ST JUDE MARATHON 2017 – “IT’S PERSONAL,
NOT JUST BUSINESS” by Romadel Delasalas (#30340)
Reasons -
I’ve supported St Jude as
team support with Coach Kevin Leathers (St Jude Heroes National Coach) for a
few years. I told myself that I would
never run it because I had too much fun supporting other runners from the
sidelines. However, I had time. I
completed the 2017 Boston Marathon in April and the New York Marathon would be
in November 2018. I had a year and a
half to put a marathon somewhere in the schedule.
I remembered the St Jude
kids fighting cancer, some with no chance for survival. Yet, St Jude was there supporting them and
their families. This race was not ‘because’,
but for a “Cause”. I signed up as a
Bronze member. I was all business about
my preparation and fundraising efforts.
By the end, I didn’t know what was harder the training or the
fundraising. However, I found both were
possible as long as you remembered you weren’t alone and kept trying.
Coach Leathers and I talk Strategy at the Expo |
Training & Fundraising
The beginning was slow. I started on hills to get my wind back. I also built a stronger chassis by concentrating
on my nutrition, yoga, and strength training.
The road race series brought new challenges and more competitors up to
the task of racing faster. I was trying
to build speed, but also thought endurance was going to push me through at St
Jude.
I primarily concentrated on
running long daily. I amassed a
magnitude of miles of over 100miles a week, +400miles a month (498 miles alone
in October). I wanted to know I could be
on a course forever and that time was irrelevant. Speed would take care of itself when
scheduled hard workouts came. I wanted
the mindset that “I could do this All-Day.”
I perform well in individual Road Race Series events. But when it came to the “Beast” (RRS 10miler)
and the RRS Half, I felt like I could be on the course longer than most
people.
My fundraising wasn’t as
great. I was very sluggish. My training
seemed so much easier than the fundraising.
But, like my training, I followed simple principles such as , “Just Ask,
Just Try.” A “No” is fine but a “Yes” is
even better. Just like my training, I
didn’t go into it alone. My training
partner, Scott Rauls, was not only a good runner he taught me how to be more
efficient and successful fundraiser. He'd remind me it was about
the kids. Not just the fundraising, but
also the running. Running is not as hard
as what those kids have to go through.
Scott Rauls, A Great Running Buddy! |
A week prior to race day, I
found myself down from my goal when I received a message from my Father in the
Philippines. He had been an admirer of
Danny Thomas in the 1960’s, not only as an entertainer, but as a
humanitarian. I would learn that like my
Father, Mr. Thomas was a devout Catholic and member of the Knights of Columbus
dedicated to the principles of Charity, Unity, Fraternity, and Patriotism. I humbly accepted my Father’s donation
putting me $9.50 above goal. I was ready
physically, mentally, and most of all, spiritually.
Race Weekend
I got my bib (#30340) in the
St Jude Heroes section. I felt very
proud of that distinction. It also got
me into the Heroes Pasta Dinner. The
National St Jude Coach (Kevin Leathers) spoke for a few moments and said
somethings profound that I would take into the race. First, “When it gets hard especially towards
the end. How are you going to end your
story?” And second, he said, “Don’t
think, Just Execute.” Armed with those
two thoughts, I was ready for Saturday.
The strategy was
simple. Run with the 3:10 pacers. Simple right?
Well, it would be if, my person record (PR) was close. It was actually
3:17:26. To do it, I’d have to run 7:15
per mile for the entire course. That pace was 17 seconds faster than my best
marathon pace. With faith from Coach
Leathers and the St Jude Pacers (Anthony and Paxton from Iowa), I told myself
it was possible and continually affirming the belief.
Daily Prayer Book, Entry @ 5AM before race |
The line was much different
from Boston. There are no waves but a
lot of corrals (ten or more). I set
myself up behind Pacer Anthony and his 3:10 sign in corral #2. I took a look back at the corrals behind
me. Over 12,000 marathoners and half
marathoners, it looked like a flock of birds heading out for migration. Corral #1 (actually called the Elites) took
off. Corral #2 would start 60seconds
later.
