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2019 Garin Park XC Challenge race recap – Hayward, CA

2019 Garin Park XC Challenge race recap – Hayward, CA

Suffering is optional, I thought as I tried to haul ass up one of the many hills that constitute the Garin cross-country course. But if I’m not having fun, then it’s really not worth doing, as I tried to pick up some turnover on a downhill and leapfrog in front of the other women in my immediate vicinity. If I’m going to spend money to run, this is what I want to be doing right now. 

having fun and working hard: mandatory. suffering: optional. (PC: Isaac)

Last weekend was the sixth event in the PA USATF cross country series, the 15th Annual Garin Park XC Challenge, up in Hayward in the east bay. As I wrote last year when I ran Garin for the first time, runners love to hate on this course. Compared to others in the circuit, the Garin course can be pretty brutal because among other characteristics, the course is hillier than most in the series, and it’s completely exposed, leaving runners pretty vulnerable to the typically hot and dry weather. Other fun elements include starting and finishing in a field riddled with gopher holes. Combining all those aspects to the backdrop of oh shit this is a 5k; I’m supposed to be going fast, and it can make for a brutal, unenjoyable experience if you let it. 

If you let it, however, is the operative phrase. 

My previous posts for the past ~five weeks have probably clued you in to my goal of racing every single XC event this fall, really for no other reason than why not. In the absence of devoting my late summer and autumn to training for a fall marathon, racing XC has allowed me to shake things up a bit and simply show up and run however my body allows me to run that day. I’m running consistently each week but have only begun doing workouts in the past couple weeks, so I don’t delude myself into thinking that I’m necessarily in fantastic shape. Hell, given the impressive depth of the women’s PA field, on a good day, I finish around the 55th percentile. Sometimes, it’s closer to the 45th, and I don’t even place high enough to score points for my team. None of that particularly matters to me right now, however. 

I show up — and I continue to show up — because I can and because all snarkiness aside, it really is pretty fun to work hard. 

circa mile 1.25 or so, off the first big hill and beginning to ascend the second (PC: Roy)

If I finish any of these XC races satisfied with my effort — regardless of how fast or slowly I ran — then I’m happy. That is both the beginning and the end of the story.

Everything about Garin ‘19 was the same was Garin ‘18: same course, same starting area, same everything, with one exception: Garin ‘18 gave us a cooler and foggier morning, whereas Garin ‘19 began warm and only got warmer. I didn’t even bother looking at my ‘18 finish time prior to racing on Saturday because all things considered, it didn’t really matter. I’m not racing against last year’s version of me; I’m simply running right here, right now, and focusing on today. 

here we go, here we go again (PC: Roy)

Fortunately, our team fielded  full women’s and men’s teams (with some extras), which made the race day morning even more fun than usual simply because I really dig my teammates and enjoy their company. The ladies and I trotted out a brief and easy 2 mile warm-up along part of the 5k course, and before too long, it was time to run fast over that notorious gopher hole-pocked field and through the hills along the ridgeline. 

I was pretty slow to get off the starting line — see the aforementioned there are holes in the ground everywhere mention — but I felt like I was picking up steam as the race wore on. As has been the norm with these XC races, I tended to stay in the same general area of the race and simply leapfrog back-and-forth with women in my vicinity. Seeing some of my male teammates, whose race wouldn’t begin for another 40 minutes or so, distributed throughout the course was definitely a fun pick-me-up because most of them know what it feels like to run Garin, so they know that a quick good job, keep it up can go a long way, mentally, when you’re feeling like you’re laying it all out there running up a hill (or three). 

off the starting line, through the gopher field, and heading for the hills (PC: Roy)

By the beginning of the 2nd mile, when we were beginning our descent and return toward the starting area, I really tried to let things fly and open up my stride. The course’s first and final half mile is nearly flat (gopher holes be damned), so once I got off the hillside, I tried to channel that forward momentum and work hard toward the finish line. (My Garmin data indicated that around the 20 minute mark, my pace picked up to a ~mid-4/5:30 effort, which at least verifies that I was working as hard as I felt I was working! I’ve been trying to close hard and fast on these races, so looking at the data has been super fascinating, in true runnerd fashion). 

