Monday 16 September 2013

Ndakaini



I felt so bad after the run that I doubted whether I would even write a report about it but realized one can never have only good runs but will also have to contend with some bad runs. Victory cant be as sweet without a few strings of failure.

The day finally came, the dreaded day. I have been looking forward to this day but I wasn’t in high spirits the way I always do on the eve of a marathon. My ankle injury was still there, fresh as ever and this had already put my morale squarely under my feet since I had not trained the whole week. Either way I still had to go to Ndakaini.
I had already made a plan B. Incase the pain killers didnt work then I will just stroll to the 16th kilometer mark and film the elites taking on that hill. On meeting the crew at Kenya Cinema, I realized I wasn’t the only casualty. Jack’s pal Jemmo also had a groin injury similar to the one I suffered a few weeks ago. I shared my pain killers with him. Abo came on board as Ogutu went MIA and mteja!
We arrived at exactly 8am, did the change up, took a few photos, the toilet thing and off we went to the starting point with Jemmo and Abo while Jack came later behind us. I took the backline while Jack took the front line because he wanted to crash the sub 100 minutes. My ankle still ached and I decided to go for a second pill. 

The gun went off and it was all systems go. I regretted why I took a back seat coz the road was full of slow flabby people who didn’t seem keen on making any impact. Shoving and dodging became the order of the day and the first kilometer really drained me. Upon getting a clear road, I couldn’t see Jack’s red cap despite being able to see quite a distance. I decided to just do what I can with my situation and shut out the world around me.
I increased my tempo on the first descent but on leaving the tarmac, the first sharp bend toward the first hill I felt the pain again. I slowed down a bit and I could see Jack taking the hill. The hill really stretched my ankle muscle, I took a walk briefly for about 5 seconds and resumed running.  I noticed a white chick up ahead in black gear and another guy running quite well. I set my eyes on them but in a conservative manner. Upon clearing the first descent, I realized the pain had subsided despite the landing impact. I decided to give chase – Jack was now way ahead together with the white chick together with another guy. I hardly noticed anybody else thereafter.
My psychological strength was thwarted immediately I saw hills that I had not envisioned emerging at every turn. I was in limbo of acute discomfort and too hazy in the head to do anything about it. The same feeling I had when I approached the last hill during our group run came flooding over me just after the eleventh kilometer. I decided to hang on to dear life, my feet were heavy but in the distance I could see Jack, the white chick and another guy taking those hills.
For a moment I saw Jack rush past the white chick and I made a vow that no one else is gonna pass me and I will maintain the gap between me and that leading pack. I passed everybody else that fell behind Jack and after the 16th kilometer final climb I increased the tempo but it was too late to chase the 1:40 record. I later realized that it’s not only about physical strength but also mental. I played safe, self preservation and thereby had a poor outcome. I walked away with my energy still in reserve, a damn shame but glad that my injury didn’t worsen. After dipping my foot on ice, I quickly wished for a replay of that run. I stuck to my comfort zone, avoided the hills in several instances but all in all a worthy experience. Back to my world and its time to focus on two group runs and a new Stanchart record. Here we go!

Upon reaching the stopping point, I realized my garmin had clocked 1:42:23 in 20.94kms. I must have walked at the commencement of the run without activating my garmin. I was really unsure about the race, skittish, very skittish. This is how bad I was damaged by the hills…
1
4:18
4'18"/km
2
8:22
4'04"/km
3
12:19
3'57"/km
4
16:41
4'22"/km
5
22:07
5'26"/km
6
27:15:00
5'08"/km
7
32:04:00
4'49"/km
8
37:07:00
5'03"/km
9
41:26:00
4'19"/km
10
47:44:00
6'18"/km
*Fastest
51:31:00
3'47"/km
12
57:15:00
5'44"/km
13
1:02:19
5'04"/km
14
1:07:04
4'45"/km
15
1:12:09
5'05"/km
16
1:18:17
6'08"/km
17
1:24:59
6'42"/km
18
1:29:02
4'03"/km
19
1:33:45
4'43"/km
20
1:38:10
4'25"/km