A Runner's Ramblings: Volume 19; 5th Edition
65.5 miles run in 2025 races
Race: Marshall University Half-Marathon
Place: Huntington, WV
Miles from home: 860 miles
Weather: 44 degrees, 91% humidity, slight drizzle
The night before this race, I put a number in my running spreadsheet. This spreadsheet is legendary for containing every run I have done since January 1st, 2006. When I know what I am running in advance, I sometimes put in the distance just to save myself the three milliseconds of having to do it later. For poops and giggles, I decided that I would also throw in my time for this half-marathon. I put 1:39:50.
The time was what I was actually thinking was possible so this was not a pie in the sky goal. But I have also hoped to run it in two previous half-marathons where I did not do it, so it was far from a lock as well. Since my root meniscus tear, one surgery and recovery for ten months which did not work, and then the partial knee replacement I had in February, I have been through a bit of a ringer trying to get back to my pre-injury form. My new knee PR sat at 1:44:28 which I ran in Slovenia two weeks ago. But the combination of near perfect weather, a very flat course, and me not being sick, not dealing with a nasal button surgery which also failed, and a plethora of other things made me feel that sub 1:40 was possible.
Race Morning:
I had booked an AirBnb barely a half of a mile away from the start and because I need very little preparation in the morning, the 7 a.m. start time, which I abhorred, meant I only had to get up at 6 a.m. Heck, I could have even got up at 6:15 a.m. and it would have been fine. I once had a friend who freaked out for me at my lack of a need to be at a race start two hours before the gun.
In fact, I got to the race around 6:50 and still had time to make a last minute bathroom break. IT was close though as guys were taking their time in the few stalls open to us. But I made it in time for the end of the national anthem (honestly, when we stop doing this at sorting events it will be a good day), a prayer (could have also done without that) and a few words about a runner the community had lost recently. Then it was all of the usual " ARRREEE YOOOOOOU REEAAAAADY!" stuff to get people fired up or whatever that I typically ignore. I need my energy for the race. I am old. Let's just go.
First Three Miles:
My goal when the cannon boomed was to not go out too fast in this first mile as I had in the previous two halfs. In order to break 1:40 I had to average 7:37 per mile. I hit the sweet spot with a 7:24 even if the effort to get it fell more in line with the 7:07 and 7:09 I had run in Slovenia and Bozeman. But the course here in Huntington really suited me. Lots of long straightaways where I can just forget about the race, forgot about the runners, forgot about running the tangents, and just run.
My second mile hit right at 7:35 which was exactly what I predicted it would be at the time. It felt like I had slowed about ten seconds and lo and behold that was the case. The third mile, which had what would be the longest downhill (and subsequently uphill, when we returned on it later) portion of the race didn’t really give me the boost I thought it would but it was still under my goal pace in 7:32.
We then went through the Huntington Flood Wall and did a quick scamper along the Ohio river. Usually little diversions like this get a tad too cutesy for me but this was pretty neat. About three miles into a race is usually where I find that a core group of people have sussed out what their pace is and you will be running near them for the majority of the race. You name them in your head. Orange shorts guy. Ponytail girl. For the most part they aren't your competition. They are our comrades. Your pace setters. The ones who keep you honest when you want to slow down. Today was no different and I began to move in lockstep with more than a few runners. Sure some would fall behind or speed ahead but you could almost always see them or feel them behind you.
To the 10K:
I knew, having driven the course the day before, that the next two miles were in one direction but curved just enough here and there that some tangent running would be necessary to not run more than what is measured. It still surprises me to this day how few runners seem to know about that and will pick a side and run it no matter how much extra distance they end up running. Probably the same ones who complain that the course is long afterward. (Not me. I just complain when it IS long! See the difference?)
We were getting intermittent sprinkles from the sky so even though I still often wear sunglasses when it is gloomy (sunglasses protect your eyes from random debris as well, many don’t seem to gather) the darkness of the skies and the drops on my glasses made me slide the sunnies to the top of my head on more than a few occasions. Given how much I sweat, rain rarely bothers me. I am going to be that wet in a bone dry race at three miles anyway, so there is no difference where the water is coming from. But I wanted to see in front of me and these were some of my darker glasses. I didn't realize the morning was going to give us rain all day long when we started. But it wasn't bad at all and didn't seem to damper the spirits of the few spectators that dotted the course.
As my fourth and fifth miles were perfectly spot-on for my pace (in fact they were a few seconds faster) in 7:33 and 7:35, I was curious what the sixth mile would hold. This mile contained the steepest hill of the course. Only about a block long, but enough to slow me down a touch, I figured to go over my desired pace and maybe closer to 6:50. When my watch beeped a perfect 7:37, I was elated. I never felt great in this race but I also never once felt bad. Those are usually the races which provide he best overall finishing time. I hoped that was the case today.
Onto mile 10:
This was far and way the nicest portion for your eyes on the course as we ran alongside a creek (named Fourpole for whatever reason) with a plethora of nice houses to our left. The unexpected boost of the sixth mile's time lifted my spirits and put more of a bounce in my step. Could I possibly even break 1:39? A group of people slid up behind me and even though they were running in lockstep, about six of them, they did not appear to know each other or be anything other than that wonderful group that forms on race days of like-minded/skilled people. These people often become your best friends for 90 minutes and then you never see them again.
