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Location:

Cottonwood Heights,UT,USA

Member Since:

May 18, 2011

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

Personal Records

Aided

5k-17:01 (Halloween Half 2011)

10K-36:06 (Halloween Half 2011)

Half- 1:22 (Halloween Half/Des News/HC 2011/2013)

30k- 2:06:49 (SGM 2013)

Marathon- 3:07:18 (TOU 2011)

Unaided and (some) outdated!

400M- 1:03 (HS 2000)

800M-2:23 (HS 2000)

1500M- 4:45 (USU 2001)

3000M- 10:33 (USU 2001)

3200M- 11:24 (HS 2000)

5k- 18:10 (USU 2001)

10k-39:36 (Classic 2013)

30k- 2:09:16 (WRC 2012)

50 miler- 9:46:43 (TNF 2015)

 

Short-Term Running Goals:

2019 Tenitive Race Schedule

4/15 Boston Marathon

7/24 Deseret News 10k

 

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

I love training with others both on road and trail. I also find benefits of running solo when I need to focus and regroup.

Fun fact: Although I prefer to run outside, I don't mind the treadmill for pace accountability and for the blind assumption that I can run really fast. I have a lot of secret treadmill PR's at 0% incline:) 

Personal:

 

 

Headsweats 25% off code: Summers_running

 

 

 

I am a Mormon

 

I am married to a supportive and driven husband. Together we enjoy geocaching, hiking, camping, reading and playing games with our three rambunctious children.

Aside from running, I am a homemaker and a Mental Health Therapist. Running has given me the ability to better concert my energies between my family, faith and friends. 

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Race: WRC 10k (6.2 Miles) 00:41:37, Place overall: 1, Place in age division: 1
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
3.000.003.003.209.20

**Time posted is a complete guess.No official time and no watch to boot, will post later today. 

 Isn't a big part of racing about strategy? When you're going to push it, when to hold back, who to stay with, how to pass, when to pass, running the tangents, when to surge... That's what I thought after a group of girls formed a circle around me just after the finish. A wolf pack showing their fangs! The first one says, "Hi what's your name?" I responded. "Well Tara, how come you didn't lead the race?" Instead of going into detail about my injury, fitness level and hopes to be able to run the entire thing, I opted for a simplified answer, " I just tried to hold on today and do the best I could." The next one chimes in from behind. "Yeah, but that makes it harder mentally on the leader." Another one adds, "Just go in front next time!" I reply, "No I don't think so, I don't like to lead early on, it's too much pressure and scary on a course like this, you don't know what the end..." Another cuts me off "Yeah, well, that's not fair, you make someone else do all the hard work!" And with that they all ran off in a group as they each took turns turning their heads while delivering a well seasoned stink eye, I must say. Wow. That was a first. I sat their stunned for a few moments and thought about running after them for further clarification but was pressed for time and needed to run home to relieve the sitter. However thinking about it, it would appear the issue might have been wasting too much energy on intimidation rather than competitive racing.

Turning back the clock... I spent the early morning hours in bed listening to the wind and wondered how it would impact the race today.  I drove to Ogden and began warming up. I already had some doubts when my Garmin died after a night of recharging. I hate that watch. Warmed up about 1.5 miles and stopped with the feeling I was on borrowed time with my ankle, so left it at that.

The race started out well. Since I was running blindly, I threw time out the window knowing wind and hills would be exigent. I made a strategy early on to run with the leader until I felt comfortable taking the lead. Then I would sprint to the finish in a dual competition. That was the plan. I ran comfortably behind the first girl for the first 4 miles- with gaps ranging 2-5 seconds. It felt relaxed and easy, but I also knew what was to come. The first 3 miles were pretty downhill with a tailwind. The last 3 were back up the hill with a greedy headwind, especially the last 1.5. 

At 4 miles, she turned around and deliberately moved to the side as she motioned me to pass her. We were all alone on the street at that moment, and I took that as a "stop drafting off me!" cue. Dually noted, I took turns drafting off of her and other men, and others did the same to me. All is fair in my eyes... so I passed her and took the lead, but knew she would pass me again as we were approaching the last 1.5 climb to the finish.

The wind was strong and I wanted to walk. At the top of the hill she had gained about 50+meters on me and I was tired! My heart felt like it was going to explode. It was apparent I was not conditioned for this today. I decided to resign my plan and let her take it. I didn't think I could gain back that ground either with about 400 meters left and feeling complete leg fatigue. I kept my eyes focused just in front of me as several guys passed. I looked up again and thought she looked closer than before....maybe there was a chance. I put it in double drive X10 and sprinted to a 1st place finish, maybe only a few seconds ahead (no watch or results yet). Yes!

