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Run for your life!!!!

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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Nothing really in the way of updates, just letting off steam really and what better place to do it..........☺️

    On the evening of new year's day, started feeling a bit under the weather with a few aches here and there and a bit of a cough. Woke up the next day with a now persistent cough and a pain just under the right shoulder. This only worsened as the week progressed and knew that frustratingly, no running would happen this week. Hearing about lots of folk this week who are experiencing similar ailments, definitely something doing the rounds.

    Thoughts are obviously on the training for Bohermeen and what sort of a spanner in the works a week of no running might cause. Not an awful lot I can do really apart from not rushing back too soon and keeping the goal time realistic.

    Definitely feeling more human today than I've done all week so will see how things are tomorrow and take it from there.


    Mile for the week - ZILCH 😶



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Monday 9th January - 3 miles easy

    After a week of no running and getting over man flu my dose, I decided - in my usual over-cautious nature - to scale things back this week and forget about what was on the plan. Started the week with a few easy miles and ended the run with the remains of whatever coughs and splutters I had the previous week.


    Tuesday 10th January - 5 miles easy

    Shocking weather out but kept with the easy miles.


    Wednesday 11th January - 5 miles easy

    Another 5 easy miles but picked up the pace for the last mile or so. Felt good afterwards.


    Thursday 12th January - 5 miles easy

    Didn't get to do this one till late, after dropping Jr. off to athletics and just about made it back in time to collect him. Actually, that's a lie. I was 5 minutes late. Bad dad. 😣

    On the home straight, along the canal, very nearly collided with a couple of swans who appeared out of nowhere. The cheek.

    Weather was shocking again, enough to make you wonder why.

    Treated myself to a new pair of running shoes (Saucony Axon 2) that were too good an offer to turn down. My running shoe addiction is now at a stage where not only do I not tell the other half but also have the shoes delivered to my work address. 🤐 None of my family read this trash anyway.......


    Friday 13th January - Rest day


    Saturday 14th January - 5 miles easy + hills

    Didn't really want the week to pass without incorporating some sort of speed work so went for 6 x 15 sec hills after 5 easy miles.


    Sunday 15th January - 11 miles

    Another very enjoyable meet up in the Phoenix Park with the Boards crew. Eight of us covered a decent area of the park, starting from the Visitor Centre and thanks to @scotindublin and his uncanny knowledge of the area, led us back to the car park with exactly 11 miles on the clock.

    Finished off with a delicious coffee and scone with eh gang before heading home. Looking forward to doing it again.

    So, a handy week all round, probably didn't need to take the foot off the pedal as much as I did but not too bothered about it really. Bohermeen will be challenge regardless of what shape I am in so I'm just focused on giving it my best shot when it comes down to it.


    Miles for the week - 36

    Miles for the year - 46



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,426 ✭✭✭scotindublin


    Great morning this morning, hope the afternoon went well for you aswell.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Cheers C! Tough crowd this afternoon..........🙄



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Update, just dawned on me that my other half is flying home to Manchester on Thursday for four days. There goes another spanner in the already spluttering works! Will need to do some drastic re-jigging this week to get the most out of it somehow. Will I ever get this thing off the ground?? 😕



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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Monday 16th January - 5 miles easy with strides

    Just keeping things ticking along with another 5 miles around Adamstown and the surrounding area, taking in the head-spinning number of new housing developments springing up. Even our kids are now able to say "I remember when that was just fields".......🤣


    Tuesday 17th January - 2 mile warm up/4 x 2 mins (6:30 pace), off 1 min/4 x 1 min (6:15 pace), off 30 secs/45 x 30 secs (5:50 pace), off 15 seconds/1.5 mile cool down

    Cold enough morning but lovely blue January skies with the slightest hint of warmth trying its best to make itself known, Used a session from May 2021 which I quite enjoyed so gave it another spin, with ever so slightly slower paces for each of the sets. Ran about 15 seconds slower for each one I think.

    Last set of 30 second sprints were a bit under 5:50 pace and I was well spent by the end but felt good. The 2 minute recoveries between sets were 30 secs walk and 90 secs jog.