This group of men and women passed me, slowed down a touch (or I sped up) and I passed them back. I was really feeling the day and decided to pick up the pace a little more. My 7:32 mile showed that. I followed that up with a 7:35 even though I had to run around a few runners who were beginning to lag a little bit.
However, right after the 8th mile we left the road we were running on and joined a dirt/rock path that winded next to the road, going under bridges for that quick down/up I despise of paths of this nature and the group passed me right back. I hadn’t been aware this was part of the course and it began to sap my energy. How long will we be on this?, I thought.
Over a mile ended up being the answer as we rounded through lovely Ritter Park, over a wooden footbridge and then headed back the way we had come, just one block north. I had lost touch with the group and they were beginning to fracture as well. My ninth mile was my first mile of the day that was over pace and it was by 12 seconds. Damn it. I really don't like loose gravel paths in a road race.
But after an annoying little out and back (the second of the day to get the required distance for the race), we were on the roads again. Even as we passed under a train track that ran through the northern part of the downtown (there were several streets that went under rather than over this track in the city) and I had an abrupt hill to slow me down, my 10th mile had me almost exactly on pace again with a 7:40. I did the math and realized I could run 7:50 the rest of the way and still get my goal. If the course wasn’t long.
The final 5k:
Seeing a 7:3x again for the 11th mile made me so happy even if it was just a 7:39. I was worried this was going to come down to a sprint finish which I did not feel I had in me right then. Buying myself 11 more seconds was huge. A couple of runners passed me who were running the marathon and it hurt the ego a bit. I know I will be back there again but right now when I am afraid I am about to board the struggle bus and them having 13 more miles to run than me, going faster, while talking, stung a little bit.
We were now once again on the curvy street section in the less than savory portion of town. I don’t particularly care what the scenery is as long as the course is fast so this didn’t bother me. I kept playing cat and mouse with a runner clad in a banana yellow outfit who would sprint ahead of me, allow me to pass him while he walked, and then sprint ahead of me again. I was unconcerned with racing him and only wanted to keep my pace. I hoped he would either walk or get out of the way. (He finally passed me for good with about half a mile to go and finished right in front of me.)
As we left the road and made a quick detour through the river retaining wall that keeps the city of Huntington safe from floods, I was admonished by a police officer leading a runner going the opposite direction to move to the right. The fact I was getting there anyway and simply hadn’t been told to get over by any volunteer irked me a bit. I wasn’t going to tackle the freaking guy, officer. I promise I would move.
A few seconds later I ran through a wall of cheering Marshall University athletes of some nature and gave them the double bicep flex to elicit a a crowd response. It gave me a small boost when they hooted and hollared. Then up the long hill I ventured, again trading place with Chiquita fella and saw my first 7:50 of the day. Drats.
I now had 1.1 miles to go. I knew we ran straight down the street and into the stadium for a finish on the football field. But I wasn’t sure if we ran around the stadium first and backtracked or what. But I could see and measure with my eyes that the stadium wasn’t NEARLY as close as I hoped it would be to get me the cushion I needed. I picked up the pace the best I could, and hit the 13th mile in 7:39. It had felt MUCH faster.
Down a very steep embankment with some mats put out to help runners with their footing (which did the exact opposite in the slick drizzle) we went before bursting out onto the football field. One of the perks of running this race is that as you enter the stadium you are given a football to hold for your final sprint. I have known about this tradition for a long time but was always curious about the delivery system. Meaning, how do they get the football to you?
As my feet hit the field, a woman holding a football locked eyes with me with a “Do you want one?” look in her eye. I nodded yes and then she launched an underhand throw that was, what we call in football parlance, a “hospital throw”. I had to reach up and back to my right, when I was going to my left, to catch the ball. I snagged it with memories of how I used to be able to do the same back in the day as a wide receiver and corralled the errant pass. I barely had time to think about whether I would have stopped to grab the ball if I had dropped it when I realized that we had to run about 70 yards, make a right hand turn, make another right hand turn, and then run 70 yards back to the finish. I looked at my watch as I made the first turn and saw the distance of 13.1 and a time of 1:39:20. Damn it. This was going to be close.
I tucked the football into my right arm and envisioned breaking tackles as I realized that even though the clock was quickly approaching 1:40, I probably still had five seconds to spare from my chip time.
I crossed the line in 1:39:50 according to my watch, fulfilling the prophecy I had written in my spreadsheet the night before. I finally got that sub-1:40 which had eluded me recently.
I stopped for a few seconds to catch my breath, grabbed two small bottles of very cold water and immediately exited the stadium. I had to walk back to my AirBnb, shower, and drive two plus hours to Cincinnati to watch my beloved Bears play the Bengals before going home. A delayed flight meant I could stay longer than originally planned.
If you follow football at all you know I witnessed one of the most bonkers games in recent NFL history. And my Bears won.Today was a good day.
Stats: 4th in my AG, 73rd OA (out of 1102) and my 116th slowest half-marathon ever. Next up I have two half marathons three days apart in New Mexico and Arizona in less than a week. That will leave me with just 7 states to go in running a half-marathon in all 50 state before I turn 50 in May.
I also have to get my final marathon state in there as well.





















