BRRC 25th Anniversary 5k - 2nd out of 70 in 17:28 (PB) 3:28, 3:35, 3:31, 3:29, 3:22
Fronted up for another 5k on Sunday, this time at West End for the BRRC 25th Anniversary race. I was hoping to run 3:33's for as long as I good and hopefully slip under my 17:45 PB if it all came together. Andy Clowes went straight to the front and David Patten tried to go with him whilst I let them go ahead, settling into third place. At the 800m, local Masters legend, Ronnie Peters loomed alongside and then moved past me. I let him go without hesitation as he is a 33-34 minute 10k runner and a few classes above me on his day.
The first k was fairly well timed in 3:28 and shortly afterward, I moved past David into third. The second k passed in 3:35 (it took in the hill behind the boatshed) and the third in 3:31 and I was feeling pretty good. Andy was about 50m in front with Ronnie 25m behind in second and a further 25m to me in third. I knew I was a huge chance of a PB so made sure I worked strongly up the incline around the milk factory so I wouldn't lose any time and was stunned to see Ronnie just 10m in front of me after rounding the bend. I instinctively thought 'Hey, I'm a chance of getting second here!' Over the next 400m I steadily worked my way up to Ronnie's heels and as soon as I caught up to him, I surged, putting a three metre gap on him. However, the surge took a lot out of me. I could feel myself tiring and my cadence started to lose rhythm and Ronnie quickly took the opportunity to surge past me less than a hundred metres later. Ronnie was unable to break clear of me however and this gave me the confidence to have another go and as we turned right off Montague Road I surged again. With the finish line drawing closer, I felt much stronger this time and was able to maintain the momentum after the surge. I sneaked a rare glance over the shoulder shortly afterward and saw Ronnie about 10m adrift. A quick look at the watch confirmed that I only had 90 seconds to the finish line. "I can do this!" I thought about the brutal speedwork sessions we had done on Tuesday and Thursday and it gave me confidence that I had the toughness and speed to hammer it home over the finishing stretch.
Every fibre of my being was in agony but I kept the pedal firmly down and charged home like a man possessed. A glance at the finishing clock 50m from the line ensured I kept up the momentum right to the end to dip under 17:30 for a 17 second PB. I was exultant after passing the line. More important than the PB was the opportunity for a fair dinkum head to head match race with a quality runner as we both fought it out for a placing. These opportunities don't come along very often and it was a huge confidence boost for me to accept the challenge and come out on top in the duel. Gees - it had shades of Deek taking on Juma Ikangaa down Coronation Drive in the 1982 Brisbane Commonwealth Games if you don't mind me saying so :) Theres a lot to be said for racing these lower class races sometimes so runners such as myself have the opportunity to fight it out for a placing rather than finishing 20 places back where you are really running against the clock more than anything. I spoke to Ronnie afterward and asked him if he was just doing a time trial or something but he was adamant he was having a fair dinkum crack at it. I guess he must be coming off a flu or injury as I would normally be eating his dust but as Mona said after the Noosa Half - if you toe the starting line, you're fair game.
All things considered, I would have to say that it was my best ever performance to date, especially considering it came after a week of intense training that left me quite sore. Am looking forward to running some much quicker 5k's later on when I race on the track, taper and wear racing flats.
Here's a link to a shot of me at the 1800:
and hammering it in the last 50 m:
Thursday, September 27, 2007
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5 comments:
As always an interesting report Matty. Congratulations on the result.
What you didn't link to was the next photo of Ronnie grimacing as he came in. I happened to be running past as you came in like a runaway freight-train, & RP was trying his best. What I couldn't compute was you being in front of him! Great effort. Maybe these shorter races are your forte...
Huuuuge congrats Matty!!! How good is it when all the hard yakka pays off. Must make you hungry for more and keen to work even harder. Goal - 60 pushups!
Excellent effort Matty!!! So proud of you and damn shame I missed seeing the performance live. The report sufficed however and I was able to relive the experience with you!
Great to see all the speed work and efforts pay off and it is results like these that we all remember for years to come.
Great run Matt. Congrats on the PB. The hard work paid off pretty quick. You are right though, summer on the track and you should be faster.
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