Monday, 17 November 2014

Abbey Dash 2014

The Abbey Dash has been in my mind since before I ever considered myself a runner.  Living in Leeds you cannot help but know about annual road closures.  However, back in 2012, a few months after I decided to take up running, I decided to test myself on the same day as the Dash.  I set off along the canal from Leeds City Centre to Kirkstall an hour or so before the race started and amazed myself when I got back to town 10k later in 59:46.  Under an hour for my first ever 10k, the furthest I had ever run, I was hooked.  The canal run was to become a weekly ritual and my times gradually fell.

Fast forward a year to 17th November 2013.  I was finally lining up for my first official Abbey Dash.  Having had a really poor Leeds 10k earlier in the year I was determined to run sub 60 again.  I ended up towards the back of one of the slow runner pens feeling very much like cattle, and a good five minutes after the gun went off, got under way. I achieved my goal and stopped the clock at 57:18.

But the 2013 Abbey Dash wasn't the end, it was the beginning.  I pushed on from there and started training for the Leeds Half Marathon.  I ran all winter, in all weather to improve my fitness and stamina so that I could take on the 13.1 miles.  This years Dash was set to be the culmination of a year of races.  But after injuring my knee I had been in two minds about pulling out.

As I mentioned before, I had started running again and my knee was holding up, but my stamina had almost vanished.  I'd managed sub 50 for the Leeds 10k and wanted to do the same again.  I was close to deferring my place for the Abbey Dash to avoid a bad time, but then I got some shocking news.  A good friend, Lyndon, had an accident while mountaineering and ended up having to be airlifted to hospital after a 3 hour search by Mountain Rescue teams.

I felt dreadful, it's very difficult when you know that there is nothing you can do to help somebody when all you want to do is help.  The only positive thing I could think of doing was to thank the Keswick Mountain Rescue Team for finding Lyndon.  So I set up a Just Giving page to raise money for them, pinned my bib number to my current favourite running shirt, and got as ready for the Dash as I could.

By the time race day came around, Lyndon's family and friends had raised almost £1,000.00 for Kewsick Mountain Rescue.  There was no chance that I was pulling out now.  With family in tow we made the short journey into Leeds and the site of the old International Pool, where the runners were packed into their stating pens like sardines.  I actually like this method of filtering as it greatly reduces the chance of being held up by slow runners in the early stages of the race.

I studiously avoided the group warm-up as I simply can not stand the perma-grinned instructors.  Luckily, and not for the first time at the start of a race, I bumped into another good friend Diane.  We chewed the fat about our lack of race prep and studied our watches making sure that we were readdy for the off.  The gates of the pen eventually opened and we jogged out onto Wellington Street.

I was already running buy the time we crossed the start line.  I'm told that I looked really focused at the start of the race.  It's not surprising really, there are so many people the chance of tripping up is very high.  Against all of the advice I have given and received I set off far too fast.  This is not unusual for me but it is very frustrating when you go through the first kilometre marker a minute faster than you have anticipated.

I tried to take stock and steady my pace and I was still a minute up at the 5k marker.  I was starting to flag though.  I had decided at the start of the race that I would avoid the water station but looking back a sip or two of water may have been a good idea.  However, while most of the people around me were kicking through a sea discarded plastic cups in the hope of getting a full one themselves, I stayed on the clear inside of the road and kept going.

I managed to keep going until 7k when my lungs and legs reminded me that I wasn't as fit as I had been back in July.  I had a brief walk to catch my breath and gave myself a bit of a pep talk, only 3k to go, you can do it.  A kind runner shouted encouragement from the pack.  His exact words "Come on, just keep plodding!" were enough to get me back off the pavement and onto Kirkstall Road.

My pace had dropped as had my head.  The tarmac wasn't flowing under my feet anywhere near as fast as I wanted.  Another brief walk was enough for me to sort myself out.  I reminded myself that my target was not to run my best ever race and get another PB for the year.  All I wanted was to better last years time and, more importantly, I wanted to finish the race with my head held high to thank everyone who had helped me thank that mountain rescue team.

