Wednesday 23 February 2011

Scottish National Cross Country Championships, 19th February 2011

Falkirk's Callendar Park was the setting for the blue riband event in Scottish distance running. It was a familiar sight having been there a fortnight before for a training run. My recent performances seem to have raised the expectation levels of everyone except myself. I felt a degree of pressure in the week leading up to the race. Comments from people like "you must be looking for top 10" are well meaning but can  place a burden of expectancy on you. I stuck to the mantra I've had for several years and still do- I will run the best I can and if I perform to my best, I'll finish where I deserve to.

In saying all that, I was extremely motivated. So much so, I was in my bed for over 12 hours the night before the race, the light being out at 10pm then not resurfacing until 10.15am. That after such a large 3 course dinner, including 2 steaks in the main course, that I still felt a tad bloated in the morning.

I had my 2 man fan club with me, my Dad and clubmate and good friend Alistair Campbell. After collecting my number, I went into my own wee world until the 2.30pm start, attempting to watch some of the earlier races. and psyching myself up. I went through my usual preparation routine, all my wee superstitions before, knowing the first corner was a right turn, positioning myself in the right hand corner at the front of the 451 strong field. 3 laps and 12km of running lay ahead.

1st lap: I survived the cavlary charge up the first hill and, after 400m, was in 9th place (so Cambuslang head coach Mike Johnston told me later). I had no intention of pushing the pace too early. It didn't worry me that familiar foe Paul Sorrie had a small gap. I let him stay where he was. A lap of the boating pond on a trail surface lead to a steep hill with heavy mud, a popular spectator spot. I was feeling fairly relaxed and decided to plod along where I was. I was only 2km or so in. Long way to go. A flatter section through more mud took us on to some lush green grass running parallel to the sight of the Antonine Wall (well, part of it). The start area was across a ditch which we inevitably had to cross without the help of a bridge. We then did a circuit which took us along some grass beside the main road, down a big dip onto some gravel and the end of a lap/home straight. I didn't feel I was running very fast but my position said otherwise. I was reluctant to do too many surges in such a long race but found enough to overtake Paul Sorrie and his Shettleston clubmate Michael Gillespie in one sweeping move prior to hitting the gravel.

Above: entering the second lap with a look which could kill. Photo courtesy of Kenny Phillips.

2nd lap: On the first hill, I got a chance to see every runner ahead of me. I counted them- "1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 then me..I'm 9th. Good stuff." Derek Hawkins (Kilbarchan), Chris Mackay (Inverclyde) and Alistair Hay (Central) were in a battle for the medals. The tough underfoot conditions were slowly wearing my legs down. The lap of the boating pond and hill thereafter sapped my energy. I had another rival to joust with, Central's John Newsom. At the top of the aforementioned hill I was joined by another Central runner, Ross Houston. I knew him- he beat me at the Penicuik 10k last May. At least I had 2 athletes to pusue during this rocky period. Using them as markers, I strived to hold position. My High Point hill sessions were standing me in good stead because, while they pulled away on the flat, I consistently closed the gaps on the hills. If it was a flat course I would have been left in no mans land. I was going on adrenaline alone when I reached the gravel again.

Final lap: Goodness knows how but I summoned a way to get to the finish as quickly as possible. Run the flat and mud free sections as well as you can and just suffer the mud. I thought of every motivational song, film, soundbite etc I'd ever heard or seen. I suddenly found a second wind and negotiated the boating pond feeling as good as I had at any point before. The big hill put paid to that but I found a third wind thereafter. I was still in touch with Newsom and Houston and could also see an Inverclyde athlete dropping back. I couldn't tell who it was. I assumed it was Chris Mackay. I started thinking about where I would be happy finishing because I feared an avalanche from the back. "9th or 10th would be good. 11th is not bad. 12th? No worse than 12th." I promised myself to be no lower than 12th. Newsom and Houston slowly pulled away after crossing the Antonine Wall ditch. I knew I also had to hang in there for the team competition. Parallel to the main road, I was forced to run in muddier parts to lap other runners. I entered the home straight in 10th. The Inverclyde man was Andrew Douglas. I now wanted to keep top 10 so, after about 11.8km of gruelling racing, I found a sprint I never knew I had. I sprinted so hard I not only secured top 10 but passed Douglas and crossed the line 2 seconds before him.

