March 6, 2018

Want to get quicker, go shorter and faster.

Dean Karnazes once said “If you want to run a mile, run a mile. If you want to experience a different life, run a marathon. If you want to talk to God, run an Ultra.” I wonder who you talk to when you race a 5k ? For me it is another case of testing yourself against yourself, how hard do you want to go and how much pain are you willing to suffer in the pursuit of ‘being the best you can be’.

This Sunday I decided to run the Joondalup Park Run as it had been nearly two years since I ran there and my time of 17:29 was relatively pedestrian by my normal finishing times.  I had just started training with Raf from the Running Centre  ( http://www.therunningcentre.com.au) and was coming out of a running slump brought on by a marathon blow-up the previous year. Funnily enough the ‘blow-out’ was a mental thing as I was defending my Bunbury Marathon title won the previous year (2013) and in good form, unfortunately I was more interested in the competition than my own pace and goals and set off way too quick. To cut a long story short (which is unlike me) I was walking through the drinks station at 15k. I did manage to regroup and finish a credible 4th in a time of 2hrs 54minutes but I was in 2:45 form all day.  Anyhow I digress.

The parkrun  is a free timed run every Saturday morning starting at 8am. ( http://www.parkrun.com/ ) Parkrun started back in 2004 when 13 runners got together on a blustery day in Bushy Park, Teddington, UK. We’re now an international family of over half a million runners (and counting). From the parkrun website.

We’re super proud of the fact our volunteer-led, free-for-all 5km runs have been taken up by so many people across so many cultures in so many countries. Of course, it was a bit more low key at the beginning…

Our first ever event was in Bushy park, Teddington, UK, where 13 intrepid parkrunners got together on 2 October 2004. The volunteer team included Paul and Joanne Sinton-Hewitt, Duncan Gaskell, Simon Hedger and Robin Drummond.

It took nearly two years before parkrun spread beyond Bushy. Wimbledon was the chosen venue and we had to prove to ourselves that we could manage more than a single event at a time. This was the start of the ‘cookie cutter’ approach to events that would allow parkrun to expand.

To begin with we collated all results on paper and the finish tokens were washers from the local hardware store! But eventually we ramped up the technology, and so the parkrun registration and barcode result system was born.

Now many thousands of runners are processed, websites updated and emails sent each week. The parkrun community is growing all the time – but it’s all still based on the simple, basic principles formed from the start: weekly, free, 5km, for everyone, forever.

parkrun website.

In Perth at the moment there are well over 20 parkruns scattered around  the city and surrounding suburbs, there’s even a parkrun ultra when a group of very ‘special’ runners hire a bus and run all of them over a 24 hour period. If the timing is right I’m certainly going to try and fit that one into my racing calendar.

So what does a 5k parkrun teach you about yourself ? First of all it teaches you about pain management because, trust me people,  you invariably don’t give it the respect it deserves and always go out at your 1500m pace, well that’s the way I run them. I love the ‘scolded cat’ start and always run the first kilometer 10-15 seconds than the rest and although that doesn’t seem a lot it means more time in the ‘pain box’ . I have always promised myself I’ll run a 3:30 min/k for the first one but as soon as we get going it’s on for young and old and I’m sprinting as fast as I can for the lead and ‘1st finisher’ position. (In the parkrun there is no winner or losers but there is a 1st finisher.)  Sunday at Joondalup was no exception and my first kilometer was a 3:13 as I chased down a young ‘wipper-snapper’ who dared jump ahead of me at the start. ! I then settled down into a more sustainable pace and got to halfway in some resemblance of being able to run back in a similar time, which I did.

Unfortunately I’m painting too rosy a picture here. I admit I got a good time and was better than expected but I feel the Nike Vaporfly 4%’ers  accounted for that. (trust me people these bad boys of a shoe is paramount to cheating !!) The last 2k of a 5k you will be deep, deep in the pain box and holding on for dear life, questioning your existence but that’s the point of racing. What it does give you is a training marker or  confidence booster (assuming you ran well) or a reality check (assuming you didn’t run well); this then becomes your target for the following weekend. (remember people they are free.) Finally being a Saturday it allows you to recover from this ‘speed session’ with the obligatory long and easy run Sunday, the 5k parkrun really is the race that keep on giving.

If you live in one of those countries where the parkrun is yet to startup you can easily measure a 5k route and just time yourself, maybe get a few friends and start a parkrun yourself, easily done apparently. Either way a 5k time trial is a distance that ever runner needs to have in their arsenal, it ticks so many boxes and the feeling you get when you finish is euphoric, trust me ! Most importantly it allows you to gauge where you are in preparation for longer events, namely the marathon of course.

 

 

Demons well and truly banished.