Monday 29 November 2010

Get ('em) in

'I'm in!' I texted James on Friday night after receiving a deluge of texts from club members informing me that I'd been successful in the club draw to win a place in the London Marathon next year.

'In the pub?' he replied.

Not the response I was hoping for but perhaps a sign that my world is no longer the 24/7 running focussed one it once was. And then it came flooding back to me...

The hours messing about with my spreadsheet of training sessions, adding up miles covered; the complete lack of free weekends for fear of missing my long run; and all those freezing and snowy evenings spent running.

And I'm feeling very nervous about whether I can really do it all again, and dare I even think it, do better? But I'm also so excited. I mean, this is London, the world's top marathon (well, according to Runner's World). I am really lucky.

Sunday 21 November 2010

Dashing Back...

After confidently declaring in my last post that the Guy Fawkes 10 would be my last race of the year, earlier this week I found myself entering the Abbey Dash 10k. This is a race I've always wanted to do but am usually not around for.

So, I entered last minute, didn't think much of it, had a couple of glasses of wine the night before, got up early, sauntered into Leeds, and somehow or other managed to knock nearly five minutes off my previous 10k PB which I'd achieved only six weeks ago - coming in at 50.47!

The race is a straightforward out and back starting at Leeds Town Hall, then up to Kirkstall Abbey then back down again. I'd heard a few people say it wasn't a particularly scenic race, and some that they just didn't like it but given a PB like that, I'll definitely be back for more next year.

I think it must have helped motivation a little that the previous night, like the stats geek I am becoming, glass of wine in hand, I'd been browsing around Fetcheveryone , comparing PBs of people who ran the same time as me at the Paris Marathon this year. It became abundantly clear that I have the slowest PBs of all of them - the average 10k PB for these runners was about 45 minutes, and 5k times seemed to be nearer to 20 minutes than 25. It dawned on me that perhaps I've simply not been pushing myself enough in these races - have I been taking the good advice to start slow too far? Quite possibly. Or maybe they just weren't pushing enough in the marathon?!

Anyway, I am resolved to take this possible learning forward, and see if I really can get my times right down. This is confirmed by proudly tapping my new 10k into the race predictor calculator on the Running for Fitness site, which calculates my half marathon time should now be around 1.50. Good to have a goal in sight, albeit ambitious.