Lose To Run

Lose To Run

Typically you will hear people say they need to start running to lose weight. Well, leave it to this architect to think differently. I knew I needed to lose weight in order to run!

A bit of background here. My friends and running buds know that I have been running in some form or another for more than 50+ years, and over the years my weight as gone up and down, so why now? Well, the short version is that I had several non-running injuries and two different surgeries during the past four years. This along with the lack of any motivation to race is how I gained unwanted pounds. Just when I was starting to recover from most recent surgery along came Covid and the end of racing.

Ready or Not Here We Race !!

Ready or Not Here We Race !!

My first race in over 19 months, you would think I would have been ready to race right? Not exactly, nonetheless I was excited to return to the racing scene at the end of April to run the very popular Glass City Half Marathon in Toledo Ohio. Let’s revisit some history.

A New Beginning

How to train this winter to return to racing in 2021.

How to train this winter to return to racing in 2021.

 
Running stadium bleachers.

Running stadium bleachers.

A bit extreme, but with practice?

A bit extreme, but with practice?

Practice balance, balance is crucial to running healthy.

Practice balance, balance is crucial to running healthy.

It has finally arrived, the time we have all been anticipating for most of last year is here. Welcome to 2021 !

I’d like to believe we all believe this year will be better than last year. A year ago I was recovering from abdominal surgery and not able to run until mid-February. I remember looking forward to returning to running and most of all returning to racing. I was determined to make 2020 my best racing year ever.

So I find it very strange that here it is a year later and I have the same aspirations for my running year ahead.The difference this year is that nobody really knows when racing will return to a more normal state. Some agree with me and believe there will be some level of racing as early as the end of April and as the year progresses the likelihood of races returning increases.

As of now the Boston Marathon, normally the third week in April, is non-committal about their already delayed race day this fall. Another very popular race here in Michigan, the Bayshore Marathon, Half Marathon, and 10K, scheduled for the end of May just announced their race will be totally virtual this year! While these notices are disturbing to runners, runners need to understand the infrastructure behind planning any race event especially very large and mega races. For this reason, I believe the races that do return to a more normal schedule will be the smaller, shorter (i.e. 5K), and locally focused events.

Stay tuned and until then what should a runner do? Well, the simple answer is to continue to run. Prepare to race. But how to prepare and what to prepare for? Difficult questions to answer, what you can do as a runner are the following points:

  1. Build a solid running base. Take advantage of this time to slowly but surely build up your weekly mileage base. Increase your weekly long run, or add another run to your week. A common mistake during normal times is that runners often attempt to fast track their training and fail to build a solid base. Building a solid base involves increasing your total miles during the next few months.

  2. Vary your runs, add intense training runs on a periodic basis. Running more and more miles as you building your base without including some level of intense training such as hill reps, or speed intervals will only assure that you are able to run the distance you have achieved in your training. To be ready to race, you will need to build your anaerobic capacity too.

  3. Build strength and flexibility. During normal times runners feel a need to log their miles and typically ignore any attempt to do anything else to improve their running performance whether or not they are aiming for a race. Most strength training can be done without fancy equipment or weights. Runners also need to take time to focus on their flexibility, this is especially true for older runners too! Running many miles after miles will ultimately result in stiff areas of a runner’s body where the runner really needs to be flexible. Think hips, core, yoga, and more.

Include these three areas of focus between now and your next race which hopefully be here before we know it and when it does arrive we all will be ready to run!

Thanks for viewing my post and continue to “Run Happy”.

Coach Lee

PS: I look forward to your comments and thoughts on this post, don’t be shy.

email: therunningarchitect@gmail.com

Lucky 13 ! - The Brooksie Race Report

I have never feared the number 13 as being an unlucky number. Not even a world wide pandemic could stop the 13th annual running of The Brooksie Way Half Marathon this weekend!. What’s so special about The Brooksie Way Half Marathon? Well you need to understand how it began and how it has evolved from the very first race in 2008.

Staying Motivated During Covid Times

Staying Motivated During Covid Times

Every competitive runner has faced their spring and even early summer races being cancelled or rescheduled. This obviously causes one to re-shift their training plans. But what about maintaining your motivation? How can you remain motivated when your next targeted race is now at least several months if not more away? How can you manage to run without your favorite running buddy or group? Are your usual routes now populated by casual walkers? Is your work routine altered? Yes, plenty of reasons to loose your motivation to run these days.

Do As I Say Not As I Do - Part 2 of 2

It all seemed so simple as my future with diverticulitis was explained by my medical team. With the benefit of hindsight perhaps it was, that is unless you are the patient experiencing it. The basics involved needing some time for my insides to continue to self-heal. In the meantime there would be a few tests, appointments with specialist, and follow-up with my primary care doc. All leading up to eventual surgery to remove the bad part of my large intestine. It was also explained that while highly recommended, surgery could also be scheduled as much as a year or so later. if I elected.

Crim Weekend Part 2 – The National Championship Race

Part two of my Crim weekend involves another Crim tradition. This one is relatively new and is known as The Michigan Mile.  The name is derived from the fact that the 1 mile race route originally was around and through the Flint University of Michigan campus. The route has changed in more recent years but still finishes along the campus’s edge on Kearsley St. 

