Episode Transcript
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Susie Chan (00:00):
I just thought maybe I could do this. I didn't think I definitely can
do this, and that was enough for me to give it a go. So if
you have any sort of sense of adventure, or just trying to
do something which is a little bit out of your
comfort zone, just give it a go.
Rob Simmelkjaer (00:19):
Hey, everybody, and welcome to Set the Pace, the official
podcast of New York Road Runners, presented by Peloton. I'm
your host, Rob Simmelkjaer, the CEO of New York Road
Runners. And with me week in, week out, my co- host, Peloton
instructor, and currently my coach, Becs Gentry. Hello, Becs, how
are you?
Becs Gentry (00:37):
Hello. I'm good. How are you doing?
Rob Simmelkjaer (00:40):
I'm doing great. I feel really good.
Becs Gentry (00:41):
Okay, good.
Rob Simmelkjaer (00:43):
We'll talk about my training in a little bit.
Becs Gentry (00:44):
We will.
Rob Simmelkjaer (00:45):
I'm feeling really, really good, and the weather has been
nice around here lately.
Becs Gentry (00:51):
Yes, finally.
Rob Simmelkjaer (00:52):
God, it just cooled off a bit. The air quality's
not ideal with some of what's left, I guess, from
the Canadian fires. You can see it in the air,
but I don't know, it hasn't bothered me this year,
as it was last year. I've been feeling pretty good,
and we've had some good enough weather, I think a
lot of people have been feeling good with the running.
(01:12):
What about you, have you been getting out?
Becs Gentry (01:14):
I have not. Today was my first run since last
Wednesday, so nearly a week of no running.
Rob Simmelkjaer (01:21):
Wow.
Becs Gentry (01:21):
It was fantastic. Yeah, we went away to Canada actually,
we went to Lake Simcoe on Thursday, for a big
family summer get- together. There's like 16 of us who
go. And we just did water sports, so if I'm
honest, my back and shoulders and arms are really sore
(01:43):
from wake surfing and paddleboarding and kayaking, all of the water
sports. So it was fantastic to do other things rather than
the regular running.
Rob Simmelkjaer (01:54):
You are having a great summer, with the running that
you do, obviously, is part of your job, but hey,
you clearly deserve some time just running a little here and
there, given all you've done. It seems really smart and
healthy, and I love hearing that for you. It sounds
amazing, and what's better than being in a lake doing
a little water skiing.
Becs Gentry (02:13):
Exactly. Yeah, it's funny because you get so tied up
in running, as a runner. As somebody who is a
hobby runner, yes, it's part of my job, but I
love it too. And I don't do other things, I
just do running, and life's too short for that, for
me personally. Just being there on that lake, I could
have got up and went for a run. I took
(02:34):
my running stuff with me. I was in a beautiful location, but
instead I was like, " You know what I want to
do? I want to go for a paddleboard before Tallulah
wakes up, because I can. It's right there." We were
on the lake with a dock, and I can't do that
in New York. I can go for a run in
New York. So it's just that, to me, is shifting
your mindset of use your fitness to enjoy other activities
(03:00):
when you're not training for stuff. It's been really lovely.
Rob Simmelkjaer (03:03):
I love that. I actually love that. It's beautiful. I
played a little golf myself, for a couple days this
week, which I hadn't done much of lately.
Becs Gentry (03:14):
Good core workout.
Rob Simmelkjaer (03:14):
It's not a lot of... Yeah, a good core workout. Definitely the twisting is good.
Becs Gentry (03:16):
Yeah.
Rob Simmelkjaer (03:16):
I walked too, so a lot of time on feet, which was good, but
had to get back to the running pretty quickly. We'll
talk about that in a little bit. We had a
nice day in Harlem this past weekend, the Percy Sutton
Harlem 5K. The weather was so nice for the runners
in Harlem. It was so great to see, because that's
been a hot race, as you can imagine, in August,
(03:38):
up in Harlem, but it was a gorgeous day. On
the men's side, Ryan Couch was the winner, 14
on the women's side, 16
19:35. But I think the best part of the day,
Becs, is for New York Road Runners, this is such a
special event, because all of our programs are on beautiful
(04:01):
display at the Percy Sutton Harlem 5K. Not only did
we have the race with 5, 000 runners, we had the
Run for the Future girls doing their big graduation 5K.
This is a group of 50 young women, high school- aged,
rising for this fall, and none of them had ever
really been runners before.
They had been training with their
(04:23):
run buddies and their mentors all summer long, and they
graduate at the Percy Sutton Harlem 5K. And they did a phenomenal
job. As you know, that's a hard course, that race
course, that's some really big hills there, especially in mile two,
but they did a phenomenal job. And Becs, seeing the
look of pride on these girls' faces as they finished
(04:44):
this, and they got their medals, and posed for pictures,
it was awesome, and it's a beautiful program we have
at New York Road Runners, so I really enjoyed seeing
them, hanging out with all of them before and after
the race, and that was thrilling. And then we also
had races for all the kids. We had stage one,
two, and three races happening in Harlem, plus we had
our Striders out there as well, our older adults doing
(05:07):
their walking thing. They walked a 1. 5- mile course, and
it was the 15th anniversary celebration of the Striders program as
well. So it was just an awesome day for everything
that we do at New York Road Runners.
Becs Gentry (05:23):
Oh, I love all of the celebrations and all of the joy. What a perfect weekend.
Rob Simmelkjaer (05:29):
Now, I was able to take a Saturday off. I
did not run Harlem, because I did my long run
on Friday, Becs, and I have to say it went
pretty well. Becs had prescribed a 14- miler for me
last week. I did it on Friday morning, beautiful weather,
and it was good. I felt really good. I stayed,
more or less, at my marathon pace. This is one thing I
(05:50):
wanted to talk to you about, which is pacing for
long runs. Because when I had previously trained for marathons,
most of my long runs were just at an easy
pace. I really hadn't focused that much on pacing in
my long runs before, which probably was not a good
thing.
And so you gave me an assignment to run
(06:10):
14 miles at my marathon pace. I kind of alternated
off that a little. I did about three miles at
marathon pace, then slowed a bit, then another three at
marathon pace, then slowed a bit. But I had some
really good sustained periods. I was actually a little faster
than my marathon pace for most of those kind of
pickups, which was good, but then I would drop back
a bit. Can you talk to runners out there about,
(06:32):
for the long runs, for the most part, how much
should they be focused on running at that marathon pace?
Should it be for the whole long run typically, should they be picking
out bits and pieces of two, three miles per push,
let's say? What do you really recommend?
Becs Gentry (06:49):
I personally, and this is every coach is different, I
personally prescribe my runners to run all their long runs
at their goal marathon pace. You actually hit it. You
were fine, even though you did some fast and some slow.
Rob Simmelkjaer (07:02):
Net-net, I did. Yeah, net-net, I did, because my average was below.
Becs Gentry (07:02):
You did. Your average pace was-
Rob Simmelkjaer (07:05):
Yeah, just under eight minutes a mile.
Becs Gentry (07:05):
I gave you 15- second window to fill it in. And that's
the thing, is to me, it's more about offering a
window of pace range for my runners on those long
runs so they get used to having a little bit
of variability. Now, the only time I would do something
a bit different to that, would be for an advanced
(07:25):
runner who is looking to shave time off their previous
marathon finish time, and I would prescribe something more along
the lines of a tempo versus marathon run in their
long run. It's pretty disgusting. It's the kind of workouts
I did when I was training for the Olympic trials.
It was mile at tempo, mile at marathon, mile at
(07:46):
tempo, mile at marathon for up to 21 miles. It
was brutal, but it got my turnover so much stronger,
not just that, it got my confidence stronger.
So already,
you already said that. You didn't mean to say it,
but you already said it in your description of your run, was "
I was actually faster than my marathon pace in one
of them." So netting it out, if you'd have just
(08:08):
stayed on a progressive run within that 15- second window,
you would've been fine because you have it in you.
But sometimes just getting that marathon pace in every weekend
is all people need in their mind to be ready
to hit that 26.2 miles at their goal pace. And
(08:29):
no shade to anyone who doesn't do this, I hate
that some people prescribe marathon pace only for shorter runs,
because when people get to that start line, how on
Earth are they supposed to understand the discomfort of running
26.2 miles at their goal pace if they have never
run 26.2 miles, or near it, at a similar pace?
