A bit over 14km today with Crossy, Kanser (yes, you read that correctly), Big Kev and JW. As usual on a Wednesday, Crossy and JW were not hanging around and after a couple of 4:10's early on, I begged them to slow down. Poor old Kanser didn't know what had hit him. My legs were shattered again and had the short choppy stride going on. Ended up doing a bit over 14km around the wharves averaging 4:16's, so we didn't slow down that much.
Continuing the theme of Melbourne Marathon stories, I received an email forwarded this morning which shows correspondence between Beaches Ben and Striders President Joe. I'm guessing Joe was reaching out to Ben to thank him for helping one of the older Striders runners to the finish at Melbourne. It's a great read and shows the true camaraderie of the Marathon:
"I blew up at 24km
aiming for a 2.52. A training partner ran past at around 27km and tried to
encourage me to stick with her [Ed: this is Erika]. I told her that I was done; my rubber band was
stretched. Thankfully she went on, ran her PB and to her race goal of 2:58. My
plan B was sub 3hrs and that went at around 29km; my rubber band had snapped. I
was in a world of hurt along St Kilda Road and thought about jumping in front
of a tram to end it a couple of times. I may have even been delusional as
I swear I spoke to Craig Mottram as he ran passed me pacing a buddy of his.
I walked through one of the last aid stations along there and was given
some support by another fellow runner with a friendly tap on the shoulder keep
at it. Plan C came into effect which was to finish what I had started,
just finish and I told myself that time did not matter. It was around
37km just before the rise of the Tan that I then decided to take with me anyone
else who I could convince that the clock did not matter anymore. So if I
saw someone walking or standing I went up to them and told them that they were
coming with us and that I'd be there by their side and we would finish this
together. I would tell the group that "time didn't matter,
concentrate on form and let's keep going together". I think I picked
up about 4 or 5 people and Graham would have been one of these. I ended
in 3:14:48 my second slowest marathon from 9 attempts, only slower than my
debut in 2005. Funnily I ran 17 seconds faster in Canberra in March this
year pacing 3:15. I'm ecstatic to hear that Graham achieved a Boston
qualifier with a small amount of encouragement from me when I was broken, well
and truly broken.
Please pass on my contact details to Graham and congratulate him on his
stellar debut Melbourne marathon and Boston qualifier."
2 comments:
Bit of a blowup by Ben. 187th at the 10k and 502 at the finish.
Definitely a blowup but if he can do what he did for others when blowing up, unlike the rest of us who mostly focus on ourselves, I take my hat off to him.
Post a Comment