3 days out from the race, and I’ve started carbo-loading. I used Energade Megaload for the Peninsula Marathon, and that worked out alright, so I’ll stick to what works.
Anyway, back to loading up those glycogen stores.
Follow me prepare for Comrades, an 89km journey.
3 days out from the race, and I’ve started carbo-loading. I used Energade Megaload for the Peninsula Marathon, and that worked out alright, so I’ll stick to what works.
Anyway, back to loading up those glycogen stores.
This Saturday, I shall be attempting my first ultra marathon, the 56km Two Oceans Marathon. I’m feeling fairly confident, but good race results and solid training allows me to be confident.
Some of the thoughts I have floating around in my mind:
As far as pacing is concerned, I got emailed this wonderful excel file* which gives you splits to aim for and is based on profile on the course. To achieve a 4:20, here are my target splits:
| Distance | Time (Split) | Pace (min /km) |
| 10km | 45:36 | 4:34 |
| 21km | 1:34:56 | 4:31 |
| 42km | 3:12:22 (1:37:26) | 4:35 |
| 56km | 4:20:00 (1:07:38) | 4:39 |
To prove that negative splits are difficult on this course, here’s a graph of my goal pace per kilometre (click for a larger version):
That would make a first half time of 2:06:30, and then a second half 7 minutes slower of 2:13:30.
Ok, so those are some of my thoughts, with it only being 4 days away, I’m starting to get nervous, and when I get nervous, I start searching for numbers to calm me, is that clear here?
*Attie Anderson developed the sheet based on splits run by Elizabeth McCaul and Garry Wilford
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