(08:53):
It's just not fair in my mind. And I've run
a fair few races to understand disappointment and discomfort, and
you don't need to go into that setting people up
for discomfort. So as these weeks roll on, you've got
16 at it this weekend, steady cruise, it's just about building
you, and you'll see that your weeks are not overloaded
(09:15):
with other things. Your workout, your speed workouts, for example,
aren't long and really, really demanding, they're just about pickup
and turnover, and the real focus is your long run,
because you're going for a hopeful time here.
Rob Simmelkjaer (09:29):
Yeah, I really like the approach. It's definitely something new
for me, but it makes sense. I mean, you know the
race environment is going to give you something extra, right?
You're going to have a little more adrenaline, a little
more speed, just from being in a race, but it
comes down to how much you're going to rely on
(09:49):
that race adrenaline fr on race day, right? Because you
don't want to over rely on that. If your body
hasn't done the work, hasn't done the 15 miles at
marathon pace to 20, 22 miles, yeah, I guess really the
question is how can you expect it to do it
on marathon day? And so I know there's different philosophies of
(10:12):
how much, maybe it's pick up, drop back, pick up,
drop back, but at least you've done long, long mileage
with a sustained amount of time at your marathon pace
so that you know it's in you.
Becs Gentry (10:23):
Yes, you do. You got to know it's in you.
Rob Simmelkjaer (10:26):
I love it. I really love it.
Becs Gentry (10:27):
Yeah.
Rob Simmelkjaer (10:28):
The speed work went well this morning. I still had to go
out on the track. I still have not gotten myself onto
the treadmill, but it was better for me today. I
felt better on the track. It was beautiful. Plus I
got my daughter, Julia, to come out and do some
speed work with me this morning, and that's definitely not happening than a treadmill.
Becs Gentry (10:44):
That's so sweet. But they were longer efforts. When you're talking more
like the shorter ones, that can be fun on the
tread. It can be fun on the track, as you say.
As long as you get out and do it, I don't care. Get it done on the tread,
on the track, on the road, you do it, wherever
it takes you.
Rob Simmelkjaer (11:02):
It was so much fun, so things going well from
now. We will keep things going, and I'll keep you
updated as I work towards Chicago. And of course, so
many of you working towards the TCS New York City
Marathon a few weeks after my run in early November.
Well, coming up on today's show, we have a colleague
of Becs is truly amazing. Susie Chan, she runs in
(11:25):
deserts, she runs in jungle, she has run Badlands, and
she runs of course, on the treadmill with Becs at
Peloton. She just celebrated her 50th birthday, and it seems
she's just getting started. She's going to tell us all
about her adventures and her book as well. Then our
friend, Meb Keflezighi, will be here with today's featured member,
(11:46):
Margaret Schwartz. Margaret ran 20 consecutive TCS New York City
Marathons, but lately, she's decided to tread some new ground.
She'll be here to tell us what she has learned
along the way.
And we've got a special Meb Minute
with HSS today, the hospital for special surgery, Chrysta Irolla, director
of HSS's world- class Prosthetics and Orthotics service, is here
(12:09):
with expert tips on how to get the right shoes
and inserts to run more efficiently.
Ready to see real
results? Try the Peloton app for free and get expert-
designed running programs that build speed, strength, and endurance. Run
outdoors with real- time coaching, as instructors guide your form
and pace every step of the way. Plus strength for
(12:31):
Runners, a program built to help runners boost muscle and
prevent injury, complements your training so you can crush your
goals even faster. Try the app for free for 30
days, and download it now from the app store or
Google Play. Terms apply. Peloton, the official digital fitness partner
of New York Road Runners.
Our guest today is British ultramarathon
(12:53):
runner, and Becs' fellow Peloton tread instructor, Susie Chan. Susie
didn't start running until she was 35 years old, when
her brother convinced her to join him for a half-
marathon. Six months later, she ran her first full marathon
in Paris, and since then, she's completed about 20 marathons,
including all six original Abbott World Marathon majors. But, like
(13:15):
so many people we have spoken to here on Set
the Pace, 26.2 miles just wasn't enough for Susie. She
kept going, went on to conquer the Marathon des Sables,
a six- day, 250- kilometer race through the Sahara Desert,
and set a world record by running 68. 54 miles on
(13:36):
a treadmill in 12 hours. That is like my all-
time worst nightmare, I can't wait to hear how she
did this. She also made ultramarathon running history as the
first European woman to finish all three Badwater Ultramarathon races in
the same year. And along the way, she's overcome serious
challenges, including a thyroid cancer diagnosis shortly after running the
(13:58):
Chicago Marathon.
Susie's also, as if this wasn't enough, an award-
winning author. Her book, Trails and Tribulations, the Running Adventures
of Susie Chan, won Sports Performance book of the year
at the 2025 Charles Tyrwhitt Sports Book Awards. Susie, what is
wrong with you? You can't seem to stop doing things,
(14:20):
are you okay?
Susie Chan (14:21):
No, I don't know if I am. Do you know
what, it's not until actually I wrote the book, and
I was forced to reflect, because I'm very much a forward-
looking person, and I was forced to sort of think about
all the things I've done. It was like, "Oh, actually, I have
been quite busy, haven't I?" And also, some of the
things, hearing them back like that, it doesn't sound like
(14:41):
me. I don't know genuinely, how I did some of those
things now, because as I'm a little bit older, I'm a
little bit slower, things are a little bit harder when I'm running,
and then I'm like, " How did I do those things?"
So yeah, I've been very, very lucky, very privileged, and
I've seen the world through running around on my two
(15:03):
feet. And I think overall, largely loved it all. There
were some low moments, as runners experience, but what a journey.
Rob Simmelkjaer (15:11):
All right, so I don't know where to start. I
guess, let's start at the start. So you run a half-
marathon with your brother, and did that trigger something in
you? You hadn't really been a runner, right, so did
you feel all of a sudden, through the process of
training for and running that half, that, " Oh, my God,
this is what I meant to do?"
Susie Chan (15:30):
It was a bit of a delayed reaction, I'm going
to say. I didn't really want to run. I didn't
have any interest in it. It sounded awful. And I used
to sit at home and watch London Marathon when it
came on my TV, in awe of what they were
doing, but not really having any comprehension of how far
that is, and how much work you have to do
to get there. But I was in a bit of a rough patch in my life.
(15:51):
I was drinking too much. I was a smoker. I was in
a bit of a life rut. I hadn't had much
money, I was a single mom. And I think my
brother could sort of identify that within me, and he
wanted to run his half. He was signed in for
a marathon, he was like, "I'm going to do a bucket list marathon. I'm going to run a marathon,
tick it off."
And he picked a local half- marathon
(16:11):
to me, to run as a training one. And basically,
he said, " Run this with me, run this with me." And
I agreed. I didn't really know how far it was
either. And I started training, this is when it was 20, when did we say,
2010, something like that. And I had no watch. I mean, I didn't have
a watch. I can remember trying to run my first run
around a field. It had two football pitches in it,
(16:33):
and I was trying to run around that that without stopping, couldn't
do it, and it was just awful. But because I had this goal,
I kept on trying to run a little bit further, a little bit further.
Rob Simmelkjaer (16:41):
Yep.
Susie Chan (16:42):
And then race day came, I was stood there, terrified.
Looked around, everybody else knew what they were doing. They
all had the gear on. I didn't even have a proper running
bra or running shoes.
Rob Simmelkjaer (16:54):
Oh, man.
Susie Chan (16:56):
Oh, honestly. And then as I was stood there, about
five minutes before the race started, somebody leaned over and said, "
Do you like trail running?" And I was like, " What's trail
running?" And the whole thing was this trail half- marathon.
It was like off- road, over fences, narrow, up mud.
And so I was so distracted trying not to fall over, I'm thinking "
(17:16):
What is happening to me," up these hills and down
these hills. Because I'd been running on a flat road, I was trying to
stay alive. And then I got to nine miles, and I thought, "
Oh, my God, I'm going to run this half- marathon."
And then
it just filled me with something which I hadn't ever
experienced before. I was very tired, but I just suddenly
believed I could do it, and then crossed the finish
line. And then of course, all those finish line feels
(17:38):
that you get, and everybody that's had that first race
experience, you're on such a high. And I was on such a high
for days and days, I thought I need more of
this. I need to keep running. That's how it started,
and then I went in pretty hard after that.
