Sri Chinmoy - Williamstown Running Festival

With a couple of weeks of solid training behind me, I was pumped for a good day. Not necessarily breaking any of my records, especially since I was training reasonably hard right through race day. I was hoping to put down a time that would really put me in line to running sub 3 hours over the marathon distance. Essentially I had to go under 1:27 for the half to be happy. Which means running my best time over this course since 2006 where I ran 1:23:44. I knew I wasn't quite in that sort of shape at the moment. but I should be able to break the 1:27:xx mark. Hoping to hit around 1:26 to really be on track for the marathon.






Reflect

Just to make sure things were familiar, the morning started off nice and cold. A layer of fog covered most of the course and stayed for the whole run. It took a while to warm up and shake some of the stiffness of my heaviest week of running in quite a while. Yet, by the time the moment of silence was up, I was ready to go.

Lined up one place from the start there wasn't too much traffic to worry about. Again I was amazed at the number of people travelling as slow as 7-8min/km who still managed to get about 50-60m clear of the front runners. Do they jump in at the first turn ahead of the start or what?

Instead of hammering the first kilometres like I often have here, this time I just cruised into a comfortable rhythm. Not worrying about anyone else. I actually didn't care who was in front this time. The rhythm felt very, very comfortable and was roughly on 4:07/km pace. Good enough for under 1:27 by days end.

Formulate

I gave myself 5km at this pace to see how I was handling things. Then it was time to formulate a plan. That first five splits were ticked off and I was feeling exceptionally good. In fact, it was like I was out for a training run. The fog was obviously staying. There was hardly any wind and the temperature was perfect. Everything was right to speed things up.

Experimenting with about 3:59-4:03/km I soon found that 4:03/km seemed to be right. Now in the greased groove I just stayed there until the 15km mark. No decisions were to be made before then.

Speculate

Around the top turnaround, through 15km. The runners had gradually spread out around me. Earlier had seen a shifting pack of 4-8 competitors, but now everyone were obviously individuals. In my own world it was clear I could hold the pace to the finish. Of course I wanted more than that. It was also clear that I wasn't going to be able to lift too much without paying the price before the finish either.

The solution the was to make the most of the slight declines that were left and just lift things a little over the rest of the course. Hopefully I could get something more out the last couple of kilometres. I guessed I should hit around 1:26 by the time I stopped the clock, but my maths was struggling a bit at this stage.

Hammer

The mild declines increased my leg speed, which I held over the flat. Down to the final turn at around 19km. Finally my muscles suggested it would be better just to stop. No real pain, just the general fatigue feeling of long distance... easily silenced.

No better way to argue the point than to be aggressive. Keep to the nice, tall, smooth running form that had done me so well, so far. Then add a little extra. Just wind it up over those last 2.1km. My post race splits showed 3:50/km over that last section.

Prove

The clocked stopped at 1:25:18.

Faster than expected. My best half marathon since 2006. A big improvement since the Police Games only a few months ago. Predicts a sub 3hr marathon according to the McMillan equivalent tables. 28th out of 506. In other words...

... a great race.

Comments

  1. Nice run Jason.

    I have just run an 85:11 so will be keeping a close eye on your training and racing on your build up to Melboure.

    Congrats!

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  2. Nice surprise, great work

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  3. Jason, seems like your running is right on track for your target marathon. It was certainly a great day for running fast down at Willy. Cheers, PB

    And thanks for the note about the McMillan tables. Going there has given me some pacing guides that make me feel more confident about tackling the marathon training program ahead.

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  4. Well done Jason - very encouraging for the marathon. Looks like there's a 4 minute k half around the corner too.

    My experience with McMillan is that if you're very strong on endurance/have done sufficient long/long-fast finish runs you'll go close to converting a half time. He was hopeless for me though - predicted 2:52 and I ran 3:11.

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  5. nice article.

    Richard / Germany

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