathon - If You Can Take It, You Can Make It

“You train, you fight harder than the other guys, you win. If you can take it, you can make it.” From the Unbroken movie. Louis Zamperini liked to run. Was he ready to join the track team? It seems so. At least after listening and following his brother's advice.


It was May 29th, almost midnight and end of my 41st birthday. Time to go to bed, just one facebook break more when I saw running friend Joshua Thompson post about Houston Marathon's official sign closing up that night. Without giving a second of thought, I signed in.

Six months after “Now I am on your hands, ” I told Universal Runners Coach, Francisco Pulido. “13.1 miles? Should I run with music?” I asked.
“No ‘cerebrito’. No iPod. Connect to yourself and enjoy it, ” directed coach. 

Big race, big mission. Getting out of my ‘cerebrito’ a.k.a. little over-thinking brain, calculating everything.

All set, on my drive way to Houston.  Four hours, that Friday evening traffic extended to almost five. Oh well, more than enough time to relax and catch up on my Audible books. “Do not hurry, but do not rest,” A great advice from Annie Dillard to writers, that can be transferred to long distance runners. Just what I needed to hear! Stamped it on my brain to repeat it for 13.1 miles.

Saturday morning. Time to go to the expo, pick up package and get Meb’s autograph. Wait! Eugenia’s apartment, sweetest girl friend hosting me, was located a couple blocks from Kirby Dr. and Bissonet St. Almost the exact Half’s half point. Just the perfect location to set a game plan. I planned to scan cool spots on while driving, and then try to see how many of them I was able to remember and find during the run. That game would keep little brain too busy to calculate, or only calculate numbers.

On my way to the expo, driving the second half of the Half started with that big red shoe. Pic! A shoe hospital! located at the corner of Kirby Dr. & Bissonet St. Keeping on Bissonet, lot of trees. Turning on Main, Pic!  Museum of fine arts, no time to visit now. Keep going Roxy, and Pic! a beautiful water fountain before turning on Montrose.

 

 


 “I am close to Rice University” I thought, “Nicholas, my son, might study and live here.” Keeping on Montrose, just looking at the huge trees almost covering the sky. Pic! Approaching a white metallic bridge with red balls on the side. Running under this kind of structures is not an everyday thing where I live.

Crossing Westheimer and Pic! Aladdin Mediterranean cuisine, “Maybe we should come for dinner with Eugenia”. On the other side of the road a Valero Gas station. That gas station brand caused the Cheetah Chicks to miss the running course at the Dallas Marathon Relay. Oh! another Pic! What is that “Little Big” sign? Fun, a little guy holding big pancakes! I do not eat pancakes but I will bring my guys some day.

 
On the way to the Buffalo Bayou park, Pic! big artistic colorful snails under the trees, and a yellow K.

 

I must have missed a turn. I didn’t know how to keep on the course, but I am pretty close to the end. Hopefully at this point I will be on fire without any need of more Pics. Time to go to the expo to pick bib and get Meb’s autograph.

Waiting on a long line. I didn’t have anything to get signed. The t-shirt? Too dark. The book? I wasn’t going to spend $25.00 on a book I have at home. Wait the bib! “I will get my bib signed” I thought, afterwards I collect interesting race bibs plus running with Meb’s signed bib was going to make it more special. “Best wish. Run to win, Meb,” is what Meb wrote on my ROXYIN A 21437 bib.
 

After the expo and couple hours at the University of Houston watching the relays at the Carl Lewis invitational, it was time to start my first half of the Half scanning drive. Thanks to the GPS technology for always, well, almost always, making it possible to drive to places we want to go but we don’t know.

On Congress, around the start line. Very downtown area. Pic! the aquarium. Lucas, my younger son, loves aquariums. Keep going and Pic! on the right a clock tower. Crossing and keeping to what ends to be Washington street. Oh! Pic! Social junkie place. I wonder what it is. Crossing Studemont and I can see a tower. 

 

Turning on Heights, to cross a bridge and Pic! Allen pkwy. Then turning on Gray and Pic! Coffee Ginger. I love coffee and ginger. In fact I drink tea with ginger but have never tried coffee with ginger. Should I try? I kept going and Pic! River Oaks movie theater. 


Then Inwood is in the woods. Nice neighborhood with fine houses and lot of trees. Turning on Kirby Dr. and Pic! a blue metal tree before I get to the shoe hospital, end of Half’s first half and start of Half’s second half.


 

Time to come get back for dinner and go to bed.

Race day. Of course I didn’t read the instructions and after I parked, dropped my running gear, went potty and jogged to the Corral A, it was already closed. I had to go and jump the fence to Corral B, then moved to Corral A and located myself in the middle of 3:20 and 3:30 marathon pace teams, around 7:38 and 8:00 paces which sounded as pretty safe spots to try to keep on.

