Athletics fans will be devastated today to lean of the breaking news which has emerged from BRAT Club official sources this morning.
Like Gebrselassie before the 2000 Sydney Olympics, athletes Tim 'Carthorse' Carter and Dan 'Slow' Robinson who successfully finished Saturday's Birmingham XC League, are facing a battle against time to be fit for tomorrow Leeds Abbey Dash (LAD) event.
The official announcement, which was believed to have been leaked to the Brat Club official website at around 03:00 GMT before bring quickly removed, stated: "we are worried to announce minor niggles to two of our non-star athletes ahead of Sunday's 10K event."
Although unconfirmed, it is believed that Carter, who recently celebrated his 21+8th birthday using body paint multiple times, has eaten far too much cake over the last 10 days, and is no longer considered race weight. Robinson is believed to have developed a sympathy injury.
The club are hopeful that both athletes, who are undergoing late fitness tests, will make the start line: Robinson is today participating in his 100th park run, where he will be racing against a friend, albeit with the handicap of 20 press ups per kilometre. The winner will receive a rest day. Carter meanwhile is believed to be wallowing in his pit, missing Ellie.
Architect and pseudo-Athlete addicted to secret midnight cake snacking, living in Stow-on-the-Wold.
Saturday, 16 November 2013
Thursday, 31 October 2013
Those Moments that Made my Year
For the Carthorse and friends, 2013 has been
quite a year of running. This year has seen many of us in my training group
significantly improve. Personally, my season was probably summed up by three
outstanding races in July (Mile), August (5000m) and September (HM), each
better than the last. But that hasn't been complete story of this year which
has just been made up of moments of hilarity, unbelievable happenings and fun. Now
seems like the opportune time to recap some of my favourite moments. In
chronological order of course.
10th April, Villamoura, Portugal:
Villamoura was a fantastic two week 'holiday'
with friends in the sun at a time when the UK was still getting snow. It was
great training aboard, although some of the routes got a little
repetitive. This Wednesday, I remember
Nick 'Nandos' Howard showing me the beach cliff trail route for the first time.
The weather was amazing, there were fantastic views of the ocean, and the steep
trails were a real breathe of fresh air.
I ran that same route later that day too.
18th May, Yate:
Summer had arrived in force and it was the
first of four Track & Field League fixtures. We were pushing for promotion
this season, but unfortunately we had a depleted team, meaning we were all
doubling, or tripling up in the events. By the time it got to the 4x400 relay,
the last event, we had only a disparate crew of exhausted distance runners left
able to run.
I volunteered to go first leg as I had prior experience
of holding a baton. The start line was hilarious; amongst five serious teams in
blocks, I took a standing-start position and had only managed a single step by the
time my competitors had sprung away and managed three….I was 50 metres behind
by 100m. Dan, with a 1500m and a 5000m in his legs, finished the third leg just
ahead of the leaders completing the event. This ensured we didn’t get lapped,
meaning Ed, the anchor, was so jubilant that he performed a double Mobot as he
eventually crossed the line.
25th May, Leicestershire & Warwickshire joint County
Champs finish line, Leicester.
Having narrowly missed it in Yate the week
before, it was widely known that I was attempting to run my maiden sub-16
minute 5000m. After one of the most physically painful races I can remember, I
crossed the line, collapsing almost immediately to all fours, unable to move or
do anything but hope the lactate would clear.
'What did you do?' would have been a polite
way for a recovered-Ed to have enquired as to my result. But probably not
convinced I would’ve been able to respond, he instead simply grabbed my
watch arm from where it lay limp on the floor and pulled to his eye level. I
subsequently found out I’d come second in the county, but recalling Ed's
violation of my watch/arm is what I smile about when I remember that day.
June 23rd, My bed.
In June, Dan was the athlete in form. The
previous day had been the Midland 5000m champs which has been a disaster. The conditions
were miserable, and even though Dan and Ed had PB-ed, no one was over the moon
about it.
In uncustomary fashion we hit the town to
drown our sorrows, and after stumbling in at 4am, I managed to drag myself
around an ‘easy’ 90 mins with Ed, in a massive struggle of hangover and sore
legs.
Dan, in contrast it turned out, had used his
hangover to positive effect. I got a phone call as I lay in bed post-run trying
to recover. He had somehow gone out and done a 9 mile race, finishing third in
an unbelievably quick time. I do not know how, only that I could not have done
that.
July 20th, Iffley Road track, 15 metres from the line.
The opportunity to run at the famous Roger
Bannister track in Oxford was too much to pass on, even though I didn't consider
myself to be in good shape to race a Mile. Dan and Mark were in the heat before
mine and both ran 4:40. Not a chance I thought.
Somehow I found myself still in it coming down
the final 100m, and with my friends ecstatic with jubilation on the sidelines,
my legs beginning to burn, bend and wobble, I was starting intently at the
finish clock which was slowly ticking up, and not getting any closer.