I immediately felt dizzy and sat on the curb to get myself together. Several men approached me, all commenting the same, "You looked like death up that hill", " I didn't think you were going to make it!" Wow, you looked tired!" Then to top it off,  the wolf pack confrontation.

Here's my two second soap box -> Every competitive runner has a strategy, and if you don't, then you're goals are different. I don't tell people how to run their race, don't tell me how to run mine. Rant over. What do you think? All comments and opinions are welcome:)

Next race is a 10 miler. The strategizing begins.....

I'll post the time after the results come out later today. I am guessing around 43?  Felt like 6:55ish pace for most of it. No clue.

 Happy running!


Saucony Pro Grid Miles: 6.20Saucony Kinvara Miles: 3.00
Comments
From Burt on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 14:04:01 from 72.223.93.158

As the great poet Kenneth Rogers once said, "you gotta know when to hold them, know when to fold them, know when to walk away, know when to run." Next time take the lead early, beat them by 2 minutes, and rub it in their faces. Then blog about itand find out that they are

From Burt on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 14:04:26 from 72.223.93.158

members of the blog.

From josse on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 14:09:13 from 166.250.9.216

What a bunch of babies, that's what racing is all about. Knowing when to lead and when not to. It's not your fault they don't know what kind of shape their in and how to race. Big huge BRATS. Kind of spoils a win, but great job, and I would do it to them again if they run the 10 miler.

From Tara on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 14:11:11 from 75.169.153.171

LOL, I hope so. I didn't want to say names, but it was Allie and her JAJA crew posing as gang members, wolf gang members. You gotta know when to hold em' know when to fold em' know when to walk away, know when to run! Classic.

From Christi on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 14:11:54 from 174.56.35.183

Some people are just sore losers...I wouldn't worry about it-strategizing is what racing is all about. Good job and win today!

From runningafterbabies on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 14:24:08 from 71.195.219.247

I definitely don't think coming from behind is an unfair racing strategy. Besides, we all know if you hadn't had your hiccup in training, you would have finished well ahead of the poor sport.

From James on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 14:27:09 from 174.23.146.70

So I can't tell you how to run, dang! Good job today! It is always fun to beat the the poor sports. Glad you didn't die either.

From JD on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 14:37:08 from 71.213.33.129

congratulations on a well run race and win! interesting reaction from the fellow competitors -

From Kam on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 14:59:47 from 174.23.234.192

You must have been well under 42 minutes. I came in at 42:30 and you were looking pretty comfortable.

From Andy on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 15:22:24 from 208.54.4.180

Congratulations on the win. Don't give what they said another thought. They are probably just upset about the huge prize money that you are going to win.

From Kam on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 15:45:04 from 174.23.123.49

Where were these whack jobs? Next time bring some string cheese to go with their whine.

From MarkP on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 16:10:44 from 97.117.96.90

Great job today. It was a perfect day for a race drafting strategy. I'm surprised those girls were so caddy about it since it happens every race...you just taught them an important lesson (rookies)!

From Jake K on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 17:45:19 from 67.177.21.60

Tara - Congrats on the win!

You should not feel bad at all for how you raced - from my standpoint, you ran smart and savvy! You know who never leads races until the last lap- Bernard Lagat. And many others who have lots of olympic and world championship hardware!

Great RACING today!

From JulieC on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 19:51:43 from 168.103.185.248

wow that was very interesting drama at your finish line today!! uhh....if you want to win you got to run faster....that's all there is to it. Congrats!! :D.

From Jake K on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 19:53:21 from 67.177.21.60

+1 on Julie's comment - exactly!!! :-)

From Andrea on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 19:54:53 from 67.177.21.60

1st place! Awesome job Tara. Be happy about winning!!!

Last year I had a girl draft off me for an entire 25k and then outkick me at the very end. Honestly I complained about it at the end of the race, but ultimately she was smarter in her racing strategy than I was and won the race because of it. I don't blame her, and I think it's pathetic for these girls in your race to be petty about it.

From emruns on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 19:56:10 from 76.27.114.171

Sounds like sour grapes to me! They wouldn't have said anything if you hadn't won. You ran smart, and anyone who knows anything about strategic racing would say the same.

Enjoy your win. You're amazing. And take great satisfaction in your defeat of some extremely poor sports!

From JulieC on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 19:57:30 from 168.103.185.248

I think that also happened to Kara Goucher at the Boston Marathon with the lead pack let her lead. She should have NEVER taken the lead near the finish with about three miles to go I think. They all outkicked her and pulled away. She was still amazing though to watch!!

