2005 AAI 10KM Road Championship - 24 April 2005
Mad Cows in Limerick
Peter Delmer
A day of high adventure started on the outskirts of Limerick
city yesterday. As I slowed the car approaching the Little
Chef roundabout on the way into the city, I sensed something
unusual then heard a rattle; stopped the car and the air was
filled with that lovely smell of burning that says ' this is
gonna spoil your day!'. Got the car off the road and spent
the obligatory 2mins under the bonnet pretending I had some
idea what was going on. Forget that, out with the mobile
phone to start making arrangements.
I dispatched my wife, Karen, off to Hospital, Co. Limerick
where she was heading to visit 'the cousin home from America'.
This was achieved by waking the said cousin from his Sunday
morning hangover to come and collect her. I then sat on the
side of the road to await the arrival of the rest of the
Athenry gang on route to Bilboa, East Limerick for the AAI 10k
Road Championship of Ireland. Squashed into the back seat of
Dave's car with James Lundon is not the greatest way to fine
tune the mental preparation for such an important race but the
conversation was lively ranging from food poisoning, to
Johnnie's late(!), to diahorea, to we're late(!!), to James'
intimate knowledge of the various affairs of everybody who
lived in a three mile radius of The Pit in Bilboa, to 'hurry
up Dave, we really are late'(!!!). This was James's
homecoming.
Our green-faced chauffer decided that numerous trips to the
bathroom that morning after a meal out in one of Galway's
favourite pizza restaurants the previous night was enough
exercise for the day. Casualty number one - Dave Dunne was a
DNS. As we negotiated the last two miles to Bilboa, weaving in
and out of athletes going through their warm-ups, the phone
rang and Johnny is in Ennis with 20mins to the start looking
for directions!!! DNS number two. At least we had two
supporters. One more casualty and the team was down to
two-thirds strength - no sign of Liam. (Liam where are you?)
Mad dash to get changed, sort out race numbers, a few laps of
the soccer pitch, no time for stretching and we're on the
start line. I bet it was never like this for Sonia. Sure
what were we worrying about? Long after we had rushed to the
start line to take up positions, eager athletes were strolling
up the hill to the start line. Sure what's the rush?
Off we go. Down the hill. The first mile is a mad dash of
running. Pounding feet. Breathing. Downhill buzz. Very
crowded. Don't trip. There's a gap. Brakes on. Now go. Wow
there's the first mile marker already. Oh no 5mins and 15
secs! Too fast. I had never ran a 5:15 mile in my life
before and I still had 5.2 miles to go. Time to slow down.
I had passed Mick on the downhill and found myself in familiar
company. TJ Whyte from Tuam, Martin McEvilly of GCH and
Martin Corcoran from Loughrea- all experienced campaigners -
and all able to beat me on the day. Now was the time to
settle in behind them and cruise for a bit. The second mile
marker flashed by in a 5:33 split! Not again! What am I
doing? Way too fast. The plan had been to hit 5:50 in the
second mile - this was suicidal. But somehow I felt ok.
Only in Ireland will you find a National Championship 10k race
which is marked out in miles. We may be all breaking
kilometre speed limits as we drive the roads but by God we run
miles in East Limerick! The third mile went by in 5:51 - on
the correct pace at last. Got a sheepish grin from Johnnie
who was stationed close to the three mile marker - that was as
close as he got to the start of the race. Beside him Dave was
looking much healthier and had changed from green to a pale
yellow.
Only in Ireland will an elderly woman you never saw before
stand beside you - as happened Dave - to inform you proudly
that her son was out there racing today - "and wasn't it hard
for them". James' mother had made her entrance.
Now the race began as we hit the foothills of the big two-mile
climb that lay ahead. I knew I was going to slow down on the
hills, but I hoped it wouldn't be too bad. 6:22 for the
fourth mile. Splits all over the place. I was feeling ok but
the legs were growing heavy. At this stage I was gone by TJ
Whyte and Martin McEvilly so I felt I was going well. Martin
Corcoran was still ahead of me but within sight at least. At
this stage I heard a familiar footstep on my shoulder and
within seconds Mick pulled up alongside me. He had started
conservatively and was running well on the hills. On the next
upward push I tried but failed to stay with him. A gap opened
up but I was determined not to lose touch.