The winner crossed the line two seconds ahead
of me, stopping the clock, but fifteen metres away I was so out of it I didn’t
really absorb this. I just remember thinking I has managed to stop time, and
that I'd now exist forever in a sea of painful purgatory at 4:32.
This mile was probably my breakthrough race
this season, and my 1500m split probably a good 6 or 7 seconds faster than a
race over the same distance just four days earlier.
24th August, Coventry University track finish line:
Coventry BMC 5000m was the ultimate of races. Paced
by super-metronomic Ed Banks, it featured four of my other friends and training
partners. I crossed the line just three seconds behind Dan, and I'll never
forget the scenes that subsequently unfolded....
As I crossed the line, Dan had had just enough
time to release the enormity of what he'd done, and turn around, with a shocked
look on his face. I simply ran straight into an embrace, and turned around to
see my friend Sarah cross the line inside her PB too. Lying around on the floor
and self-congratulations initially got in the way of knowing what anyone else
had done, but I then spotted Mark 10 metres away. He was frozen still, a
massive smile on his face, arms stretched out wide and his body language said
'just ask me' all over it. He’d taken over 20 seconds off a 20 year old PB,
breaking the 16-minute barrier which he’d given up on long ago. What a hero.
It's rare that everyone you go to a race with has a screamer. On that day
myself, Dan, Mark, Sarah and Chris all smashed it. And Ed's contribution was a
massive part of that. Those scenes may never be repeated again.
Labels:
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Tuesday, 15 October 2013
A Pentalogy of Proven Folktales II
A year
ago I wrote a blog about the five biggest things that I'd learnt or felt hadmade a difference to my running in 2012. 2013 has been something of a
breakthrough year for me, and bares many similarities to the winter of 2009/10,
where I experienced similar improvements.
Bud Baldaro:
To
suggest that I have changed coaches would be an overstatement: I don't consider
myself to have a coach. But on Tuesday nights at the university track, our BRAT
group now joins Mister Johnny Cullen, and we put the fate of our sessions in
the hands of a world-renowned coach and extremely great motivator, Bud Baldaro.
Running
tough sessions as a group has made these both fun and manageable. The sessions
involve mixed paces, terrain and rep lengths, and they would be very difficult
solo. A large training group at my pace is something I've not had since early 2010
when I was still at university.
Racing better than I train:
This
has been my biggest shift. I'm not running any faster in training now than I
have been in the last three years. In truth probably a little slower for the
most part. But we run as a group, and practice running relaxed and comfortable
at the paces, rather than slogging them out. Times don't matter to us now in
training - we can judge training performances against each other not the clock.
The sessions are not the race.
Relaxed training approach:
I've
probably done less miles to this point of the year than in 2012. My training
has been far more unstructured, I don't even plan it anymore, just identify
each week what I need to be doing outside of Bud's sessions. I'm highly
flexible. I've also not been too
bothered when I've had a bad race (the good ones have helped keep this in
perspective), and not let it cast doubts about my ability as a runner.
Recovery means recovery:
I
listen to my body now, far more than even before. If I'm tired I do less.
I run slower on easy runs, like I did back in late 2009. Recovery runs are for
recovery, not to get a good pace average, and if I stay relaxed with good
cadence / form, then they're beneficial in multiple ways.
I rest
before important races, sometimes they go well, occasionally not. It means my
training looks a bit inconstant....I have massive mileage weeks followed by low
mileage weeks. But it's worked.
Long tempos:
I've
improved my half marathon time from 75:49 (PB) in October '12 to 71:53 in
September '13. That's a big increase. I think that long tempo runs have been
key to this. I've been building up to 8 miles (45 ish mins) at almost HM pace.
Sometimes I start slow and increase it, sometime I break it down, (say 4x2miles
off a minute jog). But I get to the point the week before the race where I can
do 8 miles continuously and reasonably comfortably at a similar pace. If
you know you can do the pace for that long, than you can hang on in the race for
another 5 miles for sure.
Glute activation:
I
visited a physio last December who told me I still had a problem with my hip
flexors. Too tight, he said. I obsessively stretched them for three months and
saw a sports masseur, but to no avail. Until I realised that this could
actually be caused by compensation for weak glutes. I found an article that
massively supported this, and since April have instead been obsessively doing
glute activation exercises every time before I run. I think it's worked.
Form:
Finally,
I've never had the best form, but improved glute function (above) has helped,
as has introducing more strides and leg cycle drills. I now do 5-6x strides at
least once a week on none session days, often after a long run, and the day
before a race. Just on the road outside my house, but they've really helped my
body develop a better range of motion and run far more relaxed at my faster
paces.
Ok, so
that's seven (a heptathlon if you will), but all of these things I've been
doing regularly since February / March. Clearly I can't say exactly which have
worked to a greater extent than others, but if the ideas here help anyone
reading this as much as they've helped me, then this has been useful.
Saturday, 7 September 2013
The Circle of Life
World media has been surprisingly slow on the uptake of Coventry BMC 5000m which occurred two saturdays ago, at a back-to-front - albeit it blue - track hidden away at Coventry University which drew monster crowds of former Sheffield University Athletes.
