Garry Nelson's teacher
Well-known member
Made a late decision today to run a trail 10K. Beautiful course (Patching off the A27 west of Worthing) and for a good cause. As we lined up I noticed that there would be a 5k at the same time, but that the 10k wasn't going to be 2 laps of the 5k. I always worry about the marshalling of such events. There's just too much that can go wrong.
This time I was proved right as eventually I was 'guided' to run an extra circuit. I expected to be slow but around 50 minutes I realised that something was not right as I still seemed to be in the middle of nowhere. As I passed a few marshals I mentioned that this was a very long 10k, and they just kind of smiled thinking that I was just struggling.
Eventually, after around 72 minutes and about 14k on a pretty tough course on a very hot day, I made it to the finish line. I confess to an acute sense of humour failure, but the takeaways are
1. don't turn up to an event without some idea of the course;
2. if in doubt about being mis-directed by marshals then query it at the time;
3. don't be an old git who marshals think will be at the back of the field when in fact you are quite near the front (well, for a while, anyway)
4. treat such an occurrence as a bonus training run.
In all my years of running (around 35) this has only happened once before.
This time I was proved right as eventually I was 'guided' to run an extra circuit. I expected to be slow but around 50 minutes I realised that something was not right as I still seemed to be in the middle of nowhere. As I passed a few marshals I mentioned that this was a very long 10k, and they just kind of smiled thinking that I was just struggling.
Eventually, after around 72 minutes and about 14k on a pretty tough course on a very hot day, I made it to the finish line. I confess to an acute sense of humour failure, but the takeaways are
1. don't turn up to an event without some idea of the course;
2. if in doubt about being mis-directed by marshals then query it at the time;
3. don't be an old git who marshals think will be at the back of the field when in fact you are quite near the front (well, for a while, anyway)
4. treat such an occurrence as a bonus training run.
In all my years of running (around 35) this has only happened once before.