Rob Simmelkjaer (17:52):
Yeah, I would say so. First of all, I love that
you were running a trail half- marathon and did not realize
it was a trail half- marathon until you were at the
starting line.
Susie Chan (18:00):
No.
Rob Simmelkjaer (18:01):
Very different, very different experience than running on the road, but
that's awesome. And you're right, the focus you get on
a trail run, sometimes you stop thinking about the miles
because you're trying not to break your face, yeah.
Susie Chan (18:11):
I was just looking at whatever was coming next. It was like, " Oh, there's some trees.
Oh, there's some mud." Oh, it was just like a fence, and it was like, "
Oh, gosh." It was very busy in my head.
Rob Simmelkjaer (18:18):
I love it. So from there, did your mind go right to
the marathon distance?
Susie Chan (18:23):
No, I then thought, "Oh, I can run a 10K obviously, that's shorter." It's a very
different kettle of fish actually, running a 10K, because you
have to run a little bit faster. And then I did
a couple of more half- marathons, and then I started
to do a bit more fitness because it was making me feel
good, so I joined a couple of little fitness groups,
and they were all running Paris Marathon. And basically, I
(18:45):
was like, " Yeah, yeah." I was very much " Give it a go," like "
What's the worst that could happen?" I didn't really overthink
things too much, which probably was how I've ended up
doing some of the things I'm doing. I'd rather give it
a go and maybe fail, than not experience it, so I signed up
for Paris Marathon, trained so hard for that, and came-
Rob Simmelkjaer (19:05):
I assume you got some shoes and a sports bra, and all the things.
Susie Chan (19:09):
I wore the correct bra, and I bought some shoes. I had my
gate analyzed. Yes, I did all the right things. I didn't have a watch still. Those
were a bit expensive for me back then, but at
least I was dressed more appropriately for the thing I
was doing. And I was so hell- bent on getting
four hours, aren't we all, for that first marathon. Trained so hard.
(19:32):
And I think I came at like 407, 409, something like
that. And I was devastated when that... I was just fighting
for my life for that last 10 miles, as you
do in your first marathon. And when the pacer came past me,
at about 17 miles, and I just couldn't keep with him.
And then I can remember, I thought I was going to be
one and done, because I was happy with my half-
marathon distances. It was fulfilling me enough.
And then I remember crossing
(19:55):
the line, thinking " I'm going to have to do this again, because
I have to get it." Because it was close enough to think I can do
it. And then just this is how it happens, and
you find an excuse, don't you, for every race that
you do thereafter. And so the excuses started to build, and
so I did a marathon, and then not long after
that, I signed up for the Marathon des Sables, which
you talked about there, which again, was more born out
(20:17):
of... I had not accidentally found myself there, but I didn't
think I would end up at that start line, and I did, and
it was terrifying and life changing at the same time.
Rob Simmelkjaer (20:29):
So I just want to understand that, it's not something
I'm familiar with. So you're running through the Sahara Desert?
Susie Chan (20:37):
Yeah. So it's a six- day, it's called a multi- stage
race, so it takes place across six days, and you
are running. The course changes every year. You are plonked
into the Sahara Desert, and you run each day, a
different distance. And normally, it follows the same format, it's
something like 20 miles, 20 miles, but technical, with some
mountains, and then a longer stage, 20, 22 miles. And then
(21:00):
you have something called the long stage, which is an
ultramarathon, and then you finish on a marathon, and then
a fun run. And the hard thing is, is it's self-
sufficient, so you need everything to survive for the week,
you have to carry right from the start. So that
is all your food, which is the heaviest thing, your
sleeping gear, and anything, any survival kit. So the first
(21:21):
time in my life, I was like just trying to
find out what an anti- venom pump was, things like this. I'm like, "What?"
Just in case I get bitten by something which is
going to kill me.
Rob Simmelkjaer (21:28):
Oh, my goodness.
Susie Chan (21:29):
So they give you a tent. It's not really a tent, it's like a blanket on sticks, and they move
that further and further away, and then you run towards
it each day. And it's you're carrying... I'd say for
women, I'm not very tall, I'm like five- foot three.
For smaller women, it's harder, because carrying the same amount
as some six- foot three dude that's done Ironman. So
(21:50):
it's pretty tough, it's pretty tough. And yeah, I ended
up doing that, because I had a very long wait list,
and I couldn't really find out too much about it. This is before
the internet is what it is today. And I thought, "
I know, I'll sign up to this very long wait
list." I was like 198th, or something, and " I'll get
(22:11):
some emails about it." And I signed up to the wait
list, and then in three months, I was at the
top of it. I was terrified.
Rob Simmelkjaer (22:18):
Wow.
Susie Chan (22:18):
fortunately, where I live, I live about 50 miles outside
of London, a place called Hampshire, in UK. And by
some weird geographical freak, it's very sandy, so the trails
are very sandy near me. So in the summer, I
could easily run on sand, because it's just where I
(22:40):
run. I find it slightly... I don't find it any
easier, but I'm just more used to it, I'm going
to say. I'm better. I'm quite good at reading where to put my foot, and
then seeing... I don't think I'm more efficient, I'm just
more used to it, I would say.
Becs Gentry (22:53):
Yeah. And you're probably your ankles and your tendons and
your ligaments around your ankles and your knees, are probably
just that bit stronger, and as you say, more accustomed
to it than somebody who runs on the road or
track more.
Susie Chan (23:04):
Yeah.
Becs Gentry (23:05):
Yeah. What a feat. I mean, most people do it
once, and say " Thank you, that was enough." Susie goes
back three more times.
Susie Chan (23:12):
Yeah. I loved that race.
Becs Gentry (23:12):
It says a lot.
Susie Chan (23:12):
I do love it.
Becs Gentry (23:12):
You do. You do.
Rob Simmelkjaer (23:18):
So I think people always want to know, just like non-
runners want to know what would get someone to run
a half- marathon or a marathon, I think even people
who run marathons want to know what is it that
would drive you to take on a challenge like that?
Susie Chan (23:32):
I think you just have to be a little bit... You've got to want to. I
think at any run, anybody that runs, you've got to have
a desire to do it, because that is half of the battle. You've
got to maybe want to see what it's like to
feel like to finish a half- marathon, to finish a marathon,
and that desire is going to get you a very, very long way.
I think it's always, I don't overthink these things. Which
(23:53):
sometimes, I'll be honest with you, Rob, it hasn't worked out that well for me, because
I've not really found out as much about race, and I
found myself in a situation which is nearly beyond how good
I am. But I think it's only running, it's not
that deep. If you want to see the Sahara, what
better way than to try and run around it for
(24:15):
a few days?
And that race is actually, yes, it
is very difficult, and the terrain is quite tough to
get through, but the timings are such that a lot of
people, they hike it, they run very small, they run
periods of it, and then they walk a lot of it. And the
timings are such that you can actually probably fast- walk
the whole thing and get through it. So if you
just add in just a little bit of adventure, I just thought maybe
(24:41):
I could do this. I didn't think I definitely can
do this, and that was enough for me to give
it a go. So if you have any sort of sense
of adventure, or just trying to do something which is a
little bit out of your comfort zone, just give it
a go. What's the worst? You just stop and you've
only experienced some of it, it's not that deep. Yeah.
Becs Gentry (25:00):
I love that. I love that. And that's so true.
It's so you. I mean, I'm so lucky that I
know you. I've known you for a decade at least,
maybe longer, but that's so, so true, that people need
to remember that. It's not that deep. And I think
yes, of course, if you are a professional athlete listening
(25:21):
to this, it is that deep for you. It is your
career, it is your whole life. But for the rest
of us, as hobby runners, who do things outside of
our careers and our other hats that we wear, to
fulfill something else inside us, if it doesn't work out, yes.
Susie Chan (25:35):
It's okay.
Becs Gentry (25:35):
It's okay.
Susie Chan (25:37):
I don't know how you do what you do, Becs.
We've had this conversation off the record several times, about
how you do that with that. But the time pressure, I mean I'm not the fastest.
