mamacate
December 2015!
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2007
- Messages
- 341
Thanks so much for this info. So even though it took you 3:43, you didn't get swept. I looked through all your photos too. When I read there would be character photos along the course, I didn't think I'd have time to take photos with any of them but I guess I just need to stay ahead of the sweepers.
By the way, if you do get swept, do you still get a medal? I assume no. I think I'd cry if I got swept!!
Yup. Now, if I'd been lined up in the back of Corral H, instead of the back of Corral E, I probably would have been swept at that pace. Those three corrals behind me gave me a 20 minute cushion or so. I did what a PP recommended: I didn't decide to take all those photos until I got to the MK (other than MM photos), and I did it based on having a pretty strong start relative to the minimum pace. Looking at where I was timewise, I felt like I had the cushion. It's important to remember that at 13.1 miles, being two minutes ahead of pace (14MM) means you've got 26 minutes of cushion, in addition to any corral advantage! Train for a 15MM and you're starting with a lot of options.
Minnie and Aurora had lines that were really long, and I should have skipped them, but I was a little crazy. All that resting made it easier for me to press on the gas between miles 6 and 10 and allowed me to feel like I had a good cushion ahead of the sweepers.
From what I have read, you do get a medal if you're swept, though I can understand how people would have mixed feelings about that. You don't get an official time, of course. And yeah, I'd cry too. But remember the WISH motto: DLF>DNF>>DNS (Dead Last Finish is greater than Did Not Finish WHICH GREATLY TRUMPS Did Not Start). Race days go wrong for all kinds of reasons, and even top runners can bonk or get injured and DNF.
There's a thread on the front page about people going into Goofy/Dopey relatively untrained, and one of the responses has a great story about finishing the marathon right alongside the sweepers (from a guys who is clearly used to being in the front of the pack). You can probably find some race reports by searching for princess swept. But like others have said, train well, and trust your training.
I ran 3.2 miles yesterday averaging 14:41 per mile. But that's the farthest I've run and I get slower with each mile.I'm planning to run 4 miles this weekend so hopefully, I'll get faster with each run.
A couple things to think about here. First, race paces and training paces differ. This is less true for beginners than for experienced runners, but I was training at a 14:40 pace for most of my training for my half last month, and my race pace was 12:30! Some of that bump comes from adrenaline, some of it comes from doing shorter race-pace/tempo runs that help you practice that pace. On race day, you put it all together.
In my Princess training I really felt like I was getting slower with every mile I added too, and I was. That's okay, and normal--13.1 is a distance you have to respect. I really recommend following a training plan, and using some kind of run/walk interval. The plans Jeff Galloway produces for Disney are excellent, and his Magic Mile is quite accurate as a race predictor. Jenny Hadfield also has great walk, walk/run, etc. plans all the way up to advanced running plans: http://www.jennyhadfield.com/training-plans/half-marathon/ Remember that Galloway's plans have gotten literally thousands of runners to the finish line at Disney.
I think John Bingham said that it's not about the race, it's about all the training leading up to it. The race is just the celebration of all you accomplished in training! Trust your training plan, focus on putting in the work on your way there, and you will be wearing that medal with a great big smile on race day! Can't wait to see your race report!

Cate