The Mancos Project

Sunday, January 16, 2011

2010 Army 10-Miler Personal Best Time!

On October 26th, 2010 I competed on the All-Army Team in Washington D.C. for the Army 10-miler. This was the second consecutive year in which I had competed for the All-Army Team and ran in the Army 10-miler. In 2009, I ran my first 10-miler race and placed in the top 30 with a time of 52:26. For the past three years the All-Army team has been dominated by the Brazilian military team and this year was finally OUR year! Our team was led by Robert Cheseret, US 5k National Champion, posting a time of 48:20. Right behind Robert was Olympian Dan Browne with a time of 48:22. Brazil placed two runners after Dan Browne, posting times of 48:38 and 48:47. John Mickowski, 2012 Olympic Trials Qualifier was next for the All-Army team with a time of 49:40. Luckily, Brazil had not placed any more runners in between John Mickowski and myself. After passing 4 Brazilians at the 4-mile mark, I never looked back. I was hoping to run a sub-50 10-miler that day. I was on pace running right at 40 minutes at the 8-mile mark, but mile 9 was a killer and I ran a 5:20 9th mile. Finishing the last mile in 5:06 sealed our team's fate and I rounded out the scoring (top 4 score) with a 50:26.
Below is the competition scoring:

1All Army Team OAll: 103:16:47
NameSex-AgeTimeOverallBib
ROBERT CHESERETM 270:48:20311
DANIEL BROWNEM 350:48:2241
JOHN MICKOWSKIM 240:49:40107
KENNETH FOSTERM 240:50:26126
DARIN SHEARERM 360:51:58229
NATE PENNINGTONM 340:51:59238
BRIAN BUTZLERM 270:52:17245
TROY HARRISONM 350:53:223110

2Brazilian Army OAll: 203:19:32
NameSex-AgeTimeOverallBib
CLODOALDO SILVAM 340:48:38623
WILSON LIMAM 210:48:47721
JOSE FERREIRAM 350:50:52153
CICERO ROCHAM 260:51:161722
PAULO SILVAM 250:53:293224
REGINALDO CAMPOSM 230:59:591764

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Still Here, Still Running

The Marathon

I know it has been a very long time since the last time I posted on this blog, but I believe it is time to finally try and play a little catch up. Where to start?

I am currently at Fort Polk, Louisiana helping out as a T/M (trainer/mentor) @ the JRTC (Joint Readiness Training Center) with a unit who will be deploying soon to Afghanistan. I have not yet obtained orders for the World Class Athlete Program (WCAP), but I am anticipating they will be here in the near future. Aside from the time down here in Louisiana, training (running) has been going quite well in El Paso (Fort Bliss, Texas). I arrived in Louisiana earlier this week and I have been able to log in a decent amount of mileage, but unfortunately I have not been able to find a nearby track to do any type of speed workouts. I got in Wednesday morning and I have so far been able to do an 8 mile foundation run (Wednesday night), a 13 1/2 mile run on Thursday, a 60 minute fartlek workout on Friday - (2 minutes @ 5:00 minute pace or faster, 1 minute off, 1 minute @ 5:00 min. pace or faster, 5 minutes off) totalling a little over 13 miles with the warm-up and cool down, then another 12 1/2 mile recovery run today (Saturday). I am planning on doing another 6 miles easy later on tonight.

The past six months of training has been going extremely well and I am closer to my goal of qualifying for the 2012 Marathon Olympics Trials than ever before. I have been able to average somewhere between 70-90 miles a week with a few weeks eclipsing 100+ miles. In the past six months I have had three "breakthrough" races along with a very disappointing performance at the USATF Cross Country Championships in Spokane, Washington which took place last February over Valentine's Day weekend.

