Melbourne Marathon recap

The anticipation for my eighth Melbourne Marathon and eighteenth altogether was high following a satisfying training campaign. This would be my fifth for 2019, comfortably exceeding the three I’d completed in 2015.

Whilst I ran at Sydney four weeks earlier, this was a glorified long run – pacing ‘good honest toiler’ or simply, ‘GHT’, Mark Berry, to a PB (2:48), Melbourne represented my first goal event since linking up with Vigor Coaching under Liam Delany’s guidance after July’s Gold Coast Marathon.

The inroads from enjoying a formalised structure for the first time in my running journey, and regularly attending track sessions quickly became evident.

The largest adaptation in philosophy was quality over quantity, as my mileage dropped from the 160-180 km window it’d largely sat in for the past two and a half years, to an upper limit in the 140’s. 149 km was my largest haul in the ten weeks leading into Melbourne.

This decrease wasn’t to my detriment, as I found I was able to extract more from myself – particularly at the sessions, which certainly required some extended time embracing the pain on a level I’d seldom reached previously.

On this basis, and with a concerted effort at body maintenance, primarily through regular treatment – which had been non-existent until the lead up to Gold Coast, leaving me with no injury concerns unlike the short turnaround between Great Ocean Road and GC – when I was severely hampered by my right quad, the confidence was real that 2:30 could be broken on the day.

Whilst this didn’t come to pass, with Melbourne ultimately having my number once again, there were many positives to draw from the experience, and the satisfaction of witnessing the majority of the Vigor crew achive their goals outweighed any personal disappointment.

Saturday afternoon’s INEOS 1:59 challenge in Vienna was the perfect prelude to race day, as Eliud Kipchoge realised the milestone which few thought possible. Seeing him cross the line with almost 20 seconds in hand, chest pumping and all, definitely made the hairs stand up on the back of my neck. The performance by all involved from the organisers to the pacers, was clinical and just reward for the preparation towards the effort.

On that note it’s a good moment to recap the race that was!

Sunday, 13th October 

I woke at 4:30 feeling adequately rested, showered and made a coffee alongside some peanut butter on toast. I’ve usually been reluctant to eat much prior to a marathon, but it’s fairly neutral fuel that I could eat all day, and it proved to sit well through the morning.

By the time I’d finished eating and taken a final trip to the bathroom, it was already nearing 5.45. With infrequent train services at the hour, Uber had presented itself as the only option. Thankfully, the driver arrived in short order, though I still arrived outside the MCG a little later than desired shortly before 6:15.

I then had to step on it to drop my bag, whilst the exact location wasn’t specified clearly, thus it ended up being well after 6:30 before I was relieved of the cargo and able to make my way to the start zone.

This was easier said than done, with one of the access bridges closed down, and thousands of runners to navigate around. I ultimately commenced my ‘warm up’ as I struggled to find some clear space – consequently I was unable to work up to any real pace, and it wasn’t until nearing 6:50 that I reached Birrarung Marr.

I hastily commenced some stretches before attempting to find some air to complete a few strides on the gravel path adjacent to the start line.

From there, and without the priority status I’d been declined for despite posting several qualifying times in the past twelve months, I attempted to find an opening in the fencing to avoid a nightmare scenario being relegated to the crush some 50 metres behind the start line.

One participant kindly indicated where I could, and within moments I was making my way up the queue with less than five minutes in hand. None of this had been ideal, but I remained calm about the task at hand.

I bumped into Sean Helmot, Mark – who was on pacing duties himself this time for Jarrod Dempster, as he sought a sub 3:30, had a quick yarn, wished them luck, then doubled down on the aggressiveness to be near the front as possible.

With under two minutes remaining, I sighted Danny, Cara and Matt from the Vigor crew taking part, exchanged more positive wishes, and squeezed a few more metres out of my push forward, as many as I could manage under the circumstances.

I found Xavier and Simon – the latter pacing the former to a hopeful sub 2:40, shook hands, and then it was start time!

As a result of the relentless lead in, the first kilometre felt quite surreal as I jostled for open space, which finally came as I turned onto St Kilda Rd. In hindsight, a 3:33 km wasn’t too bad.

Looking back on the times, not that I checked frequently until the later stages, I pressed the foot down pretty rapidly from there – perhaps to my detriment, following up with a 3:25 and 3:24, in my attempt to latch on to the group including Hugh, as he was chasing a similar time.

I did feel as though I was working slightly too hard once this was achieved, having already broken into a decent sweat, though I settled relatively quickly from there on the run towards Fitzroy St. There was some decent airtime from the film crew on the motorcycles!