For the past XX years the race has connected with the national governing body for track and field, the USATF and hosted the Masters (over 40 years of age runners) National Championship 1 Mile Road Race. These are separate races for men and women with championship recognition awarded in each 5 year age group and separate men and women teams in each 10 year age group. Because of the USATF affiliation, the race attracts a very competitive field of amateur runners from around the country! This year runners from California, Florida, New York, Denver, and throughout the Midwest competed.

I join my running buds from the Ann Arbor Track Club (AATC) to compete in the team event. We actually enter two teams in the 60 yr + group.  The entries are posted by USATF on their website and in the last day or two prior to the race I could see that I could count on finishing in the back of the pack in my age group as well as the entire field too!

I didn’t compete in this race last year due to injury and frankly I have not really been running like I am accustomed to doing since late 2017! So my expectations on winning a national championship were not exactly high. I did however find myself fantasizing about 6 or 7 runners collapsing on the course during the race and then maybe I might score a respectable finish!  This year was more about simply having fun at the race.

Even when you run for fun, it’s still important to do the proper warm-ups, run the course, dynamic stretching, and other moves to break a sweat and get my heart rate up.  While my expectations weren’t high, I did have a very strong and fast track workout a few days prior to the race and thus still held out a certain fantasy of finishing well.

The start! Off we go and I am not accustomed to having more runners ahead of me than behind me at the start. So despite my best intentions of starting reasonable, I failed. I started too fast running a 5:40 mile pace for the first 300 yards!!  Yikes!  My burning lungs told my brain to slow down or I would never even finish!  So, that I did all the way to a 6:20 pace at the first quarter mile. 

Better, but despite my will, the body won the battle and I smartly slowed to a 7:40 pace through the next half mile.  To put this in perspective, I have not run this pace in over two years! Several runners had passed me, no surprise there, but I as approached the 3/4 mark and a slight uphill, I was determined not to let anyone else pass me.

The last runner to pass me was a 70 year old runner. Well, good for him.  He pulled away from me a bit as I struggled up the hill, but then as I hit the crown of the hill with less than a 1/4 mile to go, I decided to close the 30 yard gap and then catch him.  Well, he must have sensed me as I did close the gap but I “ran out of real estate” yet finished as strong as I could up that final mound to the finish line.

Crossing the 1 Mile Finish Line and feeling strong!

Crossing the 1 Mile Finish Line and feeling strong!

Unofficially I ran a 6:58 mile. Not exactly a time that is going to win a national championship for this old runner, but a time that I can be very proud of for it has been several years since I have been able to run that pace.  After a year of knee surgery (non-running injury) and other aches and pains, I can confidently feel like I am nearly back to my normal running performance.

My final finish?  I finished 5th in my Age Group!  The best age group finish I have ever had competing in this national championship! And I have my running bud from the AATC, Aaron to thank for it too! That’s another story for another time, until then, yes I can officially claim my 5th place finish!

Thanks for following this short series. I hope you return for the full Crim 10 Mile race report soon!

Coach Lee, The Running Architect

Crim Weekend Part 1 – The 30 Year Club

The 2019 version of the Crim 30 Year Club.

The 2019 version of the Crim 30 Year Club.

The Crim event has a long history of innovation in the world of road racing. Dating back to the first Crim in 1977 when it linked world class runners with charity. Then was the method of tracking thousands of runners through the finishing shoots, which evolved to the use of a microchip tied to the runners shoe laces, and ultimately led to the ubiquitous bib tracking system.  Crim was also a trend setter when it came to including other race distances to accompany the featured 10 mile race. But the one truly unique and extremely popular feature is the establishment of the 30 Year Club.

The 30 Year Club was formed in 2006 as a part of the celebration for the 30th anniversary of the Crim 10 Mile event.  Prior to that time the Crim organizers, led by the volunteer effort of Riley McLincha, who is today, one of the remaining 17 runners to compete in each and every Crim, had actually been tracking a group of runners who had completed each and every Crim since the first race in 1977.  This small group of runners were recognized before the start of each Crim and given a special head start ahead of the field of thousands.

New 30 Year Club leader Dan Bishop, Riley McLincha, and outgoing leader John Jerome.

New 30 Year Club leader Dan Bishop, Riley McLincha, and outgoing leader John Jerome.

The club remained active and in tact over the intervening years primarily due to the efforts of John Jerome. John has run every Crim except the first one. However, this year John announced his retirement from his unofficial duties as the CEO of the club and when word went out about John’s retirement, newcomer Dan Bishop answered the call. I think I speak for all of the club members by wishing you well in your new career and we all offer our help in the future.

In 2006, this field of special runners were officially designated as 30 Year runners and the 30 Year Club was formed.  Every year since, runners who would be running their 30th Crim were welcomed into the Club during a special ceremony the Thursday evening prior to race day.  Since then, the number of members in the club has grown to over 175 including the 20 new members this year. 

There is also now other subsets within the club, these are members who will be running their 35th and 40th Crims. As you might guess, the next subsets will be the 45 year runners in two years and the 50 year runners in seven years! All members receive a special number on their bib indicating their level of seniority in the club.