The first of the three "breakthrough" races took place at the Army 10-miler in Washington D.C. in early October. At that point in time I had been training underneath my newly appointed head coach, Lisa Rainsberger, for a little over 5 months. I had really only just scratched the surface with her training regimen, but I took the guidance she gave me via www.traininggoals.com and ran with it. I had been primarily doing 2x1x2 mile repeats and 4-mile tempo workouts on the track @ UTEP with 8-12 mile foundation efforts and 15-20 mile endurance runs. Although I was preparing myself for the Army 10-miler, the key race I was gearing towards was the California International Marathon in the first weekend of December. The Army 10-miler went out extremely fast led by Dan Browne with a couple Ethiopians. I tried my hardest to stick to my pace of 5:10, but still came through the first mile in 4:55 around 40th place. I continued my pace going through mile 4 and 5 in 20:20 and 25:25, would later suffer the consequences in miles 7-8. By mile 9 I knew I was close to the finish with a personal best time and finished respectively in the top 30 with a finishing time of 52:26 (5:15 pace). I felt content with my time of 52:26 considering I had set my college 5-mile (8k) personal best time twice over (26:18 - 2007 Roberts Wesleyan Invite).

The second of three "breakthrough" races came about 6 weeks later at the San Antonio Rock 'n Roll Half-Marathon meeting up with a few of my WCAP teammates, 2LT Nate Pennington and SSG Troy Harrison. I also got the pleasure of meeting the 50k American record holder, Josh Cox. I drove down to San Antonio from El Paso with a training partner and friend, Ibrahim Brashar, who actually used to run cross country and track for UTEP and qualified for the 2004 Olympics in Athens for the 1500m. The San Antonio Rock 'n Roll Half Marathon was an interesting experience for me personally as an marathon runner, and it came with a bitter sweet finish. I went out in San Antonio with the same mind set I had in the Army 10-miler and I was expecting more or less the same outcome. I expected a fast start, to hold on for dear life at the end and come out with another personal best time. I had stuck to the same training plan I did in preparation for the Army 10-miler, I did a 5k or two on one of the weekends in El Paso, and I had tapered properly before the half marathon, running a little over 50 miles going into the race. I ended up going out in the first mile of the half marathon ironically right on pace in 5:10. What I didn't realize that day until after I finished the race was the humidity factor. Although the race was in mid-November in San Antonio, humidity at the start was a blistering 96% and I quickly paid the price for it along with everybody else. Times that day were all about 2-3 minutes slower than normal, so when I finished that day without a personal best time, initially I was confused and upset, but only in hindsight did I realize I had run rather respectively. I ended up 10th place overall right behind SSG Troy Harrison with a finishing time of 1:10:42. My goal was to get somwhere between 1:08:30 and 1:10, but sometimes the exterior forces just simply won't allow it.

My final "breakthrough" race came when it mattered most for me. I had run a respective 10-miler and half marathon, but none of those wouldn't have counted for anything if it didn't end with the marathon performance I was expecting. Because the marathon is such a long and enduring race, I went into Sacramento with a number of goals set aside for me that I knew I was capable of completing. My first goal was perhaps a little naive at that point in time, but definitely achievable. I wanted to qualify for the 2012 Marathon Olympic Trials. The only way to do that was to successfully get under 2 hours and 19 minutes for the 26.2 mile course, which is somewhere close to 5:18 per mile pace. My second goal was to get under 2 hours 22 minutes, which is currently the WCAP standard for the marathon. Since I am not officially on the WCAP program until I arrive in Colorado Springs, WCAP did not hold me to that standard. Although they politely paid for my air travel and hotel, they basically told me to just go out, have fun, and run your ass off. Easy enough. My third goal I had set for myself was just to simply get a personal best time, thus proving to myself that the past 6-8 months of training I had done after my bitter performance in Belgrade, Serbia during Armor Officer Basic Course was worthwhile. My previous personal best time for the marathon was 2:29:59 which I set at the Marine Corp Marathon back in October of 2008. I had run horribly in Belgrade, Serbia with a time of 2:39:50; however, after going through Armor Officer Basic Course, looking back I now know it was just not a realistic goal to train for the marathon and go through the 5-month course at the same time.