It was somewhere around this point that the cow story
happened. (I told you it was a day of high adventure).
Unbeknownst to me, a herd of cattle were getting very agitated
in their roadside pasture as 250+ runners streamed by in
colourful singlets. There were various reports around the
finish line of the herd running around the field 'with' the
runners - something I have experienced a few times with both
horses and cattle on various training runs. However the cows
of East Limerick are a special breed and were not content to
watch from a distance. Over the ditch they came to take part
in the AAI 10k Road Championship of Ireland. James Lundon saw
them, but TJ Beatty of Loughrea got up close and personal with
them. TJ said afterwards that they frightened the life out of
him. He more or less said 'feck this' and jogged the rest of
the way home. The story goes that two cows ran a full mile
down the road but at least they didn't get by me.
The hill climb continued. I noticed that Mick had opened a
gap but was not pushing further on. I was maintaining the
distance between us. I wasn't very proud that he was ahead of
me because, although he is running out of his skin at the
moment, he had just completed three races in recent weeks and
should have been a bit tired for God's sake. A forty mile
ultra marathon, a 10k and a 2:50 marathon in London in the
space of five weeks should have tired him out a bit, but he
was still ahead of me.
Up we went and I clocked another 6:22 at the five mile point.
At least I wasn't slowing. A mile and a bit to go now and
although tired I was feeling ok. Anther push uphill and then
a half-mile downhill rush to the finish lay ahead of me. I
started to give a bit extra and overtook a Rathfarnham man on
the last few meters of climb. Turned the ninety degree turn at
the top of the hill and at last the downhill started. I just
went for it!
Steep downhill first. Travelling at full tilt. I managed to
pull up to and then go by Mick. He urged me on to catch
Martin Corcoran who was twenty meters ahead. I don't think
I've ever beaten Martin before so I knew this was a chance. I
was flat out but the gap closed pretty quickly. We hit a bit
of flat running and I pulled up behind Martin to 'rest in' a
bit. I don't remember too much but we were passing other
bodies too. I was focused only on his back. I got boxed in a
little but just as we hit another downhill stretch a gap
opened and I pushed. About 500m from home I wondered if I
could sustain it to the line but the decision was made now.
Martin spotted my singlet and pushed with me but I managed to
pull away and instinctively knew I had him. Punched the watch
at the six mile marker, but didn't look at it (5:35), gasped,
spluttered and prayed for the finishing chute to appear soon.
Very fast now, but couldn't catch a breath. And there it was
- the line.
Through a haze of exhaustion I heard that our team-mate Paul
McNamara had just earned his first ever senior road race
All-Ireland title in 30:56. It was a close-cut thing as an
Achilles worry meant that he was still unsure whether to race
or not right up to warm-up time. He came through in style
though and it was a proud moment for the Athenry club when he
collected gold.
Mick stormed in just two places and six seconds behind me, and
we edged our way up the road to look for our fourth scorer.
Around the bend came Ray O'Conner with James Lundon hot on his
tail. These two had raced in each other's sights all the way
with James closing up to Ray three or four times but never
getting ahead. Ray held him off all the way to the line in
42:06 - three seconds separating them.
James Corbett came racing down the hill about 60 seconds later
and sprinted through the finish line completing the Athenry
line up in 43:10.
36:01 on my watch. 36:04 officially. A new personal best for
me and I had taken a few scalps on the way. I was buzzing.
Paul had just won the race but I was acting like I had!
Forced myself to run a few warmdown laps of the soccer pitch
to cool off.
This report is way too long already, so I'll leave it to
another day to tell the full story of what happened next.
Johnny and I were welcomed into the Lundon farm home. Suffice
it to say that the tea flowed from a never ending pot and the
conversation was intriguing. Mrs London waxed eloquently on
her theory of what happened to the Kerry Babies back in the
early eighties, her husband tucked into a half a cow with some
bread 'n butter, we learned (and then forgot) the name of the
biggest flower on earth; we talked rugby, Mayo football,
running, fat frogs (don't ask!) and syphilis - all in the
space of 20minutes.
My car was towed a half mile and abandoned outside a garage in
Limerick and home we went. A few pints of Guinness finished
off an adventurous day. Sleep came quickly.
Peter