Wednesday, 14 November 2012

Running with Kenyans

Ok, I haven't posted anything for a while, I know. Now though I have something fairly interesting to put up here... I'm writing this from Iten (pronounced like playing battleships "E:10"), Kenya. One of the best, if not THE best, running hotspots in the world.

Situated up at 2500m elevation in the Rift Valley region, with a great climate and hard-working Kenyan work ethic, it is a great place to come and train. The locals are very hospitable and friendly, with every child you run (or even walk) past turning with a wide smile and waving with a chirpy "How are you?" Any of the local runners (including up to the many elite athletes who reside here for months at a time) are very happy to invite an aspiring runner along for any of their runs or jogs... but once there its up to the invitee to try and STAY with the rest of the runners. Most train 2 if not 3 times per day (6am, 9am and 4pm) and just know its what they're here to do, there are no excuses.

When you are training and racing as a chance to earn money, as your occupation and provide for your family, the idea of risking injury on a muddy morning run (we all head onto the "All weather trail" for these times) or taking a rest day is a very hard notion to validate to yourself.

I'm up here with my fellow professional service providers from The Running Centre: Raf Baugh and Ben Green. We are also lucky enough to have Philo Saunders (Exercise Physiologist and consistent 1500m Australian National Finalist) come along for our 2 week trip, staying at the High Altitude Training Centre, set up by Lornah Kiplagat.

The air is thin, the training is hard but we rest just as hard between sessions. For many of the nights we have been here it has generally rained down hard somewhere between 5pm and 5am making the soft clay unsealed roads that surround Iten, very soft underfoot and you end up with an extra 1kg attached to each shoe by the end of an easy (well EASY up here isn't even easy) jog. And then by the same afternoon, if you head out for a second run, you'll be stomping along on baked-rock-hard clay.

The track session we did this morning (along with about 100 other Kenyan athletes spread across the field) was a 400m rep session. The hard dirt track is actually quite nice to run over, especially once "lane one" becomes a well worn path to follow.
Most of the athletes were doing 10-20 x 400m with around 1 - 2 min break. I opted for just 2 sets of 4, seeing as I've only been up here a week, while Philo pushed out 3, 2 and 1 with a break between but he was moving very well and was asked to lead out most of the reps with a simple gesture and "Muzungo, you lead... 62!" and then they'd all crowd behind him and push to run a 59 sec rep anyway!

I'll try to post a bit more of a story before we leave on the 18th Nov. Photos and video will be put up on The Running Centre and Front Runner Facebook pages over time.

Gotta run
 :-) Marc

Thursday, 6 September 2012

NOT racing

Two very big races were on at the end of August - The National Cross Country championships and the Perth City to Surf. And I didn't race either...

Not due to injury, not due to lack of fitness, not even due to being far from the venue...
I was a manager for the WA State School Sport cross country team in Adelaide and so knew I'd be missing Perth's biggest race and probably wouldn't be able to race the national event either.
From my experience last year as a team manager I knew how long and tough race day could be - as a manager not a competitor. And with this knowledge I decided not to enter and to devote my time to helping the next generation of WA runners on their big day.
Being unable to find a registration page on the WA Aths website MAY have also played a part in my decision but mainly it was to concentrate on my 14/15 boys and the rest of team WA.

As it turned out I was extremely jealous of all the athletes coming in to the finishing shoot caked in mud from the brilliant South Australian course. However I managed to get a few good photos (Stuart Caufield 27th and Brandon Hargreaves 3rd in the Under 20s Men's 8km, to the right), lose my voice cheering on friends and freeze my fingers off clapping in athletes.
And then the next day had to endure the messages of great runs from the guys back home in Perth running the C2S. Last year I finished 6th (3rd West Aussie) and was hoping to run at least 30 seconds faster now that I know how to race the tough course... good thing there is always next year.

Now its just back to work and look for a few short races to keep me motivated until track season starts to wind up in December. Holding off injuries and maintaining the mileage is the goal for the Spring and then we're off to Kenya for an adventure in November.

I'll check in with you all again soon,
 Thanks for reading.

Gotta run
 :-) Marc

Tuesday, 31 July 2012

Day in, day out...