Really, I'm very much a middle- packer, and I'm very
comfortable with being a middle- packer, and that affords me, and
everybody else around me, the benefit of it doesn't matter
(25:57):
if we're slower that day, it doesn't matter if we don't
get our PB. I'm not trying to do what Becs is trying
to do and run that fast. And so it's nice to be able to do that,
but to take that comforting space, and then put it
in an environment which is actually a bit more taxing
and difficult, is my sweet spot. It's just being middle-
packing somewhere a little bit more adventurous and seeing how
far I could get on my steam.
Rob Simmelkjaer (26:21):
That makes a lot of sense. I think that's really cool. And
so when we started this conversation, you talked about how
early on, when you were in that first half with your brother,
your life wasn't in a great place, and you had
some money issues, and things like that. And so running,
little did you know, I'm sure, ended up changing your
life, in terms of your career as well. Can you
(26:43):
talk about how that all came about, and what led
you to Peloton? And now you're this star instructor on
the tread.
Susie Chan (26:49):
I don't know, Rob, how this happened to me. I am not joking. Sometimes I'll turn up to
work, and I'll think " How have I ended up here,"
to be totally honest with you. But I did always, I think I
managed to hit ultra- running at the right time. When
I started in the UK, there were, I think, 15
ultramarathons in the whole of the UK. There's now over
(27:10):
200. I think I just hit something at the right
moment. Social media was relatively in its infancy. I'm not
a huge on social media, but I just started to
document what I was doing. There were very few women doing these
sorts of events, and so I just started to document
it. And I did have a couple of little rules
for myself. If I've had had a bad day, or I don't know, got a parking ticket,
(27:31):
or something, wasn't going to come to social media to start
to moan about that. That's not what I'm there for,
I'm there just to talk about my running and to
keep it quite a light positive space.
So I just
chronicled my running journey. And I had a normal job. I've
worked for 20 years, in the museum and gallery sector,
putting on exhibitions, so I did love that, but I
was at the weekend then, doing these races, very long
(27:54):
races, and coming into work on Monday. And there was just
a moment there, where social media was beginning to take
off, I started to get brand deals and invited to
things. I then got sponsorship, which wasn't a lot of
money, but it was just enough for me to think
maybe I could just step away from museums and see
where this leads me. And I was doing race commentating,
(28:15):
sort of commentary, I was doing a little bit of
presenting with it. So I was doing all these little things, and just trying
to make everything work. And there was a point where
I was very stretched, and I wasn't doing my day
job very well, and I wasn't really applying myself to my
races very well, so I just stopped on the day job,
which was terrifying, and took the plunge.
And I was
just doing bits and pieces, and then lockdown happened, which worried me,
(28:36):
because a lot of my brand deals, and things, were
governed by producing content, which we weren't allowed to do
because we were all sitting in indoors. And then I just got
a phone call from Peloton, and I genuinely was like, "
Oh, what?" And the first thing I said, Becs, was, " Do you
know how old I am?" And they said " Yes, and
we don't care."
Because I was in my mid- 40s
by this point, and I just had in my head, I just thought "
(28:59):
Really?" I'm an older woman, and actually, all Peloton cared
about is authenticity and if you love it, and if
you love running, you want to share your journey. And
did various screen tests and interviews, and things. And here
I am, working with Becs. And last time I saw Becs
(29:20):
was when she disappeared off the face of the Earth
in London. She was like a big name on the scene, big name.
Everybody's like, " Becs is so cool," and then she just
disappeared, and then popped back up on Peloton. And then I
was following, I don't know, maybe three years later.
Becs Gentry (29:34):
I love that, that Susie always tells me that. Like literally, "
Do you know you disappeared? You literally just one day,
you were not in London."
Susie Chan (29:41):
I was like, "Where has she gone? She hasn't posted anything for ages." I started to get worried. Anyway.
Becs Gentry (29:48):
Oh, my gosh. Okay, let's talk. Whilst we're talking about
Peloton and treadmill running, you are such a fantastic advocate
for all the ways people can run, whether it's road,
trail, tread, and you and I are both in that
mindset. I think we're very similar in, I would say,
(30:09):
80% of the way we run, in that we get
it done. We just get it done. And we both
love a tread for speed work, it's like a set it
and forget it sort of thing. But you, Susie, eighth,
nearly, no, nine years ago, I guess now, in 2016,
you broke the Guinness World Record by running 68.5 miles on a
(30:33):
treadmill in 12 hours. I mean, you can hear in
my voice, and I just... Tell our listeners about that. What was it
like? And I love the tread, but that seems like
it would be harder than anything.
Susie Chan (30:49):
It was grim. I don't know what else to say.
Well, what happened was I ended up there because a friend of mine,
so when I do some of the races I do, I tend
to lean towards hot environments. And so my friend is actually
a doctor in ultramarathon, he's a sports scientist. And so I'd go and train. He
had a heat chamber set up at his university, so
(31:10):
I'd go and do a lot of my heat training there. And then he, as
part of his research into ultramarathoners and the effects of ultramarathons
on body, he wanted people to run 50 miles on a treadmill
in an experiment and just record the effects of it.
So not many people came forward for that, as you
can imagine. I helped him out, me and a few
friends went and did our 50 miles. He was monitoring our
blood, how we felt, doing blood tests and saliva tests,
(31:33):
and all sorts of... Did that, so I went along. I
was super fit, because I'd just finished an Iron Man. I was
super fit, I just hopped on the treadmill, ran 50
miles and just went home.
And then I just did a
little tweet about it, or something, like, " Oh, I just did 50 miles on the treadmill." And
somebody said to me on Twitter, " If you'd kept going,
you would've broken the world record." I was so close
and I didn't know. I didn't know that these things existed. And the
(31:56):
truth is, not many people give these a go because
they are quite grim, and they are also incredibly difficult
to set up. And so we set it up, and Dennis sent a 23-
page document on all the things we had to do
to make it valid, which was numerous. There were lots
of things about the calibration of the treadmill, it had to be public,
it had to be filmed constantly, it had to have independent witnesses.
(32:16):
There was so many rules that we had to do, but
we set about with the university, Kingston University.
And I
thought it wouldn't be too bad, because I wasn't that
far off, just doing that 50 miles on the treadmill. And
actually, I felt okay. What had happened, was it took
eight months to set up, and I had lost a
reasonable amount of fitness. I wasn't quite Iron Man- fit
(32:38):
anymore. And I hopped on on the day of it, and it had
gone viral. I had thousands of people watching me.
Becs Gentry (32:46):
Yeah, I remember.
Susie Chan (32:47):
You know when you start running, some days you just start running,
and you think, " Oh, actually I'm not feeling this today." Yeah, it
was one of those. I just hopped on, I thought, "I'm not really in the
mood for this." And it was too late. We'd had
so many people there watching, and I just had to
run through a day of running when I didn't want to
run on a treadmill. I got very seasick, because the
(33:10):
treadmill we had to use was huge, and it wasn't
too far away from the wall. We couldn't move it
away from the wall, and so I was just staring at a
wall for 12 hours whilst running. And do anything, it
doesn't matter what it is, just staring at a wall for 12 hours, and
you will get a bit. So I was so throwing up.
Rob Simmelkjaer (33:23):
Is that what you were doing? So were you staring
at a wall? Did you have something, you weren't watching
anything, you weren't-
Susie Chan (33:33):
Well, they kind of got a TV screen there. And
then I had people coming. I had a treadmill next to me for friends and people
to join me, just to kind of keep me buoyed
up. But essentially, I couldn't really, because if I fell
over, it was over. I couldn't touch the treadmill bars,
I couldn't touch any of it, because it was done.
So I had to have no sort of assistance holding it, so
I couldn't really look. I did a bit of it,
(33:54):
but it was really rough. And I started to throw
up because I was getting seasick, and then it got very hard
in the last few miles. I think the YouTube video,
which we had to record, is out there somewhere, of me just
going greener and greener around the gills. But I broke
the world record, and it did go viral. And then
(34:15):
it's subsequently been broken by somebody else, who she's welcome
to it, because this, it was hardcore.
Becs Gentry (34:22):
That's hilarious. Oh, my goodness. I can't even imagine. And
obviously, back in 2016, the technology for treadmills was so
much... There was so little compared to now, what we
have, like our Peloton Tread Plus is so beautiful. And if I
had to run on a tread for 12 hours, I
(34:42):
would be undoubtedly on that tread. But I can't imagine
just banging away on that, on the belt, just (inaudible) .
