Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Lots of racing, mostly good

I like racing. Especially the one-on-one kind of racing, rather than the 'run fast in a big field trying for a good time' kind of racing. This post is a catch-up on what I've been up to over the past month.

1. The ACT Duathlon Championships (10k run, 40k bike, 5k run)
Held on the September 27 — prior to the event I felt daunted by the prospect of racing hard for such a long time (over two and a half hours). My pre-race plan was to spread out my effort/energy over this amount of time and the plan worked well. For the first 10k run I allowed the fast-starting Bron to get away then gradually pegged her back, not quite catching her before transition. 46:14 for the run (yes, it was around 400 metres short). Passed Bron early on the bike leg, riding hard with the aim of time-trialing to a good time. 1:24:51 for the ride (around 28 kph). My legs felt awful for the first 500 metres of the 5k run, but gradually came good — 26:23 and very happy to see the finish arch. Final place was 72nd out of 96 in 2:39:28, around 9 minutes ahead of Bron. A fast bike makes a big difference!

2. Tuggeranong Parkrun 5k
Held on October 3. For once, I arrived in time to do a proper warm-up including 5 strides. During the run my legs felt really good! Caught Pieta just before 1k, before running with/behind Scott until 4k before moving ahead. Bron had made her usual fast start and ran a 'New PB!' of 22:24. I was pretty happy with 22:41, only 10 secs off my Parkrun PB. My splits had been 4:33, 4:29, 4:33, 4:36 and 4:30.

3. Greater Goulburn 10k Fun Run
Held the next day, October 4. Drove up early in the morning with my mate Jim. We enjoyed a really friendly, well-organised country fun run. The course had two hills, one gnarly trail climb with steps and a shorter steep trail hill. I ran with the aim of having a good hard training run and trying to beat Jim if possible. He started fast; I gradually made ground on the first climb before overtaking on the steep road descent to the start of the second climb. Ended up finishing comfortably ahead — 53:59 to 55:51. Good average heart rate too — 130. Woohoo! The race was won by Marty Dent (32:31) and young Steph Torley (43:07).

4. Run with the Wind 10k
Held on October 11. Fantastic event! Beautiful views and a challenging (hilly) course with the magnificent wind turbines looking over us. Drove up with Jim, Maria, Suzanne and Fran. Once again I wanted a hard training run (got that!) and ran with the aim of finishing ahead of Jim. The course was held on the excellent gravel access roads of the Windlawn Wind Farm. We started down a long gentle hill — Jim got away even though my first (easy feeling) k split had been 4:43. I caught him on the return run as we climbed 84 metres to the first turbine. Then it was one hill after another and windy! Funny, that. I had to make an effort to run down one hill such was the wind. I could see Liz's running skirt in the distance but it never got any closer. Finally we were at the last turbine and the downhill run for home (10th k in 4:32). Liz ran 53:34 to win the 50-59 age-group. My time was 54:34, with Jim finishing 4th 60-69 in 59:43. My friend Rachel finished 3rd female and described the race as 'the hilliest 10k ever!' — she ran 45:04 and is a 2:49 marathoner. Hubby Joel placed 3rd in the earlier 5k in 19:35 and thanks to Joel's description of the 'brutal' course, I got my pacing effort pretty spot-on.

My next race is the Melbourne 10k on Sunday — not sure whether I'll continue to race well or be all worn out from all that racing. Anyway, it's all good fun. Looking forward to it!

 5k race start (thanks John Harding for the photos)
 This young girl won the 5k in 21:18. Amazing!
 
 Running with the wind and against the wind. Did I tell you it was windy?!

11 comments:

TokyoRacer said...

That was a fun month of good running! You're lucky you have so many interesting races that you can go to and get in easily.
The 10K I did on Sunday had 3,500 runners and I applied about 4 months ago.

Running Raggedy said...

No one can accuse you of slacking off Ewen. Proud of you. The first picture is brilliant. WOW … what a hill! Bobs right, so many events to choose from. Give me a couple of years and pick one for me will you? Running in Australia is on my bucket list.

allrounder said...

lucky you were nearly 10 minutes faster than me on the bike, and yes, I have a new bike on order! :-)

I agree it is fun to have one on one racing...especially if the "one" doesn't know you are racing them!! :-)

Ewen said...

Yes, we're lucky Bob. I actually entered the 'Run with the Wind' on the day - for only $5 extra. Very civilised!

Thanks Mark. Luckily we'd 'warmed up' for over 2k before hitting that hill. And it wasn't the steepest one! I couldn't pick just one event! You'll have to come out for a month and do a race tour :)

Oh no! I'll have to buy some $2000 carbon aero wheels then ;-)

Raina said...

You've been busy! That duathlon sounds grueling... but you are great on a bike, so perfect for you.
The park run was pretty quick too! Best wishes in the upcoming 10k. The vacation will be earned after all of that!

Janene said...

Look in' good ET! 'Retirement' suits you :-). Looking forward to some trail race reports.

Carolyne said...

Good luck for Melbourne Ewen ~ it is all coming together for you, I'm sure that you'll run well if the travel goes well

Ewen said...

Thanks Raina. Looking forward to Melbourne - it's always a lovely city to visit. I like duathlons, but there aren't many events :(

Janene, I'd rate both Goulburn and Run with the Wind as trail races - they were that hard and technical! You should do them next year.

Thanks Carolyne - if my legs freshen up enough I should have a good run.

Ewen said...

Phew! Another good race - 47:39 for the Melbourne 10k (not a flat course either). Report on the way...

trailblazer777 said...

Some excellent racing this year. Hope you can build on the momentum going into 2016. I agree regarding that excitement of dueling with rivals is fantastic and more so than racing in a crowd of people not really getting anywhere. In the big fields I get some racing excitement early on with the big guns, and then duel with whoever is running near me later in the race...

Ewen said...

Thanks TB. Same to you re 2016 - you seem to be running well as the year ends. That's a great point re picking out some unknown rivals late in a race. I recall doing that at the Gold Coast one year, racing a few people with distinctive clothing for the last half of the 10k.