The WA State 10km was a bit of a disappointment for me, I faded in the last 3km after making an attack uphill and blowing up. I finished 6th in 31:53 odd, only 10 seconds slower than last year.
As with all races it was a good learning experience. I learnt to just follow the race plan for championship races and sit when feeling comfortable, not to jump the gun and go early. It was a good finish and win from young gun Brandon Hargreaves, as well as a second placing from my man-machine of a training partner Scott Tamblin and all round nice guy Neil Berry came in for a hard worked bronze.

After the race there was nothing to do but pencil it into the diary and then move on to the next week of training - after a well earned avo of backyard cricket and bad food and drink.

To give you an idea of my winter training, here is a snapshot of my last 2 weeks:

Mon: 60 min,   30 min
Tues: 35 min,   7 x 1km
Wed: 23km
Thurs: 45 min,  30min, drills, plyos, 4 x 150m sprints
Fri: 50 min,  30 min
Sat: 80 min Progressive Tempo,  20 min
Sun: 60 min
Total = 146km

Mon: 50 min,
Tues: 35 min,  3 x 2km, 2 x 500m
Wed: 23km
Thurs: rest,  30 min, drills, plyos, 6 x 80m sprints
Fri: 60 min,  35 min
Sat: 25 min Threshold,  35 min
Sun: 27km Helena run
Total = 139km

Only 2 major sessions per week, with the Saturday session alternating between a "hard threshold" effort and a longer "tempo" which winds up to a hard last 10min. The Thursday session has more of a sprint bias to maintain the leg turnover for Summer Track season, during high mileage right now in Winter mode.
Throw in 3 gym sessions per week, 2 x 1 hour massages, stretching/core/self massage each night and 32 hours of work... and the week starts to get busy.
Racing for the rest of the winter is a mixed bag of local races I can do or skip to continue a solid training block. I am heading across to Adelaide as one of the managers for the WA State Cross Country School team and may compete in the Open Men's 12km there. I raced on the same course as a student 7 years ago so it will be an interesting return. It is on the same time as the Perth City to Surf and so sadly I will have to miss it, after last year finishing 6th I believed I could have improved well on my time and placing this year.

But for now its the steady routine of sleep, eat, run, work, eat, run, eat, sleep... Day in and day out.

Wednesday, 11 July 2012

Winter in full swing

With the WA State 10km road racing champs coming up this Sunday, Winter training has gotten into full swing.
After the Leonora mile the Ks started building up, with June being one of the best months I've had to date, averaging 130km per week.

The next challenge was a nice little "weekend getaway" to the Gold Coast for a 10km race alongside major event of the Gold Coast marathon. With a side-bet with some of the WA boys back home I wanted the race to go very well. I felt in good shape and even pulled out the light-as-anything racing flats the Mizuno Wave Universe for the race... So far the furthest I'd raced in these shoes had been 4km on road and as quite a toey runner I knew my calves would be in for a tough fight ahead, but I wanted any advantage I could get to shave off valued seconds.

In the race were a couple of good young runners but none of the star sub-thirty-minute runners of previous years, so it was open to many to win it.

I took the first K easy, letting the pack go out with anxiety and just sticking to my own pace. With a 3:05 comfortably through the first 1km I was about 10 seconds down on the leader. By the 2km mark I was some 60m behind the lead four and 20m behind the chase pack. As we neared the 3km mark there was a long curve followed by a long but small hill. With the pack in front of me choosing NOT to take the racing line and running wide, I quickly caught them by the top of the hill and then proceeded to inject a 40m gap on them on the decline. For the remaining 7km I was between 60 and 100m from the leaders... in no man's land, with the chase pack 70m behind me.
In this position it was a mental battle to try and reel in the leaders but not push too hard too early and blow up before that ever-distant finishing line.


WA Triathlete and past training partner Kenji Nener made a break from the pack behind to try and catch me in the closing stages of the race. But a glance over my shoulder at the 2km mark ensured I kept up the tempo to keep him behind me all the way to the tape.
I never caught the lead pack and finished in the position I was in at the 3km point... 4th. However it was a new PB of 31:14 (30 seconds shaved off my previous road 10km time) and a good guage of where the fitness is at.
Talking to the coach on the phone that afternoon, my simple response to the question "how did you feel?" was... "now I know how to threshold a 10km".

Overall it was a great trip and experience:
Flying from Perth to the Gold Coast on the midnight flight,
landing and then racing 24 hours later when my body clock still thought it was 4:30am,
in a race distance I'd only done three times before (the last being 11months ago),
with no taper.

