Subject: Leadville Trail 100 Report Date: Thu, 26 Aug 1999 23:59:37 EDT From: Letsrun100@aol.com The Leadville Trail 100 was the most difficult physical and mental challenge I have ever experienced!! This was my first 100, I probably should have chosen a less difficult course to begin my 100 mile career. All this started last January when I was considering a "finishable" 100. I had finished several 50 K's, 50 milers and one 100K; time to move up. Among the contenders were Rocky Raccoon and Kettle Moraine. I didn't consider these to be necessarily easier than Leadville, but I felt I had a more reasonable chance of finishing either of these the first time out. At any rate, Leadville was my choice. I ran two 50K's, three 50 milers and one 100K from January through July as training runs. I also attended the LT100 Training Runs in July, lots of fun and excellent training on the course. I highly recommend this weekend. My weekly mileage varied from 40 to 70 miles, with either a 30+ or a back-to-back 20+ mile weekly long run. I had a one time weekly high of 110 miles. Most of my training was at 3,100'. We arrived in Leadville two weeks before the race and walked/ran most portions of the course. Additionally we ran at the summit of Pikes Peak and along the trails at Maroon Bells. The weekend prior to the race we worked the finish line aid station for the LT100 Bike Race. Sidenote: After watching the mass start, it was pretty cool to see the cyclists and the expressions on their faces as they descended the Powerline. My intention was to follow Dana Roueche's ten part strategy, I practically memorized it. But, sometimes the best laid plans fall apart, as did mine. I made it to Mayqueen on schedule, missed Fish Hatchery by 5 minutes and things slowly dissolved from there. The run-from-one-telephone-poll-to-the-next strategy worked well along the road from Fish Hatchery to treeline. My running partners at that point, Dennis Thompson and Ken Chlouber, introduced the term "calf rope". I think it means "I give up", anyway when I heard the term it meant that I could walk. I was still well ahead of cutoffs when I reached Twin Lakes. My feet were killing me, my appetite was nonexistent and my stomach was in knots, but I pushed forward. I slowly made it to the summit of Hope Pass, but had lost a lot of time. Once over the top, I was able to run most of the way down. By the time I reached Winfield, I was had only 30 minutes to spare. It was there that I first spoke to Dan Baglione (trail sweep), I would see him several more times before the end of the race. Very nice guy, but not someone you want to see much of at Leadville, at least until the race is over. It wasn't until I was descending Hope Pass on the way back, that I realized I had made a big mistake, I neglected to put a light in my Winfield drop bag. As I recall, I thought I would surely be up and over Hope before dark!! Not quite. It gets very dark coming down the North side of Hope Pass without a light. Luckily, I latched onto a young lady (Joy Robertson) and her pacer and followed them for more than a mile. I finally reached Twin Lakes with only 15 minutes to spare before cutoff. I considered walking around the dark parking lot just to kill time and assure that I would miss the cutoff. My feet were really hurting and I just didn't feel like going on. But, there was Dan, "Way to go Jim, Sue's waiting at the aid station for you." Sue Norwood, who I'm sorry to say, missed the cutoff at Winfield by only a few minutes, had gotten a ride back to the start, and drove all the way out to Twin Lakes to crew the rest of the race for me. I don’t know if I would have actually done the walking thing in the parking lot; the brain I had then was not the same one I started the race with, but I felt I owed it to Sue, and myself, to do the best I could. At Twin Lakes I changed shoes and socks, grabbed my lights, some hot soup and headed up the hill towards Half Moon. I probably enjoyed this leg of the course the most. It was still a clear, starry night and I felt renewed because someone cared about me and was going to help take care of me; I wasn’t alone anymore. Coming into Half Moon there he was again, smiling Dan. This is supposed to be a tight cutoff, but I walked every inch of it and still had 20 minutes to spare. Same thing into Fish Hatchery, I didn’t run an inch. Now up Sugarloaf. I’m pretty tired by now, my feet are still killing me, and now it’s starting to rain. I walked all the way to the trailhead off Hagerman Pass Road, jogged a little on the trail and hit the pavement running. I think daylight must bring energy with it. "Hello, Dan, nice to see you." He informed me that it was two minutes to the aid station and 23 minutes until cutoff. Sue was waiting, with a huge smile. She told me I was gonna make it, but I would have to get to work now. I did lots of slow running on this leg averaging only a 15 minute pace. This leg was quite familiar to me, Sue and I had put the flagging out on Thursday morning. Finally the infamous Boulevard, it's uphill at the start and very boring. The overnight rain had made it even muddier than it was almost 30 hours earlier. The sun was shining brightly now and it was starting to become very warm and humid. Luckily I had enough cushion that I could walk most of it; so did my fellow runners. It was an overwhelming feeling when the finish line came into sight. The crowd was yelling and cheering, and there was Sue behind that pink and black tape. Everything I had done since January had paid off, it was a very emotional moment for me. Summary: -My right foot hurt from 7 miles on, Morton’s Neuroma—I need to get it fixed before my next attempt. -Stomach problems after Fish Hatchery, altitude I guess. -The weather was perfect, overcast, slight rain during the afternoon and night, kept it cool and kept the dust down on Winfield Road. -I tended to hot spots as soon as I became aware of them, zero blisters. -I believe I strained my diaphragm from all the heavy breathing I was doing at or above 11,000’. It’s still very painful even 5 days after the race. Legs and feet sore, sure, but diaphragm, who would have thought? Good Running, Jim O'Neil Letsrun100@aol.com Billings, MT