For me, nothing goes accordingly to plan, but this was about as close as I've ever got. It was over two months since my last race and I'd squeezed in a two-week family holiday during that period. I had no right to target a PB but I did anyway. In fact I was aiming to go 26 seconds faster than last year and dip under 1h 25m for the first time.
I knew to do this I'd have to average 6:29 per mile. I also knew steady pace running on the undulating route from Newcastle to South Shields was about as likely as Mike Ashley being crowned Mayor of Newcastle. With this in mind I split my race plan into 4 parts.
- Miles 1 - 5 including the 2 mile uphill starting at mile 3, average 6:30 per mile and hit the 5 mile marker in 32:30.
- Miles 5 - 8 a long gentle slope, pick the pace up here without overdoing it. Average somewhere between 6:15 and 6:20 per mile.
- Miles 8 - 12 the business end of the race, a shortish uphill at 9 miles and then a loooong hill from 11 to 12 miles. Inevitably the pace would slow but give as little back as possible.
- Mile 13.1 - Go for it. Squeeze out every last drop and cruise over the finish line in 1:24:xx
Here's what happened:
- Hit the 5 mile marker in 32:31. OK 1 second behind schedule but pretty much perfect. Feeling comfortable.
- Picked up the pace and felt good. 6:15, 6:14, 6:19. Now over 30 seconds ahead of schedule.
- Still feeling good as I enter this stage. Clock a 6:38 for mile 9 and then a 6:29 for mile 10. Then it starts to get tough. All of a sudden I'm noticing the warm sunshine. The Powerade I took at 10 miles is making me feel sick and the legs are really feeling these late hills. Next 2 miles are 6:45, 6:38.
- As I enter the crucial last stage of the plan I'm bang on target. Unfortunately the legs and more importantly the mind is going. As much as I want to pick up the pace and cruise home for a PB the body just won't co-operate. Mile 13 is long and tough, sub 1:25 is out of the window and agonisingly even a PB slips by. I come home 8 seconds slower than last year.