A Love Song for Running

This week, I polled my Facebook folks for blog topic suggestion.  Gina, my longtime friend, Maid of Honor and fellow distance runner’s suggestion was fun: “These are a few of my favorite (running) things.”  So here I present, in no particular order, a love song for my favorite things about my favorite sport.  Enjoy!

Favorite Route

I like an out and back route best.  I love to run to Shubie Park from the North End of Halifax as I get to enjoy the Halifax Harbour from the bridge and Lake Banook en route. I also like the Purcell’s Cove/Herring Cove loop although I have to be in the right ass-kicking hill mood for that one.

Favorite Weather

I love the first day of spring on which you can wear a tshirt and feel the sun shining warm on your bare skin.  I wait all winter long for this day.  I also love running on early summer mornings before the day gets hot.

Favorite Race

THE BOSTON MARATHON of course!

Boston Marathon 2009

 

 

 

 

 

 

Favorite Workout

A mixed session on the track where we use more than one distance and more than one pace.  Keeps it fun and interesting and without the need to do 10 of one thing.

Favorite Pre-Run Fuel

Marathon runner fueling up before a race

PB, Nutella, Choc Chip Eggo, Syrup. Mmmm.

I will admit that I am a reformed “peanut-butter-nutella-and-aunt-jemima on chocolate chip eggo waffles” addict.  In an effort to eat more foods that have actual nutritional value, I now go with an everything bagel with peanut butter and a tall glass of milk pre-long-run.  For after-work runs, cereal is my favorite: Multigrain Cheerios or Honey Shreddies.

Favorite Hydration Method

Does being handed water by volunteers during a race count? On most other days of the year, I use the 4 bottle fuel belt.  Right now I like fruit punch gatorade the best.  That “favorite” has a shelf life of about 3 weeks.

Favorite Long Run Fuel

Gu’s Triberry Gel (the lesser known of the berries) is totally my fav.  It’s deliciousness increases about 8-fold after 19km of running.  19k is the sweet k.

Favorite Post-Run Fuel

A large Steve-O-Reno’s Vanilla Latte made with homogenized milk.  My Steve-O girl knows my order.  And possibly wants to get my cold sweaty body out of her sight as quickly as possible, whatevs, the latte is delicious.

Favorite Running Song

I don’t run to music very often and never race with music because I can’t focus as well with music.  But if I need a song to motivate me, it has to be “Lose Yourself” by Enimen.

Favorite Running Conversation

Running partners

Erin & McKim

I do most of my training with 4 guys: McKim, Mike, Gordy and Liam.  Our long runs alternate between 2 hours and 2.5 hours.  I don’t really know how it happens but every single week, 2 + hours slip so quickly by in an enjoyable stream of silly jokes.  I can’t even name the topic: just silly jokes.  Last weekend, McKim had big news for me:  New Brunswick marathoner Paula Keating had been awarded an elite Boston Marathon bib (Go Atlantic Canadian Star!).  She won a race in Detroit and this seems to be how she got her bib.  So McKim figures we’ll just fax in my Freeze Your Gizzard win (yes, in a field of 70…) and get me my own elite Boston bib.  We laughed.  And laughed again.  And 2.5 hours disappeared.

I make somewhat of an effort not to bore all the regular, kind, non-running people in my life with “running talk.” I understand that you don’t want to hear about my 1000m splits, my pound to carb ratio or my mileage build strategy.  Running conversation lets me meet a very important conversation need: the need to obsess over every last detail of my marathon training.  Mike meets this need twice a week.

Favorite Cheering Methods and Instruments

Of course I love the Run Forrest Run (my super Cabot Trail Relay Team) tambourine and clappy hand combo.  I also have a special affinity for the cowbell.

I love everything that my coach says on a race course.  In fact, I crave the words that my coach has to say.  Sometimes I run by my coach and I can’t even make sense of what he’s yelling, but I love it anyway.