    Session came in at one second slower than it did in May 2021. 😃


    Wednesday 18th January - 5 miles easy

    The 5 mile easy runs are becoming really enjoyable.


    Thursday 19th January - Rest day


    Friday 20th January - 12 miles progression run with last 3 miles @ LT

    Knowing this would be my last run of the week, I'd have been a bear with a sore head if I didn't squeeze in a long run. Had been thinking about how to approach this one for a few days. Didn't want to start off too conservatively, leaving myself with too much of a change of pace for the last 3 miles. Also, if I started out too fast, there wouldn't be enough of a progression before the end. Ran a familiar enough route down the N4 and out towards Grange Castle for a few loops of the business park before heading home. Even though I booked the morning off work, I ended up leaving the house later than anticipated....due to work stuff! Remote working is all well and good but even when you're not meant to be contactable, you still are!!! 🤔

    The pacing for each mile was working out ok but I couldn't help but wonder if I was even gauging my LT pace correctly. Not done many runs like this one up to now so it was probably reason enough to be doubting myself. That said, by the time I'd reached the end of mile 9 (7:20), not only was I now against the clock to get home in time for work, I was wondering if I'd be able to keep up the LT pace (approx 7:00 min miles) for the rest of the run. I did have to stop for about 20 seconds about half way through mile 10 due to a stitch (this hardly ever happens) but needed to keep going to ran through it with a bit of discomfort. Annoyed that I had to cut the run short but that's the way it goes sometimes.

    Ended up running 11 miles with last 2 miles @ LT

    Got home to find out scheduled meeting was cancelled.....😫

    On the plus side, it's payday (I promise I won't buy any more running shoes until at least next week)


    Hopefully, from Monday, I'll be able to see out the rest of the training plan without any further interruptions before Bohermeen. There's still some nice juicy runs left (13 mile progression run week after next and a 10k time trial the week after) so I'm sure I'll be playing those out in my head on repeat until then!

    Thanks for reading

    Miles for the week - 30

    Miles for the year - 76



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Monday 23rd January - Rest day

    Threw in about 30 mins of core strengthening exercises


    Tuesday 24th January - 8 miles easy with 6 x 15 second hills/4 x 100 m strides

    A morning chock-full of meetings was leaving me thinking I'd be facing another evening run but thankfully got out for an early lunch to do this. Legs were motoring along nicely, perhaps could have slowed down a little by 10-15 secs per mile.

    Hills were good, not the steepest incline but enough of a test for now.


    Wednesday 25th January - 9 miles endurance

    Another run between meetings with little to spare on the clock. From the off, the HR on the Garmin was flitting between 78/80 so not sure what that was about. I had the watch charging overnight and only put it on my wrist as I was literally heading out the door. Don't know if that explains it....

    As for the run itself, the first couple of miles felt a bit laboured but don't know why. Just didn't feel like the legs were moving as normal. Once I had another couple of miles on the clock, felt ok again but the HR reading was bugging me.

    Looking back on the run, it could quite easily pass for a progression run. I get that progression runs would finish with pacier miles, which is why I had to rein it in slightly for the last mile, at one point - once mile 8 had elapsed - I was getting carried away and hitting 6:45 pace.


    Thursday 26th January - Rest day

    Happy to have a rest day today as it's my one day of the week in the office and there's nothing I hate more that battling my way around the city trying to avoid the meanderthals. On the plus side, I picked up my new Sauconys that I had delivered to work last week. Nice!


    Friday 27th January - 2 mile warm up / 6 x 1k @ 5k pace (3 mins recovery) / 2 mile cool down

    Stupidly, I had been letting this run get under my skin all week. I can't even explain why, I guess when I see sessions like this on paper, the overthinking part of my brain kicks into overdrive and I convince myself that it's gonna go the shape of a pear. Crazy stuff. Part of it might be explained by the indecision for where to do the run in the first place. My original plan was was to head up to Grange Castle Business Park which has a loop of 1.25 miles. The running surfaces around the loop are not the most consistent and there are sections that have very slight lags (which I have probably made worse in my own head). Too much potential for distraction so I settled for the nice flat surface of the canal, by the 12th Lock. I was so glad that I did.