I said my prayer as the Maroon
colored electronic board counted down.
Go time NOW. I hit my start
button after crossing the line and covered it with a sweat band. I would not look or touch it again until the
finish.
I stayed on Anthony’s tail,
a quick look around and noticed there were approximately 25-30 people in the
group. I was surprised that the pace
didn’t seem too fast, rather manageable and easy. However, that’s the trick of the marathon. It feels really good at the start because
you’re pumped up and want to fly. But to reach your goal, you need discipline
(and faith).
Sticking with Anthony all the way |
Discipline would be put to
the test with a right turn going into the St Jude campus. I heard how emotional and lifting it was to
pass all the kids who were fighting for their own survival. Previous runners experienced feelings that caused them to run too fast or slow losing track of pace. I intended to look right at Anthony’s back
and not pay attention. However, Anthony
started doing “High-Fives” with the kids and I caught a glimpse of a bald
little boy with his brother in a University of Washington (my Alma Mater) sweater cheering us. I got emotional for a
moment and refocused on the road ahead.
“I’ll celebrate when it’s time.
This is for you Kid!”
The streets were so
familiar; I had run them with MRTC buddies many times. I would see friends near Breakaway and
familiar faces on Poplar and McClain.
Seeing all these people I knew strengthen my resolve. These people knew me and I was not going to
give them a poor Marathon story.
The 3:10 pack was still
very strong heading down Madison Street.
However, I knew the Half Marathoners would be going left while I went
right on Cleveland Street (mile 11). A
quick “Good Luck” from the Pacers and three-quarters of the pack was gone. There would be six of us flying the rest of
the 15miles.
Paxton called out the half
way point time, “1:35:02!” I joking
yelled back, “Dude, you’re letting us down!”
The six laughed. Paxton and
Anthony would do everything to get us through.
We grooved to my 80’s music playing on my smart phone. I set the playlist for 3:11:50 and
all songs were as close to 180BPM to keep cadence. Luckily all six of us were old enough to know
each song. One of my goals was to beat
my soundtrack (47 Songs).
Into the neighborhoods after
Southern Avenue, the first inclination of discomfort started. Again, I didn’t want to “Think” too
much. I told myself, “Hey, I’m on mile
19 and I’m only feeling the discomfort now.
I’m doing really well.” I would
continually take inventory of my status.
I would tell myself “I’m doing Really Good” often. I would see runners ahead of our pack start
dropping or slowing. At least I thought
they were slowing, or maybe we were speeding up. Paxton would yell to them to get on board our
pace machine and roll with us.
Pacers on Peabody - Anthony in Blue / Paxton in Yellow |
I found exhilaration at
Peabody and MLK. I knew that it was
going to roll downhill and that there was only 5miles left. Now larger sums of runners were fading while
we were still running strong but had unfortunately dropped two in the
flock. We were inspired by one runner
who flew on his own, a magnificent sight.
I was still behind Anthony as things got harder. The dreaded right hamstring started its
typical tremor. I reflected on Matt Fitzgerald’s
books “How Bad Do You Want It” and “Brain Training for Runners.” Specifically, when it gets hard to focus and disassociate
the pain. It will be there, but deal
with it. My disassociation was looking
at Anthony’s back and the words Pacer on his shirt. I lasered on the “C” on his back when it got
hard. That would be my central point and
anchor.
Right turn on Danny Thomas,
I had practiced the “Paperclip Route” seven times in November. Here I was when it counted, and I was ON
TIME! My wife planted herself on the
Union Street overpass, I yelled at her, “I’M STILL HERE BABY!” Then, I yelled at Coach Kevin at the Monroe
Street overpass, “This is my Gosh Darn Story!!”
Right turn on Adams Street I started to slow. Anthony was the only one with me. Paxton was trying to save the other two pack
members who were fading fast. Anthony
assured me we were still on pace. Up
Jefferson overpass, the trembling in the hamstring worked its way to the gluteus. I didn’t call on a negative thought, instead
I called to Anthony, “Right Ham and Glute!”