Rob Simmelkjaer (34:50):
Yeah, the old school belt. I mean, Becs, we've had people on
this podcast who've done a lot of amazing things, yourself
included. I don't think there's anything I've heard that terrifies
me more than what Susie did. And I mean, do
you still think back to that and feel the trauma,
(35:10):
Susie? Because I'm feeling it and I didn't even do it.
Susie Chan (35:13):
Yeah, a little bit. It took me a long time
to get back on a treadmill after that, for a
while. I was just outside at any opportunity. It was
really, really tough. And I've never felt that I'm well running,
and there was a lot of... I think if there wasn't so much pressure, because so
many people were watching and there, I think I probably
(35:34):
would've just gone home. It was a little but you have to keep going because there's so
many people looking at you, it was a little bit
like that. But thank God they were there, because actually,
I did manage to do it. And I think left to
my own mental space, I probably wouldn't have done it,
so there's a little bit said about the vanity of
trying to look good in front of people.
Becs Gentry (35:56):
Well, here we are today. I just looked it up., The current
record, just for your information, is 81 miles in 12 hours.
Susie Chan (36:01):
Oh, I couldn't have done that. I was aiming for,
I think we had me down to do about 76, 75, which was within my capabilities.
Which wasn't really, we were on target for until the
last three hours, and then all the vomit was really slowing me down.
Rob Simmelkjaer (36:20):
Oh, my goodness.
Becs Gentry (36:20):
You got past the record, and you're like, " Tap me
out baby, I'm done."
Susie Chan (36:28):
Yeah.
Rob Simmelkjaer (36:28):
Well, Becs, Susie is back to the more conventional outdoor road
running marathon distance. She's training for the Sydney Marathon coming
up this fall.
Becs Gentry (36:38):
Yes.
Rob Simmelkjaer (36:38):
And she was telling me as we came on the
interview, that she had a little bit of a registration
issue, wasn't actually sure she was going to make it,
but she's in.
Becs Gentry (36:47):
Okay.
Susie Chan (36:49):
I hadn't fully completed my registration. There was an extra
layer, which I didn't know about.
Becs Gentry (36:54):
Until when, recently?
Susie Chan (36:55):
This morning, Becs.
Becs Gentry (36:56):
I was going to say, hold on, I saw you a week ago
in London, and you were all go.
Susie Chan (37:00):
I was getting some. Anyway, some minor detail that I've
dotted the Is and crossed the Ts, thank goodness, because I've
bought that plane ticket. Can you imagine?
Becs Gentry (37:08):
I was going to say she's off with 19 days to spare, and we're
officially in.
Susie Chan (37:12):
Yeah, I hadn't quite completed it. Anyway, I'm in. I'm very excited.
Rob Simmelkjaer (37:17):
So you've already got the six- star medal, so this will
be number seven for you, on the road to whatever
it will be, nine perhaps. What's got you back in
the marathon phase? Is it just the challenge and it's a
new place, new experience, and all of that?
Susie Chan (37:33):
Yeah. I mean, this is how they get you, isn't it? The sixth star, so I thought I was done. They announced Sydney, my friends
are saying " I'm going, are you going?" And I was like, " Oh, okay then," because you don't want to have the FOMO of seeing your friends get
the seventh and you haven't. So I'm dreadful. I'm very
easily persuaded in things like this, Rob, very, very easily.
And so a couple of my friends are going, and
(37:55):
I was like, " Okay, I'll come too," because I couldn't
bear to miss out, so I'm off. I haven't run.
Last time I was in Sydney, in Australia, it was like 20
years ago, so I wasn't even a runner, so very much looking
forward to it. Never been to Sydney. Slightly anxious about
the course profile, which I looked at, and it's 1, 500- foot.
Rob Simmelkjaer (38:18):
Yeah, there's some legit elevation in there, absolutely.
Becs Gentry (38:20):
It gives New York a run for its money.
Susie Chan (38:24):
Yes, it really does. And I've run New York three times, and actually, the
last time I ran New York, I really felt the
hills, and they're not my strengths. But on the day,
this only happens on the day, doesn't it? Race day,
another world marathon major, I'm way off racing this, so
I'm just going to go with my friends and have
(38:45):
as much fun as possible, and do it justice. I'm
going to do my best that I can, because it's
a world marathon major. I'm so lucky to be there, so
I'll give it a crack. Not super fast, but just
consistent. I'll try and be as consistent as I can on
those hills.
Becs Gentry (39:00):
Yeah, you've got this. And as you say, there's something
about the energy of these world marathon majors, and this
one being the inaugural official one, I think, is going
to be really cool. You've been running through extreme heat
in the UK this summer.
Susie Chan (39:16):
I love it.
Becs Gentry (39:17):
Yeah, you love it. So maybe the coolness of a spring race in
Sydney is going to be exhilarating for the body.
Rob Simmelkjaer (39:23):
Yeah. I think for some reason, Sahara Desert runner here, I'm not
thinking heat's a big issue for you, Susie.
Becs Gentry (39:28):
No, it's not a big-
Susie Chan (39:28):
I love running in the heat, yeah.
Becs Gentry (39:28):
Oh, my God.
Rob Simmelkjaer (39:28):
I would hope so. Tell us about your book and what drove you
to write the book, what can someone get from reading
your book? What's the story?
Susie Chan (39:41):
So I didn't really want to write this book. The
book company, Bloomsbury, they asked me a couple of times,
and I said no, mainly because, I don't know, I
just thought, " Well, I'm not that interesting. I haven't really
done that much." And also, I felt a lot of imposter
syndrome there, like " I don't know. I really don't know."
And then a couple of things happened, lockdown happened, and
(40:04):
then so everything that we could do was taken away.
And then I got into the race of my dreams,
which was my final destination race. I finally got into
that race. And so those two things made me think, "
I'm just going to embrace them. I'm just going to
embrace life as it is right now, and say yes."
(40:24):
So I'd already established myself in Peloton. I'd been there
for about a couple of years, and I thought, "Okay, I've got a little bit of space
to try and write the book."
So I started to
write the book. And I'm saying right at the beginning, Becs, that
writing the book actually made me do a lot of
reflection and realize that I've been in some extraordinary situations,
and been really lucky with my running. And I had,
(40:46):
in fact, I've done quite a lot with it. So
it's just a story of a normal woman fighting her through
some very long miles, and on a bit of a journey of discovery.
I'm going to say a journey from being not confident
and not confident and a single mum, to just reinvention,
(41:08):
and just finding my strength, and finding a whole community of
empowerment within the runners.
Becs Gentry (41:17):
It's such a great book. Obviously, I've read it, and
I've actually listened to it as well. I listened to a lot of
it during 7, 7, 7, where Hillary was actually listening
to it when we met. It was so weird. It
was on her phone, and I was like, " Wait, that's
my Susie. You're listening to my Susie."
Susie Chan (41:38):
I'm so flattered. That's wild.
Becs Gentry (41:40):
Those were the two of us on the plane.
Susie Chan (41:42):
Yes, yes.
Becs Gentry (41:44):
Of course, with this voice, I mean-
Susie Chan (41:45):
It was an intense three days, but I was like, " I'm down for a
recording. I can do this." So yes, yes. But really, it
just chronicles what is that transformative period of my life,
from being very unfit and unhealthy, and having no confidence
at all, like terrified to speak publicly, to running on
(42:06):
a treadmill, talking to millions of people about running. And
it really is, it's like a love story about me and running and everybody
I've met along the way, and just some extraordinary, extraordinary
people out there.
Becs Gentry (42:19):
And it's very funny as well. You're a very funny writer.
Susie Chan (42:23):
Thank you.
Becs Gentry (42:24):
Not all the way through. It's not a comedy of
course, but there are some true Susie Chan moments that
really make you have a good chuckle. But it is,
everyone should read it, because it's such a testament to
how strong you are. You've been in some, I'm not going to give
away the plot lines, but you have, you've put yourself
in some gnarly situations. You've had some very scary experiences.
Susie Chan (42:47):
I have, yes. And I'm very pleased, because I did
actually, I refused a ghost writer. I was like, " I'm
writing this all myself." And it was a slog to
get that thing out, but I did it. Yeah.