This year was my 33rd running of the Crim. I am a proud member of the 30 Year Club Class of 2016.  Since that was also the 40th Crim, my classmates were welcomed into the club by Bill Rogers and the winner of the first Crim British runner Steve Kenyon.

The ceremony includes each new club member being introduced with a special story about their running history and what the Crim means to them. There are as many various special reasons each member loves the Crim as there are members.  Most members are from Flint or have ties of some sort to the Flint area, including me.  Genesee County is where my running career began while running for the Grand Blanc High School cross country and track teams. I was also working downtown Flint in 1977 during the first Crim but was totally unaware of the race.  Probably because I was about to be married several weeks following that first race. Regardless, I am very happy to have discovered the Crim and it is the highlight of my running year!

Thanks for reading my post and be sure to check back next year following my 34th Crim!

Coach Lee, The Running Architect

Touring Crim - Entire Version

In response to an overwhelming demand (was there a demand?) I am publishing the entire version of “Touring The Crim Course” in a single post. I hope this will be of some aid to some runners out there.
I look forward to your feedback and thank you in advance.

Pre - Race

Normally the prerace events start for me about a week in advance. I follow the event’s website, enjoy a mild taper, and travel to and from Flint Friday to attend the expo. Race morning begins while most normal people remain in their dream state. I awake hours before the race, enjoy my coffee, toasted bagel with PB and jam, get dressed in my race gear, pack my food and race goods into a bag and head out to meet other runners from our Running Fit 501 group to caravan from Novi to Flint. We arrive in downtown Flint before sunrise and just as the race grounds begin to awake.

If we are lucky, the weather is clear, cool, and dry. However, this is Crim weekend and the weather is rarely ideal for running a 10-mile world class race. Traditionally the weather is hot, sunny, and very humid. Nonetheless, many world and American records have been set for the 10-mile distance on this now prestigious course.

This is perhaps the best place in the racing world to people watch for there are all types of individuals all with one thing on their mind, either finishing the race or to watch their family member or friend finish a race. While this part is fun, it’s also time to get serious. Runners need to continue to hydrate and that of course leads to the inevitable trip to the port-a-john. Get to one soon for it may not be the last time to need to use one! Somewhere about this time you will also be hearing several reports from the PA announcer. They will welcome you to the Crim and remind you who the sponsors are. In the midst of this you will also be aware of the first official start of the Crim 10 Miler. The wheelers will be the first to start a full 30 minutes of your start. This is always an inspiring moment to witness. I highly recommend you find your way to the starting line to experience this event and get your blood flowing a bit before you start your warm-up. 

Next up are the true elite runners, those who will be running their 30th Crim or more! New this year new to Crim will be the first ever class of 40 year runners!  19 inspiring runners have participated in every Crim race since the first back in 1977. This group of special elite runners will be honored with a 15 minute head start ahead of the thousands of other runners. I am very honored and proud to join this group for the first time too! It seems like just yesterday that I was counting down the final few years until I could join this group. Now I can claim being a member of the 30 year club and looking forward to running my 33rd Crim. Think of it, how many other clubs have a 30 year waiting list? 

Perhaps one of the most important things a runner can do prior to a race such as Crim is to warm-up those cold muscles. There are plenty of opportunities to jog along the city streets that parallel Saginaw St. Mix some slow running with a few quicker strides, stretch a bit, get loose, get your heart rate up, and then find your place in your starting corral at the last possible moment (3-5 mins ahead of the start).

The Start

After weeks if not months of training there you stand in a crowd of people on the bricks of Saginaw St. between the Citizens Bank Building and the Flint U-M Student Union.  Several years ago they started the race in waves. This means the elites and faster runners (approximately 7 mins per mile pace or better) are the only ones who now actually start at the official start time. Other runners will be held back a minute or two for each corral or group of corrals. There is very little time and distance between each wave. It will not take long for the entire mass of 10,000 or so runners to blend as one long parade line running through Flint.

The weather is probably sunny with a bit of an over cast, deceptively humid, and warm. Not to bad for the 4th Saturday in a Michigan August. The air is still as the PA announcer finally realizes there is nothing more to say, nobody left to recognize, and turns the mike over to Riley McClincha to sing the nation anthem. There may be a hot air balloon over the near horizon, perhaps a television helicopter, and certainly at least one drone hovering above you!

 Finally the Mayor of Flint will ask the runners and walkers to get ready, pause, then announce the runners and walkers to START. The gun! or more accurately the horn sounds! You begin to move from a being anxiously still for the past 10 - 20 minutes or so to a mild shuffle that quickly turns into a walk, a jog, and a slight run. Before you know it you are stepping over the chip mat, you click your watch, the crowded field begins to disperse, and you are a Crim participant!

Being a participant is nice, but you want to succeed! Success in the Crim is a very individual measurement. Whether it is to simply finish without walking, win a medal, set a PR, or even a national record makes no difference, it’s all about knowing that you achieved your best today! To help you achieve your best the following is a brief outline of what to expect, perhaps suggest a strategy to attain it, and hopefully help you celebrate your Crim success!