I very much enjoy cheering on friends in races and love making signs!

But above all, I love bagpipes.  I can not run by them without getting chills (the good kind that enhance performance).

Favorite Running Gear

My pink ASICS Speedstars are probably my favorite piece of gear right now!  I love the comments I get about them.  Last week, a 10-year-old boy yelled, “Those are sick!”

I also love my prized Boston Red Sox winter pullover, a score from the 2009 Boston Marathon Expo.  I have an orange skull and crossbones headband that I enjoy wearing.  My favorite shirt is Lululemon’s racer-back tank.  I love to race in these tanks.  I am aware that I look like an average skinny runner in this tank and that I don’t look at all intimidating but when I pull this one on, I feel fast and ready to kick some race butt.

Favorite thing about being a high school running coach

High school cross country Team

Girls XC Team

Seeing youth develop a love for the sport.  There are moments where I feel like I can actually see them bite off a piece of my love.  Last week, I left 8 runners (it’s March and track practice is optional until April) on the track doing warm-up to run to my car to get my pen.  When I returned, all 8 runners, boys and girls, were skipping around the track like kindergarten kids instead of running.  I affectionately yell at them: “What the heck kind of warmup is this?!”  They respond, “The We-Love-Running Kind!” they yell back.  “We love running so much we have to skip!”  That’s a beautiful thing.

Boys XC Team

Favorite Mantra

A marathon is a long race.  A long time to run and a long time to think.  For many marathoners, me included, a mantra (a word or quote that you repeat incessantly) is important to maintain mental focus and to shut up the inner monster who wants you to slack off, stop or walk. I’ve used many different mantras- different ones work at different times.  Sometimes new surprise mantras pop into my head during a race and they get me to the finish line.  Right now, my favorite mantra comes from previous coach Matt: “Take a Risk.”  It means push harder, push deeper, run faster.  Almost always, you have a second gear.  Or the ability to maintain a faster pace for longer.  Using it involves taking a risk.

Favorite Thing about Running

I’ve given this some thought, trying to come up with a one liner.  I have it.

Running helps me be my best self.

Boston Marathon: My Best Self

 

Running with a Coach

Like most distance runners, I am at least mildly neurotic about my body.  We have to be, our body is what lets us perform our sport.  For instance, I won’t listen to any of your advice about the health of my body.  I won’t wear those high heels. I won’t sled down that hill. I won’t bend that way in yoga.  I won’t eat that bacon, it’s long run day. I will, however, do everything that my coach says to do.  Because I trust him completely with my body.Maybe you’ve never had the opportunity to run and train with a coach so I’m going to tell you why I think having a coach is fantastic.

1. It’s so “easy”

Right now, my marathon training with coach Cliff is focused on the Boston Marathon- my 3rd running of the most glorious marathon on earth (in my opinion).  I’m running 85 km+ per week- fitness that will carry well onto the 430km road to Banjul in The Gambia.  You may say there’s nothing “easy” about running 85km per week.  You’re right. The “how” to train is the “easy” part.  Cliff dictates my training plan, I trust him completely and I do exactly what he says.  Last year when I was training with coach Matt, same thing (Matt left Halifax for Antigonish & university).  I’m good at working hard on the roads and on the track.  Plus it’s something that I love.

Although sometimes this absolute trust does not feel like it works out so well.  I end up doing really challenging workouts that, without a coach, I would never force myself to do.  For example, 3 x 20 minute repeats at half marathon pace on a Tuesday evening.  On this particular evening I pointed out that this was 60 minutes of half-marathon pace running.  Like ⅔ of a half marathon.  Cliff says “Yes. And?”  Or my “favourite” (read least favourite) this cycle, a set of 400m intervals at 5km pace alternating with 400m at marathon pace totalling 5km in the middle of a 2 hour long run.  But Cliffs tells me to do it, I do it.