My pace generally sat just above 3:30 through 10 km, which dipped into 3:28 as the chasing pack merged with the one I’d been in. Not that I recall exactly when, but I had my first gel sometime after descending on Albert Park.

As it proved, the sprint back up pit straight to 12 km was the final time I would go under 3:30, the pace of the group which had slowly put a gap on me was unsustainable.

I soon found myself in the not unfamiliar position of having the road to myself, neither here nor there. Once I reached Beaconsfield Parade, lacking a solid reference point, and with another small group catching and dropping me, my times crept further away from 3:30, a slide which I was unable to arrest despite another gel.

Falling beyond 3:40 for the first time at 20 km, I accepted that the rest of the morning was going to be a grind. A 21.1 km split of 1:15:07 seemed encouraging on paper, but with my right calf had already exhibiting mild fatigue, and with the toughest part of the run ahead, designs on a negative – much less even, split in the back half were optimistic.

An electrolyte bottle provided by Liam as I approached Marine Parade proved timely, as the desolate trudge towards Elwood loomed large. There were no excuses on account of conditions – which were as optimal as you could ask for, so it was about embracing the pain.

There wasn’t much on offer on the chase towards the final turnaround, but a gel and encouragement from Mum on the approach was appreciated.

Nevertheless, my pace continued to decrease – unsurprisingly as the elevation gain came into play, as I fell into 3:50 for the first time at 29 km. Despite a 3:48 30th km and final rev up from Liam, I’d subsequently remain beyond 3:50 pace for the balance of the race.

Being cautious on anything that might flare my stomach, I’d never previously experimented with caffeine gels, but as it’d been generally sound to this point, I decided to see if an SIS infusion could lift me at 32 km after navigating around the bulk of the half marathon crowd which had spilled onto the course at Fitzroy St.

It was immediately more viscous than their standard gels – which have an easily digestible water like texture, so I took my time devouring it. I did notice that I felt slightly more attuned to my surroundings, though it provided nothing that would eradicate the fatigue which was now inhibiting both calves.

I was unsurprised to see my first real dip arrive on the climb up Birdwood Ave – my pace ballooning beyond 4:00 at 37 km, so I had to maintain my composure in the knowledge that once I’d negotiated the arduous portion and returned to St Kilda Rd, I was effectively home.

The time I’d bled to here was nothing on previous years, so in relative terms it wasn’t a disaster. What I was most pleased by was my ability to close out the final kilometres at a respectable pace despite now being very restricted by the calves, with my 40th and 42nd kilometres dipping back under 4:00.

Once I entered the MCG, there wasn’t much in the tank, yet I gave it everything I had with the irrepressible lift the crowd provides. Navigating the final turn, leaving an 100 m dash to the line, my right leg felt close to buckling, so crossing it couldn’t have come soon enough.

I’d fallen short of the sub 2:30 goal – or a new PB, at 2:38:31, but I was happy to have persevered at a place which has bitten me much harder through the years, whilst a six minute course PB remained a satisfying takeaway.

Whilst Hugh couldn’t manage a PB either, finishing with 2:30 after battling a foot issue since Gold Coast was a great effort, and seeing Xavier cross the line barely a minute behind me was a brilliant result so early in his marathon days.

Several other sub threes – and in most cases, PB’s from other Vigor runners, amounted to a great collective outcome on the day.

After catching up with those that had finished, I decided it was wise to make a move to freshen up as the legs were feeling sorer by the minute!

I was sorry to see that Dion wasn’t able to break 2:20 at a place which has had a colourful history for him, following a hugely impressive training block and year of consistently fast marathons.

It only reiterates that Melbourne is unforgiving, leaving you to be punished if you’re even slightly off your best on the day, though I have no doubt that even more determined, he’ll break through sooner than later with a big twelve months beyond the marathon scene ahead.

I was conversely rapt to learn that Jarrod achieved a 3:29 with Mark’s pacing spot on, so it was nice to catch up and toast the achievement with both at the local later on.

Mark now turns his attention to ramping up preparations for Osaka on December 1 as 2:45 becomes his new medium term target.

From the local, it was back to the MCG, where many of the Vigor crew had reconvened to celebrate the culmination of the previous months’ efforts, the drinks went down very easily!

With Melbourne in the rear view mirror and no future marathon date set in stone, it’s been nice to have enjoyed a little downtime in recent days, even though the itch is definitely asking to be scratched having ran just once in the week following!

