The hardest part of any race, is getting to the start line injury free and fit. As I stood next to Beth in the Olympic Stadium in Amsterdam I thought it was mildly amusing we were both undertrained and unfit, for a marathon due to various circumstances, and she had a cold and I had an injured knee and lower back. But we were there and going to give it our best effort while enjoying the course.
My strategy was, for the first time ever, to run consistent 5 min 20 sec KMs to get a time of 3hrs 45 mins. I knew it would be hard and was quite prepared to give it a go and if it went t1ts up, I'd either jog in or stop. What I wasn't prepared for was that on exiting the Olympic Stadium, what an atmosphere, there would be the first of many "pinch points" which reduced you to walking. I ran harder than I wanted to after each pinch point but my first km was still 5:40.
The course was fantastic. The crowds were amazing lining the whole route. Running beside the river Amstel and admiring the beautiful houses took my mind of the niggles, but I knew around 30 km it was going to start getting painful. I got a massive boost when 2 of Beth's cousins with partners and kids gave me a big shout out. If you are ever in a crowd watching a race, encourage the runners with a shout out as it works every time.
The weather was almost ideal at 11 degrees and no wind but there was some torrential rain and hailstones which was normal for us!
When I got to 21km I knew I couldn't keep the pace going and therefore 3hrs 45mins wasn't possible but I wanted under 4 hours so I gritted my teeth and hobbled on. I couldn't afford to stop as I knew I'd cease up but at the same time I had to restrict my gait as my right hamstring was ready to blow - tight as a snare drum!
On reaching the Olympic Stadium the crowd was even more lively and doing a lap in that atmosphere is what had kept me going. I crossed the line, 3 hrs 55 mins and promised myself that was my last race of the year - my body was relieved to hear that.
As I was about to exit the stadium, Beth came flying in with a huge smile on her face. She was having a great time "living in the moment". Despite her cold, having to stop and tie her laces and posing for a picture with her cousins, she was only 9 mins behind me. Two days before I doubted she'd make the start line and was hoping she wasn't going to pass her cold to me (I fortunately avoided it). What an effort and she enjoyed every moment of it.
It was good to have our friends Team Gall racing in the Marathon and they had a great race and enjoyed it too. Unfortunately we never saw them due to the number of runners.
My knee, lower back and hammy were painful when we got home and I got a massage and saw my sports therapist who taped my knee. I won't be running for a week to give it a chance to repair. Today I was back with my Personal Trainer and it was more like a rehab session. Bartek is getting to know my physical limits and adjusting the programme accordingly. The strength training and yoga are the answer and essential to me being able to carry on with these adventures. That is our winter plan and we'll have to dust down the turbo trainers.
It's a fine balancing act, training / racing when injured but I've ran more races this year than in any other year since I started this madness in 2008. A lot of that is down to Beth and we are hoping to have an exciting 2024 if we can get through the ballots for certain races.
Thursday, 19 October 2023
Rest, Rehab and Strengthen
Sunday, 8 October 2023
It's come full circle
For those of you who are new to my blog, all this "craziness" started in 2008 when, due to too much alcohol, I entered a "white collar" charity boxing event in London. It was an amazing event, black tie, £400 per ticket and TV camera's. Fortunately I lost, so gave up boxing, but not before raising £14,000 for Maggie's Cancer Caring Centre's. I loved the training and the fitness, but not getting beaten up, so entered a triathlon as I couldn't swim! That led to Ironman then Marathon des Sables (5.5 marathons self supported across the Sahara Desert in 6 days) and many more crazy events and this blog has reported on my journey throughout.
I'm now approaching 62, how did that happen? I still have ambitions to enter events that will stretch me to limits I don't know I even have. But my body and mind need to hold up.
I'm still coming to terms with being diagnosed with Atrial Fibrillation but hope the medication and me keeping an eye on it will allow me to continue with these events - might have to turn down the ones over more than a week in the heat.
To do this, I have hired a personal trainer as I need to be become stronger to reduce my susceptibility to injury. Before the Glasgow half marathon my training was affected by sore quads and then I fell and really hurt my left knee. I was fortunate that it didn't affect my Glasgow half marathon but it has affected my training for the Amsterdam Marathon in a weeks time. The strength training is going well, although my knee is still not good, but today I returned to boxing training after a 15 year gap. Just circuits and pad work but, I managed to get tennis elbow FFS! Couldn't believe it and had to miss out part of the training. It was a tough session and I was blowing out my a@@e but I don't like failing and this was a fail.
Earlier today I read a race report from my pal Wilson who has had a tough year involving back problems and DNFs in half ironman races. He battled through in his "A race", Barcelona Ironman, and was slower than he wanted but took pride in finishing the race in difficult conditions. That's the mental strength you need to compete in these events. He might be feeling his age, we're all getting older but mentally he's focused on his goal of a sub 10 hour ironman. It's friends and stories like this that inspire me to work hard during the winter to get in shape for next year.
So 15 years later I come full circle and back to boxing. It will be part of my winter fitness training and hopefully I can get rid of the tennis elbow. I can assure you however that I won't be going back in the ring. That was an experience I wouldn't want to repeat. Age may only be a number but keeping my body injury free is probably my biggest challenge. Bring on the winter training.
Sunday, 1 October 2023
Great Scottish Run Half Marathon 2023
What a day. What an event. What a race. It's estimated 30,000 took part in the half marathon but all I know is Glasgow "came alive". The runners, experienced or otherwise, came out to complete either their 10th or their 1st. The sun shone. The crowds lined the streets and cheered us on.
I was in the purple pen and separated from Beth, Holly & Stuart that I was travelling with. I met my pal Beardy which was good but there was so much chatter going on from excited runners that I shrank into myself and just focused on the starting pistol. I was unsure I could complete the race due to my knee injury but I was going to give it my best shot.
I was aiming for 1 hour 45 mins and knew from last year that the pacer starts off fast up St. Vincent Street. After 500m I'd lost Beardy, he was flying and after 3km I was doubting my knee would last and I was considering pulling out. Then I thought about my WHY. This was a lead up to the Amsterdam marathon in 2 weeks time. It was to test my ability to maintain a fast pace, faster than I'd ever achieve in training. Faster than I'd run all year. And I was injured.
Beth was also injured with plantar fasciitis but she was going to push through the pain. They say 80% of runners are running injured but we weren't going to let spoil our day.
I lost the 1:45 min pacer at 5km. He was doing sub 5min kms which was too fast for me. But the time made up with the sub 5's offset against the slow K's in Pollok park. Once again my heart rate defied logic. Running my fasted time this year and my average heart rate was 147 with a max of 157. It goes higher in Strathclyde Park running slow! But my other watch showed I had been in AFib - it's all about the rhythm. I hit my 1:45 target and Beth was happy(ish), being 5 mins behind although she would have preferred being 1 minute ahead! A successful day. Fortunately the meds are working so tomorrow is a new day. Training starts for Amsterdam in 13 days time. I think both Beth & I will enjoy the scenery around the route rather than go for a PB as we don't have the training in us. But then again, who knows. It will depend on the WHY.
But Glasgow you rocked today. Thank you to everyone who cheered us on. Being "inside the ropes" is such a privilege and I will never take it for granted being able to take part in these events.