Here I am, standing as far back as possible from the
starting arch at the 2014 UROC 100K.
Even though it is pitch black out I have not turned on my headlamp,
there is enough light from those around me.
Even though there are almost 200 people around me, all I hear is
silence. Even though it is 35 degrees
(F) out I don’t feel cold. In fact I
don’t seem to feel, hear, or see anything!
It is as if I am in a dream, a dream which began as a nightmare on a
hospital bed in February.
2 days post op, I think that's my knee |
I had knee surgery in late February to repair several
genetic issues in my right knee. As the
anesthesiologist finished and I began to drift off, my last thought was of me
quickly descending a mountain, and then my legs seemed to no longer work
properly. I fell, or more precisely
crashed, then nothing! I realized before
surgery that I may not be able to qualify for the Western States 100 Lottery
this year. Later after some research I
learned that UROC, 6 months away, was a qualifier and it seemed that I might be
able to recover from surgery in time to race.
Thus began my time running up and down Copper Mountain in Colorado.
[First let me take a second to do something most race
reports do at the end and thank a few people.
The reason I am doing this first, is even though running by itself is an
individual sport, without the love and support of others a runner would never
succeed. First I want to thank my
family. To my wife, you are not a runner
and may not understand ultras, but your support is awesome. To my two girls, thank you for inspiring me
with your ability to find joy in everything.
For Trae and Jessica at Performance Running Outfitters, though I am the
“weirdo” ultra guy on the team, your enthusiasm and support for my racing
dreams never ceases to amaze me. To
Peter Defty of VESPA thank you for the sage nutritional advice, I truly value
your counsel and support. To Liza Howard
of Team Red White and Blue, thank you from the bottom of my heart for first
allowing me to represent Team RWB and second for all that you do to aid my
fellow brothers and sisters in the military, they are the true heroes! Finally to Adam McRoberts, Logan Polfuss,
Ashley Erba, & Heather Moore my hosts in CO, your generosity and friendship
will never be forgotten! ]
Copper Mountain Colorado a beautiful mountain, a skier’s
mountain, as it is very steep and very technical. Well it is no less steep or technical if you
plan to run up and down it six times.
UROC is an exceptionally beautiful course put on by Bad to the Bone
racing. B2B did an amazing job and I
would highly recommend this or any other race they direct. Francesca, Gill, Shannon, Mike, and all the
others were nothing but amazing both before and during the event. The 100k course had us running the same
roughly 50k’ish loop twice. Knowing
what’s coming the second time around doesn’t make it any easier ;). This course had over 11,000ft of vertical
gain, according to my watch, and the same amount of descent totaling over 22k
of vertical change in 100k (62 miles).
The race starts at an elevation of 9800ft and goes up to the summit at
12,441ft, we then spent the rest of the day going up and down between 10,000
and 12,000ft. Trust me there was not
much oxygen.
Elevation Profile of 100k |
As Francesca counted down from 10 to start the race, I
suddenly could hear again, I could feel, I could see, and I was scared, really
scared. I had been telling everyone the
only reason I was doing UROC was to “check the box” for the Western States 100
lottery (A sub 15 hour finish would allow me to enter the 2015 lottery). This was a lie, well sort of. I did want to be able to enter the lottery,
but more importantly I wanted to, desperately needed to, feel like a trail
runner again. I had a lot of questions
and no answers at the start of this race.
Would I even be able to run, as I had only run for 5 weeks 3 times a
week prior to the race? Would my knee
hold up to the long assents and descents, as I had only been running flat
trails in my runs? Would I be able to
finish, as my longest single run had been 2.5 hours? Would I be able to breathe and how would I
handle being at altitude all day, since I was coming from sea level? Most importantly would I be able to let go of
racing, expectations, and my fears to be able to enjoy my time in the
mountains?
The race started pretty easy, with us running first along
a golf course path, then a trail along the base of the mountain. These early miles seemed to flow by pretty
quickly and I noticed that my knee/legs seemed to be holding up. I was able to focus on the beauty of the
course, and the amazing sunrise.
Normally I would be talking to anyone and everyone nearby during these
easy first miles, but today I went into my own head pretty early. I was really nervous and decided I needed to
focus. About mile 7ish I met Matthew
Young (See his awesome race video here), a West Virginia runner. We jogged together sharing where we were from
(sea level), and what our current fitness level was (mine = surgery and no
running, his=severe head cold). We both
made unspoken promises to each other that, as Matt put it, the brotherhood of
flatlanders would prevail in the mountains of Colorado.
Soon enough the “flat” running was done and it was time
(1 of 6) to head up. I hit the aid
station and got into a great hiking rhythm.
I rolled through the mile 9 aid in about 100th place. As the course wound up to the summit of
Copper Mountain at 12,441ft I began to feel great and I started to pass people,
quite a few actually. As I was passing
people I was talking to them and most of them were from places at altitude,
this gave me a huge boost of confidence.
This carried over all the way up the summit. About 900ft and 1.5 miles from the summit was
the “Fat Marmot” aid station, manned by non-other than Geoff Roes. The final approach to the summit was a lot of
icy scree.