Mile 1

Despite the shoulder to shoulder start, you will want to be sure to line up on the right side of the street. Within the first two hundred feet or so there is a traffic island barrier in the road. you will remain on Saginaw St. for the first quarter mile and then the course will take a 90 degree turn to the right. If you take the left side of the traffic island you will be adding unwanted distance to your very first mile. It may not sound like much but the Crim course gently winds in many places and you need to run all of the tangents as efficiently as possible to help ensure your best finish time.

Think of the first turn in the route as a giant hair-pin turn for before you know it you will make another 90 degree right turn and head once again over the beautiful Flint River as you run south along Harrison St. That 9 story tall office building on your right brings back many memories for this writer as I was the project architect for the State Office Building in 1980-81 and oversaw much of the construction activity as well.

Harrison St. parallels Saginaw St. and will offer the opportunity for spectators to line the street and cheer you along the start of your Crim adventure for 2019. The newer route no longer crosses over Saginaw St. where the crowds previously gathered, but like earlier years, you need to be very careful along this part of the route and not to get too excited, avoid any adrenaline rush, and keep running nice and relaxed. It’s very OK, in fact it is even very smart to run slower than your intended pace at this point in the race. Begin to work your way to the left side of Harrison as your next turn is onto Kearsley St.

Kearsley St. also brings back many fond memories for this writer for where the route turns left once stood the old Palace movie theater. I saw many movies here as a kid, the last one being “Woodstock” way too many years ago. Kearsley was also the name of a Flint area school that was the nemesis of my high school track and cross country teams, again too many years ago. Like years fly by, so will you along this portion of the route. It is straight with a very gentle slope that you will likely not perceive but one that will affect your pace. Keep relaxed, the cheering crowds are likely to extend along Kearsley St., the border of Flint U-M’s campus as you begin to approach the 1 mile mark.

Take this mile easy and relaxed.  Remember 10 miles is still a long way and you likely did not have much of an opportunity to warm your muscles, including your heart!  Focus on being relaxed, don’t work too hard by passing too many too soon. The crowd will soon begin to spread out. Keep your head up and look ahead at the mass of runners, look for how the mass will turn, you will want to move to the side of the street where the next turn will move you. Smart racers focus on running the shortest distance possible!  Be aware of the next tangent ahead!

Before you know it you are out on the wide open Chavez Dr. you approach the one mile mark.  Odds are that you will run your first mile faster than you would like too, do not fret too much, this is a race and the beginning of mile 2 will quickly reel you back to reality.

Mile 2

If you were fortunate enough to catch your split and get a drink, you need to continue to run smart and keep your head up! Continue to watch the crowd of runners ahead of you. Note their path and the turns to the left onto Robert T. Longway Blvd. This is a very nostalgic turn for me. The small office building on the corner once was the home of the Flint architectural firm Nelson McKinley Reed.  I visited this office during my high school years and after completing my Master of Architecture degree, ended up working for them, but at a different location two blocks exactly west of the Crim finish line!.

The nostalgia bug continues to bite me as we run along Robert T. Longway, just after running over the Flint River, the runners pass a high rise residential building surrounded by low rise residential buildings. This housing initially was named the Doyle Housing Project, and I worked on many of the low rise buildings, again during my early years as an architect working in downtown Flint.

Next, just before you cross Saginaw St. the race organizers were kind enough to offer you a very brief short cut on the course! You make two gentle left turns and then suddenly you are once again on Saginaw St. and looking ahead at the starting line you left just minutes ago. As a 30 year runner I get a 15 minute head start on the field. So, when I arrive at this point on the course I see the mass of runners lined up and prepared to start.

The view of the starting line is not a long one for next you will make a right turn and will be running on the original Crim route as you pass the 2 mile mark!

Mile 3

This is where you return to the balance of the “old Crim route”. You likely begin mile 3 at least a few seconds faster than your goal pace. No fear another hill is near J  This time it’s of the long and slow rise variety. Between the 2 and 3 mile marker you likely will not realize it but you conquer a 60 foot rise in the course too.  In case you either forgot your breakfast you can likely take advantage of the Krispy Kremes or similar treats being offered to runners at some point along this part of the course! 

During this mile you will likely start to encounter the back of the pack members of the 30 and 40 year clubs. You can’t miss them as they will be wearing the number that represents their years of running Crim. Be sure to offer encouragement and congratulations to each of these runners. I promise you will be rewarded with special runner karma later along the course J

Be careful here as there are several small traffic islands in the street. You will need to stay to the right of these islands and for the entire distance along University. You do NOT want to ever be running along the left side of University!

You will be on this street for nearly a mile. If you are not having a good day, this stretch will do nothing to make it any better. It begins with a hill, flattens in the middle a bit, before another long gentle slope up to the 3 mile mark at the corner of Chevrolet.

Two of my favorite sites along this stretch are the locals who stand along the street curb to cheer and Atwood Stadium.  Odds are you will be much closer to your goal pace at this point, but don’t be surprised if you begin to question your ability to maintain your pace for the next 7 miles. You will really need to maintain a positive mental attitude as you run this long, straight, and gently rising mile stretch. Do not let this stretch of the race beat you mentally.