Above: my sprint finish gets some attention. Photo courtesy of Kenny Phillips.

I was 9th in 40:21, improving on my previous National performances of 82nd in 2007, 87th in 2008, 59th in 2009 and 30th in 2010. Derek Hawkins won in 38:45 from Chris Mackay and defending champion Alistair Hay. I had actually set a pre-race target of top 10. However, I had only told one person in particular about it, a very close friend. My Dad didn't even know. The target had been met and, to top it off, my Cambuslang clubmates helped us secure team bronze to give me my first National Cross Country medal at the age of 27. I couldn't have penned a better script myself.

We had a get together that evening at our club house and a few, myself included, carried on to another bar then "the dancing" as we call it in the west of Scotland. I admit to being fairly refreshed by the evening's end and a little heavy eyed the following morning. That was eradicated by an easy run for an hour which left one feeling remaining- jubilation about the day before, the best day of my athletics career to date.

All race results can be found here and loads more photos, some featuring me in different stages of discomfort, are here.

Sunday 20 February 2011

Training Pre-National

Yesterday saw me run the Scottish National Cross Country Championships at Callendar Park in Falkirk, the finale of several months of winter training and racing. I achieved my best ever finish of 9th place, fulfilling my pre-race top 10 target in the process. Cambuslang also won team bronze. Earning my first ever National Cross Country medal at the age of 27 is a wonderful feeling.

A separate report, and photos, will follow but, for now, here is my training in the 3 weeks leading to the race starting with the day after the National 4km Cross Country.

Week Commencing Monday 31st January

Monday: Track, 8 x 600m, 200m slow jog recoveries, all 1:46-1:49, 8 miles approx including warm up and warm down.
Tuesday: Club, Hampden run in reverse, 8 miles easy (49:52).
Wednesday: Tempo run, 8 miles (44:36), 6 minute jog warm down.
Thursday: Rest
Friday: Hill reps, High Point, 10 reps, 5.5-6 miles approx including warm up and warm down.
Saturday: 5-5.5 miles easy on grass at Callendar Park, Falkirk
Sunday: Longer run, 20 minutes easy then 5 mins, 1 min, 2 mins, 4 mins, 5 mins, 1 min, 2 mins, 4 mins, all with 5 min jog recoveries, continuous run, 15.5-16 miles (1:42:09)

Mileage: 51

I started the week very tired after the Sunday race. On Wednesday, my legs were still heavy. We had incessant wind and rain on Thursday. This, coupled with my jaded state, saw me take the night off and nail the hill session on Friday when, to be honest, the weather wasn't much better. I felt good after doing it. I skipped the Glasgow training session on Saturday to do a pre-race familiarisation run at the National venue. Sunday was one of my Spedding interval runs at Whitelee Windfarm. I felt absoloutely brilliant during it. The pace was great, even on the easy sections. I was flowing so well and confidently.

Week Commencing Monday 7th February

Monday: Track, 10 x 500m, 200m slow jog recoveries, times- 1:27-1:30, 8-8.5 miles including warm up and warm down.
Tuesday: High tempo, 5 miles (27:59), 4:30 jog warm down.
Wednesday: 8.5-9 miles easy (54:48).
Thursday: Race, Armagh International 5km Road Race- 27th in 14:52.
Friday: 5.7 miles very easy (48:02), Gosford Forest Park, Armagh.
Saturday: 7 x 3 minutes, 90 second recoveries, Navan Mount, Armagh, 6.5-7 miles including warm up and warm down.
Sunday: Longer run, 20 minutes easy then 5 mins, 1 min, 2 mins, 4 mins, 5 mins, 1 min, 2 mins, 4 mins, all with 5 min jog recoveries, continuous run, 13-13.5 miles (1:28:22)