Showboating at the finish.

I made it up and over the dreaded slip road at the end of Kirkstall Road and found one last push, one final scrap of energy to get me across the finish line.  I don't know how but I stopped the clock at 50:03, only 11seconds slower than this year's Leeds 10k time, but more importantly, 7:15 faster than last years Abbey Dash.  A course PB that will keep me smiling for a long time.  I collected my finisher's t-shirt, found my family, and picked up my phone to tell the world what I had achieved.  It was then that I noticed that we had gone over £1,000.00 on the Just Giving page.

What really rounded the day off though wasn't my time, it was not the brilliant race organisation by Age UK, it wasn't even the fantastic fund-raising efforts.  A little later in the day, while I was toasting my run with a bier and wurst in the German Christmas Market, I saw a tweet from Lyndon.  He was hooked up to machines that go ping and had NG tubes in, but it was him, in one piece, communicating with the world.

I doubt I will ever run a more emotional race, but the 2014 Abbey dash is one I will remember for a long time.  Next time it will be sub 45 and I hope that I won't be fundraising for any more fallen friends.  In the mean time I'm going to take some advice on board and keep plodding, at least until I get my fitness levels back.

Saturday, 8 November 2014

Bring on the Dash!

I was going to write this update about a week ago, two weeks into my latest training plan and two weeks before the Abbey Dash, but for one reason or another I have managed to put it off.  It's not that I've missed any of my scheduled runs.  Neither have I been so ridiculously slow and unfit after injury that I didn't want to share my progress.  The main reason for putting off this post was that I was waiting to receive my race pack for the Dash.

Normally, in my brief experience, race packs get sent out a month to two weeks before a race.  In fact in this instance, the good people at Age UK, who organise the Abbey Dash, told me via twitter that packs were being sent out two weeks before the race.  With that information I decided to wait until I had my bib number before writing a progress report.

I waited, followed my self imposed training plan, and waited some more.  Finally, today, nine days before thousands take to the streets of Leeds, my number turned up.  It is real.  Three months after I injured my knee I will be taking part in one of the top ten 10k races in the UK.  Honestly, I was beginning to think that something had gone wrong and that I no longer had a place.

You see, even though I entered the race back in April, for me it only starts to feel real when the pack turns up.  The instructions for the day: Times, locations of bag drops, where the toilets are, inspirational pep-talks from professional athletes, the route map, and most importantly your number.  All of these things heighten the anticipation and give the butterflies in my stomach a bit more vigour in their wings. 


I'm relying on these pre race nerves to get me around the course.  I have managed to stick to my schedule but that has only got me back to running 6k.  In an ideal world I would have managed a couple of 10ks by now, but in that world I wouldn't have injured my knee.  My original goal of a sub 45 minute 10k has taken a back seat and I'm now just aiming at beating last years time of 57:18.

After the last few months, a course Personal Best will do me just fine, even if I miss out on a distance PB by some margin.  Bring on the Dash!

*** UPDATE ***

Since writing this post I ran parkrun in Cross Flatts Park.  Throughout my injury time I have been attending parkrun as a volunteer, but now I'm back on my feet I've taken advantage of our hilly 5k course as part of my rehabilitation.  Before the clock started at 9am on Saturday morning I decided that I was going to run the course twice, finish the 5k, get my barcode scanned and set off to do it again, just to see if I could complete 10k.

My actual parkrun time was 24:33, the first time sub 25 minutes since doing my knee in, mostly thanks to Debs who I'm sure I wasn't racing against!  The second 5k took a much more leisurely 27:09.  Combined times of 51:42 for 10k (all be it with a couple of minutes breather in the middle) gives me so much hope for a decent Dash.  Even if I run the slow 27:09 pace for the full course on Sunday I will come in 3 minutes under last years time.  If I wasn't looking forward to race day before parkrun, I sure am now!