    The run itself? It was ace. Wore the new Saucony's (Axon 2) which felt fantastic all the way through, the first time I have ever had more than one pair of running shoes on the go. Each of the 1k's started and finished exactly the same way - a little too fast, before reeling it in - and finishing with just the right amount of hurt - no more so than for the last ( and fastest) km........but that's why we do this, yes?

    Conditions couldn't have been better, a mostly blue sky, a little chill in the air and a deserted canal path. Pure bliss.

    Finished the session with both arms in the air and let out a resounding "YES!!"

    End result? A much needed confidence boost.


    Saturday 28th January - 5 miles easy (recovery)

    Decided to venture down to Griffeen Parkrun as it had been quite a while since I did a Parkrun anywhere. Had two miles done with a couple of minutes to spare befroe the start and made my way around the two laps of the park nice and handily (apart from a cheeky sprint for the last 200 metres).

    Later in the day, did another half hour of core strengthening.


    Sunday 29th January - 12 miles endurance

    Another endurance run and another opportunity to test the legs. Made sure the early miles were handy enough before stepping up the pace from mile 8. Happy that the increase in pace came easy enough and by the end, with a 7:25 mile, I felt I could have kept going for another few miles at that pace. Plenty of time for that later in the plan.

    Next week's plan has some interesting stuff, with a 40 minute tempo run, 10 mile endurance run and a 13 mile progression run but I feel it's all moving along nicely considering where I was six months ago.


    Miles for the week - 44

    Miles for the year - 119

    Post edited by coogy on


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Getting this out of my system, before I change my mind....


    Monday 31st January - Rest day


    Tuesday 1st February - 2 miles warm up/38 minute tempo run/2 miles cool down

    Utter b**ls up is the only way I can describe this. 2 mile warm up was into a stiff wind so I knew no matter where I ran, I'd be running into it at some point. Went up to Grange Castle (yes, I know) and after less than a mile, I found myself running straight into a hard enough headwind for the half km straight on the other side of the loop but was still managng to keep the pace consistent enough. First mile came in at just under 7 mins and already I'm feeling not too hot. Running form felt all over the place and just couldn't get into a good rythym. Pace wise though, mile 2 was pretty much the same as the first mile but running into the wind the second time around felt even harder and the pace dropped to about 7:30 pace. Coming back to meet the tailwind for the third time, and with the pace almost back on track, I just felt exhausted and knew there was only one option, to pull the plug. Didn't even bother trying to pick it up again after taking a two minute breather.

    Walked/jogged back home, tail between legs.

    There's a lesson in there somewhere, just haven't figured it out what it is yet.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,301 ✭✭✭ariana`


    There's a lesson in there somewhere, just haven't figured it out what it is yet.

    Maybe run to effort rather than pace 😉



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,501 ✭✭✭Laineyfrecks


    I'd have to agree with @ariana` another thing I am trying go get right, especially as Tallaght feels like a wind tunnel almost all of the time, is to run by effort. There's no way the efforts are the same if the pace is consistent & one half is into a strong wind, sometimes the HR is great for keeping me honest. Next time I'd scale it back into the wind then hopefully you won't feel so fecked! I hate the wind more than any other weather 🙈



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  • Registered Users Posts: 10,457 ✭✭✭✭Murph_D


    Absolutely. Figure out your tempo HR and forget about pace. It will release you from all that second guessing and unnecessary anxiety. As I run on the coast almost daily and there is always a wind of some sort, it's the only way to do it without going mad!



  • Registered Users Posts: 7,740 ✭✭✭Mr. Guappa


    Based on the paces you mention, I think I'm right in saying that was supposed to be a 38 minute LT run? That's an absolute monster of a session, and I also think I'm right in saying you'd missed a few of the earlier LT runs which would work up to 38 mins? Would have been no harm today in trying one of the earlier LT runs which are more manageable (but still tough!).

    Agreed with the effort/HR advice though... nothing good will come of straining to hit paces in difficult conditions. Need to take that advice myself... I'd similar issues with wind today and pushed a bit too hard as well. Thankfully mine was a much shorter session.

