Interestingly enough, it turns out this was a relatively slow year for the NYC Chase Corporate Challenge. I mean, with my 21:25 I’m in no position to call anyone out, but take a look at the Top 10 from 2009 vs. 2008…
| 2009 MEN | |||
| 1 | Jeffrey Rios | 17:29 | DAVIS LANGDON |
| 2 | Matthew Forys | 17:37 | BLACKROCK |
| 3 | Sean Swift | 17:45 | JP MORGAN CHASE & CO. |
| 4 | Aidan Walsh | 17:46 | THE RUNNING COMPANY |
| 5 | David Sorensen | 17:48 | D. E. SHAW & CO. |
| 6 | Frank Corrigan | 17:51 | THOMSON REUTERS |
| 7 | Chris Delaubenfels | 17:56 | UFT RUNNERS-DOE |
| 8 | Jacob Gomez | 18:00 | MEMORIAL SLOAN-KETTERING |
| 9 | Chris English | 18:03 | LEVY & HALPERIN, LLP |
| 10 | Larry Contrella | 18:10 | BANK OF AMERICA |
Now compare that to the 2008 results, where all the Top 10 men broke 18 minutes. Also interesting that the top competitors from 2008 barely appear in the 2009 results…
| 2008 MEN | |||
| 1 | Matthew Forys | 17:25 | BLACKROCK |
| 2 | Karl Dusen | 17:28 | AIG INVESTMENTS |
| 3 | Francis Corrigan | 17:30 | THOMSON REUTERS |
| 4 | Ryan Hays | 17:36 | LEVY & HALPERIN |
| 5 | Ben Reynolds | 17:42 | MERRILL LYNCH & CO. |
| 6 | Chris Ellis-Ferrara | 17:51 | ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LP |
| 7 | Mark Olivier | 17:54 | TEAM PFIZER (PGRD) |
| 8 | Chris English | 17:57 | LEVY & HALPERIN |
| 9 | John Traugott | 17:58 | CREDIT SUISSE |
| 10 | Dean Charette | 17:59 | UBS |
Same thing with the women, the top 2009 woman was 13 seconds slower than ’08s winner, and this year’s number 10 woman was 19 seconds slower than her counterpart in 2008…
Tonight was a great night to race in Central Park and I think the 3.5 mile Chase Corporate Challenge went off without a hitch. It was a slightly humid 70 degrees which made for pretty comfortable conditions. I had a good race, coming across the finish line at 21:25 with 6:07 mile-splits. I’m going to guess that puts me in the top 150 or so.

The journey to the starting corrals seemed a little less hectic than it’s felt in previous years. I began the race 7 or 8 rows back from the start line and never felt like it was too congested. I heard from people further back in the corrals that the start went pretty smooth for them as well.
I like the course. Although there are a few rolling hills, I think its actually a small net decline. I’ve never seen so many water stations in a three mile race, but I guess that a lot of people do this as a fun run and are therefore out on the course for a while.
There are also some pretty fast runners that come out for the Corporate Challenge. I heard the winner was a JP Morgan employee and that he ran a 16:45-ish race. That’s really freaking fast. Like 4:45 mile split fast.
There’s also a lot of runners that go out really fast and then die after the first mile. I was passing people left and right starting at the 1.5 mile point. There were also a lot of people that finished around me looking pretty strong, whereas I know I was completely spent running a 21:25.
There was good food in the tents for those with access. The beer tickets at the end were a nice treat as well, thanks JP Morgan Chase!
J
We’re only two short weeks away from the 3.5 mile Chase Corporate Challenge in central park. That means it’s time for me to start thinking strategically about how I’d like to run the race. Time-wise I’d like to break 21 minutes (sub-6 splits), which I don’t think is too aggressive considering my 5k splits from March were 5:49. I’d like to think I’m a little faster now than I was then.
There are 122 men and 9 women who broke 21 minutes in last year’s Corporate Challenge, so that means there are at least 130 people that should start the race ahead of me. Since this is largely an amateur event (not being a running snob, its just true) I’m quite sure there will be plenty of runners who don’t know their starting position. But hopefully not too much bobbing and weaving at the start of the race. The full results from the 2008 Corporate Challenge in central park can be found here: http://tinyurl.com/NYCin310-JP-2008
I traced the race’s course map on www.mapmyrun.com. Fortunately the course avoids my absolute least favorite hill in the park (north-west corner). However, the first ¾ of a mile are basically uphill, followed by a good solid mile of downhill. Then mile 2 begins a short ¼ mile ascent, but the remainder of the race is pretty much flat or downhill which rocks.
Now that I’m back on a regular training schedule, I’m thinking about the big picture and the smaller picture simultaneously…