I’ve met John in March of 2006, but didn't start to get to know him until later that summer. If you’re a regular reader, you’ve probably heard me mention many of his accomplishments; only person to run all Twin Cities Marathons AND all Grandma’s Marathons, 80 marathons or ultras in the ‘80s, a string of like 19 out of 20 years sub-2:50, 2:28 PR the week after a 2:33, one of the first running store owners in the area, etc.
You can imagine that he has a lot of interesting stories to share. Last night we talked about how he got started running and his first marathon. Here’s the condensed version; after college he was getting fat so he started to run; ¾ mile out, stop, rest, ¾ mile back. Next a couple of buddies said he should do the Boston Marathon. He says okay and starts to train. He’s up to a long run of 17 miles with about 6 weeks to go. Then he finds out that the BAA has decided to implement a qualifying standard of 3:30. The local runners quickly organize a March marathon for people wanting to qualify for Boston. John runs 2:59, like 9 months after he started running. 4-5 weeks later he ran 2:53 at his first Boston.
He would definitely make for a great interview, however, he’s not much for email. I think during one of these runs I need to bring along my recorder and conduct an interview while on the run.
Anyway, I ran a couple of miles beforehand and finished with 13 for the day. This morning I managed 8 miles. For some reason Katie was up around 3:30. I put her back to bed, but she kept getting up. Needless to say, my 7.5 hours of sleep turned into 6 hours. That bites.
Speaking of Katie’s, I see the other Katie so often now, that it’s not even a big deal. I was trying to decide on some shoes for Grandma’s and ended up just taking her advice; “Stick with what you know.” Good luck to Katie (and Jason) at the USA 25K Championships this weekend.
Quote of the day;
“It’s really a simple sport. You have to put in the miles and race hard. We had a whole lot more guys running fast in 1981, and none of them were ever worried about staying in their heart rate zone or only increasing their mileage by 7.9% a week.” – Jason Lehmkuhle
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