Sunday, August 30, 2009

My finest hour

2:57:59 by my watch. How do you like those apples ( I almost said this to the girl giving out fruit in the recovery tent a la Matt Damon, but took pity on her)

Leading up to this one, I wanted to focus on 2 things - mental discipline not to go too fast in the middle third, and adequate nutrition.

I decided to use 7km chunks as my targets, as indiviual kms were too variable with the hills. I wanted Nothing under 29, nothing over 30 for each of the sixths.

29:14/29:16/29:09/29:22/29:18/29:15 by the Garmin - all within 2 sec/km of each other.

So I started conservatively, feeling quite good. I tucked in a group of about 6 - mainly South African guys who I expect are stalwarts of WAMC/Darlington. I heard one had run 2:17 in his younger days. I'm not a chatty marathoner, so I just listened.

Nothing really happened in the first HM. I took powerade at every station, and grabbed a Gu at 15k and had it with some water at the next station. I didn't walk any of the stations, often needing to take 2 paper cups to get adequate fluid after spillage.

It was a buzz to go pass the assembling hordes before attacking Market St. I've run it several times in training and took a head down approach. The aforementioned ex2:17 runner bounded ahead up the hill, but we reassembled in Kings Park. We made up some time on the downhill, and after the U turn at the bottom of the hill, I found I had pulled ahead of the group. I didn't speed up so I assume they slowed for some reason. I ran the rest of Kings Park solo.

Turning into Kings Park road we were partitioned off from the 12k runners, but then the fun started. On the pre race map it said we took a little left detour into Thomas St, but this didnt happen. We turned right and merger into hordes of walkers/joggers. Knowing we had a Barker St turn left I moved to the path on the left of the road, but there was noone ther telling Marathoners to turn left. I did but I pity those who weren't familiar with the course. There was a guy 100m ahead of me down Kings Park road who obviously go lost in there beacause he was nowhere to be seen when turning into Barker road just a few hundred m ahead.

Running thru Subi I felt good, but again turning into Hay St we merged with the masses, and I spent km 34-38 weaving through joggers. This didnt slow me down much and helped distract me from the big hill. The problem was that the 2 drink stations along here were packed with people stopping and I went about 7k without a drink.

So we turn down Stevenson and I'm alone again. I suddenly became acutely aware of the fact I was at 38k, on pace and feeling pretty good (I had a left groin niggle quite badly in KP but it faded on flatter terrain). I was in a new situation for me whereby I started picking off runners one by one. The first was Verity Tolhurst, who I had run near in Canbeera this year before I blew up. I started feeling the pain at the 40k hill towards WC highway, but I wasn't about to stop.

At this point I was glad to see Clown running towards me and he said some encouraging words. At this point I was pumped. My shoe had picked up a long piece of sticky tape flapping about but I wasnt going to stop and pull it off. I even managed to find some energy for sub 4 pace in the last 500m, and took 2 guys in this last bit.

Surprisingly I felt OK afterwards, apart from an incredibly sore right groin/hip flexor which I suspect is going to be very annoying in the coming fortnight.

So my 5 year goal is complete, in style, on a hilly course. I guess I do better with hills - my PB in HM and Mara are now on hilly courses, and in retrospect in School Xcountry I always did best in the hilly ones.

Why today? Luck, lighter weight, no virus in the leadup, good weather, disciplined pacing all played a part.

Congrats to all those I saw out there - Gunner and Coops, Craig/Duffer with a Mara PB, TB I saw at the start and not the end. Sugar and Biscuitman I look forward to your 12k reports. Clown thanks for coming down and supporting despite not running the HM - you'll go sub3 in Melbourne. Homo - next time. Sling - you'll go sub3 sooner or later.

I'll post my official time and HM split when available

8 comments:

homo said...

Well done!

A very much clinically controlled effort, you definitely have the distance pegged by now.

I couldn't make it out there today, but was crossing my fingers for you.

& what's next?

DC64 said...

Fantastic! I'm really stoked for you. I was looking out for you but didn't see you. Perfect pacing, perfect plan. Well done!

Biscuitman said...

Well done - brilliant!! Happy it all came together on what must have been a great day for you.

Clown said...

Once again mate, well done and really well deserved.

Caps off a great first 8 months of the year where you've really taken your running to a new level.

Anonymous said...

Epi,
Brilliant effort, you have worked hard this result, the perseverance you showed along the way has been something else.

Enjoy your achievement.

Gunner

Sling Runner said...

What a perfect splits!!

A big congrats and well deserved :)

trailblazer777 said...

Well done! Massive Congratulations!
Great to see you nail the holy grail on an extremely tough course...the Kings Park section was very tough and Rochdale a testing way to finish, and Malcom also, but you destroyed all the obstacles, way to go! As I said at the start your training and 6-inch experience had to give you a good chance, and you nailed it...
Verity Tolhurst is a top runner too...

I could see you looked like you might be in for a blinder in the first few km and again at about 16km near Steves Hotel...

Very even splits, and well done on negotiating the Barker St mess successfully, splitting it into 7k sections is a masterstroke...

I did finish albeit in 4.42 but sub 5 was my goaltime for today...

As henry said whats next in 2010? You are not far off preferred start in Canberra or Sydney, Melbourne etc...
Enjoy an extremely well earned break, but hope you can maintain the intensity...

Epi said...

Thanks guys.

For the moment I'm going to take some down time, with no specific plans until the SixInch trail run in December after we get back from Nepal.

If I recover well I'll run a few shorter club races in the coming months, but want to keep it fairly easy.