Becs Gentry (43:01):
So amazing. Trails and Tribulations, everyone needs to go and
read it. Susie, while we're talking about scary things, I
think one of the scariest things for me, is when
people go into marathon races and they fall down. And
as another runner, you run past, and you just, for
(43:22):
the rest of your race, you're just thinking, " Please, goodness
above, please hope that person is okay." And this is
what happened to you at the end of the Chicago Marathon, right?
Susie Chan (43:32):
Yes.
Becs Gentry (43:34):
In 2017, was it?
Susie Chan (43:35):
I was about to say, you pointed the date. Yeah,
was it 2017? Yes, it was. I had been feeling very
just off and on, unwell for, I'm going to say
a few months. I couldn't quite put my finger on
it. I was feeling very sluggish, very slow, sweaty, everything
was a bit of a chore. And I thought, " Well,
maybe I'm just getting unfit, maybe I'm getting older." There
was no obvious symptom, but the biggest symptom I had
(43:59):
is I kept having this dreadful cough, which was just an
awful cough, which would come and go. And I was put
on antibiotics, it came back. And I had this terrible
cough, and I was doing Chicago Marathon, which was my
sixth, and then, I thought, final World Marathon major, so
it was huge. I'd qualified, I'd got in, the hotel
(44:20):
was booked, I was over there with a few friends, we're all
getting our six- star medal together. It was a moment, and I had not
been feeling great coming into it.
I had this cough. And
I ran the marathon. I was running with one of
my very good friends, Sophie, who's also doing Sydney with
me. And I said, " This cough, I feel dreadful." And
I said, I remember telling her, Becs, I said this, "
(44:42):
If I faint, don't let them take me off the
course because I need this sixth star. I can't come back a year later." And I was
clinging on and clinging on. I can remember my vision
being a bit... She was one side of me, trying
to make sure I was okay. And I finished the race.
It wasn't my finest moment. But we were being presented
with our sixth star medals and being videoed, they were talking to
(45:03):
us, and I remember thinking, and I was very British about it,
because I said, " I'm so sorry, I think I'm going to faint." And then I just fainted. I collapsed and I
was so English about it, " How embarrassing, I'm so sorry."
And when I
fainted, and then I don't really know what happened. But
the short version is Sophie was very worried. She was like, "
She can run 100 miles through a desert, there's something
wrong with you." Phoned a doctor, went home, had an X-
(45:25):
ray on my lungs, because they thought there was perhaps something my lungs, and
they found a huge tumor in my neck. It was quite
a large tumor in my thyroid. And I had thyroid
cancer, and I didn't know. I was very lucky. I've
seen and know people that have been on cancer journeys, which
have been incredibly rough, challenging, and hard. And being completely
(45:48):
honest with you, I was incredibly lucky. It was a very easy, I had
a couple of operations, mild treatment, and I dealt with
it, probably not in the most normal way.
I did
a half- marathon about two weeks after my operation. Didn't
ask my oncologist, just thought I can. Exactly, I'll just go for a run, and if
I stop, I just stop. Finished, and then went on and did a
(46:12):
very, very life- affirming Marathon des Sables with my best friends a
couple of weeks after.
Becs Gentry (46:20):
Wow.
Rob Simmelkjaer (46:20):
Wow, wow. Glad that was a successful journey, a successful ending
for you too, because obviously a scary thing, and clearly,
has not held you back. So, all right, so Sydney
Marathon's next. I guess, in closing, is there another big
crazy thing out there that you have your eyes on?
(46:41):
Is it what Becs did with the Great World Race? Is
there anything else out there that you look at and say, "
Yeah, this needs to be my next big thing?"
Susie Chan (46:50):
Rob, it never ends. And I actually, I mean, maybe
Becs is the person actually. There's one itch left to scratch,
and I don't know if this will ever happened, because I have to be... I'm
getting older. I want to be running until I'm a
little old lady, and I need to just look after myself.
And I can't run like I used to, I just
throw myself into anything without much thought, and now I have
(47:10):
bit more considerate. But maybe I'm just going to ask Becs live on this podcast,
if she would. I want to run in the Arctic, Becs.
I know you've run there already, so you're like an
old hat at this thing, but there is one race
in the Yukon, where we just run, walk 100 miles
with a little sled. I love it.
Becs Gentry (47:27):
Done, in. I did Antarctica, so technically, the Arctic's different.
Susie Chan (47:31):
Oh yes, there we go. Yeah. I don't know if it'll ever happened, but you only see
those people with their sledges, and they're like that. Yeah, I'd quite like to see that.
Becs Gentry (47:39):
Yeah, I would love to do that for the exploring
side of it too, because I ran four loops around
one base in Antarctica, so I didn't really see it. So I feel like
that would be, yes, see it. I think we do,
we need to do a big, big ultra together.
Susie Chan (47:54):
We need to do something.
Becs Gentry (47:54):
Something like, I don't know, the old-
Susie Chan (47:54):
You'd have to either get the kettle on when you get over the finish
line or slow down if you want to be (inaudible) .
Becs Gentry (48:03):
No, we'll do it together. It's an ultra, we'll do it together.
The Hippie Trail, I'd love to be able to actually
do the Hippie Trail, the original Hippie Trail, like across,
but I don't think politically we can do that anymore.
Rob Simmelkjaer (48:12):
I don't know. If I ever go to the Arctic, I want to
be pulled by eight Huskies, you know, sled dogs. That
sounds like fun. Maybe I'll pass. Maybe I'll pass, you guys. Yeah.
Becs Gentry (48:23):
Yeah.
Susie Chan (48:24):
There's always something. I'm very much driven by experience over experience with
people to the race rather than a distance or a
time now.
Rob Simmelkjaer (48:34):
It makes sense. Well, Susie, congrats on everything. Congrats on
your book, Trails and Tribulations, which is out now. And
good luck in Sydney, hope you have a great, great
time. And the first time Sydney's a major, so you'll always
have that experience to go on. And keep going on
those treadmills for all those Peloton classes, but not for
(48:55):
86 miles.
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(49:18):
potential. Learn more, and contribute at nyrr. org/ donate.
Margaret
Schwartz is a very familiar face to New York Road Runners,
having run 263 NYRR races, 20 of which were New York
City Marathons. But after completing her 20th consecutive marathon in
2021, she made the decision to step back from the
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26.2 mile distance. And despite her streaker status, she hasn't
run a full marathon since crossing that last Central Park
finish line. Instead, she's become a devoted marathon spectator, and
has swapped endurance running for endurance swimming. A lifelong athlete,
Margaret is both the certified yoga instructor and trainer, and
(50:01):
she brings two decades of marathon grit and her growing
love of open- water swimming to today's member moments.
Meb Keflezighi (50:08):
Thanks, Rob. Thanks, Becs. Margaret, welcome to the Set the
Pace Podcast. How's it going today?
Margaret Schwartz (50:15):
It's going well. And I'm just really happy to be
here and talk to you. But we see you from
afar, so this is exciting for me.
Meb Keflezighi (50:21):
Very kind of you. It's great to be with you.
So let's get to, wow, 263 races with the New
York Road Runners, you run the TCS New York City Marathon 20 times, but
now you consider yourself retired from the 26.2 miles. What
drove you to run year after year? How did you
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give yourself permission to stop the 26. 2?
Margaret Schwartz (50:45):
Well, it's a soft provision, Meb, I'm not going to lie.
It hasn't been easy. And in my own mind, I
haven't missed one marathon yet. So when vacations come up
and someone says, " First Sunday of November," I'm like, " Not
yet." I still have to be in New York City
on what I believe, maybe next to the Thanksgiving Day
Parade, is one of the most happiest times in New
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York City. So it's my favorite day.
So permission was
I just wanted to quit while I was ahead. I
had a few injuries along the way. We can all
cringe at plantar fasciitis. I had a labral tear at one
point, and thought I'd never come back again, where a
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friend of mine convinced me to, or I used the
Galloway method to do probably what was my 14th marathon, to
keep the streak going. And then I became a streaker,
and knew I'd have guaranteed entry. And so I guess
in the back of my mind, I know that I
can run the marathon at any given time. And I'm
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turning 59 this year, and then I thought to myself, "
Maybe every decade I'll just complete it, so I'll do
it when I'm 60." Who knows? I don't know. Jury's
out on that one.