The starting line was freezing in December in Sacramento. Luckily I was in a heating tent with other elite athletes and it was extremely comforting to have Nate Pennington and Troy Harrison alongside to share the anxieties of the upcoming adventure. Since I had run relatively close to Troy Harrison for the majority of the San Antonio Half Marathon, I knew it would probably be in my best interest to try and pace off of him for the marathon. Little did I know before the start of the marathon, Troy and I would run side by side for the first 20 miles. Looking back on the 2009 California International Marathon, it was really quite a blur. I remember going through the first mile with about 50 athletes all within about 5 meters of me at 5:25 trying to find Troy. It wasn't until after the first mile did I finally find Troy and when I finally did find him he was already right beside me. Troy and I would work off of each other for the next 20 miles, using each other as a mental crutch, saying little encouraging phrases to one another, and also as a physical crutch, drafting off of each other, which was extremely beneficial after the headwind we hit at mile 15. Troy and I went through 5k in a little over 16:30, 10k 32:50, 10 miles at 53:00 and through the half marathon in exactly 1:09:39. I would actually hit both my half marathon and marathon best times this day. Going through the half marathon, I knew Troy and I were close to possibly getting under the 2:19 Marathon Olympic Trials standard, but it would take a negative split to get there. I had been conserving as much energy as possible at that point and although there were plenty of times where I just wanted to start sprinting up ahead, I also knew this was a 26.2 mile race. Troy and would hit all of our first 13 miles (except for mile #1: 5:25) under 5:20 pace. We continued our pace up to mile 15 when we took a left turn and hit a strong head wind. We ran our 15th mile at 5:40 and although we drafted off of each other specifically after that point, the damage had already been done. Although I felt stronger than ever between miles 15 and 20, the head wind was relentless and our miles grew longer.

I specifically remember hitting mile 20 and watching Troy create his space between me. Troy would increase his spacing between me to about 15 seconds apart in distance. At that point I had to make a mental decision to myself. I could throw in the towel and probably still end up with a respective time, or I could suck it up this last 10k and do what I came to Sacramento to do. All of this happening and going on in my head within about 10 seconds, I had already decided. New goal: Keep Troy Harrison in sight! For the next 5 miles I still felt "fast", but I also could feel the previous 15 miles of lactic acid accumulating in my calves, quads, and hamstrings. Somehow or another I was able to stay in control and keep Troy in my sights. Finally at mile 25, for the first time since mile 10 I had another runner come up on heels. Ironically enough, it was another Pennsylvanian, Kevin Poole who used to run at Allegheny College and was an All-American I believe. Having Kevin pass me at that point was perhaps the best thing that could have happened. After all those miles I still had a competitive edge and as I saw Kevin run by, I tried keeping on his heels with everything I had left. With close to 800 meters to go I noticed Troy Harrison coming closer and closer to me and by that point I was in full stride trying to gain as much time on him as possible. Knowing the finish had to be close, I used whatever energy I had left to surge ahead with finishing "kick", although realistically I had been kicking for the past 6 miles. Rounding the turn to the finish I saw the time read 2:22:50-51-52-53. Kicking with everything I had I finished the 2009 year with a personal best marathon time of 2:23:03 (12th place overall).

Monday, April 27, 2009

AOBC, Serbia, and WCAP Update

I am actually headed out for a run, so I will be quite rapid and forceful, as the lingo goes in Fort Knox at AOBC. My time has been extremely limited here in Fort Knox, Kentucky. I have been here since 11 January 2009 and haven't had a whole lot of extra time on my hands. In fact, I haven't even had extra time to normally continue my training. Armor Officer Basic Course has been rather demanding at times, if not physically, definitely mentally, and at least to the point where I have simply had just massive amounts of information jammed in my head.

As of right now I have completed all graduation requirements. I leave for the Gauntlet, which is a 10-day field training exercise, on Wednesday and the only thing keeping me from graduating on May 19th is a simple "GO" on my leadership evaluation. But I'm sure that "GO" is not going to be easily accessible and it is going to take all of the knowledge I have learned up to this point and I will have to apply it in a field-oriented, combat-tempo situation.

I'm praying that I have a good mission and that nothing disastrous happens out at the Gauntlet.

Even though running has possibly for the first time since I started had to take a backseat, I have ran 2 half-marathons, one in a personal best time of 1:09:53 and I participated in the 42nd annual CISM Marathon Championships, which was held in Belgrade, Serbia. I have also been accepted into the WCAP Program to begin training for the 2012 Marathon Olympic Trials. My training partners will be Nathan Pennington (2:19:35) and Troy Harrison (2:27) who will be running with me out in Fort Carson, Colorado. I couldn't be more pleased to have this opportunity in Colorado and it is honestly a dream come true. In my eyes, this is what I have worked so hard for up to this point in my life, and although I have posted some descent times and had some great highlights thus far in my career, I believe that once I begin my training in Colorado, I will reach a level that would never have been dreamed possible for me otherwise. It is almost as if God is standing by my side saying, "Alright Kenny, here's your chance." Coach Lisa Rainsberger, Olympic athlete and the 1985 Boston Marathon Champion and actually the last American female to win the Boston Marathon, will be my coach.