    Might sound cliche, but as long as you learn something from it then today was no disaster. No need to beat yourself up about it either.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,807 ✭✭✭skyblue46


    Echoing some previous comments...effort rather than pace and using HR as a guide. Is sub 7 really tempo? Klaas Lok, the man behind EIM, always stresses effort not pace for race distance efforts. He mentions that you are not tapered, not wearing race shoes, not buzzed with adrenaline and not running with others around you. Slower paces can be equal in effort.



  • Registered Users Posts: 5,392 ✭✭✭Sunny Dayz


    My god, running into the wind absolutely drains the legs. As others have said, run by effort which is easier said than done and may be harder to pinpoint a pace or speed for.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Thank folks for taking the time to respond, I do appreciate it.

    I will hold my hands up and admit that, even after nearly five years of consistent running, I am awful when it comes to understanding HR, and don't pay nearly enough attention to it as I should.

    I also know that I am far too hung up on paces during training, to the point where it can sometimes be the sole focus. Clearly, the lines of understanding between what the various paces should be are becoming blurred. Recipe for disaster.

    Yesterday was a valuable and timely lesson to take things down a notch or two. I mentioned in my end of week log entry for last week how pleased I was with how things were progressing after the lay-off during 2022 but perhaps I've jumped the gun a little and not given myself the time needed to be in a place where should be, rather than where I want to be. It's only January, DCM is still a long way off.

    Again, thanks for all the input/advice!



  • Registered Users Posts: 759 ✭✭✭marathon2022


    No harm in running to pace.



  • Registered Users Posts: 10,457 ✭✭✭✭Murph_D


    Well it doesn't have to be HR-based - you can always just allow yourself a bit of leeway in terms of split times when running into a headwind.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Testing, testing.....is this thing still on?

    That's better. Well, it's been a while since I last shared a log entry round these here parts. A lot has happened since January and I currently find myself coming out the far end of a pretty horrendous few months in terms of where I am and where I should be, running wise.

    Thanks to the perspective and guidance of a number of 'stars in jars', that's behind me now, and it's time to move on. DCM is still my target race but with (for now) slightly lowered expectations.

    That's it in a nutshell, really, so from now until 29th October (and hopefullt beyond), I am hoping to keep a regular enough record of my journey along the way.

    Here goes nothing..........



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Marathon training officially kicks in tomorrow.

    The fitness levels appear to be as good as I coud possibly hope for right now, so physically, I am more than ready for what's ahead. Need to make sure things stay that way.

    Four years on from my last marathon though, it might take me another four or five weeks before I'm 100% comfortable with the idea of runing 26.2 at a pace that will allow me to achieve my (current) goal time.

    After I signed up for DCM, I had originally decided to use the Boards Grads Plan (it served me well back in 2019) but have now decided to go with the Hansons plan instead. I like the look of the midweek tempo runs, they seem to be just what I need to hopefully keep me focused.

    Oh, and logging officially begins tomorrow too 😉



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    First off, before I get into the logging, I have decided to go with the P&D plan rather than Hansons. I didn't realise the latter involved 6 days of running which is a little beyond me. Also, P&D has very few interval sessions which suits me fine. Plenty of midweek runs and weekend runs with half marathon/marathon paced miles thrown in so I'm happy with that.

    Monday 3rd July - OFF

    Tuesday 4th July - 2 miles easy/4 miles @hmp/2 x miles easy.

    The plan prescribed 8 miles including 4 at half marathon pace so I broke it up into warm up/4 miles/cool down. Getting to know my training paces is something I had to think long and hard about. Although I will most certainly be chasing a PB at DCM, I would prefer for it to be a sensible one rather than setting myself a goal that is just that bit too out of reach.

    Was happy with this run considering it was done mostly in torrential rain and a stiff enough headwind in some parts. Two of the four hm pace miles were done on an incline too so was nice to be able to still hit the paces.

    Wednesday 5th July - OFF

    Thursday 6th July - 9 miles General Aerobic

    Daughter's 14th birthday today (YIKES!) so had to be out the door early to get this done. Finally getting used to the early starts again. Only really good at them when I know I really have to but hoping that as the weeks progress, that feeling of early morning lethargy will disappear.

