I bet the injuries are made up, or at the very least exaggerated. From the May 21 blog post:
I trained all year (2013) for the Philadelphia Marathon, all the while thinking that just because I was running more miles I would be able to handle the load. What I failed to realize was that in addition to increasing my miles, I needed to get stronger.
The result? I hurt my IT Band just a few weeks prior to the Philly Marathon. I was devastated. I had been training all year for the marathon and didn't know at that point if I'd be able to run it.
I went to an orthopedic specialist who diagnosed me with IT Band Syndrome (Runner's Knee) and sent me to a PT who stretched, foam-rolled and iced me to the point that I could run the race.
I was told that I really couldn't do any more damage by running but the pain made it very difficult.
However, there was no way I wasn't running in that marathon! So I managed as best I could, popped some Advil (and Tylenol) and went for it. My knee felt OK , until mile 3 when the pain kicked in. I was fortunate just to be able to finish the race.
What kind of specialist would say to an inexperienced runner with an overuse injury that they "really couldn't do any more damage by running" 26.2 miles? Not to mention that ITBS and Runner's Knee are totally different diagnoses.