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Apr
16
2008
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Race Report from Rotterdam Marathon 2008 |

DUBLIN, IRELAND (Team Geared Up) Marathons are scary events. Only a couple of people in the race are out to win and the thousands of others just want to do their best, whether that means just finishing or getting a Personal Best. Failure is so scary.
To say I was nervous would be an understatement but I’ve been worse, standing on marathon start lines. I got a Race number that allowed me almost right up at the start banner, so I waited till less than ten minutes before start time to get into my place. Looking around me was scary.
Once we were off I felt like I was moving quite fast. I hadn’t a clue how fast though because my heart rate went through the roof and I missed the first few kilometre markers so I just hoped it wasn’t slow!! I tried to relax and get my heart rate to settle but it wouldn’t so I chose to ignore the readings of between 185 and 190. When my foot hit the mat at 10k in 40 minutes I realised I was well inside the 3 hour mark (shock!) and decided at that exact moment that I wasn’t gonna let that go without a huge fight. I was thinking I was moving at too fast a pass to sustain for too long, but what the hell, let’s just go for it and hang on and I thought if I let it slip a little later on I could still break 3. And so I continued, despite hitting low points at 16k (feeling sick for a minute) I just pushed and pushed. It was killing me to be moving that fast while thinking I still had a long way to go. So I took a gel and as JackieO said to me “put your head down and dig in”.
I hit the half way mark at 1:27:42 so was still moving quickly enough. Finding things to focus my brain on was difficult. At 27k we came right back into the city but by 30k we were back out into a really quiet park which felt like a real lull after the buzz of the city. It was hard to push on at this stage. But I actually caught a glimpse of the leaders on the opposite side of the road who were at the 40k mark and thought, what a lift, to see them racing this close!
At 35k I was over a minute inside the 3 hour pace but the pain in my calves was increasing. I had worn super flat racing shoes and I suppose this was the price I paid for wearing light trainers. So from this point on it was head down, push hard through the ever increasing pain. But I knew the pain of being just outside 3 hours would be a pain I might have forever if I didn’t go for it! I can’t even describe what happened in the finishing straight. I couldn’t see the clock properly, but I could see metre markers counting down the last couple of hundred metres. I could hear the crowd do the countdown till the clock hit 3 and just as my foot landed on the mat the clock hit 3 hours exactly (and my heart rate hit 199). I couldn’t believe it. It took a couple of hours to get my chip time of 2:59:58, giving me a placing of 28th woman and 341 overall. Running buddy Bronagh had a PB of 3:20 and new friend Anthony ran his first marathon in 4:25.
During my marathon preparation Nige had said I could go sub 3. I didn’t believe it really, I imagined even as I stood on the line I would finish at about 3:03. I wrote before about how Nige was helping me but I didn’t imagine the help would ever get me this far. Training under pressure (with the heart monitor) made racing under pressure much easier, he said I would suffer so suffering during the race became normal, not something I should be scared of. (Normally you slow down when you’re suffering). His two words Push Hard became a mantra during the whole race and I couldn’t let it go. To run well I believe you also need a good club and a good coach. You need people to push you, to believe in you and they act like a support group. I sound like I’m doing an Oscars speech but I really have to thank my coach and brother Eugene for support and encouragement and his wife Gina who looked after my legs!
Right. Now do I get the record for the longest TGU post ever?
-Aisling-
Image is winner William Kipsang 2:05:49 from IAAF.org

Ireland
Scotland
Wales
England
France
Switzerland
Italy
USA





Latest Comments (17):
Ais, I read this in Draft form earlier today while you were still writing it and couldn’t wait til you posted. It’s a fantastic log of your emotions, pain & cheer, as you ran….
Push Hard. Push Hard. Push Hard!
Now we just need a photo of you crossing the line ;-)
As I said to Tony, it was an unreal result, Congrats.
truly amazing, fantastic effort and proof of what you’re capable of!
I’ll be transferring that mantra myself back to my own sport :)
New tagline on tshirts? Team Geared Up - “Push Harder”
Great review I really enjoyed reading it.
Congratulations on your time : )
Regarding a mantra;I used to word with a particularly hardcore chef in Australia who was fond of screaming “Go Hard or Go Home Ya C@%t” in the middle of a busy service.
That works for me!
@Fearghal - not sure that’d work as a logo on our t-shirts ;) although interested if there was some printed?
@robin - good idea!
Congrats Aisling .. so it was worth missing Connemarathon then!! I’m not even sure this comment is appropriate… but…
you went out way too hard!
10km sub 40!
Half way in 1:27:42!
You did it the hard way!
A 3 hr marathon is something special.
Well Done!
Cheers Robin and Neal. I have a lot to thank TGU for really!
Fearghal when I worked in construction we had a saying or two just like that one! ;-)
Alan I really missed Connemara, but it was kinda worth it! And I made a decision before this one that I was NOT gonna run negative splits, no way! I was gonna cross that line absolutely shattered. I intended going out hard and hanging on, that way I knew I had given a fast one the chance. If I went out slow I would never know what might have been. ;-)
Maybe I’ll try that in Conn next year?
Well done Aisling. That’s a fabulous achievement, one you can be proud of for the rest of your life.
Isn’t it amazing to think that if you were a mere 3 seconds slower you would have got the most frustrating time possible! Its great to see you on the right side of that crazy, arbritary, but oh-so-significant invisible line.
Gotta agree with Alan though…. negative splits is the way to go. Its not easy to do though. Give it a go some time. The whole race experience is much better when you do it right.
@ Aisling- LOL
@ Neal- Yeah thought as much you remove the @% if that would help ; )
Congratulations Aisling! You absolutely deserve it! I doubt i could keep that sort of pace up for a mile let alone the full thing…
Super report Aisling…. Incredible finish. Congratulations.
Well done Aisling on a great finish time …….and an excellent report.
Aisling, we were dying to hear how you got on so I was just delighted when I heard the good news!! Well done you and I look forward to being able to congratulate you in person hopefully at the next hill race! You deserve that elusive sub- 3hour marathon more than anyone after all the work you put in. Love Eva.
Aw thanks everybody. I’m so touched!
Better late than never but well done Ais! You’re super! :)
Great job pushing harder despite feeling yucky early in the race! A total “guts” run from start to finish! You are a running diva! Your support group sounds like a great bunch of friends!
Rest and recover well. Can’t wait to read about your next adventure.
Actually “Push Harder” sounds like a better tag line for a hospital maternity ward than a TGU shirt!
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