At this point in time, other than the fact that life has been a little tough here in Fort Knox, I have everything going in my favor for 2012.

Kfo.

I promise as soon as I get the opportunity to write more on here I will do so, but I have my own PCC to conduct later tonight and I want to get some running in before I go out to the field for 10 days.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Running to Catch Up - Marine Corp Marathon & the Army Marathon Team

So here I am, back again. The last 2 months have been incredibly busy and there is a lot for me to catch up on. The Marine Corp Marathon...what I have been training for since the beginning of summer, was ultimately a success. I recorded a personal record time for myself, 2:30:01, but my tracking time online recorded a 2:29:59...regardless, it's faster than my 2:32:50 recorded less than a year ago. Although I feel that my 3rd marathon (Philadelphia Marathon 2006; 2007) was a success, I definitely made some vital mistakes that cost me big time in the end. Below and to the right is a picture of me during the Marine Corp Marathon, taken by a photographer. I am in a white Army tank top with black shorts, out front in the lead pack, second from the right. This was mistake #2, which was at around mile 8 during the marathon. I will go in depth about this and other lessons learned later on throughout the discussion.
Before I go into my Marine Corp Marathon experience, I would like to first like to go into something just a little more important. Christie and I decided to take our future together into the next level, and on our big anniversary, I proposed! We decided to travel down to Pittsburgh for our weekend anniversary and check out Station Square, preceded by an amazing dinner at the Belle Vista Ristorante. It just so happened to be that our anniversary landed on the same weekend of Pittsburgh 250th Anniversary, so we were able to enjoy massive fireworks, evidently larger than the July 4th fireworks, later that evening. We stayed at an incredible hotel for the weekend with a very relaxing jacuzzi. Definitely the best weekend we've ever had together!! Although we have not yet set a date, we have a pretty good idea on the the time frame of when we want to tie the knot. To the left is a picture of Christie and I during our weekend anniversary and engagement.

There is quite a bit for me to catch up with, but I am still determined to one day publish this online blog as a book, we'll see where it takes me, but at lea
st I have a lot to discuss and examine. If you would like to view the results of the Marine Corp Marathon, please go to the top-ten results page.

So about 2 months ago I finally got a response from the Army Marathon Team. I had
been trying to contact the coach for the team and was unsuccessful on several attempts. At one point I had nearly given up, but I located one of the athlete's e-mail and decided to make contact. I finally got a response and within 2 weeks I received orders to run the Marine Corp Marathon for the team. It turned out to be extremely convenient for me because I had already signed up to run the Marine Corp Marathon through a charity organization, Team Semper Fi. Once I got the orders, it was game on. By the time I received the orders, I already had less than a month left before the marathon, and I was scheduled to go down from 23 October until 27 October, having race day on Sunday 26 October. The training had went extremely well leading up to the marathon. I did my last race before the marathon on 28 September, which was the "10k Great Race" in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I knew I was in pretty good shape after the 10k.

The Great Race had well over 6,000 competitors, and I finished a respective 4th
place overall in a personal record time of 31:33, according to the online results. After the race was over, my feet were on fire. I used the Asics Gel-Piranhas, also know as "white fire." It is Asics fastest racing shoe, but it was a worn down pair and there was definitely not adequate support. It was the same shoe I used in 2007 for the Philadelphia Marathon as well as the Marine Corp Marathon in 2008, which was Mistake #1. I will discuss later.

Anyways, after the finish of the Great Race, and before I e
laborate on the overall experience, I would just like to clarify that I felt that absolute, most immense pain ever after a 10k race. It wasn't the fact that I had run a PR by over 2 minutes, but rather my feet felt like they were literally on fire. Even prior to the race, I was a little distraught because I did not get very much sleep the night before. It was a Saturday night at Mercyhurst College, which happened to fall on alumni weekend. All my college friends were up to visit, and since I don't get to see most of them now as much as I like, I wanted to spend as much time with them as possible.