    Friday 7th July - OFF

    Saturday 8th July - 4 miles recovery

    Ran an easy Parkrun with another mile tagged on at the end.

    Sunday 9th July - 12 miles medium-long run

    Another early start and just as well. No sooner did I have 12 very enjoyable miles done and dusted that the heavens opened once again. Felt tired at the end of this week but hoping that once things get motoring again, it'll all start feeling normal.

    Above everything, am very excited about the next few months ahead and to be back on here, logging and catching up with how everyone's progressing! 🙂

    Post edited by coogy on


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy



    Monday 10th July - OFF

    Tuesday 11th July - 8 miles w/10 x 100m strides

    Another nice early start. Mile paces were about 20 seconds too fast. Not sure why, it shall remain a mystery.........

    Wednesday 12th July - OFF

    Thursday 13th July - 10 miles GA

    Slowed the paces right down for this, could possibly have even slowed down even more but still felt very relaxed for the whole of this run. Hopefully, as the weeks progress, I'll get better at making the easy days as easy as possible. I remember this being an issue during training for DCM 2018 so just need to remind myself that easy means easy..

    Friday 14th July - OFF

    Saturday 15th July - 5 miles recovery

    Soaked through due to some insane weather. Headed out to the Forever Young Festival as I was booked to draw caricatures in the Opel Ireland tent for a few hours. The place was a mud-fest, and certainly not suited for anyone without wellies. (that's me, by the way).

    Sunday 16th July - 13 mile run (3 miles warm up/8 miles @ mp/2 miles cool down

    Throughout the week, it felt like there was a lot hinging on this run, my first real test of running at my planned marathon pace. Perhaps calling it 'make or break' is a bit extreme, especially so early into the plan, but I knew I would have to work hard mentally to make sure it would go according to plan.

    As usual, spent way to long trying to work out where I was going to do it. As far away from traffic seemed like the most sensible option so I headed up to Grange Castle - conveniently situated three miles from the house (depending on what side you enter) - before beginning the first of what I had worked out as just over six laps of the inner loop (1.25 miles each) of the business park.

    Even though there was a stretch on one side of about 400/500m running into a headwind, the first mile felt good and was grateful from the brief reprieve from the windy conditions over the other side of the loop. I wondered to myself if I would last the whole 8 miles mp doing just loops but with just over 4 laps done - I knew I had had enough of Grange Castle and headed out onto the ring road, down through Adamstown before finally finishing the 8 miles right outside my estate. The paces were pretty much bang on from start to finish and even though I was starting to tire a little over the last mile and a half, I was still able to keep things consistent and at times had to hit the brakes a little when the paces got a little too speedy. A great confidence booster, coming at the perfect time.

    Headed back out to Forever Young Festival for another afternoon of drawing punters. Conditions even muddier than the day before. Still , great atmosphere but a little too much cheese for my liking......

    The first three weeks of the plan had three rest days which will now switch to two from tomorrow. A little concerned that the next long run that incorporates marathon paced miles comes while we're away on hols in Greece. Really hope I don't lose too much momentum over those two weeks but will have to play it by ear and perhaps pick out which runs in the plan that I'd benefit most from.


    Miles for the week - 37

    Mile for the year - 914



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,417 ✭✭✭Lazare


    Great week K, keep it motoring.

    Don't stress the holiday runs, get out early if you can, don't worry if you can't and miss some.

    So much time left, enjoy yourself.



  • Registered Users Posts: 5,236 ✭✭✭AuldManKing


    Do you have the P&D book - I find with these plans its vital to have the book so you understand the runs.

    These plans can be very hard as the MLR's and long runs have to be done at specific intensities (I think MP+20% and MP+10% by the end of the run) - so its a lot of 'steady running' and quite often he has 2 days in a row of this - so be careful with it.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Thanks A. Yes, I have the book and currently making my way through it. 🙂 Not something I'm used to doing, if I'm being honest, so it feels like there's a lot to take in.

    It was actually the inclusion of the medium to long runs at half marathon/marathon pace that swung it for me in terms of what plan to use. I knew, going by the suggested paces, that it would be something of a challenge so I was fully prepared for that. Reading the book over the last week has really helped in understanding the whys and wherefores. Lots of questions but they're all being answered as I'm making my way through it!



