A nice little 6 day break took me to the Red Centre of
Australia that then gave me the opportunity to line up for the ‘Australian
Outback Marathon’(AOM), and boy what an experience it turned out to be. Flew in
on the Wednesday and it was anything but the usual race preparation before
lining up on the Saturday with another 250 excited runners.
What a sight it was as we watched sunrise before the local
Aboriginal signalled race start with the traditional didgeridoo blast to get us
going. Settled pretty early and a set
time was never the go for this race so was happy (and surprised) as I got
talking to another ex-pat named Oliver running along side by side in 2nd
and 3rd place with Mr Japan guy about 10m behind. The scenery was
stunning as we went through the 10k mark
in about 43 minutes averaging 4.17 per/k.
First and only drama was to come at the 13k marker when the
U.S Marines on a visit via Darwin who were on road crossing duty and didn’t
mention to take the next left 300m up the road that saw us continue straight
for an extra 900m before they had to drive to turn us back (thus adding 1.8ks
that wasn’t in the script). It was at this stage that Oliver decided he wanted
to push on to try to gain some time back but I was happy enough to be holding
the 4.17s and that was the last I saw of him till about 2 hrs later in the day.
Spent the next 8ks or so going past people (who didn’t go the wrong way) that
took my mind off things and then the back markers after you pretty much double
back at 26k. Plenty of High 5s to go with it and before long I was at the 30k
mark of the race.
With no specific marathon training leading into this race I
really started to struggle from about 33ks and when a basic rookie error meant
my GPS packed up with no battery life it then meant I was seeing the race out
without no idea of time. What I did know though was my pace had dropped
considerably and when Mr Japan came up and went past at the 38k marker there
was nothing I could do about it despite me trying to stay with him at least
till the 40k point. The ‘Field of Lights’ sight that I knew was near the end
was a welcome relief and when I could hear the music blasting out I somehow
managed to lift the pace (albeit slightly) as I crossed out in 3.17:11
Mighty happy then to find out I had snagged 3rd
position and even more pleased to see Oliver take 1st with Mr Japan
2nd despite all 3 of us include the extra distance and didn’t affect
the end result.
As a race it was one of the best events I’ve had the
privilege to run in, with drinks stations every 3k on the course, personal
drinks put out and most importantly EVERY kilometre sign was out and spot ON.
Course was tough, plenty of compact soft stuff to run on but the little sand
dunes were a killer that almost brought me to a standstill. The organisation was top notch with FREE
supply of food and drinks all the way
through the afternoon as the runners were coming in right up to the generous 8hr cut –off time. Even then with still 12 runners left on the
course they kept the clock going and I don’t think there was a dry eye in the
house when the final lady crossed the line in 8hr:43 dragging her sorry body as
if she’d been to war to rapturous applause as she was presented with her
finishes medal.
The night time after party was as good as I’ve been as well,
with everyone coming together in the ‘Pioneer Outback Pub to tell all the
success stories from the day as many a beer was consumed. A couple of easy days followed sat around the
pool and some sightseeing around the Rock on some bikes completed a very
memorable trip.
Will I be back? – you bet. Get it locked in.
A few pics from the tour and actual race.
Cheers
Wow, third place in a marathon run on sand with no specific marathon training?! Fine form! I'll take eight minutes at c2s, thanks very much.
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