THIS IS WINTER... THIS IS WHERE THE WORK IS DONE

Monday, 11 June 2012

Going for gold

The first weekend of June saw a small WA Goldfields town play host to Australia's richest mile. Leonora, 60 minute plane ride inland from Perth, has held the event for the past 9 years and has attracted some of the highest calibre athletes in Aus with the prospect of winning gold. The winner each years earns $6000 and a one-ounce gold nugget, with all places through to 8th in the final (my finishing spot for the past 2 years) winning around $250. In other words, its quite a handy weekend's worth of work.

This year heading out to Leonora there was a slightly lesser field than in previous times - not that it was a slouch field by any reckoning, however it was missing a few of the bigger names of previous years.
With a few more K's under my belt than previous years I was hopeful of finishing higher up the ladder. Although a lack of lactic-tolerance work since the national champs would also make the final 400m tough.

Runnerstribe.com.au has helped organise the event for the past few years and get elite runners over from the eastern states to participate in the event and local council has helped make the mile race a centrepiece of their Foundation day long weekend.

Once all the elite athletes had landed out in the red-dirt mining town the few first-timers were a little awe-struck with just WHERE we were racing. The mile race is 3 laps of a 530-odd metre lap of the main street of town, from one hairpin turn back to another. The fast pace, quick turns and close proximity for the crowd makes for exciting racing - both for competitors and spectators alike. As we all warmed up the locals would all shout out encouragement and joke with us - not quite as cynical as when you jog the streets in the city.

I managed to get through the heat ok on the Saturday night. Nine men were only split down to 8 for the final the next day and the heats were more a good hit out for the legs than really taxing the body. We all slept in our dongas that night to the sounds of "Run to Paradise" by the Choirboys.

The Sunday final was a much more anxious affair. With serious cash on the line, no one had come out just for fun. This was work time. With middle distance running not being the most lucrative of endeavours, a high paying race is one you want to peak for.
We all lined up - Jeff Riseley (the current 1500m Australian champion, 3rd fastest Aussie of all time over the 1500m distance and 2nd fastest for the 800m), Philo Saunders (10 times Australian championship finalist), Malcolm Hicks (the New Zealand Mile champion all the way over here just to race), Chris Discombe (2011 Whelsh 5000m champion), Josh Wright and Josh Johnson (very fast young middle distance proteges), Tom O'Shaughnessy (training partner of Jeff Riseley)... and me... the "local favourite... and five-time reigning WA 1500m champion... Marc See!" as co-founder of the event, commentator and also my boss, Raf Baugh, put it.

The final went like most middle distance races... slow first third, slowly picked up the pace and then was on for all money (which in this case was quite a bit) after the bell. The hairpin turns kept us all bunched up for the first 2 laps but once we rounded the third last hairpin the pace quickened. Jeff Riseley (the obvious favourite) lead the pace until this point and was not looking like giving up the lead any time soon. His effortless stride seemed to just lengthen and push him further ahead (or thats what I was feeling at the time 10 metres behind him in 5th). Along the long back straight Josh Wright challenged Riseley and Philo Saunders ensured the pace was still hot through to the final turn. As we rounded the last corner I was just in touch with the leaders (the hairpins have never been a favourite of mine and I slipped over on the 2nd last corner in the rain last year) but as we all accelerated out of the turn I didn't have the same emphasis that the four in front of me did.


Men’s final results were as follows:

1. Jeff Riseley: 4:17.06

2. Josh Wright: 4:18.01

3. Philo Saunders: 4:18.47

4. Malcolm Hicks: 4:18.59

5. Marc See: 4:20.58

6. Joshua Johnson: 4:23.92

7. Chris Discombe: 4:24.42

8. Tom O’Shaughnessy: 4:37.97

and the link to the video is here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=StLS391MJHs

It was another good year out in rural WA and I look forward to next year, going back and fighting again to get to that golden first place.
The week after Leonora has been one of my biggest so far in 2012, I ran 135km with a couple of good sessions in there. The coming weeks I am looking to maintain around 140km/week and more importantly maintain the body at this level of effort. The Gold Coast Marathon is on at the start of July and I am running the 10km event along side this with many of the Front Runner athletes we are taking over to compete. Hopefully a PB (sub 31:43) or even sub 31minutes is on the cards but really its all about Summer...