  • Registered Users Posts: 7,740 ✭✭✭Mr. Guappa


    Best of luck with the training K.

    Maybe my maths are off, or maybe you've moved the weeks around, but going by the runs you describe here and those I see on strava I think you might be a week behind on the schedule?



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    A, you're absolutely right, well spotted.

    I started from the beginning of the plan but a week later than I should have............🤐

    What. A. Dope.



  • Registered Users Posts: 4,807 ✭✭✭skyblue46


    I just hear the words of Roy Keane ringing in my ears ... 🤣



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    Monday 17th July - OFF

    Tuesday 18th July - 10 miles GA

    Nice start to the week. Not used to such long runs as a first run of a new week but really enjoyed this and the paces were nice and relaxed.

    Wednesday 19th July - 4 miles easy


    Thursday 20th July - 8 miles incl' 4 @ LT pace

    A busy day in work, coupled with numerous fruitless attempts to bag myself some stupidly over-priced Taylor Swift tickets, followed by a three-hour drawing gig, left me with no option to do this late in the day. Was tired-ish starting off but my eagerness to get it done saw me through it and a couple of miles in, the paces started feeling nice and controlled. Happy with this one overall.

    Friday 21st July - OFF

    Saturday 22nd July - 4 miles recovery

    Was going to head up to Corkagh for the Parkrun but slept through the alarm so just stayed local. Tried to convince my youngest (12) to join me but he promised me he'd do the Junior Parkrun the next day (this didn't happen either).


    Sunday 23rd July - 14 mile medium/long run

    No surprise to wake up to another wet morning. Why even wait for it to stop, it's down for the day. Getting used to the addiitonal mileage now and more importantly, have started noticing that I've become more able to separate my head from what my legs are doing..........if that makes sense? During parts of the run, I found myself completely 'zoning out' from what I was doing but still keeping the pace consistent. Read into that what you will.....🙂

    I'm learning a lot from the P&D book as I'm going along, but not withough making a few minor schoolboy errors along the way. I guess I'll know better next time.....


    Also, big thanks to the eagle-eyed @Mr. Guappa for the timely nudge a few days ago that I was a whole week behind where I should have been on the plan. Note to self: next time, read directly from the book before thinking about typing up a fancy shmancy colour-coded Google doc. 🙄

    Abother busy week ahead which will no doubt result in some more early starts.

    Miles for the week - 40

    Mile for the year - 954

    Post edited by coogy on


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    "Fail to prepare.............." or just any words by Roy Keane? 🤣



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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,250 ✭✭✭coogy


    What's that you say? Race report from Jingle Bells you want, is it? Sure go on.....

    In my last log entry, I was still a DCM entrant. Things very quickly ground to a halt, mostly due to a niggle that was bad enough to have me sidelined for a couple of weeks but to be frank, it was perfectly timed as it gave me a way out. Just wasn't motivated enough to take on the training this year and be excited enough about the prospect of running my third marathon. So I jumped ship and breathed a massive sigh of relief.

    The niggle eventually subsided and I carried on, keeping things ticking over. Lo and behold, the entries for Jingle Bells went up and I managed to nab one before they sold out. Gave me some much needed focus and the opportunity to finish the year on a relative high.

    Went straight for the Boards 5k plan for the second time this year (Ran Bob Heffernan 5k in May, crossing the finish line in 19:39, an official pb) so knew exactly what was in store. Sub-19 was considered very briefly but decided that shaving a healthy 20-30 seconds off my pb would be a realistic enough target.

    The training itself went very well and over the course of the last 4 or 5 weeks, I found myself able to push that little more than what was required of the plan. As with any 5k race I've done, there's been no small amount of trepidation, knowing the effort needed to come away on the day with a satisfying outcome. Still, I was feeling very positive about how the day might pan out, but not without the usual pre- race nerves which have too often derailed any hopes I had of running well.

    The conditions were simply perfect, with blue December skies as far as the eye could see, although the biting chill in the early morning air did take some getting used to during the warm up.