I ended up going to bed at around midnight and woke up a 0600 the next morning for a 2 hour drive down to Pittsburgh. I had near perfect directions, or so I thought, to the exact location of the race, but I am not sure if anyone has ever tried to navigate in Pittsburgh without a GPS, but it's damn near impossible if you aren't familiar with the area. I arrived in downtown Pittsburgh at approximately 0800, but I needed to get on the other side of town to arrive at the starting line. Inevitably, I ended up getting lost, but I still had a good hour and a half before the start of the race. Well, minutes went b
y and I was still lost.

I decided to call my mom for further directions, thinking that she would be more familiar with the area than I was, but I was without any luck for the time being. By 0900 I was still lost with only a half hour before the start of the race. At this point in time, I was starting to panic a little, thinking to myself, "I am going to drive down here to Pittsburgh for 2 hours, miss the race, and then have to find my way back to the highway and drive another 2 hours back." The thought made me furious and my adrenaline started to boost. Five minutes went by and I knew I was at least in the area, but I did not see any runners, or signs for the race. Exactly 15 minutes before the race started I saw a lone runner jogging around with a bib number on his tank top and I asked him frantically, "where the hell is the starting line for the Great Race." I didn't mean to sound rude, but he obviously took it that way and just simply pointed up ahead.

I quickly found the nearest parking spot, slapped on my flats for the race, ripped off my shirt, and bolted towards the starting line. I didn't even care at that point about going to the registration and finding my bib number, I just wanted to run the 10k, be done with it, and make the journey back home. I
was lucky however, and to the right of the thousands of runners in front of me was the registration. I knew I didn't have any more than 5 minutes before the race would start. I pinned on my bib number in a fury and luckily the race had the new technology of a "sticker-chip" to put on my shoes so they could record my time, rather than untying my shoe laces for the old fashioned timing chip. By the time I stuck my chip on my shoe, the starting gun was fired and I bolted towards the front.

Practically running over slower runners, I made my way up to the lead pack. My adrenaline was like never before and the pace of the lead pack seemed rather slow for my liking, so why not just take the lead. I went through the first mile in a brisk 4:52 and felt great. I maintained throughout the rac
e, going through the second mile in 9:45 and then 3 miles in 15:00. At around the 5k mark, I was passed by Ryan Place, the eventual winner, and then by a Georgia Tech alumni. Mile 4 was slightly uphill and I fell from a 5 minute pace down to a 5:22. I went through 5 miles in 25:22 exactly when another runner tried making a move on me for third. Starting to falter a little bit, I answered his challenge and we ran neck and neck up through mile 6. With close to 400 meters left in the race we were both in a dead sprint for third. Unfortunately he has just a little more in the gas tank than and I ended up getting out-kicked, as usual, and finished 4th overall with a time of 31:33.

Now, as I was before, once the race was over I kept pacing around from various spot to spot, trying to get the burning sensation out of feet. I would walk around for 3-4 minutes, then sit down on a bench for another 3-4 minutes, trying to alleviate the pain. Neither tactic seemed to be a valid solution. I decided to get some water bottles and dowse my feet, but not even cold Aquafina could cure my ailment. In the midst of my dilemma a lady approached me and asked if she could sit down with me and ask a few questions about the race. Of course I agreed, hoping it would take my mind off of my fire feet. She informed me that she was from the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review and wanted to ask me how the race went. I could have told her my entire story, but I decided not to take up the entire article. Ryan Place had finished first place overall with a very respectable time of 30:45, and it was his day and his race. I won't go in great detail about the interview. It was short and to the point. Below is the short excerpt she wrote online for the Tribune;

Foster, 22, of Brookville, finished fourth.

"I started closing in on the third-place kid, but he outkicked me at the end," said Foster, also racing in his first Great Race. "My legs were just shot at the end. There wasn't much I could do."


Well for now I'm going to take a short break. I ended up covering a little more than what I thought I would have about the Great Race, but it was a great experience, a fast race, and I highly recommend anyone who wants to run a fast 10k, do the Great Race in Pittsburgh. Just be sure that if you do not know the area, either take a GPS, or get better directions than I on Google Maps.