I’m behind Janet and Heather here (around the bend in the pic), but man, I love this course for the views, if nothing else! (PC: Isaac)

I was trying to make it back in time for a local swim meet, so I kept my cool-down pretty short and stopped partway through to cheer for the open men’s race with Claire. It wasn’t until I got home and compared the data to ‘18 that I saw that I ran ‘19 nearly :75 slower, to which I simply shrugged. I was running and training differently at this time in ‘18 than I am now, in ‘19, so it would reason that I’d be posting comparably different times now, too. 

the view from mile 2 onward (during the men’s race)
descending past mile 2 and onward to the finish! (PC: Roy)

The conversations I have with my teammates are similar to what I have with my eight year-old: what matters most isn’t how fast you are (or I am, in this circumstance) compared to the field. What’s more important is simply showing up, working hard, and not giving up when it gets tough. That’s what you’ll remember, not the time you posted on any given day. Putting myself in the rather uncomfortable-but-fun environment of racing short stuff, a la cross country, is something that I wouldn’t have done at any other point in my recent running history, but I can do it right now, so I am. I have no doubt it’s making me a better runner, and while I may not “see” the results manifest tomorrow, I’ve no doubt they will. All these miles become a part of my story, and it’s exciting to imagine where it may lead. 

the Wolfpack ladies at Garin, plus Lisa’s pups (PC: Roy)

(Again: my weekly invite to local runners to come play cross-country with us! This weekend it’s Tamalpa, which I’ve heard is the best in the series. See you Sunday?!)  

The Garin squads (men’s and women’s open teams) (PC: Roy)
2019 Golden Gate Park XC Open race report – SF, CA

2019 Golden Gate Park XC Open race report – SF, CA

This past weekend brought the fourth cross-country race of the PA series, the Golden Gate Park Open, and of particular interest (and sentimentality) to me, my team, Wolfpack Running Club, hosted the event. This historic 4-mile, 2x2mile-looped course covered the same ground, in the same way, as it did when I last ran the course back in ‘17 at PA Champs, but this time around, things felt a little different.

our women’s and masters women’s teams (PC: WRC)

For the past two years that I’ve run the GGP Open, at this time of year, the course wasn’t the usual (and historic) Lindley Meadow iteration. Instead, back in ‘17, the organizers had to begin/end the course on the nearby polo fields to accommodate some permitting restrictions. That makes sense, since SF is a pretty big place and all, and people can reserve sections of GGP for whatever. (If memory serves, we couldn’t run the historic course in ‘17 because part of it was reserved for a birthday party.) 

our open men’s and masters men teams (PC: WRC)

Anyway, when it came time for the ‘18 iteration, the course repeated what it was the year prior, the non-historic, polo fields-style iteration. For someone like me — someone new to the PA XC scene — starting and ending the GGP Open on the polo fields, and not on Lindley Meadow, was no big deal simply because I didn’t know any better.

For local vets of the sport, however, the polo fields iteration of the GGP was a somewhat undesirable blip in the history of the event. Not having the historical perspective of a local racer who has been doing this stuff here for a long time, I’ve only known the GGP open as an event that began and ended at the polo fields; the PA championship race (“Champs”) in November was the only PA XC race that began and ended in the Meadow. 

the start of the women’s race (PC: WRC)
open men’s start (PC: WRC)

I’m belaboring the starting and ending nuances of the GGP Open course here because by virtue of my club hosting the event, I spent my non-racing moments of the morning assisting at same-day registration and interacting with a lot of runners. Multiple people expressed how happy they were that we weren’t “doing polo fields” that day. In fact, unprovoked by anything I said, one PA racer enthusiastically told me about how historic the Lindley Meadow course was and how happy he was that we were *finally* running that course for the GGP Open, insinuating that that was the “real” course. Suffice it to say that that runners (understandably) have strong opinions about these things. 

off the starting line and in the grass, trying not to slip, fall, or otherwise self-sabotage (PC: WRC)

Moving on, it’s here that I’ll note that I don’t have any startling revelations to share, nor can I speak to any of the behind-the-scenes intricacies that are entailed in organizing and hosting a cross-country race in a major city park in a large urban setting — I’ll gladly defer to Andy, our team’s race director, and Coach Lisa, his co-director, for that — but simply judging by the sheer number of Wolfpack members, friends, and family members who showed up to help out on the event morning, let me assure you… there’s a lot involved. A *lot*. 

one of the few stretches of pavement on the course (PC: WRC)

