It's done and I am looking forward to run a similar time in the future. Being so physically unnaturally made for running I am one proud human being! I also enjoy the advantages of finishing a little earlier than usual. Mainly, the likelihood of your favourite post-race Cola will still be cold; there will still be food and fruit left in the club tent, and you get to spend more time hogging more sunny warm grass space! So here's what happened:
Race day morning
Given there was road closure right outside our apartment my friend suggested it would be wise for us to walk to the start. This was the best decision ever. Not only walking will give us an exact arrival time to the start tent, it was also a good way to warm up our bodies for the mega mileages ahead.
On the way there we saw the half marathoners already out in force:
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The GCAM 2015 Half Marathoners out in force at 6AM |
Anyhoo we reached the start tent. Another great thing that I came to realise with walking 2.5km to the start line was that it gets the blood in your intestine moving...my stomach was feeling funny around half way to the start and luckily it wasn't during the run or I would have sh*t everywhere. What I love about the Gold Coast Marathon was their super clean port-a-loos!! They were pristine! They smelt of heavy toilet cleaners but boy they were clean!
The time came and we have to line up. At that point in time I was still unsure what average pace I will do. The Boy kept telling me to do 5:19 for a sub 3:45 finish. I think partly because I promised earlier that if I finished sub 3:45 then I will take everyone to the pub and shout all food and beer! But I know I cannot at this point in time because I don’t even train at 5:19 pace so I don’t even know what that feels like…
Eventually I decided to simply close my eyes and just run whatever that feels marathon-comfortable. It was also strangely warm for a winter day and I really enjoyed it as I don't fare well in the cold. At that point in time...2 minutes before the start I had this sudden urge to pee. Ugh too late now! I will find a loo along the way (I will find one but doubt I will go so I better just get the run over and done with quickly so I can pee!).
And so the Gold Coast Marathon started.
0-5KM. The first 2km I had to swim through the crowd and stuck at 5:30min pace. So that means I had to increase my pace to an average pace of 5:25min/k by the 5KM. I did it though but it's not ideal.
5-10KM. I saw a lot of people overtaking me. I had to suppress my competitive streak to let them pass me and forced myself to stay at goal pace (5:25) and let them go and catch them later...
10-15KM. The first turning point. As I was approaching the turn I saw the elites and later my team mates flew by. It was magnificent to watch them run! Around the 12KM mark my body has finally warm up and I was able to reduce my average pace to 5:23min/km.
15-25KM. This was the most magical part of the run. I was in full control and I felt like I was floating with each stride. I was able to maintain my average pace of 5:23 throughout the run.
25-30KM. Ok this part was tough. I don't think that the wall but – suddenly my pace slowed by a few seconds per km and by 30km mark my average pace was down to 5:24.
30-35KM. I was able to pick up my pace after a slow km (1km slow, 1km faster). My average has drop down to 5:26. I was still feeling great but I think my cadence had drop as I was getting tired. At this point I can feel cramp creep...that same dreaded tingle down my right calf that I had at the Six Foot Track marathon back in February. To restraint the cramp I walked at every water stop and also forced myself to stand tall. It worked and I was able to suppressed the cramp.
35-40KM. At this point I told myself that this is the part of the race I excel at. And I did. This was the point where I hit my runners high and I found my stride again and was able to pick my average pace back up to 5:25. By that time I was onto my GU Espresso Love with caffeine and hope that will give me a lift for the final few Ks.
40-42.2KM – Arguably the longest 2.2 KM ever. I feel very dehydrated I even had to stop at the last drinks top at 1.6km to go. Two cups in hand, walked for 5 seconds, and off to pound the pavement again. The last 400M was fuelled by pure emotion and adrenaline as I have nothing left. The crowd must have saw me with my suffering face on, which drew even more cheers! By the time I saw the finish arch I had 45 seconds to approach it. That felt like the longest 50m, ever.
0-5KM. The first 2km I had to swim through the crowd and stuck at 5:30min pace. So that means I had to increase my pace to an average pace of 5:25min/k by the 5KM. I did it though but it's not ideal.
5-10KM. I saw a lot of people overtaking me. I had to suppress my competitive streak to let them pass me and forced myself to stay at goal pace (5:25) and let them go and catch them later...
10-15KM. The first turning point. As I was approaching the turn I saw the elites and later my team mates flew by. It was magnificent to watch them run! Around the 12KM mark my body has finally warm up and I was able to reduce my average pace to 5:23min/km.
15-25KM. This was the most magical part of the run. I was in full control and I felt like I was floating with each stride. I was able to maintain my average pace of 5:23 throughout the run.
25-30KM. Ok this part was tough. I don't think that the wall but – suddenly my pace slowed by a few seconds per km and by 30km mark my average pace was down to 5:24.
30-35KM. I was able to pick up my pace after a slow km (1km slow, 1km faster). My average has drop down to 5:26. I was still feeling great but I think my cadence had drop as I was getting tired. At this point I can feel cramp creep...that same dreaded tingle down my right calf that I had at the Six Foot Track marathon back in February. To restraint the cramp I walked at every water stop and also forced myself to stand tall. It worked and I was able to suppressed the cramp.
35-40KM. At this point I told myself that this is the part of the race I excel at. And I did. This was the point where I hit my runners high and I found my stride again and was able to pick my average pace back up to 5:25. By that time I was onto my GU Espresso Love with caffeine and hope that will give me a lift for the final few Ks.
40-42.2KM – Arguably the longest 2.2 KM ever. I feel very dehydrated I even had to stop at the last drinks top at 1.6km to go. Two cups in hand, walked for 5 seconds, and off to pound the pavement again. The last 400M was fuelled by pure emotion and adrenaline as I have nothing left. The crowd must have saw me with my suffering face on, which drew even more cheers! By the time I saw the finish arch I had 45 seconds to approach it. That felt like the longest 50m, ever.
I crossed the line at 3:52 and a net time of 3:49. I was very happy that the 4hour curse has truely been broken!
I don't want to gloat here as there are huge room for improvement in time for Berlin in September, but
right now I am just so so so so so happy! I shed a tear of joy and relief at the finish. I even
almost scored a place at the medics tent because I walked into one of the
volunteers and she thought I was about to faint. (I wasn’t but I was delirious
and just walking into people)
Analysis paralysis
I need to stretch more/do more yoga. My hips are very rigid
from being a long time desk jockey.
Cramps – I still have no idea why I get them. I blame it on
my still sh*tty running technique. I never get them at training runs so it’s a
bit difficult to work out a cure for it. Perhaps if I persevere and work on my
technique I might be crampless for Berlin.
Gels – SIS are now my gel of choice. I no longer carry a
bottle when I run on road so these liquidly SIS gels quench my thirst when I most
needed it.
I still like to carry a couple of GU/Expresso Love for a
caffeine kick towards the finale. They are very compact which is ok.
I think I should have carbed up more. I did feel a bit tired
(battery charged to around 80%).
Pacing wise it is good this time. My pace was fairly even
overall with a bit of a drip from 35km onwards (loss about 5-8seconds per KM).
A little bit of a positive split but that’s ok. (5:24 down to 5:28). I would
prefer to be identical all the way though. Something to work on.
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