Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Lemon's Practice

The Hottest Half was Sunday. I survived. I didn't break any records. I didn't even run the whole time. I crossed the finish line, and I felt great. My knee is still intact. I didn't have much soreness. It was great practice for marathon training. Oh yes, that's next. Speaking of practice...

The real star of the Hottest Half was Andrew Lemoncello. He won. He ran the thing in 1:07. I think there are some seconds on there too. I saw him between mile 4 and 5. And by saw him, I mean I saw a streak running toward me, heard people clapping, turned around to see who the heck it was and kept running. That was him on the way back to the finish line. So I looked ahead waiting to see the next group of elite runners trailing him. It took a minute or two, but they slowly (obviously not that slowly) started passing us mere mortals. As two guys (I'm guessing they finished second and third) were passing, I heard them say, "Do you know who the guy in the front is?" Well, he was Andrew Lemoncello. He can be found here.

Here is his tweet from later in the day: "Swam through a half marathon in Dallas today it was so humid. Great practice for Daegu"

Yes folks. It was practice. Finishing 13.1 miles in 1 hour and 7 minutes was practice. Flying by me as I was clipping along at my own merry (read: slow) pace was practice for him. He won the Hottest Half, arguably the literal hottest half marathon you can run. No biggie.

His running was effortless. And I don't hold that against him. Good for you Mr. Lemoncello. Good for you. I still finished. I still felt great. I still got my post-race Mexican food. And you know what? I'll run just a little bit better during my next race, because it was practice. It's always practice. Remember: practice, practice, practice.

And for those who are still hating this running god (ahem, I'm looking at you running buddy), here's the quote I got today from my "Daily Kick in the Butt" from Runner's World:

"Winning has nothing to do with racing. Most days don't have races anyway. Winning is about struggle and effort and optimism, and never, ever, ever giving up." ~ Amby Burfoot.

No comments:

Post a Comment