From JulieC on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 20:29:34 from 168.103.185.248

Tara, I was just reminiscing the two races I "met" you at last year for the first time. Remember 4th of July 10k?? I caught up to you and then you blasted to the finish line at top speed??? I was like saying to myself "you go girl". And you sure did. Then the Speedy Spaniard there you were again passing by me at mile 4 with ease. Like I cared. Mainly I wished I had your energy. I totally never thought I needed to conjure up some reason why you flew to the finish line faster than I. You were faster. Same point as I made above :D. Those two races it really was nice seeing we were close to the same fitness level. And now after you are getting back to your more serious speedy self (minus the ankle problems) I may not have that chance again. That was fun. Really.

From Tara on Sun, Feb 26, 2012 at 16:08:23 from 75.169.153.171

Josse-You make me laugh. Thanks for the support!

Christi- Thanks. You are a tough runner. You know all about strategy.

Melody-Hiccop or not, probably the same result. 10 miler however, no mercy:)

James- Hi.

JD- Thanks for the comment:)

Kam- When are the results going to post already!? Cheese and whine, ha ha, that was good!

MarkP-So glad to have put a face with a name. Rookies! Ha haha.

Jake- I always sort of think you know it all. I'm being serious. You always have good things to say. I feel like taking notes sometimes. Congrats on your windy win as well!

JulieC- I remember those races. Someday I will learn to run strong through the entire race, rather than just the last 100 meters...and I LOVE that you made 3 comments! You rock!

Andrea- I thought a lot about what you said....I wonder if I would have thought differently if that had happened to me. Good to put in perspective. Did you bully the winner after the race too? :) I must say drafting for an entire 25K is a bit much, but then again she did win. huh. Strategy.

emruns- Did I run with you on that windy group run last month? Anyway, sour grapes. Hopefully none of us ever falls into that category. Easy to do just after a race when you're tired though. Hopefully that was just that. Thanks for the comment:)

Burt- Go away chicken fat, go away..or something like that. Oh, and don't check my grammar.

From MichelleL on Sun, Feb 26, 2012 at 16:33:36 from 42.98.255.52

I think if you were 2-5 seconds behind, then that is not close enough to draft, you have to be .5 second behind. And you passed her with two miles to go, so she had plenty of time to respond, and that means you were ahead of her for part of the head wind. If you are right with someone and know you should be (not like "hanging on") then I would say you should take a turn, but if you are just hanging on, then draft by all means while you are behind if you can keep close enough. Now I will definitely be watching for who got second :D You won fair and square.

From allie on Sun, Feb 26, 2012 at 16:40:28 from 97.126.223.139

tara: congrats. sorry your win was attacked at the end, but i am not seeing a problem here. maybe if you had jumped out of a box at 5.9 and sprinted past them while laughing...

you ran a good race, and your performances in the series so far show how strong you are this year, even with the injury you have been battling. keep it up and don't let this experience spoil the next race or intimidate you. just keep running *your* race and wearing *your* cool spandex.

From Bonnie on Sun, Feb 26, 2012 at 16:46:09 from 64.119.33.134

pacing and strategizing IS part of the race. They were just spoil sports because they couldn't hang with the ALPHA wolf.

You rock!

From Burt on Sun, Feb 26, 2012 at 17:55:06 from 72.223.93.158

I checked it but didn't say anything. (their/there)

From Kam on Sun, Feb 26, 2012 at 20:27:52 from 174.23.253.211

Still no official results...Tara, next race, draft behind until mile 9, then pass the girl while with a primal yell, like you did on that windy/rainy LPT run, and drop her like a bad habit. Or, start way back, letting 5 minutes elapse from gun time till you pass over the mats. Let them think they took you easily, only to be stunned when the results post you as the winning runner. Oh, the variations on this come-uppance are endless.

From Tara on Mon, Feb 27, 2012 at 14:16:55 from 159.212.71.17

Results are back finsih time was better than expected...41:37. I like your idea Kam -start back by several mintues. I would hate for that to come back and bite me in the behind:) BTW, saw a posted video of the 10k and it is very apparent I was not drafing off of anyone in several shots...ha ha proof!!

From Burt on Mon, Feb 27, 2012 at 14:49:02 from 72.223.93.158

Drafting or not, it's still mentally harder on the leader.

From Scott Wesemann on Mon, Feb 27, 2012 at 15:08:27 from 205.158.160.209

Congrats on the win!!! You ran a very smart race and it paid off for you.

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