Mileage: 52

I ended up running every day this week. While not minded to ease down for Armagh, I felt a 5 mile tempo run was sufficient. I followed it up with an easy run through Calderglen Park and country roads on Wednesday morning before flying out to Armagh in the afternoon. This also gave me a good recovery period until the race which wasn't until 8.30pm on Thursday night. We joined a few of the English and Welsh athletes for a run on Friday. My legs felt terrible and I turned down the offer to run for another 20 minutes on top of what I'd done. I opted for a swim and sauna at the hotel later instead. I felt a lot better during our cross country session on Saturday. Our warm down was a 2 mile run back to the hotel carrying our back packs! Sunday was another set of Spedding intervals at Whitelee Windfarm. I didn't feel the need to go overboard on distance. An hour and a half was plenty.

Week Commencing Monday 14th February

Largely self explanatory.

Monday: Track, 10 x 400m and 2 x 200m, all with 200m slow jog recoveries, 400s- 68-70 seconds, 200s- 32-35 seconds, 6-6.5 miles including warm up and warm down.
Tuesday: Club, shortened Hampden run, 6 miles approx easy (43:19).
Wednesday: Hill reps, High Point, 4 reps, 4-4.5 miles including warm up and warm down.
Thursday: 4 miles- mile hard, mile easy, mile hard, mile easy, 5:12 and 5:07 for the hard miles, 22:49 overall for the 4 miles.
Friday: Rest
Saturday: Race, Scottish National Cross Country Championships, Falkirk, 12km- 9th in 40:21 (winner- Derek Hawkins of Kilbarchan, 38:45).
Sunday: 1 hour easy- all I had the energy to do.

Mileage: 37 approx

Sunday 13 February 2011

Armagh International 5km Road Race, 10th February 2011

Cambuslang Harriers have a long friendly association with Northern Ireland's Armagh Athletics Club going back several years. One of the positives to come from this relationship is the invitation extended to Cambuslang runners annually to run in the Armagh International 5km Road Race, held as part of an International Sport and Cultural Week. As well as the Home Nations and Ireland, runners from USA, Finland and South Africa have taken part. Cambuslang can even boast a former winner of the race in Stephen Wylie who did so in 1995. Such is the depth of quality, my time of 15:25 in my first attempt was only enough to earn 49th place out of 85 finishers.

Undaunted, I returned this year for another go. I was initially reluctant with the Scottish National Cross Country only 9 days afterwards but Cambuslang chairman David Cooney convinced me to attend. I enjoyed myself so much in 2010, I thought "why not." I therefore flew over the day before with clubmates Stewart Orr, Joe Kealey, Alistair Campbell, David Cooney, Jim Orr (coach) and Bob Burt ("Mallaig Ambassador").

I intend to post separately about the 4 day trip as a whole but this one will home in on the racing on Thursday night. The race takes place in a rather unique atmosphere, comprising laps of the Mall in Armagh, run after dark under floodlights and street lights.
Above: the Mall in Armagh. The lit building in the distance is the women's jail (well, was at one time).
Among the earlier races was the womens International 3km, 2 and a bit laps of the Mall. Scottish athlete Claire Gibson (no relation) ran very well to win the race from some stiff opposition in 9:23. Before this year, Stephen Wylie was the only Scottish winner, male or female. Scotland can now boast a winner of both races. Our time drew near and I grew increasingly anxious. I only had one tactic- run like hell. There was no alternative. The race has a minimum entry standard of 17 minutes. No-one waits for you.

I lined up just behind the USA team and the field of 62 runners were set on their way by the Mayor of Armagh at about 8.35pm. The pace was furious. I got off to a great start. The course has a one time women's jail at one end (referred to as the "jail end") and Armagh County Museum at the other. We went through the jail end, into the home straight then had another 4 laps to do. I was just about sprinting and, incredibly, hanging onto the coatails of the leading group. The leaders went through 1km, just after the museum, in 2:55. I completed it in exactly 3 minutes. As far as confidence boosts go, it couldn't get better.