He said, “Shorted the stride going up but keep the cadence. Breathe it out nice and slow. Follow and We’ll get there!” Paxton rejoined us for the last mile. I had the Anthony/Paxton convoy and they were
going to get me in. I hit it hard with a
right on Beale, then right to Auto Zone Park.
At the 26mile marker, Paxton yelled at me in an angry voice, “ROME, Get
your BUTT MOVING! RUN!”
Full Sprint |
Paxton and Anthony follow me in |
On a scale of 1-100 of pain,
I was at 99. But that 1% left over was
exhilaration. If I’m ahead of my pacers,
I’m ahead of my goal. “Fast Feet,” I
thought. Left turn into the park and
25yrd to the line, I raised my hands into a double fists pump and gave an Eagle’s
Cry.
I crossed and hit my watch; I was under 3h10min. Paxton said we made it to 3:09:29 and laughed that I had beaten my marathon’s soundtrack. More amazingly, I was the last man standing.
I crossed and hit my watch; I was under 3h10min. Paxton said we made it to 3:09:29 and laughed that I had beaten my marathon’s soundtrack. More amazingly, I was the last man standing.
A year prior, a good friend
(Paul Dinus) ran 3:09:14 accompanied by these same men. He sent me a picture of him and the 3:10 flag
and told me it was one of his prized marathon possessions. Moments after my race, Anthony would hand the
3:10 flag to me as my own keepsake. I’d
find out later that I had placed 35th Overall of 2897 marathon
participants and that I would receive the 2nd Place 45-49 Age Group
award.
At the Finish |
Final Thoughts
St. Jude is more than a
race. The love I had for it as a
volunteer elevated as a participant. Not
just because of the Run, but because of the community and the cause. From my Father half way around the world
donating retirement money and friends across the country giving what they
could, to local runners and coaches in
this great city pushing each other to run better, fund raise more and support
each other as human beings with the spirit to save children and our souls. Preparing, running and fundraising for this
race, I was never alone. I couldn’t have
asked for a better time to race my best.
Can't Stop Endurance Coach and I Celebrate the Race |
Negative Split on the Second Half |
Thank You St Jude Donors
Bobby D.
Brenda B.
Gray M.
Victoria & Rob S.
Vicente M.
Lisa M.
Anna L.
Mae U.
Alan D.
Steve L.
Navy Personnel Command / PERS-9
Navy Recruiting Command N7 Training and Quality Assurance Chief's Mess
Soundtrack
Duration
|
"
|
Song
|
"
|
-
|
Artist
|
0:05:07
|
"
|
God of
Wonders
|
"
|
-
|
Third Day
|
0:04:10
|
"
|
Return to
Innocence
|
"
|
-
|
Enigma
|
0:04:06
|
"
|
I'm Like a
Bird
|
"
|
-
|
Nelly
Furtado
|
0:04:48
|
"
|
Ramblin
Man
|
"
|
-
|
Allman
Brothers
|
0:03:34
|
"
|
Tusk
|
"
|
-
|
Fleetwood
