I ran the Christmas Caper 10K today in an official time of 41:01.
As you can probably tell, it wasn't a great race.
This race, like several others in the PVTC Ed Barron series, was held on Hains Point - a ridiculously flat and fast route if it's not windy. And it was not windy today, so score!
It was fairly cold, though - in the mid-20s. I debated what to wear, and eventually went with tights and a longsleeve shirt. Did my standard warm-up, and then trotted over to the socially distanced start.
We started off, and immediately 3 other women pulled ahead of me. I let them go because I wanted to start conservatively. And then after an easy start I started reeling them in. I passed one, two, and then kept the third in my sights. The course was essentially a double out and back - my plan was to run the first lap conservatively and then open up for the second.
I had felt OK but not great during the warm-up - just stiff and tight. Many times, I'll feel one way when warming up and then completely different during the race. That wasn't the case today - I just felt cold and stiff throughout. And then my chest started tightening.
I tried to relax and work through it, but somewhere after the third mile, I pulled over quickly to use my inhaler, then jumped back in - getting passed by a woman and slotting in to third. Once I started up again I was able to make up ground, but things worsened as I did so. So I pulled over again about a mile later to take two more puffs. That was enough to finish the race but it sucked.
My splits ended up being:
Mile 1: 6:30
Mile 2: 6:24
Mile 3: 6:18
Mile 4: 6:38 (with stop)
Mile 5: 6:45 (with another stop)
Mile 6: 6:26
Last .31 (my watch read a bit longer than the course) in 1:58.
So not the race I wanted or the race I thought I was capable of. It happens, I guess. Cold dry air is one of my asthma triggers, so in retrospect this wasn't a complete surprise. I'm also due for my next Xolair injection on Monday (once a month medication that controls my asthma) and that may have played a role here also. The Xolair seems to wear off towards the end of the month. (I have been offered the option of getting it every 2 weeks, but I'm really reluctant to do so since that would double the time I spend each month in a doctor's waiting room.)
I do believe that the good races balance out the bad ones; so this one may just mean better races are on the way in 2020. I had a similar bad race at the Monument Avenue 10K a few years ago - same exact experience except that the cause was high pollen not cold dry air. And I ran some great races after that one. Bad races are the prelude to good ones.
[two obligatory Covid 19 notes:
1) I'm as sure as can be that this is asthma and not Covid 19. I know shortness of breath can be one of the symptoms of Covid 19, but that's unexplained and consistent shortness of breath, not momentary shortness of breath due to a known trigger. And Covid 19, to my understanding, does not cause brief attacks that are remedied with an albuterol inhaler. Plus I have no fever, chills, cough, sore throat, loss of taste/smell etc and pulse oximeter reads great.
2) yes, I know that one of the recommendations for those with asthma triggered by cold dry air is to wear a buff or similar. Believe me I've tried. I tried several times pre-pandemic. Doesn't work. Breathing the super humid air that results while running is another asthma trigger. Can't win.]