I ran as hard as possible, focussing on gaining more places than I lost. During the second lap, English athlete James Walsh passed me. I recognised him as a multiple winner of the British Universities Cross Country. I also remembered him from the 2006 Isle of Man Easter Athletics Festival which he won (I was in the 40s). I tried to to keep pace with him for a few seconds but he was going far too fast and I had to concede. Just as well because he ended up 5th in 14:18. What on earth was he doing behind me all that time? By the third lap, I was shouting at myself out loud. Things like "don't drop back, "head up" and "lift your knees." I had gone through 3km in 8:54. Work out from that what I had run the previous 2km in.

At the jail end coming into the home straight with a lap to go I had 2 runners for company. I felt the time was right for a Charlie Spedding surge (see my training posts) so I injected even more pace, pulled away and started gaining on a few more runners ahead of me. In the final lap, I was hanging on. Heading into the finish the familiar figure of Mark Pollard overtook me on his way to 22nd place in 14:48. But for that, I would have been first Scottish finisher. I hung on grimly to finish 27th with a huge new personal best of 14:52, beating last year's time and also bettering my track 5000m best by 14 seconds. It's my first clocking under 15 minutes. It felt fantastic. I turned round to offer a handshake to whoever was at my back. I saw a Finnish international vest. It was Miika Takala, a runner who can boast a half marathon of 66:04 and marathon of 2:24:25. I didn't know the Finnish for "well done mate" off the top of my head so I conveyed the message in English. I think he got my drift because I got a "thank you" in response. One step forward for Cambuslang-Finland relations. I also beat his teamate Joonas Lehtinen who has 800m and 1500m bests of 1:52.50 and 3:50.20 respectively.

Behind me, 18 year old Stewart Orr ran superbly in his first ever 5km road race, clocking 15:24 for 41st. This is an excellent benchmark. I train with Stewart twice, sometimes 3 times, per week. This result does not surprise me. He has plenty improvement to come and something on his side I don't- time due to his age. Joe and Alistair both got good races under their belts after lengthy spells sidelined with illness and injury. Joe came through in 16:56 and Alistair in 17:17, both times which would comfortably win a lot of races in Scotland. The sharp end saw a blanket finish with England's James Bowser edging victory in 14:16.
Above: Team Cambuslang after the race. Left to right- Stewart Orr, myself, Alistair Campbell, Joe Kealey.

The race programme rounded off with the open 3km race. David Cooney lined up for this, running competitively throughout and finishing in 12:17 with plenty runners behind him. The night was rounded off with a roast beef dinner at 11pm (!) then a few pints in the hotel bar which, to my taste palate after my earlier efforts, were marvellous.

Next stop, Falkirk for the Scottish Cross Country.

Race results can be found here.


Tuesday 1 February 2011

Scottish 4km Cross Country Championships, 30th January 2011

This was the next of my big winter race targets. Repeating the trick I performed before the West District Cross Country, I trained at Bellahouston Park the week before. That though was an open Glasgow session. There was no full race kit worn that time. Instead it was good session in the company of Kilbarchan's Robert Quinn, Shettleston under 20 Lee Wilson and clubmate Bobby Bristow, all of us working well together.

The goal here was to improve on my 11th place finish in 2010. In my first attempt here in 2002, I was 65th out of 83 finishers. A dry but bitterly cold day greeted me at Glasgow's Bellahouston Park where I collected my number from club coach Jim Orr.

There were some "Glasgow Development" invitational races for younger athletes before the seniors. It is a credit to Cambuslang's athletes and coaches that we had a healthy number competing through the age groups. Our route had changed, now comprising a circuit in the park then a loop round the pitch and putt golf course. Until being told this, I didn't even know Bellahouston had pitch and putt.

Doing some strides before the start, I got a good luck shout from young Cambuslang athlete David Robertson. I returned his thumbs up. The announcer read out some "ones to watch." Jim's son Stewart turned round and stared at me when my name came up. I shook my head in disbelief.