On your mark, get ready, set and go! Way up on Congress. Downtown, Pic! Aquarium, Pic! crossing to Washington, Pic!. Social junkies, Pic! Still no idea what it is for. Crossing Allen pkwy. Pic! Coffee Ginger, Pic! “Hi, Roxy!” said Magaly Soto with a big smile while flying by. Then I heard more “Go Roxy!” and I waved. I thought that was probably somebody from Dallas.

On Kirby Dr., almost getting to the metallic blue tree, Pic! another “Go Roxyin!” That is when I realized cheering people didn’t know me. They were reading my ROXYIN A 21437 printed bib. I wonder if they could see Meb’s autograph.

“Keep going Roxy. Almost there,” and finally got to cross that magic Half’s half point with the big red shoe. Second half of any race, even physically can be more demanding, mentally it feels like a relief for me.

Way down on Bissonet. New Pic! A running kid, 11 to 12 years old. He stopped and started crying. I almost stopped to help him but a guy, maybe his dad, turned back to make him keep going. “Same as Son & Mom running, my running project with Nicholas,” I thought. “With the discipline and energy he’s been training, it might be the opposite, son helping his mom, me, to keep going.”

I was getting a little bit tired, however even legs were not necessarily moving faster, heart rate was still behaving. Pic! the big water fountain and Pic!  enjoy the trees on Montrose. Pic! The cocolorful snails under the tree and time to stop 15 seconds for a drink. Was I thirsty? Not really, but I needed to reset and keep strong to the end. I got to Allen pkwy. That was the turn I had missed while driving. As I didn’t have any more Pics! I had to play with living pics. All people cheering around, crossing under the bridges and getting into the downtown jungle. I knew the end was close, so I started running faster and faster. Where is the finish line? Oh! there!

1:44:some. I knew I had started just around minute and a half after. Not a 1:25 but n worries. This time I took the race to finish it, and I made it. I could say I kind of connected to myself and absolutely enjoyed the race. Thanks Universal Coach Pulido for the great advice. Mission almost accomplished!

You train, you set the right goals, you finish happy and unbroken. If you can take, you can make it!  
Let’s repeat and I have already signed for Aramco Houston Half on 2016.



Sunday, January 11, 2015

Behringer 5-Person relay - Cheetahs in the Ocean

Every breaking wave on the shore
Tells the next one "there'll be one more"
Every gambler knows when to lose
It's what you're really there for

Sunday, December 14, 2014. Omni hotel, Downtown Dallas. “Are you running the Full Marathon?” a runner asked me. “Yes! I’ll be leg #4,” I replied, “We are running the full marathon as a team.”


Each relay team consists of 5 members who each run 4.25-6.25 miles. The course, same as the Full and Half Marathon begins in Downtown Dallas. Along the way, the Full marathon course splits from the Half, goes around the White Rock Lake and joins back, both ending in Downtown.

Geographically mixed Dallas-Austin, Cheetah Team wearing pink and bright silver cheetah tops and headbands uniforms. Simple pieces of fabric clipped and tied on.


The Plan

We kept it simple. With each leg, 5 to 6 miles distance to cover at 7 to 7:30 minutes pace, it was supposed to take runners between 35 to 45 minutes, keeping the team around the 3:15 to 3:30 marathon paces groups.

Even the race provided a complimentary bus service to each relay exchange point, we, The Cheetah Chicks, decided to use own transportation. Edward, our driver, was going to drive around the race course and drop legs #2, #3, #4 and #5 to our respective relay exchange points.

Runner
Starts At
Approx. Relay Leg Distance
Total Miles
Leg #1 Dallas-Angela
Mile 0
4.25 miles and to keep in the course to complete Half Marathon.
4.25
Leg #2 Austin-Lisa
Mile 4.25
6.25 miles and decide on the course if to keep running or not.
10.5
Leg #3 Austin-Stacy
Mile 10.5
4.75 miles to complete the marathon course after her leg.
15.25
Leg #4 Dallas-Roxy
Mile 15.25
5.25 miles, just run her leg.
20.5
Leg #5 Dallas-Colleen
Mile 20.5
5.7 miles, To complete her run, pick finisher medals and meet all at the “C” letter Reunion area.
26.2

The Process

Almost 8:00 am. Leg #1 shook legs and said bye! Rest of team all aboard on the dark grey Volkswagen Jetta. We arrived the exchange point #1 around 20 minutes before top runners started to get close. We got to see Meb, followed by Sara with Ryan Hall and our leg #1 kicking at a pretty good pace.


We had around 40 minutes to get to the exchange point #2, where leg 2 passes chip to leg #3. Wait! that is not so much! Especially when driving around cut streets and when we decided to make a logistic stop at that Tony's Valero Gas station. Ready to go, we dropped leg #3, Cheetah-Stacey by the race course. By two miles from relay exchange point #2, good to warm up.