Cliff sometimes laments that “no ones listens to him!” But then he’ll look at me and say, “except for you.”  In previous marathon training cycles, my longest long run has always been 32km (20 miles) which takes about 3 hours to run in training.  This cycle, Cliff has capped my long runs at 2.5 hours.  I pointed out once that I would never reach 32km with a 2.5 hour long run.  He asked me if I thought there was something magic about 32km?  I didn’t have much of an answer other than “yes sir, I will run 2.5 hours.”  So I listen, I do it and this keeps training “easy.”

2. You work much harder than you would if you were training solo

Sometimes I don’t want to do what my coach says.  Especially the quality speed segments in every second week’s long run.  But I know that on Tuesday, he’ll ask me about my long run.  So I have to do it.  Sometimes when my workouts take me away from Cliff’s “headquarters” at SMU, I don’t want to hit the fast pace he’s requested for intervals.  But I know he’s going to ask me how they were when I return.  And he’ll be happy when I say I was on pace.  And then I’ll be happy too.  I want to please him in a way that I can only compare to the way a kid wants to please their first grade teacher when learning to write their name.  Sometimes a runner needs this external motivation for fuel.  Especially when the work is hard.

3  If your coach is good, it’s awesome

Certainly some of the runner-coach relationship depends on both of your personalities.  With both Matt and Cliff, I feel like I hit the jackpot.

Cliff knows pretty much everything there is to know about training. He’s like a walking library.  Although careful getting him started, he’ll talk for a long time!  He’s funny.  He’s motivating. He’s generous with his time and he cares a lot about his runners.  Well, upon consideration, he’s motivating and generous with his time because he cares so much about his runners.

A distance runner and her coach

Erin and Cliff after the Moose Run

One day my husband and I were driving down Robie Street and saw Cliff walking.  We honked the horn and I called out “Hi Cliff!”  He yells back, as my car continues to drive, “Hi Erin!” But then he continues, “Erin! How were your legs feeling after the track on Thursday! I hope they are ok!”  He may have yelled more but we had driven way.  Classic caring Cliff.

Cliff is also incredibly generous with his time.  Matt was the same.  Cliff is outside with his runners most nights of the week from 4pm to 7:30pm, all winter long, wearing boots, mitts and 4 pairs of pants.  Matt used to follow his runners on his bike.  In January.  In snow and ice.  Dressed in a snowsuit.

I have a Nova Scotia-Gambia Association board of directors meeting on the 1st Tuesday of every month, a night I usually train with Cliff.  On more than one occasion, he’s come out on Monday night, just to coach me alone.  I try to get him to tell me workout instructions and then go home but he won’t hear of it.  “The people who want to be here are here.  Let’s train” he says.

Cliff coaches the city’s fastest and best runners.  I am by no means in the ranks of fastest or best.  Yet, I feel like he treats me exactly the same as he treats his fastest runners. Both Cliff and Matt can make you feel like you are the most important athlete that they coach.  This is truly a hallwark of a superb coach.

Sometimes Cliff says really funny training things that I laugh about for an entire workout.  One night, we were running intervals at 10k pace and he says “Tell me your best 10k again.”  I say “42:00”  He says, “Well, gawd, we can’t be running that slow.”  For the rest of the night, I run at a faster 10k pace with a grin on my face.  Another night he instructed us to do 200m repeats and I ask him how fast.  He gives me a standard Cliff response, “just go nice and relaxed and easy.”  I return to the start line having run 200m in 45 seconds.  He says, “Ok, much, much faster please.”  I do the rest at 40 seconds with a laugh in my stride.

4.  Your coach’s belief in your running ability becomes your belief in your running ability.

Cliff, and prior to him Matt, knew I could race faster long before I believed that I could race faster.  A good coach monitors your splits, your weekly mileage, your progress, your fitness, the way your body is responding to stress and can pretty accurately predict your performance on race day.  Putting your training cycle, goal setting and faith in a coach that you trust 100% is liberating.