Mile 4

If you like long essentially straight routes you will love miles 3 and 4. Mile 4 along Chevrolet Ave may have a gentle bend to it. You need to mentally prepare to run straight line and not become focused on your tired legs. There is a reason they are feeling tired now, beyond the obvious, Chevrolet is also a very gentle but seemingly constant rise to the next turn at Cashew Point.  It also is not perfectly straight either!  About mid way, if you are paying attention and know how to run tangents properly, there is an opportunity to save a few strides here too!

Cashew Point, this is perhaps one of the more recently famous turns in all of road racing?  This is where in the past the tradition was that you were offered free (and likely warm) beer to wash down that Krispy Kreme you had!  But following the 2012 Crim it was announced that the homeowner at this famed corner was going into retirement and 2012 was his last year. The thousands of devoted Crim runners missed this thrill. However, Cashew Point returned in 2014! Be prepared to be greeted by a rowdy crowd, enjoy the crowd for after this point (no pun) the race really begins and you need to rely upon your mental strength too!

This is also the point at which you want to begin to regain your stride and pace for as you turn the sharp left corner you also begin a very welcomed downhill!  It is a very subtle downhill so you might otherwise miss it, but trust me, this is an excellent point to gain some time!

Mile 5

You are now moving thru a little better area of Flint, not only for the houses but also for the welcomed shade. Most of mile 5 is downhill and meanders thru several streets. Despite the Bradley’s that lay ahead, this is not any time to slow to rest for them!  Keep the faith and keep running hard. To help you keep that faith, there is a gospel choir as you make your right turn onto Sunset before heading to Bradley!  Somehow this group is very appropriately placed J

Up next, the Bradleys’!  You can’t miss them. First, you will undoubtedly overhear other experienced runners talk about the Bradleys’ as you approach them. Second and impossible to miss is the giant blue entry balloon gate. The Crim tracks runners for 1 mile of the Bradley neighborhood. Next, one quick left turn and before you know it you are facing the first of three rolling hills.

The first is actually the toughest, in part because to the uninitiated you mentally break down thinking they all are this bad!  Not really, stay to the left side of the road and use the people cheering you on as motivation, remember the arm and upper body action, keep your head up, and visualize flattening those hills with each foot strike. Pretend your legs and feet are a steam roller rolling down the size of each hill.

As you reach the peak of the first hill you may think, is that it? For it seems like just as soon as you hit the first hill you are headed down and to the actual 5 mile mark.  Congrats you are halfway home!

Mile 6

Halfway?  Not so fast! 

Crim history has proven that it is a race that is extremely difficult to run a negative split. So odds are you are not half way home in terms of time, but give it a shot and go for that negative split! So far you should at least be running smart if not fast. 

The second and third Bradley hills are not as terrible as the first. However, it is because you just finished the first hill that these two seem so terrible. The Bradley’s are not so much about the ability to run hills as they are about the ability to recover from hills. Of course to recover you must first actually run a hill!

Successfully conquering these three hills may seem like a victory but as you might guess, there is a theme here. As you cross the next major intersection at Corunna Rd. there is (IMHO) the worse hill on the course. There is actually a 4th Bradley!  This is not a hill, hill, but rather a long steady climb that takes you just shy of the 6 mile mark. For many years a group of residents have passed out cups of ice cubes for the runners. I highly recommend you keep the back of your shirt tucked in your shorts. Then take the ice cubes and toss them on your back.  They will rest between your skin and shirt, in the small of your back and provide a very nice albeit short lived cooling effect.  

Make a right turn onto Court Street and in a few hundred feet you will not only be at the 6 mile mark but also on an overall downhill slope to the finish! 

Mile 7

Just kidding!  Yes from mile 6 to 10 the course drops, but along mile 7 on beautiful Hawthorne and Parkside Aves you will see your share of rolling hills, mostly shaded route and the many huge stately homes of Flint!  Stay to the left side of the shady Hawthorne Ave.

The views are nice, many neighbors are out to support you, there will be a band playing as you approach the mile mark,  but do not get too distracted. This is a very critical stretch to pay attention to the tangents!  This is especially true once you make the 90 degree left turn onto Parkside Ave. Here the shade is gone as your view opens up to the site of Swartz Creek Golf Course.

Mile 8

Yes, mile 7 might have felt short as hopefully you have been able to pick up your pace again as the course is flat to downhill. There are two immediate tangents to pay close attention too immediately following this turn. Along scenic Parkside you will receive encouragement from a high school band and cheer team may get your juices jumping a bit but you still need to pay attention to the curves of the tangents, work the hills (they are all short so run hard and get them over with!) and stride down the hills when given the opportunity. 

There are many twists and turns along the last half of this mile that prevent you from seeing too far ahead. The result is you may think you only have one more bend in the road when in fact another bend and another hill await you. Your pace is likely slower than a few miles ago so your brain teases you by making you think the route is longer and harder.  Remember, a mile is a mile.

As you approach the end of mile 8 there is a large house on the right, you are on a shaded part of the route, and there will likely be a hose spraying water for you to run through. There is another very mild hill to get over and again, your mind begins to play tricks on you. Be mentally tough, don’t slow down, plow through this point and turn the corner onto Miller Rd. only two more miles to race!