On our way to relay exchange point #3 we realized about the full/half marathon split. We had dropped Cheetah-Stacy little bit after the split. Coming from Austin, was she going to realized about that? We didn't know what to do, we just crossed fingers and hoped Cheetah-Stacey was going to figure this out.




By mile 15.25, at the exchange point #3, where leg #3 passes chip to leg #4. Time to turn on our devices for the mobile app update. We could see Leg #2 had passed the 15k at 9:12 a.m, 1:07 from the start. All doing good, leg #3 should pass 13.1 mile mark (21K) by 9:40 a.m., reaching the exchange point #3, between 9:50 to 10:00 a.m.



Leg #4 Cheetah-Roxy, me, was at the exchange point. I could see people around shivering and tiny drops falling into my face. Was it cold? I didn't feel it.  

My only focus was to spot the cheetah dressed runner coming and hear “Bib number 30073 coming!”. 

“30083 coming!” I could hear from the speaker. 
"OMG! almost! but water!” I thought while I started singing the “Every breaking wave” song from U2. 

“Every breaking on the shore, tells the next one ‘there'll be one more’…”

“30093!” the speaker announced.

“Wave,” I replied. "30063 wave came, followed by 30013 and 30173. “Getting closer!" I yelled. They say it is in our minds, if we really want something to happen we need to focus on it.

An oriental guy with a cell phone came to me. “That cheetah was waiting at the previous exchange point,” he told me. Then we checked bib #30073 at the mobile app on his cell phone. “Yes!” I yelled with I saw the 13.1 mile mark (21K) had already been crossed.

Few minutes after “Alelluia!” I hear bib number 30073 from the speaker as I saw the magic bright pink cheetah uniform coming. It was 10:24 a.m., after 34 minutes of breaking waves, I got the chip from Cheetah-Lisa, leg #2. She tried to explain me that Stacy never showed up. She had to wait until an official at the exchange point told her to keep going.

“I know, I know,” I yelled and took off!

Last pacing group I had seen was 3:45. With over 15 miles on these runners were a little bit tired so even almost without warming up, I was able to follow and start passing them. Spectators were cheering “You look good,” “Nice uniform!” “Love those colors!” made the run very fun, even on that windy hill up. Second alleluia appeared when I got to the big blue relay exchange point #4 and passed chip to leg #5, Cheetah-Colleen.

Cheetah-Colleen crossed the finish line at 11:43 am. Team got together for a big hug. Rather than discussing any issue or trying to blame on someone’s fault, we shared big smiles and started talking about upcoming relay races for the “Cheetah Chicks”.

The Result

Week after the race I got to check the results. Cheetah-Colleen got to finish around the relay at 11:43 am, with a total of time of 3:38:02 that placed the Cheetah chicks in the 15 position as Mixed/Odds & Ends--Mixed 0-99, Division/Class, which doesn't receive any award.

“Did we get signed to a wrong Division/Class?” I asked Marcus Grunewald, MetroPCS Dallas Marathon, Executive Race Director. “We were supposed to be Female Masters--Female Masters, a Division/Class we would have won, even our logistic issue.”

“I checked with our timer to help resolve the division issue… Although your team could face a potential disqualification, it was felt that moving the team into the Odds & Ends category would be more fair.” Marcus replied to me.

We really appreciate the MetroPC race officials decision to keep the Cheetah Chicks team qualified. Not only we had a lot of fun at the race and we already have plans to sign for the 2015 race, but also we learned a big lesson as relay team:
  • Review course carefully,
  • Set strategy as a team,
  • Plan times accordingly, including extra,
  • Use race services and potty!
  • Keep mobile apps ON!
  • and... Plan what if scenarios!

Again as my favorite song from U2 says:

Every breaking wave on the shore
Tells the next one "there'll be one more"
Every gambler knows when to lose
It's what you're really there for



----------------------------------------------------------------------

Course Maps*

·     Course Map (includes relay exchange points) – Click here to view the the Behringer Relay course map.

Cheetah Chicks results
3:38:07  3:38:02  30073    Lisa         Ansin     Austin   TX           Mixed / Odds & Ends Mixed 0-99              15

Female Masters results
Chip Time            Bib          Division Class
4:44:53  30436    Female Masters Female Masters              1
4:45:51  30209    Female Masters Female Masters              2
5:03:14  30335    Female Masters Female Masters              3

 

FAQ’s

Learn more about the Behringer 5-Person relay: 

https://www.dallasmarathon.com/relay-faq/

If you are prepared to run your leg, but your runner hasn’t shown up at the exchange zone, it’s best to wait instead of continuing on, which could disqualify your team. Circumstances may have prevented your runner from starting as predicted. After an adequate waiting period you may decide it’s not worth the wait and continue on.