Happy running to you all and thanks for reading,

- Marc

Friday, 1 June 2012

Road racing

The Winter season has begun. Last weekend was the first race I've done since the national champs in mid-April: The perth HBF Run for a Reason 4km. I opted for the shorter distance race as I am also racing the Leonora Golden Mile this weekend (flying out tomorrow morning) and the 14km race would have set the energy reserves back a bit too much to back up well against the boys coming over from the East to race Leonora.

HBF went well, the game plan was to not make any unnecessary moves until the last kilometre of the race. However, after 2km when a few tactical moves were made in the lead pack (namely from Kenji Nener and Gerry Hill) I had to react and ended up covering the attacks & then making a break with 1500m to run. I ended up winning by 20 seconds with a time of roughly 11:28, ten seconds faster than last year and it felt pretty good for only a month's worth of training.
After a 50minute cool down to pick up more Ks for the week I performed 7 massages that afternoon on the sore bodies of some of my mates who had run the further race distance that morning. No rest for the wikid, or in my case a Physio who has friends who like to take make use of that fact.

Leonora this weekend should be a good race. I've headed up there for the past 2 years and finished last (8th) in the final of the elite mile. This year with some of the big names absent and some better form from myself I am hoping to finish much higher up the ladder.

I'll try to check back in with an update after the weekend.

Gotta run
 :-) Marc

Monday, 23 April 2012

Nationals 2012

And the season is DONE!
 Eight days ago the 2011/2012 season wound down. Well it didn't exactly "wind down" it finished with the 90th Australian National Track and Field Championships in Melbourne.

I flew out from Perth Thursday and had the 1500m heat on Saturday. Thirty odd runners were split across 2 heats, I was in the second. Jeremy Roff took out the first heat in a modest 3:47, the first 4 from each heat automatically qualified for the final and then the next 4 fastest non-automatic times qualified. So for me to make it to the final I needed to either cross the finishline as one of the first 4 runners of my heat or run faster than the 5th-8th placed runners in the first heat.

Our heat went out   s - l - o - w - l - y.

Runners were packed 3 wide for the first 600m with no one making a move to get the pace rolling. With the chance of beating the time of the runners in the first heat virtually gone I had to try and finish in the top 4. Not an easy task with the reigning National champion Jeff Risely in the race as well as reigning 800m champion James Kaan and many other fast finishers.
I was sitting back in the pack for the first 600m and wanted to position myself better for the inevitable kick down that was going to happen at some point. I made my way up to the front of the pack with 2 laps to go. I was going to just slot into the front and sit for a while longer but as no one really reacted to me moving up in the pack I decided to stride out for the next bend and see if anyone made a move to cover me. No one did so my repositioning attempt ended up being a drive to the finish as I kept on working the pace and gapped the main field behind me. I didn't "break the pack", the leaders of the group simply allowed me to go, knowing fully well that the top 4 automatically qualified and that if I kept going and took the first spot there were still 3 others they could comfortably take.
I ended up winning the heat by a second, time trialling the last 800m while the pack behind me made a frantic dash over the final 300m to qualify.

Cool down done I grabbed some ice on the walk home, had an ice bath and then settled in for as much rest and recovery as I could get to make ready for the final the next day.

The final was run pretty similar to the heats. Slow for the first 800m with the pace building 600m from home and the real attacks coming at the bell. I positioned myself FAR to far back in the pack and by the bell I was 2.5 seconds down from the leaders with too much work to do over the final lap. I finished up 6th and a little unhappy with the result but it was another learning chance and a good race to remember for the future.

I am now in the middle of a 2 week break from training before hitting the winter base-building stage of the yearly cycle. The mental rest is much more needed than the physical & it has been good to put in a few more physio hours at work.
I'll post something agian once training kicks up again.
As always, thanks for giving this a browse.

 - Marc


Youtube video of the final:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dZIYl9hnIds

Full results of the final:
Men 1500 metres Open Final
1, Jeffrey Riseley, VIS, 3:47.78.
2, James Kaan, NSWIS, 3:48.00.
3, Jeremy Roff, NSWIS, 3:49.40.
4, Mitchel Brown, VIC, 3:50.01.
5, Philo Saunders, ACT, 3:50.18.
6, Marc See, WA, 3:50.64.
7, Daniel Clark, VIC, 3:51.62.
8, James Connor, NSW, 3:52.59.
9, Mark Blicavs, VIC, 3:53.29.
10, Rhys Jones, SA, 3:55.24.
11, Sam Fergusson, TAS, 3:55.27.
12, Matthew Ferber, SA, 3:58.01.