Wednesday, January 23, 2013

To F3 or not to F3? That is the Question....

I am in day seven of an injury layoff.

The injury started over the holidays when I was experimenting with new running shoes. One pair caused my foot to land differently and thereby strained my ankle ligaments. This caused some numbness and tingling in my ankle and foot. Despite this fact, I kept running. As I got stronger, my ankle felt better, but I was likely still doing incremental damage to it every time I ran. Last week, my ankle had had enough punishment and it could no longer hide the injury, so it shot pain signals to my brain at the end of a run. That was enough for me to decide to rest it and get the thing healed far in advance of Boston. I still want to be able to run a competitive 26.2 miles.

Most web articles on ankle injuries don't give a definite recovery time for an ankle injury. Most articles' advice is to see an ankle specialist. Having been to the doctor for an ankle injury before (last year), I know the prescription for a mild sprain is typically:

  1. Rest
  2. Strength exercises

However, since open-ended waiting is extremely frustrating, especially when a race countdown is looming, I wanted someone to tell me the exact number of days I needed to rest until I could start running again. In my search for an answer, I found a New York Times article which said that for a "grade one" ankle injury (i.e. a mild injury) the MINIMUM time off should be seven to ten days. I have rested seven days, and although my ankle feels better, it does occasionally get those tingly sensations and is only 50% less sore than last week. Does this mean I can begin running on it? I have paid for the F3 Half Marathon on Saturday. So, I have been coming up with scenarios on what to do:

1) Run a test run tomorrow of 1 to 2 miles to see how the ankle feels and make a decision tomorrow whether to race on Saturday.

2) Don't run until Saturday. This would allow for the most time to heal, but then risk "shocking" my ankle with 13.1 miles. Plus, I may go 2 miles and realize that it was a bad idea and have to pull a DNF.

3) Do a run/walk combo on Saturday and put up a really bad half time and still risk injury.

4) Blow off the race entirely and take another week off and make sure my ankle is at 95% before I start running again.

In any case I have two days to make a judgement call. Right now, I would say there is a 30% chance I will run the F3.

12 comments:

  1. Ugh. That really sucks. Do they have a 5k option that might not be as potentially straining on the ankle? Either way, avoid any advice i give. I frequently make bad decisions.

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    1. Unfortunately, I think it is just a Half. Yes, it really sucks. Sometimes the ankle feels fine for awhile, and I get pumped and think that I am cured. Then it starts to act up, letting me down again! :-(

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  2. Even though it sucks to DNS, I would trust your gut, focus on the long term goal and skip the race if you have any lingering feelings that it is not 100 percent recovered. BUT, it is far easier for me to tell someone else to do that.

    Can you still go to the post-race party?

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    1. Thanks for the advice. Yes, the long term goal is most important. Since writing this, my ankle is feeling better (knock on wood). Still have to decide if it can handle 13.1 miles, so I'm more like 50% now. Anyway, I would like to go to the party and see the CRBs. I will see how the morning plays out.

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  3. What a pain in the butt :( I know you'll make the smartest decision, even if it means losing the money over the race :(

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    1. Yes it is a pain. The money is already spent, so I have already "lost" it so to speak. So, I will try and not take it into consideration in my final decision.

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  4. Run slower and then you can run with meeeee!

    I'd take an extra day off and still race on Saturday, but I'm insane.

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    1. Thanks for the invite, I may just do that! Looks like I will be taking the extra day off since I did not run a "trial run" this morning. If I run the F3, it will be my first run in almost 10 days!

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  5. Im so sorry about your injury. You should see how your body feels before you run it. You can run super slow (like me). Just be careful :) I had calf pain up and down my leg this week so my last run was on Tuesday.

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  6. Ugh, I literally feel your pain with the ankle injury. It is the most frustrating thing, ever. I am just catching up now so I missed out on commenting prior to yesterday's race, sorry about that. But I am sure that whatever decision you made was done with the utmost in intelligence for what is best for you. I am looking forward to hearing about your final verdict!

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    1. I didn't end up running. My next blog post tells more about my final verdict!

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