As I sit here with a cuppa half-watching the 'Lost Boys', I am already
aware that I won’t watch the film to the end. I can hear the washing machine spin in the kitchen,
the high pitched whine competing with something vague with canned laughter on Radio
4Extra. Everyone's out, and I’ve been slacking. But the previous load is out on the line and the
potatoes are on the hob.
I ground out a very solid 12 miles this morning. About 7:25
pace. Twenty kilometres sounds better. The conditions were cool and humid and I
was soaked by the time I got back. I was
surprisingly fresh given that I had attended a wedding reception the previous night
and, hours before that had competed in the NE track champs, finishing 7th
out of eight in a time of 5m:07s. It took me 1hr 45mins to get down the 50 miles to
Teesside on the congested A1 in the pouring rain and I was late to get my number and then
almost missed the registration call-up 10 minutes before the start. I had to
remind myself that gobbing on the track was a no-no. Out of an impoverished original
entry of 12. I counted 9 starters as we were led onto the track like modern day
gladiators. Back in the day this 2 day event would have attracted a big field of elite runners. Not any more. The crowd craned their necks in an effort to get a better look at
the contenders. I wasn’t one of them, having decided only to run this short
event as a marker to test my form and to boost my Power of Ten ratings. Call it an ego boost. I
was drawn in the first lane nearest the inside track line. However, I had no
illusions of running anything near to the 3:56 or whatever was required to win the
event. If I could go sub-5:30 I would be pleased. Sub 5:15 would be very
encouraging. At the gun I settled early into my pace, letting all but one of the others
fire on ahead and witnessing them disappear around the top bend and into the
distant horizon. There was very little
to report as I pushed round the nearly 4 laps, beating Hughes of Sunderland by a handful of seconds at the end. At least I wasn’t lapped. I won a modest applause as I finished and
wondered if I had had some competition at close quarters, would I have squeezed
another two or three seconds out of the track. Who knows?
There, I’ve changed the film to the Twelve Monkeys with a
brooding Bruce Willis and a delusional Brad Pitt. Much more watchable. A mix between Bladerunner and the Fifth Element.
Next on the calendar are
the Signals Relays at Hetton Lyons. My two interval sessions a week coupled with 3 visits a week
to the gym and regular core exercises at home, iron supplements and the ongoing
assault on carb intake seems to be paying dividends. If nothing else, I can get into my jeans more
easily and feel better about myself. This psychological fillip is important
when you’re under duress and you can call on all these minor gains as the going
gets tough. Well, at least this is the rationale and mental mantra I have adopted. I better get a Hill race under my belt before
the end of the year if I am to avoid a duck for the year on Chris Upsons Site.
Eildon looks favourite.
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