Meb Keflezighi (52:05):
It's a wonderful idea. I think it's great to be
able to do what you have done, 20 of them,
and then if you have the desire or the urge to
come back every decades, we'd love to see you there.
From your perspective though, how was running the first marathon
different from running the 20th time?
Margaret Schwartz (52:23):
The first one is, for me, and this is all
my personal experience, no one in my family was a
runner, and I wasn't a runner. And I had started
working close to Central Park. And back in 2000, yay, Central
Park Conservancy. The Central Park wasn't what it is today.
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So I would leave. Back then, there were no phones.
I would leave a note with a person, saying, " I'm
going to Central Park now. If I'm not back in
an hour, something has happened to me." So I mean, I feel
like I'm sort of getting that experience, because we take
it for granted, this beautiful place that we have to
run. And for me, as a little girl, I grew
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up in Queens, and I always went to watch the
marathon, I guess 15 and a half at the Queensborough Bridge, and
I just thought they were people doing something that I
could never do.
And then one year, my friend, in
1999, did it. And so I finally knew someone who
ran the marathon, and I thought " I can do that."
And so it's really about completing it for me, and
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I thought " One and done, I'm out." And then it was, "
Well, let's see if I can do it a little
better the second time." And then it was "Now I qualified
for Boston. Okay, I'm going to end it with Boston."
And I remember talking to someone on the plane to
Boston, and I said, " Well, no, this was I thought
it would never happen, so I'm going to be done
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here." And she looked at me, and she said, " No, you're
not." I don't know what she saw in me. But the
last one was also special, because it was the 50th
running of the New York City Marathon, and I got
to do it with my wife. So I'd like to say maybe in
my last five marathons, I called them completing marathons. I
didn't necessarily run them, I used the Galloway, and certainly,
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that last one was a run- walk coming out of COVID.
Meb Keflezighi (54:09):
Amazing. I said, my first one I did in New
York, I said, " This is my first and last, I don't
think I want to do it." But somehow, someway, you've done
20 of them, you've done 26, but we're grateful for that.
Margaret Schwartz (54:19):
Yes.
Meb Keflezighi (54:20):
So you are also a crazy leg runner, which means
you have run the Mini- 10K at least 15 times.
You ran your first Mini- 10K in 2001. What is it about
that race that makes you want to keep coming back?
Margaret Schwartz (54:34):
I love that race. First and foremost, I think the new course
is great. It's a little outside of the park, so you
got that first mile on Central Park West. But along
with that, there was a time, and I always say
this to my running students, where they didn't think women
could run more than a 5K, and that's the impetus
of that race, to run the 10K, and that women
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got together, and said, " We can do this." But the
New York City Marathon, people like me get to run
next to people like you, or Edna Kiplagat, or Catherine
Switzer. And it's just mind blowing that we can be
sort of these non- professionals doing our best.
And I
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always say in that race, at the halfway point, the
race is over. Somebody already won. It's just crazy that
these women are doing it in 30 minutes. It's just
crazy. So I love that race, and so in my heart,
it will always be a crazy... It will always be
a Mini and one New York City half. If it's
not the United, perhaps Brooklyn, but there will always be
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a New York Road Runners half- marathon and the crazy lights
for me, as long as I can do it.
Meb Keflezighi (55:48):
You're going to keep doing it. Just keep doing those small things, that makes
a big difference. You're inspiring many.
Margaret Schwartz (55:52):
Yeah.
Meb Keflezighi (55:53):
But now, your endurance sport is swimming. How does swimming
in open water compare to running a marathon?
Margaret Schwartz (56:01):
They're very similar, except it takes you much longer to
swim a mile than to run a mile. Whether it's
me or you, it just takes longer. So I remember
the first time when I thought I could swim a
5K, I had two miles under my belt easy, and I said, "
What's another one?" It's a lot. And the truth is
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when you're running, you can start to walk. When you're
swimming, there's no walking, and usually no standing up. I
swim with a safety buoy, so it's different in that
respect. They're very similar though, nutrition- wise, so I can
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use the skills I had from running distance events and
put them into swimming events. And it's much easier on
my body. I know when I run a 5K, but
sometimes I can forget that I swam a 5K, I just
don't feel it in physical body as much.
Meb Keflezighi (57:01):
No, the impact is definitely less on the body, but
I think you're doing a great job balancing 10K, the
mini, or the United Airline Half- marathon, stuff like that,
to do great job. So how did participating in yoga
make a difference in your running, and do you find
it helps with your swimming as well?
Margaret Schwartz (57:20):
Well, I started yoga probably in the late- 90s, when
it wasn't as in vogue as it is now. And
I think like many runners are terrible about post- recovery,
like doing stretching. So for me, as a student, it
forced me to stretch. It forced me to move my
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body differently. But there is similarities with it, and as
a yoga instructor, and knowing more about yoga in general,
the mind- body connection is, to me, the same. So
if you're in a hard posture, even if it's warrior
one, it's been said that the second you want to
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come out of the posture is when the yoga begins.
And just like when you hit mile 20, for me,
that's the marathon. The final 10K is the marathon. 20,
we all do that. That last 10K is more here
than physically for me. I can't speak for anybody else.
Meb Keflezighi (58:24):
I think I could relate. The last 10K is a more mental
thing. But having done yoga since 1994, '95 also kind of
helps you with everything, to just stretch, be in the moment, and visualization.
With all your experiences as a runner, swimmer, and a
coach, what's the biggest insight or piece of advice you
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find to yourself sharing with others?
Margaret Schwartz (58:50):
Well, with my experience, so in my mind, I know
that I'm capable in the distance. For those 20 years
that I was running, I always had a base, always.
And so when I stopped running the marathon, I thought
I could just run 10K and just bang that out. I
cannot do that. You still have to build. So I
actually had to train for a half- marathon for the first time. I was always half-marathon ready. So knowing where you are in the
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moment, it doesn't matter what you did six months ago
or six years ago. Although mentally, that foundation is still
there, I like to train, Meb, on the less is
more. Less is more. And especially as you get older,
pushing those miles, and having 40, 50- mile weeks, which by
the way, if you have any other life besides running,
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if you're not professional, you have another job. So actually,
to put that time in is very time consuming and
hard on the body, hard mentally.
So I'd just say
less is more. Have your base before you even start
training for a marathon, and then build on that. And
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always distance first. I mean, you know this. This isn't
anything that we can't find anywhere. Speed is second. Complete,
and then add your speed to it. One of my
friends told me, who became a full Ironman, Kona Ironman,
and was injured along the way, she said " The one
reason why I had longevity was because I never pushed
the speed," and I think she was right.
Meb Keflezighi (01:00:23):
I agree. I think the base is important. You could always
convert endurance to speed, but you can't convert speed to endurance.
So as long you can do the fundamental work and
progression run, and longevity is important. So as long as you're having fun,
staying healthy, have a maintained lifestyle, a healthy lifestyle, great
things can happen. So Margaret-
Margaret Schwartz (01:00:44):
Can I ask you a question, Meb?
Meb Keflezighi (01:00:45):
Sure.
Margaret Schwartz (01:00:47):
Because the final marathon you did, of course I did a
little history here, looked back, a little homework. You were
one hour longer than you're winning New York City Marathon
time. How was that for you? Because I'm one hour
longer than I have ever been, and then you get to
a time where it is what it is, right? It
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is what it is.
Meb Keflezighi (01:01:08):
I was with a New Balance person yesterday, having a
dinner, I said that win in Boston, or the finish equally
hurt the last time I did it, last year. Same
pain. But at the same time, I was ready for
it. It's just the last time, I had a lot of
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injuries going into the race. But it equally hurts. You
have to prepare for it. A marathon, you can't just
walk into it, you have to do the work. And
if you do the work, we might make it look seamless
or effortless, but it hurts. Whether you're in front of
the pack or the middle of the pack or the back of the pack, it hurts.
But at the end of the day, you could say, "Hey, I
have done it." Coming across the finish line is such
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a gratifying moment, no matter what.
Margaret Schwartz (01:01:53):
I think exactly what you just said, it hurts at
208 and it hurts at 308.
Meb Keflezighi (01:01:57):
Yeah.