However, sneaky mile 8 decides to jump up and steal it all back again!  Enjoy this stretch of road for as you turn right onto Court St, you will be likely be greeted by sunshine with the resulting hot pavement. The sun, the heat from the pavement, the vast width of the road, your tired legs, all combine to make this part of the route this writer’s least favorite. The best part of mile 8 is completing it, for now there are only 2 more miles to race!

Mile 9

Mile 9 is really the character builder, for as you turn right onto Miller, you will be likely be greeted by sunshine with the resulting hot pavement. The sun, the heat from the pavement, the vast width of the road, your tired legs, all combine to make this part of the route this writer’s least favorite. Continue to stay to the right for there is a welcomed aid station ahead. After your drink of choice (Gator Aid or water) you will need to move to the left side of the road.

Appropriately placed about the mid-point is a group of young cheerleaders on your left. You will also be greeted by members of the Flint Sunrise Rotary Club, be sure to thank these wonderful volunteers giving their last Saturday of the summer to support you! 

Somewhere along mile 9 on Miller, the Karma Gods may reward you for your diligent effort, support of the 30 and 40 year runners, and greetings to other volunteers by boosting your mental effort or by dismissing those aches you feel in your tired legs.

You will know when you are about to hit the 9-mile mark when you see a large crowd of support to your right. The supporters from Flint Powers High School will be there to cheer you on to Court St as you stride into the final mile!

Mile 10

You crossed the last blue mile mark line for the race and you can begin to sense the finish. This is where it is critical to at least maintain your steady pace!  At least until you hit the White Horse Tavern on your left and at about the 9.5 mile mark.  You can’t miss this place, it’s at a traffic light, has a loud boom box and DJ, and off course a statue of a small white horse in front!  You will want to move to the left side of the street at this point.

Be sure to smile as you reach the roadway over the Swartz Creek, for there are always several camera people there on the right side of the road, nudge ahead of the next runner so you can have an opportunity to score a great race shot of you J

If you have been holding your pace, this is the spot to slowly but surely begin to step it up a bit, not too much too soon but begin now! Yes there is one more seemingly long slow hill, but tough this one out as it is the last one you will notice! 

Court St. meanders a bend onto Fifth St. as you negotiated the tangents in the early miles you must continue to run with your head up and pay careful attention to these final few tangents too for if you do, you will ultimately be rewarded with a faster finish time

Soon you will see the next traffic light ahead, stay to the left as you hit Grand Traverse and continue to concentrate on your effort, relax and be efficient too!  (I know much easier said than done). At this point in the race I literally race from traffic light to the next traffic light, After Grand Traverse is Church St, then the next is Saginaw St! 

As you approach Saginaw Street you can hear the bongos booming from the corner of Fifth St and Saginaw in the distance and you are soon at the curb of Saginaw St. It’s important to cut this corner as tight as possible, stay to the left side of the course and focus!

As you make this turn, begin to turn your legs even a bit faster, it may hurt, but it will pay dividends in just seconds!

Pound the pavement hard now!  Ahead there is the first iron archway, the old Montgomery Ward store on your left, Churches, and BRICKS ! 

Run run run!  You are on the bricks and running downhill in the middle of Saginaw Street as fast as you can, use every last bit of energy to push your arms and legs and hold nothing back!  

Don’t forget to SMILE!  With a few hundred feet to go there will be plenty of folks in the middle of the road taking your picture again! 

Be sure to listen too!  About every 5th -6th runner’s name and where they are from is announced, they just may pick you too!

Finally, be sure to RUN PAST the finish line!  You would be surprised how many do not do this and in a race like this is can mean a new PR or even a spot or two in your age group!

The Finish

DONE!  A Crim success story!  There are many things about the finish that make Crim special. Years ago it was their well organized chute system, then came chips, they were one of the first major races (if not the first?) in the country to use the chip. Their finish line technology continues to innovate each year.

You are greeted by a crew of volunteers offering you your finish medal and the awesome cold wet towel you get to use!  While many like the beer and pizza afterwards, my favorites are the Popsicles (purple are the best) and cold towels!  And it’s not over! You will greet your friends and be greeted by friends. You may even have the opportunity to congratulate another runner whom you battled throughout the race.

Next it’s time to head to the festival area. This is where you can get in the line to receive your choice of beer or soda and pizza in the festival lot. Soon the air will fill with caloric stuffed odors from the festival tent while runners meet family, friends, and reminisce about the race. Shortly thereafter while even more runners join the festivities the band begins to play and the whole place is a celebration.

This year my family will join me and my running friends from our Running Fit 501 training group will continue the celebration at the Team party. This is where you and eat as much as you like and share your celebration with your running buds from 501. This is about the time that I start planning next year’s race too!  Thank you for reading this I hope it helps you through the tough, challenging, and fun Crim course.