The sub 2:30 might have to wait a little longer, though we’ll settle for this year’s yield of 2:34 – a ten minute PB, a 2:38, a pair of 2:40 and a 2:48 – pacing, following an underwhelming 2018.

The priority now shifts to improving times at the track through summer, which we’ll work together to accomplish.

Digging in when it’s hot and uncomfortable might not sound like an attractive proposition, but if we can stay the course the benefits will be on display when it’s time to refocus on the longer hauls towards autumn.

As individualistic as running might seem, it’s a journey which relies heavily on others to achieve respective goals.

To everybody who has been a part of my 2019 marathon ‘season’, whether personally or from afar, thank you for your contribution, I hope you got as much out of the year as I have.

To Liam and Vigor, it’s only early days, I’m looking forward to what we can achieve in the future!

Bring on the 2020’s!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Weekly recap: 25th Feb – 3rd March

My previous post addressed my recovery from the glute/back injury which wiped me out for 1 1/2 weeks, only managing to return on the weekend.

This made last week’s turnaround extra satisfying injury and mileage wise as I was able to resume normal service in swift fashion. It also culminated in a long awaited professional breakthrough which I’ll address later.

Monday 25th February

I commenced the week conservatively with an easy 50 minutes in the morning, more greatly afflicted by calf & quad DOMS following my layoff rather than the subsiding discomfort in the trouble spot.

The afternoon wasn’t anything special either, 25 minutes at 5 mins/km, though by now I’d shaken off the rustiness and felt ready to contemplate some longer hauls.

AM

10.5 km. 50 mins @ 4m 48s

PM

5 km. 25 mins @ 5m 1s

DAILY TOTAL

15.5 km. 75 mins

Tuesday 26th Feb

I took to the Bayside trails for the first time in a while, primarily to allow the tender legs a breather. The run itself was nothing if not a consistent ten miles, though the biggest takeaway was that the glute and back awareness was almost non existent.

AM

16.1 km. 1h 15 mins @ 4m 40s

Wednesday 27th Feb

I must admit there was some fatigue during this midweek ‘long run’, notably from the 15 km mark, thus I was happy to bring it home at a gradually increasing pace for a near 90 minutes.

Following this, it was great to catch up with Dion over coffee before he made the trip to Japan for the Tokyo Marathon. The sentiment was strong on a new PB being achieved, little did any of us foresee the extent this would be realised a few days later!

AM

20 km. 1h 29 mins @ 4m 28s

Despite a lack of energy or intent, it was pleasing to chalk up 30 minutes in the afternoon albeit at a pedestrian rate.

PM

6 km. 30 mins @ 5m 1s

DAILY TOTAL

26.1 km. 1h 59 mins

Thursday 28th Feb

Having built the mileage over five days since I resumed – albeit without any great pace intensity, I decided it was time to put myself through my paces.

I’m usually quite comfortable sitting in the 3m 40s – 3m 50s window over extended intervals, yet I quickly discovered that just a fortnight in the slow lane made much harder work of what was intended to be a moderate tempo workout, comprising three blocks of 3 km repetitions off a 1 km float.

My heart rate – whilst rising by the kilometre, remained in the 150’s for the first set, yet it ballooned into the 170’s by the end of the second, and didn’t fall below this for the balance of the session.

Even though I shortened the final set to 2 km – having briefly considered abandoning it altogether, with my HR straddling 180 in the final km, it was reassuring that the glute held up nicely and I felt sharper for the tuneup.

With this, I was finally able to tick over the 1000 km milestone for the year alongside 400 km for the month, having tracked to reach the former much earlier until my setback.

The warm days ahead belied the reality that summer proper was at its end, though it was a pleasing season which delivered a marathon PB at Hobart in January, hopefully laying a solid base for further progress into the cooler months.

AM

18 km. 1h 12 mins @ 4m 01s

FEBRUARY

402 km

YTD

1004 km

Friday 1st March

It was summer no longer, but the Indian summer which ushered in the opening days of autumn facilitated an uncomfortable slog at any hour.

I settled for an easy 60 minutes circulating Dendy Park in the morning, and with the temperature already nudging 30 degrees by 10 am, there wasn’t much incentive to head out again.

Forcing myself into the furnace for a shakeout, a few strides gave some validity to the perspiration which didn’t cease for several hours.

AM

13 km. 60 mins @ 4m 36s

PM

7 km. 33 mins @ 4m 41s

DAILY TOTAL

20.1 km. 93 mins

Saturday 2nd Mar

It had been an uncomfortable night’s sleep so the run which followed was a pleasant surprise.