Even if you are incredibly fit, a lack of confidence and belief in your ability will almost always cost you a good performance in a race.  Last year before the Boston Marathon, Matt told me to race @ 4:43/km pace to run 3:19:xx.  The year before I ran 3:32:36.  This was a whopping 13 minutes faster.

Erin Poirier at the finish line of the 2010 Boston Marathon

Boston Marathon 2010 Happy 3:19 Finish

I did my last workout with Matt on a Wednesday, 5 days before Boston, and felt really confident.  Thursday through Saturday were nerve-wracking for me.  Several very caring people asked me what my Boston goal was and I said “3:19” and they said, “Wow, that’s way faster than last year, are you sure you can do it?”  I had myself in a state of anxiety, doubting my ability, until I talked to training partner Candice.  “Matt knows your fitness and your racing ability” she told me.  I remembered, yes, yes he does. I remembered that I believed in Matt’s coaching skill, I trusted him completely, and I believed that he would never set me up for failure.  So I chose to believe I could run 3:19, no matter what anyone else said.  And I did it.  I went out and ran a very well executed 3:19.

This year in April, when Cliff and I set my race goal, I will believe that he’s correct. He’s a knowledgeable coach, I trust him completely and I’ll go out and do it.  But this year, I won’t be disclosing my goal.  I have no doubt in Cliff and no doubt in myself.  But I need to protect myself from other people’s doubt.

 

A Dingo Ate My Baby!

Ok, so there are no dingos in The Gambia.  And I don’t have a baby.  But there are a number of wild animals in The Gambia.  After the heat, wild animals are my next biggest concern related to my 430km run across The Gambia beginning July 7.
South Bank Rd, The Gambia

The South Bank Road, about 200km from Banjul.

The Gambian River runs down the center of the country and there is exactly one road above the river and one below.  I’ll be running along the South Bank Road, below the river.  My support vehicle will be driving ahead 4-6km and waiting for me to catch up.  No idling is important to me.

The South Bank Road is rural, especially “upcountry” where my run will begin.  It’s territory owned by animals.  Hippos, goats, cows, monkeys, lizards, large cats.  Case in point here in this photo: a road block crafted by cows.

Like many, I loved these animals as a kid. I still admire their beauty.  I understand people who want to go on safari. But I don’t want to lay eyes a single one of them in July.  I don’t do well with animal surprises while running.
This summer, Candice, Debbie and I were running in Kejimkujik National Park, single file on a narrow forest trail.  I was in the lead.  A deer popped up in front of me and I swear my heart stopped for 3 beats.  I froze.  My flesh suddenly turned to ice.  My girlfriends collided with my motionless form.  Not a big deal, the deer was more afraid of me and it ran away.
a hippo in The Gambia

A Gambian Hippo. Photo from linked newsstory

Hippos

If I pull this frozen statue trick in The Gambia, I pretty much become hippo bait.  There were news reports of hippos and bush pigs destroying farmers’ crops along the Gambia River this winter.  In 26 different villages.  Click here for that story.  I saw one hippo in Zimbabwe in 1999.  I’ve never seen a hippo in The Gambia, and would like to keep it that way.  So please, hippos, leave white running girl alone.  Go back the river, there’ll be nothing to see on the South Bank Road this July.

Monkeys and a volunteer nurse in West Africa

Monkeys- perhaps the cutest of all rabies-vessels.

Monkeys

With an enduring image of a monkey jumping on Ashley’s back in 2007, I’ve been considering getting the rabies vaccine.  Until I learned that it’s very expensive.  Like $230 per dose and you need 3 doses expensive. Training partner McKim has offered to take me to the vet with his dog Bailey where it’s cheaper.  He figures I weigh about 25 lbs more than Bailey, it could work. Always looking out for me, that McKim!

Canadian girl with a snake around her neck

There's a cold pool of fear under my smile.