Author’s notes:

I was working downtown Flint in 1977, the year of the first Crim but was not aware of the race. It was not until 1984 that I ran my first Crim. For me Crim is a very personal annual event. In some ways it’s a homecoming. This is where my running career began back in the spring of 1965 as a “fast runner” on my junior-hi track team in Grand Blanc. I also ran cross country and track for GBHS in the late 60’s. Our team of distance runners was well recognized as among the best in all of Michigan! In more recent years the tradition of excellent runners from GBHS continues with the likes of USA Olympian in the 800m Geena (Gall) Lara and Grant Fisher who became only the 7th high school runner ever to run a sub 4 minute mile, and two time Footlocker National Cross Country Champion and has since become a NCAA Champion racing for Stanford.

In the early days of Crim, the start of the race was on the Campus of Mott Community College. From that start area in 1984 I remember standing and looking towards the upper floors of St. Joe’s Hospital and the window of the intensive care unit where I was with my father during the last hours of his life just a year prior and asking him to look over me during the race. In more recent years the Crim has become an opportunity for me to connect with many of my old school pals. I have been told that my old school mates look for my results each year too. I now have new motivation.

Thanks again for your interest and time in following this post.

Coach Lee

copyright 2019

Touring The Crim Course - Celebration Time !

The Finish

DONE!  A Crim success story!  There are many things about the finish that make Crim special. Years ago it was their well organized chute system, then came chips, they were one of the first major races (if not the first?) in the country to use the chip. Their finish line technology continues to innovate each year.

You are greeted by a crew of volunteers offering you your finish medal and the awesome cold wet towel you get to use!  While many like the beer and pizza afterwards, my favorites are the Popsicles (purple are the best) and cold towels!  And it’s not over! You will greet your friends and be greeted by friends. You may even have the opportunity to congratulate another runner whom you battled throughout the race.

Next it’s time to head to the festival area. This is where you can get in the line to receive your choice of beer or soda and pizza in the festival lot. Soon the air will fill with caloric stuffed odors from the festival tent while runners meet family, friends, and reminisce about the race. Shortly thereafter while even more runners join the festivities the band begins to play and the whole place is a celebration.

This year my family will join me and my running friends from our Running Fit 501 training group will continue the celebration at the Team party. This is where you and eat as much as you like and share your celebration with your running buds from 501. This is about the time that I start planning next year’s race too!  Thank you for reading this I hope it helps you through the tough, challenging, and fun Crim course.

Author’s notes:

I was working downtown Flint in 1977, the year of the first Crim but was not aware of the race. It was not until 1984 that I ran my first Crim. For me Crim is a very personal annual event. In some ways it’s a homecoming. This is where my running career began back in the spring of 1965 as a “fast runner” on my junior-hi track team in Grand Blanc. I also ran cross country and track for GBHS in the late 60’s. Our team of distance runners was well recognized as among the best in all of Michigan! In more recent years the tradition of excellent runners from GBHS continues with the likes of USA Olympian in the 800m Geena (Gall) Lara and Grant Fisher who became only the 7th high school runner ever to run a sub 4 minute mile, and two time Footlocker National Cross Country Champion and has since become a NCAA Champion racing for Stanford.

In the early days of Crim, the start of the race was on the Campus of Mott Community College. From that start area in 1984 I remember standing and looking towards the upper floors of St. Joe’s Hospital and the window of the intensive care unit where I was with my father during the last hours of his life just a year prior and asking him to look over me during the race. In more recent years the Crim has become an opportunity for me to connect with many of my old school pals. I have been told that my old school mates look for my results each year too. I now have new motivation.

 

Touring The Crim Course - Mile 10 !

AHH ! The post you have been waiting for, the final mile!! Perhaps with the exceptions of making that final turn onto famed Boyleston St to kick in the Boston Marathon, or also making that final turn in Columbus Circle and into the final stretch of the New York City Marathon, making that final turn onto Saginaw St, in downtown Flint MI. is one of the special moments in all of road racing!! The awesome crowd support, the feel of rejuvenated legs, and best of all that all downhill view, truly makes this a special moment that I hope each of you will treasure as you gut out your finishing kick!

But wait! This is not the end! Check back tomorrow for the FINISH !

Mile 10

You crossed the last blue mile mark line for the race and you can begin to sense the finish. This is where it is critical to at least maintain your steady pace!  At least until you hit the White Horse Tavern on your left and at about the 9.5 mile mark.  You can’t miss this place, it’s at a traffic light, has a loud boom box and DJ, and off course a statue of a small white horse in front!  You will want to move to the left side of the street at this point.

Be sure to smile as you reach the roadway over the Swartz Creek, for there are always several camera people there on the right side of the road, nudge ahead of the next runner so you can have an opportunity to score a great race shot of you J

If you have been holding your pace, this is the spot to slowly but surely begin to step it up a bit, not too much too soon but begin now! Yes there is one more seemingly long slow hill, but tough this one out as it is the last one you will notice! 

Court St. meanders a bend onto Fifth St. as you negotiated the tangents in the early miles you must continue to run with your head up and pay careful attention to these final few tangents too for if you do, you will ultimately be rewarded with a faster finish time.

Soon you will see the next traffic light ahead, stay to the left as you hit Grand Traverse and continue to concentrate on your effort, relax and be efficient too!  (I know much easier said than done). At this point in the race I literally race from traffic light to the next traffic light, After Grand Traverse is Church St, then the next is Saginaw St! 