Many teammates came from all over the bay area (and beyond) to help out in some capacity (race day reg, course monitoring, finish line chute duties, you name it) and of course to also provide the sincere and heartfelt words of support and encouragement mid-race, to everyone racing, regardless of which team singlet was adorning their chest. We all know that those mid-race words matter, especially when you’re grinding and in the thick of it (and on this storied and hard AF course, no less!).    

right around the mile 1/3 markers, as you exit the singletrack and begin to plow through the gopher-pocked field (PC: WRC)

It’s with this amazing and soul-filling backdrop of knowing that it’s my team behind the scenes, putting on a lovely and well-executed show, that my actual race took place. A gaggle of women and I arrived hours early to help with event set-up, and with a little bit of time to spare, we ran one warm-up lap to scope out everything and re-acquaint ourselves with the terrain. No doubt this course is so storied in part because it’s so very prototypical cross-country: a grassy meadow start and finish, a minor stretch of asphalt, a gopher-pocked field, singletrack, a few bouts of sand, rocky and rooty patches, tiny-but-still-significant-when-you’re-trying-to-race-fast ascents and descents, and more. It’s one of those courses where you can’t help but think to yourself holy shit, we’ve only run (1 mile/2/3/4 miles)?! That’s it?! The relative work-to-distance ratio is sorta silly.

on the other side of the field, before the other singletrack bit, before getting adjacent to the polo fields, smiling like a fool bc DAMN THIS IS HARD (PC: WRC)

In other words: this course is so, so fun, in the most (lovely yet) inane way possible. 

somewhere around mile 1.3 or so, adjacent to the polo fields, after the sand, before the woods… are you keeping track of all the various terrain?! (PC: WRC)

We fielded enough participants to have masters women/men’s and open women’s/men’s teams (hooray!), and everyone who raced also volunteered. Our course monitors were situated pretty frequently throughout the course, which meant runners always knew where we were going and that we all got those soul-affirming great job, you’re doing awesome, keep going supportive commentary throughout the entirety of the race, which matters. 

I’m 700+ words deep by now and have said nothing about my race, but the pictures above probably speak for themselves, to a degree. Right off the grassy field start line, both hamstrings felt extremely strained when we made the fast ascent from the grass to the path. It took a little bit of time (and some downhill) for the panicked feelings of ohshitohshitohshit to subside; my only explanation is that I wasn’t adequately warmed up. About a mile in, when we were in the first singletrack stretch before the gopher-pocked field, I rolled or began to roll my ankles no fewer than three times, before/after/during the sand portions, once hard enough that the women behind me audibly gasped and asked if I was ok. (I was, and thanks for looking out for me!) Throughout the race, I felt pretty strong but not very fast — again, that same place where I’ve been since May at MTB — and on my second lap, I surrendered two places and got back one. At the very end of the race, with about a quarter-mile to go, I tried to close the gap on the woman in front of me and flung myself into a dead sprint, grassy field finish line be damned. Ultimately, she beat me by two seconds, but my Garmin data details that the final 30 seconds of my race waded into sub-5 territory, with a low of 4:17, which is probably some sort of record for me in a race (let alone a XC race). That’s exciting. 

finishing strong, hence that weird grimace-smile thing (PC: WRC)

My time was ~1:40 slower than it was when I last ran this course in 2017, but it’s of little consequence to me simply because in ‘17, I was just a few weeks out from CIM and thus had a ton of concerted training under my belt. For the past few weeks, I’ve been sitting around 50 mpw but without any real workouts to speak of. I was happy that I could find a really high-for-me gear at the end of a tough race on Sunday, and I finished feeling like I had tried hard. So far this XC season, my goals at each race have simply been to have fun, work hard, and don’t give up/stay in it when it gets uncomfortable. Provided I do all of those, I walk away (tired but) gratified. That’s enough.

RD Andy de-briefing post-race (PC: WRC)

Following the women’s race were the masters men and open men’s races, and not too long after that came our team picnic. Hanging with my teammates — and meeting some of them for the first time — was such a lovely way to bookend the morning. The morning left me completely jazzed for the rest of the XC season and got me hyped about running the course again at Champs in November. (Here again is my usual open invite to one and all to come run any of the PA cross-country meets. Ask me any questions you have!). 

the obligatory silly shot (PC: WRC)

Congrats and THANK YOU to everyone who came out and raced and/or helped on Sunday; you helped make the day what it was.  xo