With a field of just eighteen, I was able to start with my toe behind the
curved start line, so no metres lost at all! At the gun, I settled in with
Angel, Sue and Roger, Jim ahead and intent on also running "a 25"
having been in the 26s at 5k parkruns. We were right behind Jim through the
first 1000, 5:03 the split so perfect pacing. Jim started slowing after another
two laps so Roger, Sue and myself went past, my watch showing 10:10 through 2k.
I was finding the going tough, Roger forged ahead with Sue also stretching out 3
or 4 metres. I passed the 3k mark in 15:23, so 5:13 for that kilometre, not
good! Roger was gone but I managed to hold the gap to Sue at around 10 metres.
The fourth kilometre was covered in 5:20, slowing further! I rallied in the last
lap, catching and passing Sue to finish 14th in 26:04.67. Roger ran a great race
to run 25:14. At the pointy end, an excellent run by Bruce Graham (16:59.93 at
age 59!) from Jacob (17:06) and Alistair (17:39).
For myself, it was a somewhat
disappointing result — under 25 is still over a minute away. My recent
form is showing improvement though which gives me confidence a '25-something'
will be run soon. The photo below was taken at the Coombs parkrun last Saturday,
demonstrating good running form, both feet in the air at the same time!
You are not walking if both feet are in the air |
5 comments:
Well done on rallying in the final Km. You appear to be making the most of the race setting to squeeze out a little extra push. Will there be more opportunities for a track 5000m this season?
Thanks Canute. No, unfortunately. There are a couple of road 5k races in the winter XC season, the afternoon start time suiting me better than the 8am of parkruns, so I'm looking forward to those.
Great photo, great race report. I wish I could jump that high Ewen!! 5k is the hardest race to master in my view. Pity you couldn't hold on to Roger, but Well Done. Good luck during the XC season.
Awesome photo! Very cool that you got to take a spin on the track.
Thanks Nev and Lize for your encouragement.
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