As you approach Saginaw Street you can hear the bongos booming from the corner of Fifth St and Saginaw in the distance and you are soon at the curb of Saginaw St. It’s important to cut this corner as tight as possible, stay to the left side of the course and focus!

As you make this turn, begin to turn your legs even a bit faster, it may hurt, but it will pay dividends in just seconds!

Pound the pavement hard now!  Ahead there is the first iron archway, the old Montgomery Ward store on your left, Churches, and BRICKS ! 

Run run run!  You are on the bricks and running downhill in the middle of Saginaw Street as fast as you can, use every last bit of energy to push your arms and legs and hold nothing back!  

Don’t forget to SMILE!  With a few hundred feet to go there will be plenty of folks in the middle of the road taking your picture again! 

Be sure to listen too!  About every 5th -6th runner’s name and where they are from is announced, they just may pick you too!

Finally, be sure to RUN PAST the finish line!  You would be surprised how many do not do this and in a race like this is can mean a new PR or even a spot or two in your age group!

Congratulations on finishing the story of how to run the Crim course. But there is more to come, remember to check back tomorrow for my story of how to enjoy the finish too!

Thank you.

Coach Lee

Touring The Crim Course - Mile 9

Welcome back Crim runner! If you love to run in the sun, mile 9 is made for you!

Mile 9

Mile 9 is really the character builder, for as you turn right onto Miller, you will be likely be greeted by sunshine with the resulting hot pavement. The sun, the heat from the pavement, the vast width of the road, your tired legs, all combine to make this part of the route this writer’s least favorite. Continue to stay to the right for there is a welcomed aid station ahead. After your drink of choice (Gator Aid or water) you will need to move to the left side of the road.

Appropriately placed about the mid-point is a group of young cheerleaders on your left. You will also be greeted by members of the Flint Sunrise Rotary Club, be sure to thank these wonderful volunteers giving their last Saturday of the summer to support you! 

Somewhere along mile 9 on Miller, the Karma Gods may reward you for your diligent effort, support of the 30 and 40 year runners, and greetings to other volunteers by boosting your mental effort or by dismissing those aches you feel in your tired legs.

You will know when you are about to hit the 9-mile mark when you see a large crowd of support to your right. The supporters from Flint Powers High School will be there to cheer you on to Court St as you stride into the final mile!

Thank you for following my posts, now get ready for the final mile tomorrow!

Coach Lee

Touring The Crim Course Mile - 8

Welcome back Crim Runners! Glad to see you have survived the first 7 miles! Today I guide you along mile 8, a beautiful stretch of the course that includes many more wonderful homes, wide views, some shade, and oh, those curves with “gently rolling” hills. I hope you enjoy this mile too!

Mile 8

Yes, mile 7 might have felt short as hopefully you have been able to pick up your pace again as the course is flat to downhill. There are two immediate tangents to pay close attention too immediately following this turn. Along scenic Parkside you will receive encouragement from a high school band and cheer team may get your juices jumping a bit but you still need to pay attention to the curves of the tangents, work the hills (they are all short so run hard and get them over with!) and stride down the hills when given the opportunity. 

There are many twists and turns along the last half of this mile that prevent you from seeing too far ahead. The result is you may think you only have one more bend in the road when in fact another bend and another hill await you. Your pace is likely slower than a few miles ago so your brain teases you by making you think the route is longer and harder.  Remember, a mile is a mile.

As you approach the end of mile 8 there is a large house on the right, you are on a shaded part of the route, and there will likely be a hose spraying water for you to run through. There is another very mild hill to get over and again, your mind begins to play tricks on you. Be mentally tough, don’t slow down, plow through this point and turn the corner onto Miller Rd. only two more miles to race!

However, sneaky mile 8 decides to jump up and steal it all back again!  Enjoy this stretch of road for as you turn right onto Court St, you will be likely be greeted by sunshine with the resulting hot pavement. The sun, the heat from the pavement, the vast width of the road, your tired legs, all combine to make this part of the route this writer’s least favorite. The best part of mile 8 is completing it, for now there are only 2 more miles to race!

Thanks for following me along this long. Come back tomorrow as we prepare for the final push to the finish line!

Coach Lee

PS: Please cruise through the other parts of The Running Architect website while here too!

Thanks :)

Touring The Crim Course - Mile 7

Welcome back, this time to mile 7 of the Crim route. Perhaps it’s my architectural heritage or maybe it’s the welcoming shade covered Hawthorne Dr. but the next two miles are my favorite part of the Crim route.

Mile 7

Just kidding!  Yes from mile 6 to 10 the course drops, but along mile 7 on beautiful Hawthorne and Parkside Avenues you will see your share of rolling hills, mostly shaded route and the many huge stately homes of Flint!  Stay to the left side of the shady Hawthorne Ave.

The views are nice, many neighbors are out to support you, there will be a band playing as you approach the mile mark,  but do not get too distracted. This is a very critical stretch to pay attention to the tangents!  This is especially true once you make the 90 degree left turn onto Parkside Ave. Here the shade is gone as your view opens up to the site of Swartz Creek Golf Course as you run along towards mile 8.

Thanks for following my posts. I invite you to also peek into my other pages of The Running Architect website too!

Enjoy!

Coach Lee