However the race, in which the highest placed finisher worth mentioning finished in a position which would rank him a toasty 340 in the National Rankings for the year, has generated a disproportional amount of column inches, with two blogs and a website article amassing almost double figures of interest between them.
Dan Robinson, who was said highest finisher, was in pole position coming in to the final kilometre, having been accidentally tucked into Ed Bank’s super tight pink racing shorts and carried round the first 10 laps. “It was just about staying with Ed for the first four kilometres and trying to remember how many laps the race was. I knew that Carter was on my shoulder the entire time because I could hear him panting like a Horse.”
Carter, who we have been able to confirm was also in the race, offered “I wasn’t really enjoying myself. I knew we were going for curry afterwards, and I was getting quite hungry deciding if I could manage a whole naan myself. I spent the first three laps deciding the best way to drop out, and whether I would need to feign tripping over in order to make it look legit.”
After reaching four kilometres in a highly symmetrical 12:40, the 3 minute and 3 second race to the line was won by Robinson in 2:59, to which Carter was incensed. “Robinson pulled away in the final two and a half laps. I’d already planned that we would cross the line together holding hands, but when he did that all I had left was to beat the Irish International runner. Sarah Mac afterwards stated that her favourite laps had been “2, 5, 6, 8 and 11,” and that she was “no longer talking to Tim” because of his 450m sprint for the line. “Where I come from [of which no one is sure], friends don’t beat friends.”
Veteran38 Mark Ince overcame a severe bout of ageing which has been afflicting him for the past 10 years, and was in the race the entire way, with only a wrong turn on the 10th lap letting him down. He came in as the 5th Significant Person, in 3:11, just behind Chris (also 3:11). Mark was giddy after breaking a PB that has stood for 20 years, back from his student days where he claims to have run 1:39 and 3:25 for the middle distance events. He was reportedly “very giddy” the whole way back as he snacked on Haribo Sourmix.
BBC token pundit Denise Lewis has been quick to offer some expert insight into what might have caused this spectacle of super-human feats on this late summer evening: “The thing about the 5000m is, that it is 5000m long.” The BBC are hopeful of not renewing her contract.
Monday, 27 May 2013
The Perfect 5000
They say that the county
champs are in decline. As true as that maybe, and as sad as it is for
athletics, it doesn't bother me in the slightest as with decent competition I
honestly wouldn't have been standing on the second tier of the rickety podium
at the Warwickshire's yesterday, second only to the ever-reliable Ed Banks in
the 5000m, who now holds a head-to-head record against me of about 200-0. Mo
Farah in contrast has never beaten me, which puts into perspective how much
better than Mo Ed 'The Beard' Banks is.
A
pre-planned racing strategy with second-favourite training partner Dan Robinson
was going to be the secret to us both breaking 16 minutes, although
unfortunately the ultra-marathoner fell a little shy on the day.
As I
stretched for the finish of the most painful race I'd ever done, the capacity
crowd willed me forward. I flung myself at the line having given everything,
and sunk to the ground gasping for air and willing the screaming in my legs to
dissipate.
The
pandemonium on the track silenced as the words came over the
loudspeakers: 'The time is Fifteen minutes....' The rest of the
announcement was drowned out by the joyous cries of several people who had just
witnessed history in the making. At last the barrier was broken.*
Breaking 16
was everything I dreamed. 'Tell me about your race?' said an important looking
gentleman to me as I collected my medal, who I incorrectly assumed was from
world media. I quickly tailed off my overly detailed description as I realised
he was merely the guy who had timetabled the events. All he actually wanted to
know was if an 11:30 start suited and would be fine next year as
well? 'Great!' I said, after quickly mulling over if in my brief moment of
power there was a more preferable time of day for me to be comprehensively
beaten in 365 days time. '11:30 is great.'
* 'The
Perfect Mile' by Neal Bascomb is available from all good bookstores.
Friday, 4 January 2013
2013 looms
It
has been a positive Christmas in the Carthorse camp. News of a new sponsorship deal to rival Sarah
Mac’s Inavo Eight contract came in just day’s before the holiday, in the form a
text message from Mother, who offered cooked meals all Christmas in exchange
for keeping my bedroom tidy and my bed made.
Seemingly
spitefully however, my fell shoes by the afore mentioned manufacturer had other
ideas, slicing a layer of skin clean off the back of my heel on day two of the
holiday. Ten days have now passed and
this latest injury now resembles a gouge out of my foot, making requests by
Malcolm to make the 10 minute limp to the postbox cause for anquish.
Meanwhile
I am fully prepared for this weekend’s Warwickshire County Champs (XC), despite
my girly injury scare, and fresh from record 341 man-minutes of labour to
remove the spikes from the footwear from last time out.
In
other news, tales of my double-December PBs has clearly spread, with fan tribute video[s] now starting to emerge on the internet. Teenage running sensation Emilia Gorecka used
the term “fantastic” on her website while Steven Bayton replacement training
partner Dan Robinson has not been seen since it went viral.
Labels:
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