Margaret Schwartz (01:01:58):
But yet you feel like you're running as fast as
you did when you ran that 208.
Meb Keflezighi (01:02:02):
The only thing, Margaret, I could say, is if you can do even pace or negative splits, it
hurts a little bit more than then just going out
hard. If you go 127 and come back 140, that's
not pretty, that hurts.
Margaret Schwartz (01:02:15):
Heartbreaking, heartbreaking. Go for the negative split always.
Meb Keflezighi (01:02:19):
Negative split. Makes it easier. It doesn't mean it doesn't
hurt, it just makes it easier that day, and also
the recovery process.
Margaret Schwartz (01:02:25):
Yes, yes, yes. Absolutely.
Meb Keflezighi (01:02:26):
So great time to be able to talk to you
as Member Moments, Margaret. Keep up the great work, and
congratulations on all your accomplishments.
Margaret Schwartz (01:02:33):
Thank you. Thank you, Meb. So nice to be with you here, and
very inspirational. My friends are going to be very jealous,
that's all I'm saying.
Meb Keflezighi (01:02:40):
We had a nice conversation. Pleasure to be with you.
Margaret Schwartz (01:02:42):
Yes, hopefully I'll see you at the Streaker Luncheon.
Meb Keflezighi (01:02:44):
All right, sounds good.
Rob Simmelkjaer (01:02:45):
Now it's time for today's Meb minute with HSS.
Meb Keflezighi (01:02:49):
Thanks, Rob. Chrysta, welcome to Set the Pace Podcast. How's
it going today?
Chrysta (01:02:53):
Great. Yeah, it's going really well.
Meb Keflezighi (01:02:56):
Great to have you. Many recreational runners aren't sure whether
their aches are normal or a sign they need help. How do
you assess runner's gait and foot mechanics to decide whether
the custom insert could be beneficial, or if a well-
chosen shoe is sufficient enough?
Chrysta (01:03:13):
Sure. So I think there are a few things that we do in a clinical setting that actually,
we recommend patients and runners can do at home, two
types of assessment that they can do of their own
feet and their own alignment. One is a static assessment,
this means just standing and observing. I think the first
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really helpful thing you can do is look at where
you have calluses on your feet. Calluses is a little
bit of your body's way of saying, " I wasn't quite
designed for the pressure and forces you're putting on this
section of my foot." So the calluses can be indicative
of areas that have too much friction, or too much
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pressure against them, while you're running and moving. So looking
at those calluses and seeing where they're located. The second
is looking at your alignment, standing in front of a
mirror, or doing a footprint test, where even almost like
just stepping with a wet foot on a piece of
paper and seeing how much of that bottom surface of
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your foot is contacting the ground.
And you can see
online, they're really easy to find, footprint alignments that show
you a high, normal, or flat arch. Essentially, the more
that that footprint is in contact with the ground, the
flatter your foot. The less in contact, where it looks
like it's jumping from the heel to the ball of
the foot, that's a higher arch. And you're sort of
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trying to determine what type of arch alignment you personally
have, and that's what we'll use to determine if you
need something more significant. So callusing, looking at your foot
alignment, and then looking at the mobility of... Primarily, I
think the biggest ones for runners are your calf, so
how much ankle movement do you have, and your first
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toe. So your calf, you should be able to get
at least 10 degrees of motion, up from 90 degrees,
and you should be able to get that first toe
to be at a 90 degree angle up with the
rest of your foot.
And if you're not, that sort
of tightness, or you have significant tightness, that's usually indicative of
maybe some orthotic intervention, or a different type of shoe
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might be beneficial. So that's sort of the static things.
And then the dynamic things are really just having people
take videos, or looking at pictures of your running, and
seeing what your foot and ankle alignment look like when
you're running. So if your knees are collapsing inward, your
feet are rolling inward, your heels are rolling inward, that
usually indicates a flatter arch, and that might be something
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that we'd want to do an orthotic intervention or a
more substantial shoe for.
Meb Keflezighi (01:05:53):
Pretty awesome information. Self- diagnose a little bit, and then go
to the experts.
Chrysta (01:05:57):
Yeah.
Meb Keflezighi (01:05:58):
For someone dealing with recurring shin splints, or plantar fascia,
what role can orthotic insert play in reducing pain or
helping them get back into training?
Chrysta (01:06:08):
Sure. So shin splints happen for a few reasons, one
reason can be overtraining. So sometimes it's just that you're
overtraining, and that might be more of a physical therapy strengthening
adjustment to your training schedule intervention. But orthotics can really
help if one of the things contributing to your shin
splints is that you're over pronating, so that arch is
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collapsing a little too much while you're running and putting
a little bit of a rotational force on that shin,
which is more likely to result in you developing the
shin splints. So having an arch support that puts your
arch in the correct alignment and provides good support along
the inside arch of your foot, can really help your
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muscles act in the plane that they're supposed to be
functioning in, instead of having this extra rotation put on
them when you over pronate.
And I always recommend for things
like shin splints, that people, especially if it's their first
time, or it's a milder case and they've done some
physical therapy, or changes to their training, and it seemed
to go away, that they really start with an off- the-
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shelf orthotic insert and see if that's enough. If it's
a recurring problem, then I usually recommend people go to
somebody, like an orthotist or podiatrist, to see if they
can get something custom- made to really more directly address
their alignment if they're continually seeing the shin splints reoccur.
Meb Keflezighi (01:07:30):
And how long is too long to have a problem?
Sometimes you say, " Oh, it's going to get better. It's
going to get better." Is it a month, is it weeks? And
for me, personally, when I was at UCLA, I used
to have, and when I first wake up and the
first three, four steps were excruciating pain, so when is
the time to go see a professionalist?
Chrysta (01:07:48):
Yeah, I'd say anytime this pain is more significant, like
where it's excruciating, I would say always go to see
a specialist, if you're starting to see a significant amount
of pain. If it's more of a soreness, and it seems
to go away within, I'd say, give it a two
to three- month period with intervention to see if something's
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working. If after three months, you've tried off- the- shelf
foot orthotics, you've tried stretching interventions, you've done some exercises
to help strengthen your muscles, like you're intervening, you've changed
your shoes. That's the first thing I tell people, " You
have shin splints, when was the last time you bought
a new pair of running sneakers?" Change your shoes.
Meb Keflezighi (01:08:28):
Treat yourself.
Chrysta (01:08:28):
Right. Change your shoes, because sometimes it's just that the
padding and the foam has worn down, and the shoe
is just not providing the same amount of cushioning and
impact absorption that it used to. So I'd say more
than three months, definitely go see somebody. Anything that feels
significant or very poignant, like this sharp pain here, very
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localized, or it's consistent, it's hurting all day, then definitely
see somebody much sooner than that. I would say within the
first week or two of starting to experience the pain,
you want to see somebody much sooner, because you could
also be misdiagnosing it. It could be something different than
shin splints, especially if it's that acute and sharp. But
the dull ache, which seems to go away and come
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back every now and then, try interventions for, I would
say, two to three months, to see if they work,
and if not, then escalate to the next level.
Meb Keflezighi (01:09:20):
Great job. I think it's always good to self- diagnose
a little bit, when you going for a run, kind of
pay attention a little bit to what the body is doing and
try to stretch in the stability and exercise. And if
not, then go see yourself a specialist. But yeah, when you have
a little bit knee or plantar fascia, it could be
the shoes, simple as that. But if not, you got
to go to the experts.
Chrysta (01:09:42):
Yeah, for sure.
Meb Keflezighi (01:09:43):
Well, Chrysta, I said it all here. Thank you so much for taking
the time to give out this wise advice to be
better runners, and be able to move forward quickly and
efficiently as possible.
Chrysta (01:09:53):
Of course. Thank you so much for having me.
Meb Keflezighi (01:09:53):
My pleasure.
Rob Simmelkjaer (01:09:53):
All right, that does it for another episode of Set The
Pace. We want to thank our guests today, Susie Chan
from Peloton, Margaret Schwartz, and HSS's Chrysta Irolla. If you
liked the episode, make sure you give us a five-
star rating, share it, leave a comment so we can
hear from you. We'd love to hear from all of
(01:10:15):
our great listeners out there. Hope everybody enjoyed the show.
Enjoy those miles out there. We will see you next week.