Mac
|
0:03:37
|
"
|
Tenderness
|
"
|
-
|
General
Public
|
0:03:59
|
"
|
Modern
Love
|
"
|
-
|
David
Bowie
|
0:03:52
|
"
|
Tonight
she Comes
|
"
|
-
|
Cars
|
0:02:58
|
"
|
Don't try
Stopping it
|
"
|
-
|
Roman
Holiday
|
0:04:23
|
"
|
Lunatic
Fringe
|
"
|
-
|
Red Rider
|
0:04:43
|
"
|
The Stand
|
"
|
-
|
The Alarm
|
0:04:37
|
"
|
Pressure
|
"
|
-
|
Billy
Joel
|
0:04:50
|
"
|
Dancing
With Myself
|
"
|
-
|
Billy Idol
|
0:04:27
|
"
|
Rag Doll
|
"
|
-
|
Aerosmith
|
0:04:38
|
"
|
Cradle of
Love
|
"
|
-
|
Billy Idol
|
0:04:50
|
"
|
Burning
for You
|
"
|
-
|
Blue
Oyster Cult
|
0:03:35
|
"
|
Devil Went
down to Georgia
|
"
|
-
|
Charles
Daniels
|
0:03:50
|
"
|
Why Can't
this be Love
|
"
|
-
|
Van Halen
|
0:04:58
|
"
|
Same
Direction
|
"
|
-
|
INXS
|
0:03:40
|
"
|
Black and
White
|
"
|
-
|
INXS
|
0:04:18
|
"
|
All the
Things She Said
|
"
|
-
|
Simple
Minds
|
0:03:43
|
"
|
Opportunities
|
"
|
-
|
Pet Shop
Boys
|
0:03:34
|
"
|
Private
Idaho
|
"
|
-
|
B52s
|
0:05:01
|
"
|
Lay Your
Hands
|
"
|
-
|
Thompson
Twins
|
0:03:44
|
"
|
Turning
Japanese
|
"
|
-
|
Vapors
|
0:03:10
|
"
|
Should I
Stay
|
"
|
-
|
Clash
|
0:04:12
|
"
|
Radio
Clash
|
"
|
-
|
Clash
|
0:03:12
|
"
|
Train in
Vain
|
"
|
-
|
Clash
|
0:03:40
|
"
|
Rock the
Casbah
|
"
|
-
|
Clash
|
0:05:09
|
"
|
Atomic
|
"
|
-
|
Blondie
|
0:03:32
|
"
|
Call Me
|
"
|
-
|
Blondie
|
0:03:14
|
"
|
Treat me
Right
|
"
|
-
|
Pat
Benatar
|
0:03:04
|
"
|
You Better
Run
|
"
|
-
|
Pat
Benatar
|
0:03:29
|
"
|
Just a
Girl
|
"
|
-
|
No doubt
|
0:03:49
|
"
|
Dangerous
|
"
|
-
|
Roxette
|
0:05:07
|
"
|
Running on
Empty
|
"
|
-
|
Jackson
Browne
|
0:03:10
|
"
|
Maps
|
"
|
-
|
Maroon 5
|
0:05:44
|
"
|
Just About
Enough
|
"
|
-
|
Paris
|
0:04:03
|
"
|
Poker Face
|
"
|
-
|
Lady Gaga
|
0:03:28
|
"
|
Bulletproof
|
"
|
-
|
La Roux
|
0:04:21
|
"
|
Starships
|
"
|
-
|
Nicki
Minaj
|
0:03:49
|
"
|
Rolling in
the deep
|
"
|
-
|
Adele
|
0:04:43
|
"
|
Counting
Stars
|
"
|
-
|
One
Republic
|
0:03:50
|
"
|
Remember
the Name
|
"
|
-
|
Fort Minor
|
0:04:18
|
"
|
Can't Hold
Us
|
"
|
-
|
Macklamore
|
0:04:30
|
"
|
Empire
State of Mind (New York)
|
"
|
-
|
Alicia
Keys
|
0:03:20
|
"
|
London
Calling
|
"
|
-
|
Clash
|
3:11:56
|
Splits | Avg Moving Pace | Avg Run Cadence |
1 | 7:10 | 208 |
2 | 7:05 | 207 |
3 | 7:10 | 205 |
4 | 7:16 | 206 |
5 | 7:14 | 205 |
6 | 7:07 | 208 |
7 | 7:10 | 206 |
8 | 7:08 | 205 |
9 | 7:09 | 208 |
10 | 7:11 | 209 |
11 | 7:10 | 207 |
12 | 7:08 | 206 |
13 | 7:06 | 209 |
14 | 7:09 | 206 |
15 | 7:19 | 208 |
16 | 7:08 | 210 |
17 | 7:10 | 209 |
18 | 7:05 | 207 |
19 | 7:10 | 209 |
20 | 7:02 | 212 |
21 | 7:06 | 211 |
22 | 7:04 | 210 |
23 | 7:14 | 204 |
24 | 7:05 | 204 |
25 | 7:12 | 197 |
26 | 7:00 | 196 |
26.2 | 6:32 | 199 |
Summary | 3:09:34 |
No comments:
Post a Comment