Snakes

Mel Connors and I didn’t know each other before traveling to The Gambia.  48 hours after we met, we arrived in our bedroom in Fajara, where there was one double bed.  Snuggled together under the same mosquito net, our friendship blossomed.  However, despite our strong bond, I once left her for dead.  By accident.  We were walking down a path.  A snake shot out from a bush and slithered speedily towards my sandaled feet.  My fight or flight response kicked in immediately. I ran far, far away, as fast as I could.  It was crazy.  I didn’t even think, I just ran.  And I left Mel with the snake.  I didn’t even warn her…  I don’t deal with surprise animals.  I could barely deal with this snake around my neck.  The snake owner took it away from me as soon as this photo was snapped because my anxiety was stressing out the snake.  And I was crushing my friend Pa Modou’s hand.  He was probably as happy as the snake to be out of this situation!  What kind of snake is this? I don’t even know- a scary one.

A monitor lizard

Major scary monitor lizard

The Nile Monitor Lizard

Hippos kill more humans than any other animal on the continent of Africa.  But in my opinion, this is the scariest of all animals: the Nile Monitor Lizard.  It’s basically a crocodile the size of a large dog with fast moving legs, a long tail and strong jaws.  It’s a day time animal that hangs around more in the rainy season.  Oh, and it’s a carnivore, nice.  I witnessed this monitor lizard bomb out of a bush in a monkey park.  Of course, I didn’t take this photo, Ashley did.  I was trying not to pee my pants.   God I hope I don’t pee my short shorts while running on the road to Banjul.  Imperative to this goal: don’t see any monitor lizards. My palms are sweaty as I write this.  You’ll have to read your own information about the monitor lizard here.

So like the heat, there’s not much I can actually do to prepare for animal sightings.  Unless, I suppose, some of my running partners start surprising me on our runs by jumping out of a hiding spot and yelling “monitor lizard!”  So as it is, animal sightings will happen.  I’ll get through.  I’ll arrive at the Atlantic Ocean in Banjul.  I’ll raise lots of money to keep kids alive through HIV and malaria education.

 

Why I am Running

When I was working with youth in The Gambia, they loved to sing this song by African hero Philly Lutaaya.  They sang it everyday.

Nova Scotia Gambia Association Youth

Ashley and I with our Gambian students

My job as a nurse was to prepare my Gambia students with the HIV knowledge that they needed to be peer health educators.  My students then returned to their schools to share HIV prevention messages with youth in their communities- teaching them to be safe, keeping them alive.

This song, “Alone and Frightened” has become Africa’s anthem against AIDS, especially since Philly lost his life to AIDS at age 38.  I regret that I never recorded my students singing this song but here it is by Lutaaya himself.

This is why I am running.

This is why I am running all the way across The Gambia beginning July 7.

This is why I am running the Blue Nose Full Marathon on May 22 even though it’ll be my second full marathon in 5 weeks.

This is why I want you to join me.

Please stand up and fight with me.

Click here to sponsor or join Team Love4Gambia to fight AIDS.

|Donate Now Through CanadaHelps.org!|

Meet Kate & Wish Her a Happy 10th Birthday

Kate will be 10 years old on March 10. She doesn’t want gifts, she wants donations to Love4Gambia.
Kate is my long run partner Liam’s daughter.  She loves to run too.  She loves to cheer on runners at races and boy do I ever love her sweet, smiling face at a finish line!
Erin and the birthday girl

Kate and I after a long run with her Dad

Kate learned about my Love4Gambia plans to run across a country in Africa from her mom, Brenda, a beautiful person that I used to work with.  Kate told her mom that she wanted to help me raise money for the kids in The Gambia.  Kate has a big heart and a generous spirit and she agreed to be in charge of the 50/50 draw at our Italian Club pasta dinner.

One day in February, after Liam and I did a long run together, he asked me to come in because “Kate had something to tell me.”  Seated at the kitchen table, drinking milk together, Kate told me that she had decided that she only wanted donations to Love4Gambia for her 10th birthday. For the kids in The Gambia.  She didn’t want any gifts (except from mom & dad).  I was speechless.  Thinking about this moment, while I write, my eyes fill with tears.