I will write another blog post later on down the road about the Marine Corp Marathon. I was interviewed after that race as well, so I am just going to simply leave that article on my blog, be lazy, and
not type my own experience....for now. I will be back, but I want to dedicate these last couple of thoughts to Christie. The time now is 0137 in the morning and today she will be running the PSAC (Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference) Regional Championship in Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania. Horribly, I am not able to attend the race and cheer her on because I am currently at Fort Benning, Georgia for Army training. It's been a whole 8 days since the last time I saw her and it seems like an eternity. She has had one incredible cross country season, placing 4th at the Notre Dame Catholic Championship with a time of 18:11 for 5,000 meters, and last week she placed 3rd overall at the PSAC Conference Championship with a time of 21:21 for 6,000 meters. I want to wish you good luck sweetheart and I know you will do amazing. Regardless of later today, you have had the most impressive cross country season and I am so proud of all of your accomplishments. I will be thinking of you all day tomorrow! I love you always!


Marine Corp Marathon Interview:



Tim Hipps summed up the interview with an online article saying,

U.S. Army 2nd Lt. Kenneth Foster set the pace for a lead pack of five runners through the first 11 miles. He finished 10th overall in 2:29:59 and was the first Army Soldier to cross the finish line.

‘‘I just started running for the All-Army marathon team and this is my first Marine Corps Marathon,” said Foster, 22, who ran four seasons of cross country for Mercyhurst College in Erie, Pa., where he holds the 10-kilometer school record of 33:25. ‘‘I’m also trying to qualify for the Army World Class Athlete Program.“


Foster ran the 2006 Philadelphia Marathon in 2:43:41 and completed the 2007 chase around the City of Brotherly Love in 2:32:50. At Marine Corps, he knocked almost three more minutes off his personal-best time.

‘‘I was on the lead pack for the first 12 miles — then my pace started to drift off, but I was really happy with the way I performed today,” said Foster, whose sights are set on qualifying for the 2012 U.S. Olympic Marathon Team Trials. ‘‘That’s been my goal ever since I was a freshman in college. When I was younger, I was a little bit naive and I wanted to be the new Steve Prefontaine and dominate the 5K, but I just never had that turnover, so that led me to the marathon.”

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Marine Corp Marathon - Team Semper Fi

I must say, it has been quite some time in which I have been able to dedicate a solid block of time and update some of the information in my blog. Recently I have been hard at work across the board. At the job and running as well. I have increased my mileage to about 80 miles a week. I'm running at least 11 -15 miles a day, with my longer runs reaching upwards of 18-20 miles. I have decreased the amount of racing to about once every 2 weeks, concentrating on tempo mileage and speed workouts of 1 and 2 mile repeats. Frankly speaking, I can run a sub-5 mile on the track in my sleep and I feel rather comfortable running a 2-mile in under 10 minutes. I've ran a couple of cross country invites the past few weeks as an independent runner. I felt apart, however, 2 weeks ago at the Cal U XC Invite, running a 27:44 on a moderately hilly course and coming in 15th place against moderate competition. Here are the results: Cal U
Just this last Saturday, however, I ran about the same mileage for the week, (80) and still found enough strength in my legs to take the individual title. Here are the results: Penn State Behrend

I am finally all signed up and ready to go for the Marine Corp Marathon on Sunday, October 26th, 2008. I am running for a charity organization, called Team Semper Fi, which benefits injured Marines from Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as their families. Since I am affiliated with Team Semper Fi, I am required to raise a total of $300.00 for donations. If anyone is interested in donating for this charity organization, please visit my website at http://www.active.com/donate/teamsemperfi08/KFoster103

So far I have raised $565.00 and over my $300.00 goal, but the amount of funds needed for our injured troops is limitless. Thank you very much for any donations made through my website. I have almost exactly a month and a half left in Erie, Pennsylvania before I leave for Georgia. I must admit, it is not the most exciting feeling. I have lived in Erie, Pennsylvania for nearly 4 1/2 years now, going to college and working in the area...I will be sad to say goodbye to Erie, Pennsylvania. More importantly, I will be extremely sad to tell Christie, "I will see you soon."

Out