You might think 4km, fairly flat, little mud, easy. You would be mistaken. The early pace was furious. I sprinted to establish my position. I was 2nd after about 200m. 5 or 6 athletes ambushed me on the first corner. It didn't bother me. The course was one lap of 1.9km and another of 2.1km. I was battling with some familiar foes, Craig Ruddy (West District winner), Andrew Douglas and Paul Sorrie (West District runner up). Also present were Irish international Daniel Mulhare and Scottish Cross Country Champion Alastair Hay. I was at my absoloute limit attempting to keep a top 10 position. One lapse and you were down several places. By the pitch and putt, a loop of which completed the first lap, I was groaning out loud in pain. Another lap to go.

I felt the group were getting away from me. My Dad encouraged me to close the gap. Mulhare and Hay pulled away gradually. I couldn't cope with their pace. The rest were catchable. I got into a ding dong battle with Edinburgh under 20 Andrew Crichton who was 3rd in the East District Cross Country. My legs were hurting, my lungs were burning, I was out my comfort zone and beyond. I had Paul Sorrie pursuing me and Andrew Crichton next to me. What to do? Do one of your Charlie Spedding intervals from your long runs (see my previous training topics). These range from 1 minute to 5 minutes. I dug deep and injected a surge of pace. Crichton tried to match it. He couldn't and dropped back. Presumably Sorrie did too. I gained on those ahead. Unlike training this surge lasted barely 30 seconds. Crichton fought back. Rather than a jog recovery, I had no option but to recover at approximaely 4:55-5 minutes per mile pace.

We entered the pitch and putt. We strode it out over the tees, onto the fairways and through the greens. On leaving, we had a sharp right turn into the finishing straight. I was still top 10. I got passed by Crichton and Dermot Cummins of Edinburgh based Corstorphine AC. I was 9th. Normally that would be it. Not today. I was ready to run through brick walls. Cummins overtook a tired Andrew Douglas. I lifted my knees, gritted my teeth and threw myself past Andrew Crichton, nearly catching Douglas in the process, to finish a physically destroyed 8th in a time of 12:15. I mustered one hand shake with Alastair Hay before lying face down on the grass exhausted. This was the hardest I had pushed myself in many a month. The top 10 in a field of 107 finishers were:-

1. Daniel Mulhare, 11:43
2. Alistair Hay, 11:49
3. Mark Mitchell, 12:03
4. John Newson, 12:08
5. Craig Ruddy, 12:12
6. Dermot Cummins, 12:13
7. Andrew Douglas, 12:14
8. Stuart Gibson, 12:15
9. Andrew Crichton, 12:16
10. Mark Haskett, 12:20

Paul Sorrie was just outside this, 11th in 12:21. I had the energy to offer a hand shake to him. I got great support from my club mates, John MacNamara (20th, 12:37), Stewart Orr (22nd, 12:43), Robert Gilroy (28th, 12:56), David Munro (46th, 13:19), Bobby Bristow (47th, 13:23) and a returning from injury Andrew Coulter (51st, 13:30). The first 4 of us counted for the team competition. Sadly, we were edged out the medals, 4th behind Central, Inverclyde and Shettleston. No shame, everyone gave it everything in a fiercely competitive race.

The senior women's race followed us. One of my training partners, Kirsty Grant, had entered this. The Facebook followers among you will have gathered that Kirsty has been cruelly struck down with meningitis. Naturally she wasn't in attendance. In my worst points during the race, I had a thought in the back of my head- I may be suffering but it's temporary and nothing like what she must be going through. I believe that thought motivated me to push myself to the limits of endurance I did, so much that I ended up only 12 seconds from a bronze medal. I've also noticed that all 7 of the runners ahead of me were people I've never beaten before. Looking at things like that, I got the very best performance possible out of myself. A very satisfying feeling. For the record, Elspeth Curran of Kilbarchan won the women's race holding off stiff competition from Edinburgh's Sarah Inglis and Kilbarchan club mate Natalie Sharp.

Having regained my humanity with a roll and roast beef and flask of tea, I actually jogged home as a warm down, the 9 miles or so taking me just over an hour. Next stop, Armagh International 5k Road Race. I fly out on Wednesday 9th February for the race the following night.