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I came through the first 5km a bit quicker than I wanted (pretty sure everyone did!) but even though I was around 6:20 pace my HR was still well up around 160bpm. 100km is a long way so on my 2nd of 20 laps I knocked the pace back a little more to see if that helped but by the end of the lap the lowest reading I had seen was around 157. Time to make a decision. After 10km of worrying about my HR and getting nowhere I decided that it was high for whatever reason so I needed to ignore it and get on with the running. It was quite a relief once I decided this and I felt way more relaxed. Even though the lead group was pulling away from me I wasn’t too worried as a few always start a bit quicker than perhaps they should so it would make for an interesting last few laps if I could run strongly (little did I know now that my last 3 laps would be quite interesting due to the suffering I would go through!).
The laps were ticking off slowly and I was getting all my drink bottles and nutrition so that was one less thing to worry about. Just before the end of lap 5 I came around the corner after the feed stations and saw Steve just ahead of me which was a surprise as he had been in the lead group. This would be a theme for the night with Steve yo-yoing back and forth due to unwanted pit stops. By 40km I could feel my legs weren't really in the best shape already so I knew it was going to get tougher. I went through 50km in 3:17:54 which was almost spot on split I had thought about pre race though I was already losing a chunk of time each lap. Within the next 2 laps I had gone from having a 2 minute buffer on a 6:40 finish time to a 1 minute deficit as I went through 60km in 4:01.
The next few laps laps my mental focus was lagging a bit which was not helped by my quads which were really starting to cease up now. My HR had dropped into the mid 140s which meant I was being a bit lazy on the effort and a couple of 23 min laps confirmed this. It was good timing then that one of Steve's many pit stops meant we ended up running together. I had to up my effort but it was time to man up and get on with it, or at least die trying! We were ticking along at around 7 min pace which was a vast improvement and with 5 laps to go we needed to average 7 min miles to secure a sub 7 hour finish time.
@marigold_bac and @marders rocking the #TeamGB kit! Happy face, very unhappy legs. |
Finally, last lap! |
One of the most special moments of the whole race for me was right before the finish line. I was in a world of pain and couldn't wait to be finished but I made sure I enjoyed those final few moments with a tug of the vest and a big smile, all before collapsing onto the ground and being wheeled off in a wheelchair.
I was sweet as, I just had nothing left in my legs to allow me to stand up which was perfect for what was to come next, a nice chilly ice bath.
My end result was 19th in 7:09:39 and whilst disappointed I didn't perform as I’d expected it was a great experience and something I’ll remember for a long time for reasons at the extreme ends of the emotional spectrum! As an added bonus the other 3 GB men had run awesome enough races which meant we won Bronze in the team event so we didn't go home empty handed at least.
Team Bronze! Back left to right: Craig Holgate, Paul Giblin, Steve Way, Paul Martelletti. |
Splits for the record...
5km splits:
19:33 20:11 19:29 19:30
19:43 19:29 19:44 20:05
19:43 20:23 21:09 21:56
23:04 23:03 22:28 21:49
22:21 23:55 24:30 27:27
50km splits
3:17:54
3:51:45 (oops!)