    Bumped into Murph D and his Raheny club buddy and we did a nice easy warm up complemented by some drills/sprints before heading over to the start line. Last time I did this race, it was 2021 and I recall positioning myself much too far back from the start, leaving me penned in amongst the hoards, who I eventually shook off once we hit Chesterfield. This time, I got a decent spot about 20 feet from the start line and was happy that the only nerves I felt were the good sort.

    My goal pace - if I was to make any sort of in-roads, was between 6:10 - 6:15 min/mile. Bob Heffernan saw me complete my first mile in 6 mins flat and I paid the price towards the end so I tried my best to not get carried away too soon, hoping it would all fall into place if I stayed sensible.

    Off we went and straight away felt overwhelmed, surrounded by so many runners. They all seemed so assured and confident, appearing mightily determined in what they were doing. With barely 3 minutes on the clock, the first feelings of doubt arrived. "Can I actually do this?, am I ablwe to keep my legs going at this speed?" I thought to myself, as I briefly considered how I would feel about a DNF. I immediately batted away any negative thoughts, realising I'd invested too much time and effort into training to be entertaining such a ridiculous idea. Buck up.

    Up Chesterfield and thankfully no breeze to contend with. A glance at the watch and I was exactly where I wanted to be, even though at this early stage, plenty of runners were passing me out. First mile came in at 6:13. Clearly saw that the markers were in km's so I tried not to pay too much attention to them just yet. Once we turned onto OS Road, I felt pretty ok and was thankful of the slight downhill, even though this particular stretch is always longer than I remember.

    All I was trying to focus on here was, well....to be focused I guess, and try to start settling in to the pace I was running at. By now, I was running alongside a pack who all seemed to be doing something similar to me so I stayed with them for the time being. Mile two beeped in at 6:13 again so I knew it was time to up the pace. Come on, just another six mintes or so of this and you're home and dry. The legs felt ok but I could feel my arms getting quite tired and a little tense. Tried my best to block it out and I could see the pace quicken to around the 6 min/mile mark. With about 2kms to go, I felt by now like I was well able to hold this pace, knowing that the famous downhill finish was not far off. Again, the twists and turns of this section of the route was another that seemed to last longer than my memory had remembered, and I was now desperate for the top of the Upper Glen Rd to come into view. Once it did, I knew that even with the downhill, I couldn't afford to ease up in any way so more effort was put into this last kilometer or so. With the finish area in the distance, my sole focus was to maintain this pace as best I could but it was harder than I thought, as by now, all I was doing was willing the finish line closer. Mile 3 came in at 6:01 so now all I had to was to put the foot down for the last 200 and I was home and dry. Just couldn't make the legs work as fast as I hoped I would, knowing how precious every second was. Eventually crossed the line, stopped the watch and found the nearest patch of grass to collapse on.

    Looked at my time and saw 19:09. What the hell???? I honestly couldn't believe it. A good 10-15 seconds better than I had expected. I let out a massive "YES!!!" as I watched the crowds spill through the finish. I looked at my watch again and for good measure, I let out an even louder "YES!!" The guy sitting on the grass in front of me turned around slowly and offered me a congratulatory, but seemingly forced fist pump, making me think it was done purely as a deterrent to me letting out yet another over-excited yell. 😁

    Got to my feet and collected the all important mug, still trying to process what just happened. Bumped into Lazare (whose words of confidence the previous day made a huge difference to my mindset at the start line) who ran a very respectable 19:20. His wife also ran and came away with a mightily impressive PB. Met a few other familiar faces and hung around for a bit before squeezing in a couple of miles cool down, then back to the car. Found out that in my eagerness to stop the watch at the finish line, I pressed it a tad early and my official chip time was 19.10. Still thrilled with that, a massive confidence booster that came at just the right time.

    Walking back to the car with my shiny mug, I bumped into my old coach and gave him the low-down, more animatedely that I probably realised. After a couple of minutes, his parting words were "great to see you with a smile on your face again, says it all". These words stayed with me for the rest of the day, how true it was.

    Naas 10 miler in March is next so straight back into it, will be using the Boards 10k - HM plan.


    Thanks for reading.

    Post edited by coogy on


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