Go Erin Go Gambia

Magnet from Kate

Kate and I had fun over February break, making her birthday party invitations using photos from my trip to The Gambia in 2007.  She also gave me this super magnet. I look at it every day.

Please help make Kate’s birthday wish come true and donate to kids in The Gambia for her.  She’s turning 10 and $10 would be a happy birthday gift  .  All you have to do is click here or click my “donate now” button on the homepage.

I know that Kate is going to grow up into an exceptional young women.  She is exceptional now.  At age 10, she is already living the change that she wants to see in the world.   How lucky the world is to have Kate.

Happy birthday, sweet girl.

Kate and her Gambian headband

 

Erin Poirier still faster than Erin Callaghan

Today was Run Nova Scotia (RNS)’s Back to Basics 8 miler, the kick-off to the RNS race season, and my second race with my new married name.  Due to some poor planning on my part, it was totally back to basics for me!

My coach Cliff suggested that we run this race as our weekend workout.  With our marathon training, we alternate 2 long runs.  One week’s long run is 2.5 hours.  The other is a 2 hour long run with a quality speed segment in the middle.  This week’s quality speed segment was  threshold-pace (the pace that you can run hard at for one hour) running and fit nicely with today’s 8 mile race.  As long as it fits safely in your training plan, racing a few tune-ups is good preparation for your key race.  You go through nutrition, wardrobe, pacing, finishing strong, refueling- all good practice for success in your key race.

But I did a few things wrong today!  I arrived at the Fire Hall start with my girl Candice, chatted with Cliff a bit, then looked at my Garmin while in line for the bathroom.  Curiously,  my Garmin 405 was stuck on the default screen and said it was 2159 hrs- the time at which I plugged it in to charge the night before.  When I finally got it to unfreeze, it flipped screens and read 2% battery.  Gulp.  Yikes.  I had 2 choices and I chose not to panic.

My training partner Mike was also racing.  While we do almost all of our workouts “together” Mike is faster than me and I am used to running a precise distance behind him.  I figured I would just do that, race at my prescribed distance behind him.  He’s tall and easy to pick out.  I would just race by feel: back to basics.

Mike and I warmed up on the course and I was to relieved to see mile markers.  I had my splits worked out in min/km at goal 4:15/km.  Cliff pulled out his coaching grids and converted my pace to min/mile at 6:50/mile and, bless him, also gave me his chronograph watch.  I’m very bad at math while running but I would at least have a stopwatch.  I would be at least good for… 2km.

So we were off, me back to basics with my chrono watch.  Everyone knows that you can’t win a race in the first mile but you can certainly blow a race in the first mile.  I am usually so vigilant about being well-behaved in the first mile.  But, wow, I rely on my Garmin a lot!  Other training partner Tonya was with me, I had no Garmin, and I hit mile 1 @ 6:25.  Opps.  Tried to settle down and run smart.

Runners after Run Nova Scotia's 8 mile race

Run Friends Candice, Erin, Mike, Lexi

This was an out-an-back race, my favorite.  Seeing the leaders doubling back on me after the turn-around always gives me an energy lift.  I was looking forward to seeing Mike double back and was excited when he crested a hill in front of me, looking really strong and smooth (way to go MJ!).  I love when I get to turn around and see my racing friends on my way back- Lexi looked smiley and cheery as always (she’s the happiest runner ever) and I was thrilled to see Candice running in control, much faster than her long run pace.

On the way back, no less than 3 men who were still on their way out called to me “I need a pair of those shoes!”  Love for the hot pink Speedstars.  They are fast!  I had moved into 3rd female at this point and put enough distance between myself and her so that I couldn’t hear her behind me anymore.  I was happy.  I felt strong.  I’ve been talking to one of my running friends about believing in themselves more.  And had sent them a Nike quote saying, ““The only one who can tell you ‘you can’t ‘ is you. And you don’t have to listen.” I thought about this for a bit.