Skyline from Copper Mountain Summit 12,441ft |
Coming down the scree, for my first sustained decent of
the day, I decided I felt good enough to really push it (test the knee). I came to CO wanting to feel like a runner
and sometime during that decent off the scree, I began to feel the run, feel
the trail, become one with the mountain, and I started to fly down the hill. Descending has always been a strength, and I
guess not even knee surgery could change that.
Up and down we went, first the summit, then Union Saddle, then up the
back side of Copper Mountain, and back to the start. Time to do it all again!
The miles started to pile up and I entered the mile 38
aid station ready to refuel and push back up to the summit for round 2. Unfortunately I entered the aid station at
the exact wrong time. They were fresh
out of everything, even water. The truck
that had all of their resupply had to take someone off the mountain (Altitude
issues) and there would be a delay. All
they had was some energy drink. I do not,
and have never done well with any energy drink.
I decided the stack of saltines and Nutella I grabbed with both hands
plus the 12oz of water I had in the bottle stuck in my shorts would have to get
me back up to Geoff at the summit. Well
I almost made it; with about a half mile to go I went completely dry. What ensued was a pretty massive dehydrated bonking
mess. I stumbled into Geoff’s aid
station, massively dehydrated, low on calories and energy, and having small
back pains (in the kidney area). I was
concerned as I was really dehydrated and had not relieved myself in a long
time.
Geoff Roes, dispensing advice and food (Photo: Matt Young) |
Well Round two of UROC went well. I hiked a lot and managed to stay strong the
rest of the day and night. My pace never
really slowed much, which was encouraging.
Also the altitude, although I had dizzy feelings and a slightly elevated
heart rate, never really adversely affected me.
My stomach was strong all day and night.
I was able to run whenever I wanted which was a huge confidence
boost. One major benefits of maintaining
a solid pace, hiking, and running downhill strong was that I was not passed all
day. I managed to move from about 100th
at mile 8 to 40th by the end of the race. That’s right I went to Colorado, to altitude,
to a 100K race up and down a mountain, from WI, with zero specific training,
more questions than answers, and I found myself and my answers.
Here was my answer, what Geoff and I talked about near
that summit. I realized that this race,
which I thought was a box checker, was so much more. For the past three years I have focused on
Western States 100 as my ultimate goal for a 100 race. Not that there is anything wrong with this,
Western is awesome, the race and environment are incredible and someday I will
run that course whether it’s as a pacer or for myself. What I realized climbing up to that summit
for the second time was that I had wanted “in” to States because everyone else
did too, not because I did. What truly
motivates me is to push my limits, in the mountains, in places I haven’t
been. I BELONG in the mountains. I told Geoff that I wanted to take my family
to races like UROC, to immerse them in the remote beauty of these courses. I listed off some of the races that truly
inspired me. Right there with Geoff
offering me a hug, (Yes I’m sure I smelled awesome ;) I decided I didn’t care
about the States qualifier; I was going to enjoy the hell out of the rest of
UROC.
Just for fun I made it to mile 57 in 15 hours, that’s
right had I wanted to run harder, which my body could have handled, I would
have made it. I didn’t care. Speaking with Geoff my plan going forward is
this. Number one, I need to rebuild all
of my lost aerobic capacity from so much time off. My aerobic pace last year was comfortably
6:45. I want to lower that to 6:15-6:30. I plan on taking a long time to do this. Then I plan to add in a lot of hills both ups
and downs in separate weeks. At the last
minute I will add in speed in the form of fartlek and progressive long
runs. Then I plan on taking this
training, picking a 100 mile course that motivates me, and exploding all over
it. I am not going to hold back, I AM
going to find my limits, and if I don’t finish, it still will be a
success! It will still be a success
because I will be able to look my daughters in the eye and know that I have shown
them there are no limits to your dreams and achievements if you want it. Others may say, in my case, you should focus
on a race that fits your strengths or those that you can replicate in your
training area. I say screw that, I am
going to train for and race what I want, when I want, if I fail it will be
video worthy, and if I succeed hopefully it motivates my girls! This was where Geoff told me to keep moving.
Here is my race placement, as well as all of the gear and
nutrition info, and some awesome photos from CO. As always this gear came
from Performance Running Outfitters. I
can never tell people enough just how much PRO means to the local Milwaukee
area running community. The work they do
is incredible and without them the running scene would not be the same. If you have the opportunity please support
your local running store rather than buying online!
MB – PRO Race Singlet
North Face No Hands Arm Warmers
Craft head band
Under Armour ColdGear® Infrared Storm Extreme Run Glove
Pearl Izumi Ultra 3/4 Tights
Dry Max Trail Running Socks
Altra Paradigm shoes
Amphipod 12oz Hand Held x2
Petzel Headlamp
Garmin Fenix2 GPS watch
Nutrition
VESPA – 1 Ultra concentrate 3 hours before race1 JR 45 min before start
1 JR every 2-2.5 hours
Coke mixed with water during the race
Crackers with Nutella
Snack size snickers
Placement
40 Nicholas Wied 16:37:45 M 35 Wauwatosa WI
Out of 140 startersAs always find your own inspiration!
Copper Mountain, CO |
Skyline from Union Saddle |
Skyline From Copper Summit |
Skyline From Copper Summit |
Guess they thought I lost weight, I got this to hold up my pants |
We need to run and talk sounds like an awesome race. Jaymz Touchstone
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