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Race Reports!
Please send race reports to
and I'll post them here.
50K Race Report from Neil Olsen (who set a course record in the 50K)
February in the Willamette Valley predictably means rain, so I was
mentally preparing myself for a long cold soggy windy mud-fest like last
year. The weather report even the day before predicted rain at least
into the morning. But weather forecasters, like national security
advisers, somehow keep their jobs even when their predictions are
wrong. It was crisp at first, but clear skies, no wind to speak of, and
beautiful.
Unlike last year, I was determined to be at the starting line before the
race started. I set three 3 alarms- one mistakenly for 6:30 PM, one I
didn't hear, and thankfully one that got me up. I didn't linger over
breakfast at mother-in-law's in McMinnville, but instead ate a big cup
of cheerios in the car on the way.
Don't ask me where this came from, but they have a skirt competition at
the start. Sean Meissner (Peterson Ridge RD from Sisters) looked as
cute as ever, but I thought the stocky guy in the jumper took it up a
notch.
Sean had a bit of laryngitis, but he's still great company. We watched
some guys go out fast on
the dirt road out-and-back. By the dam they had about a 1 minute lead.
I did some mental math and figured it would take 7:20 miles to hit the
course record. On a muddy day that wouldn't be plausible, but there
were long stretches with good footing and little mud. We were on pace
and I felt good, so I started shooting for that. From the 1st to 2nd
aid stations I drafted off of Rod Bien (from Bend). He shared advice
from longer runs. We caught up to the leaders about half way
through, and other than some hamstring tightness I was still feeling
good, so I put in a little surge to stay ahead of that 7:20 average.
Shortly after this I got a boost from catching my friend from Central
Point, John Lotts, who had taken an early start for his first trail 50k.
True to it's advertising, there was still mud. It was only shortly
after the "Abandon All Hope" trail sign that I gave up keeping my shoes
clean and dry, and this is where I took my first fall. My next was on a
bridge after the start of the second loop. Somewhere around 400 runners
had crossed that bridge at least once, and
they transferred just enough mud to make it slippery. I reached my hand
out in time to squash open the gu packet I had been carrying in the palm
of my glove and got gu all over my glove and GPS watch. I got road rash
and a bruise on my shoulder. My other battle scar came later from a
blackberry bush to my thigh as I swung wide to pass a 25k runner. I
feared for another skin problem as well,
but it has now been 2 days and no poison oak has shown up yet. A huge
amount of trail work must have gone into getting the trails ready.
The 2nd lap I was able to hold fairly steady, ticking off each mile on
my GPS watch, which only lost satellite connection a couple brief
times. The flats I was able to go well below pace, and the hills and
winding sections generally are fairly short at a time. I ran somewhat
negative splits, so I was confident I had the race, and with a couple of
miles left I knew I wouldn't die hard enough to keep from going under
the record. I saw 2 other friends from Central Point, Brett Mitchell
and Ken Ellgen doing the 25k. I saw a bunch of other 25k runners, and
hope I
didn't surprise them by coming up fast from behind. I know I surprised
the guy working the
finishing chute, because at first he tried to send me on for another lap.
Half the fun of these runs are the quality people. The aid station
folks were
wonderful. Cheepskate that I am, I just used a walmart water bottle,
but they were able to fill it through it's narrow neck before I even had
my 2nd handful of m&m's. And I hadn't tried pumpkin bread on a run
before, but it was quite good. kudos to them, the race directors, those
that did all the trail work, and the other volunteers.
-Neil
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