But I had no idea what I was doing pace-wise.  I’d lost the ability to count in increments of 6:50.  I had calculated my overall time using 4:15/k pace for 13km @  55:15.  But hadn’t been careful enough to convert miles to km.  8 miles is less than 13km so my goal time was actually too slow.  I saw Cliff at 1400m to go and was happy.  I see Cliff and my mental boss says “Look good!”  And then I feel good.  I was going to finish slower than 55:15 but still 55:xx so was pleased.  This race wasn’t easy for me but I didn’t struggle and was able to feel strong for all 8 miles.

3rd Place Certificate for Run Nova Scotia raceI finished 3rd female and was really proud to round out the top three females- all of us Cliff’s runners.  Cliff coaches many of the fastest runners in the city and he makes me feel like I belong with him every single day.  If I was 30 minutes slower, he would still make me feel like I belong with his club.  Yet I’m very happy to help round out a top-3 Cliff sweep.

Timex Watch

Timex Prize!

When I got home, I learned my mile-km conversion mistake and that I was actually running around 4:20/km.  I say it was pace calculation problems and not fitness.  I’m looking at my timex prize and don’t care.  So congratulations to my racing friends- Mike, Lexi, Candice, Tonya and bring on another week of training.

 

ASICS Speedstars ARE Stars!

I love ASICS.  I love the way their sneakers hug my feet with the just the right amount of hug.  Like a hug from your sister.  Not a hug from your best friend after a one-year separation and not a hug from an awkward male relative.  I love the way they feel when you go for your first run in a new pair.  The GEL® is one of my favorite features and, in a new pair, I feel like Tigger from Winnie the Pooh, like I could bounce my way home on a 32km run.

Asics Speedstars

Recently, the ASICS Speedstars (aka pink panthers) came into my life through amazing sponsorship by Aerobics First and ASICS.  I ran my first race with them at the PEI Freeze Your Gizzard Half Marathon.  The Speedstars are considered lightweight training shoes, not racing flats.

 

Advantages of Lightweight Trainers:

Training and racing in lightweight trainers can provide a few advantages.  When running a race of any length, a weight drop of only a few ounces can make you run faster as you can cover more distance with less effort. Most experts agree that reducing the weight of your running shoe can shave 1.0-1.5 seconds per mile for every ounce of weight saved.  For example, I train in ASICS GEL- 1160s, which weigh about 9.5 ounces per shoe.  I now race in Asics GEL-Speedstar, which weigh about 7.5 ounces per shoe.

The difference of 2 ounces per shoe should help me shave 2-3 seconds per mile off of my race times.  Not very much, you think?  Over the course of a marathon, that amounts to a savings of about 52-80 seconds.  Pretty much one full minute!  Any runner chasing a BQ or PB knows how valuable one minute is.

Runners must beware though, the lighter you go (and the longer the race), the greater the potential risk of injury.  If you are thinking about switching to a lighter shoe for racing, you should make sure that you don’t have any injuries and gradually get used to running in them.  Before the Freeze Your Gizzard Half Marathon, I ran 3 x 15km workouts in the Speedstars. I’ll run up to 2.5 hours in my new Speedstars before Boston Marathon.

Let me tell you about some of the Speedstars’ Best Features

1. Tigger-bounce, aka GEL® Cushion System

In the rearfoot of the Speedstar you find the GEL® Cushion System which absorbs shock during impact phase and allows for a smooth transition to midstance.  The GEL® Cushion System is the one feature that drives my Asics brand loyalty.  Some racers feel really flat, like your foot is right on the road.  I love feeling the GEL® in a lightweight racer.

In order to keep the shoe light, ASICS uses SoLyte® midsole material, a midsole compound that is lighter than ASICS standard EVA and SpEVA®.  This keeps me loyal as it light yet provides cushioning and durability.