I went out at a steady pace, straddling 4m 10s into 4 mins for the first 10 km, before dipping into sub four territory, though encouragingly I didn’t feel overly uncomfortable in the heat.

Settling around 3m 55s for five or six km, things got interesting when I heinously trespassed on the heritage listed cycling lane at Port Melbourne, between Kerferd Rd and the South Melbourne LSC currently undergoing redevelopment, some 250 metres up the road.

Between the pedestrians or volleyballers warming up for action on the adjacent beach strip along the pathway, the inconveniently slow corners at the playground coupled with my pace at that time, it’s one section where I don’t feel I’m imposing greatly on cyclists. Wrong…

I almost immediately had a not so subtle “ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding” – no exaggeration on the count, ringing in my ears, at which point I was ready to turn around and issue an almighty STFU.

I was beaten to the punch by an “OIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII” as the one in question essentially leaned into my right ear, accompanied by an imaginative “GET OFF THE F*CK#NG PATHWAY MORON” from his, shall we say, well rounded friend. Life’s obviously been good to them!

I look forward to being cited as a delinquent menace to society in their local paper’s mail section…

“Have a nice day” was my considered response. Truthfully, between the heat which never really dissipated overnight and my body which was beginning to overheat, I didn’t have the energy to spend on negativity, instead channelling that into another level of pace which suddenly took effect.

Before I knew it, I was sitting below 3m 45s, which I managed to hold through the turnaround just past the Spirit of Tasmania docking zone and until the scene of my earlier skirmish.

I soon felt myself succumbing to the inevitable, and thought about backing off to bring it home around four minute pace.

That I was able to sustain high 3m 40s, low 3m 50s in the final stages, despite feeling very much vanquished, and clocking up my 30th km under two hours, having started with the intention of 27 km, perhaps 28 km, was a big tick.

I was pretty cooked for a few hours afterwards, and the idea of work in the evening wasn’t appealing.

The breakthrough I earlier alluded to presented itself about half an hour before I had to depart, and in my post run state, my delight was slightly subdued, but it was a big moment nevertheless.

For the past three years I’ve worked in media at the Grand Prix – this year’s edition occurring in a fortnight, yet I haven’t been granted the desired access to the Formula One paddock and the associated opportunities, instead having to settle for national media status where news filters through second hand.

Until now.

I received an email informing me on my success in acquiring full accreditation, and following a few uncertain hours where I couldn’t confirm my application with the international administrative body on my conscience at work, all of the particulars are in order as of this morning and the countdown can commence.

AM

30.5 km. 2 hours @ 3m 56s

Sunday 2nd Mar

It was another restless night in tandem with my GP application status, so five hours of shut eye would be a generous estimate.

I was greeted by a message from my manager that the security alarm had been triggered multiple times by the fickle air conditioning overnight, this despite my certainty that I’d turned it off as I do every time I close up shop without fail.

The switch, which sometimes requires multiple clicks to respond, must have somehow turned itself back on as I departed. Long story short, manager wasn’t happy!

So my run took an interesting trajectory to Elsternwick for a stop and go to deactivate and reactivate the alarm for all to be in order for when… I opened up shop about an hour following my run.

With that out of the way, I returned to familiar territory and completed an otherwise uneventful 10 miles ahead of the work turnaround.

On my return, there was a strong desire to throw myself straight onto the bed, but before I made good on this I forced myself back out and chalked up another 30 minutes or so to close out the week.

As far as turnarounds are concerned, I was extremely satisfied to go from a 26 km week to an 149 km week without feeling as though I’d over exerted myself. With another building week ahead of the Grand Prix commitments which will see a mileage reduction, Great Ocean Road preparations are very much back on track eleven weeks out.

AM

16.1 km. 1h 13 mins @ 4m 34s

PM

6.5 km. 31 mins @ 4m 53s

DAILY TOTAL

22.6 km. 1h 45 mins

WEEKLY TOTAL

149 km. 11h 1m

 

It’d be remiss not to congratulate those who conquered the Tokyo Marathon, with positive results across the board.

Dave Ridley came home in a lick over 2h 20m, Dion Finocchiaro claimed a standout three minute PB in 2h 21m despite a nasty fall, with Craig Appleby closely following in 2h 22m, and Brian Lyons crossed the line in 2h 29m.

Conditions on the ground were extremely trying which makes these times even more laudable.

Enjoy the hard earned celebrations!