2. Super light = Fast!

The Speedstars tip the scale at 7.4 ounces. Factors such as the above mentioned SoLyte® midsole material keep them light.  This may help me save as much as 80 seconds in the Boston Marathon.  During the Freeze Your Gizzard Half Marathon, they felt as light as socks.  In this, my first race with the Speedstars, I won the women’s field!  Obiviously the Speedstars ARE stars!  See here for more on that race.

 3. Upper Mesh

The upper is open mesh, which provides excellent breathability so feet stay cool and dry.  Let me translate this for you in Canadian winter running lingo.  When it’s hovering around zero, snow melts into large sidewalk puddles.  When you put your foot directly in a large puddle full of shocking cold water, it soaks your foot.  As long as you’re wearing quality socks, the Speedstar mesh allows your foot to dry quickly so that you are not sloshing around in a cold squishy mess until you get home 12 km later.

4. 3M Reflective Material

I must include this for its comical irony.  ASICS has kindly included 3M reflective material in the Speedstar- a thoughtful gesture to enhance your visibility on the road.  Helping keep runners safe. However, let me now point out that the HOT PINK color pretty effectively guarantees your visibility on the road.  In fact, the hot pink color has the capacity to stop traffic (evidence Saturday, Feb 19: 2 separate cars slowed, honked at me, pointed at my feet and gave me thumbs up while I was down at Maringal Rd Seaport).  However, the Speedstars come in colors other than hot pink so this is an important safety feature.

Runner at Halifax Seaport wearing ASICS Speedstars

Toe-off after smooth transition from heel to forefoot

Canadian and Gambian runners in The Gambia

Spider, Erin and ASICS Nimbus in Africa

Like many runners, I have a shoe saga.  I originally ran in Asics Nimbus and was in Tigger-heaven.  I ran in these for several pairs, left a pair in Africa with my running partner’s happy sister, and then began training in 2008 to qualify for the Boston Marathon.  During this 2008 winter training cycle, I developed arch pain in my left foot.  I learned that my left foot pronated (rolled inward) causing stress and strain along the muscles that lift my big toe, into my calf.  The pain persisted through excellent physiotherapy treatment.  So I switched to the Asics 1140s- a shoe with a medial post to control pronation.  My arch pain improved.  I qualified for Boston at the 2008 Fredericton Marathon.

In the fall of 2008, my arch pain returned.  I added Arch Molds, over the counter running insoles that provided extra stability to prevent my left foot from rolling inward.  I ran ok for a bit.  Then the pain came back and was again unresponsive to physiotherapy- logical because the pain was originating from my pronation and treating muscles doesn’t fix pronation.  I saw talented pedorthist (and Love4Gambia sponsor) Freeman Churchill and began to run in custom orthotics.  I set a personal best of 3:32:36 at Boston Marathon that year.

During my 2010 Boston Marathon training cycle, I began to train with Coach Matt Sheffield through Aerobics First.  Freeman had been trying to get me to clean up some aspects of my stride but I only saw Freeman for short periods in his office.  Now Matt was with me 2 nights a week, watching me run.  I worked really hard with him to improve a few aspects of my stride- running taller through the hips and landing on the balls of my feet. I began to run faster.  And more efficiently.  And then I began to notice new muscular problems popping up in my glutes.  Curious, I took out my orthotics and the glute problems disappeared.  But then my arch hurt.  I put the Arch Molds back in and felt perfect. A puzzle. I went back to see Freeman and learned that I in fact no longer needed orthotics. I had cleaned my stride up enough, had improved my biomechanical efficiency enough, that I no longer required orthotics.  He “blessed” sneakers with use of Arch Molds.  Given my newfound efficiency, I was brave enough to try out the lighter weight Asics DS Trainer and I had the run of my life at Boston that year: 3:19:37.

I’ve been training and racing happily with a combo of ASICS 1150s/1160s and a lightweight trainer and Arch Molds since.