Showing posts with label Comrades. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comrades. Show all posts

Comrades 2019 - The Up Run #11 (better late than never)

Despite good intentions, I was unable to finish my 2019 Comrades Marathon race report. Life got in the way. Anyhow, I managed to lump together some pictures and notes. There may be some titbits in here for people interested in such things. Hope it floats your boat. 
~RobbyRicc (March 2021) 


Oceans Eleven
I took it as a positive that the 9th June was my birthday and the running of my 11th Comrades. Also it was my first Comrades in green (#47714) and Alby's 16th. So the planets aligned nicely for the 88k's that lay ahead.
 
Leave no stone unturned
With just over 21,000 runners on the day, and food and drink already catered, I had a good feeling about the run. The beginning of the year had a few glitches with a twisted ankle and a sore knee, that thwarted my volume goal of 1,400k's, but those troublesome weaknesses in the body eased in the days leading to race week. I managed 1,030 k's from January. Alby was close to 1,300. 
 
Before the race, I asked Alby what pace we should adopt. 
 
"We'll see," he said. 
 
This in Alby-speak means "I'm not feeling well. There's a good chance we won't make Inchanga."
 
Or it could mean "The gods have predestined us for greatness. Glory and untold fortunes await us at Pietermaritzburg if we head out at Silver 5-minutes per k pace. Death before dishonour."

The Running Year So Far


I mentioned to Manchild, Jake (13), that he runs like Eric Liddell. Eric was the winner of the 400 metres in the 1924 Olympic Games held in Paris after refusing to run the 100 metres due it being held on a Sunday. He was a missionary and running on Sunday was against his religious beliefs. The movie Chariots of Fire was about the 1924 games, and its musical score by Vangelis is played minutes before the start of the Comrades. 
 
Ever since I told Jake that he runs like Liddell he throws his neck up and looks at the sky every time he runs by me.

Man-cub, Ben (10), has started picking up on his cross country running. "It's quite easy for me because I am skinny," he says. He decided he wants to break the world kilometre record. "That'll be easy because it's shorter than cross country." 
Umhlanga Park Run, the day before Comrades.  Good to be surrounded by my friends. The Cows, one and all, most in Apocalypse Cow outfits who are in their 10th year. 
Bainbridge junior is the runner to keep an eye on. Hailey-Jade will be ripping up the world of running in the near future.
   

I turned 47 on race day.
Luis Massyn ran his 47th Comrades. 
Marco De Stefano in the black Tshirt ran 1,700k's between January to race day.
He PB'd by almost an hour with 9.37.
 
Hanging out with the Cow Girls
Jackie Mekler (87) told me it took him 45 years to write this book.
It was well worth the wait. A keeper for the library.
Jackie ran way over 100 miles per week, sometimes closer to 150.
And he never ran in socks for the first few years!




THE RUN
Alby and I started off in batch C with the sub 3.40 and charity runners. Batch C was the third biggest batch with 3,384 runners. Batch F has 3,551 runners. Batch D is the largest (and most snug batch) with 4,502 runners.

So here's the run in numbers: 
  • Fastest K Splits: 5m08s at KM17; 5m13s at KM42; 5m19s at KM84
  • Slowest K Splits: 10m10s at KM77; 9m56s at KM81
  • Average Pace: 6m44s 
  • Finish time: 9h55m
  • HR average of 135 (mostly zone 1 & 2)
  • Calories expended: 5,054 calories or 9 Big Macs
We ran, we survived. Life is good.






Born to run,
Jake in full flight
~RobbyRicc

The Green Jacket brigade








A Week Apart:- Durban Half Ironman and Comrades 2018

Quick flashback: I missed a slot to World Champs at January's East London 70.3 by 2 minutes and 11 seconds. Let me write that out: two minutes and eleven seconds. And now in bold: 2m11s. 

It's quietly unnerving especially after 5 hours of racing. No-one else was to blame. I messed up my tactics and blew myself to smithereens. Simple. Having thrown all my chips on the table as noted in my East London race report, I was prepared for the outcome.

However I had a nagging feeling I could qualify for Worlds at the Durban 70.3. Maybe.
The Quandary

Under ordinary circumstances, I would not advocate doing a Half Ironman triathlon (or 70.3) a week before an Ultra Marathon (or even a regular marathon). One may wing a Half Ironman, however, Old Lady Comrades at her voluptuous 90.184km's does not take kindly to bravado. You disrespect her, she'll crush you without mercy.

I was, however, in a quandary.

Durban 70.3 was on 3rd June, my last chance to qualify for Worlds. A week later on the 10th would be my 10th Comrades and permanent green number race.

A week apart. And therefore my quandary.

Natalie said something which I couldn't shake off, "Just qualify for the next 70.3 World Champs in South Africa." And I was stumped. World Champs has no set venue and rotates the planet. Last year it was Chattanooga, USA. Next year it's in Nice, France. This is the first ever 70.3 Worlds to be held on the African continent. It's unlikely to come this way again.

"So do both," said Natalie giving me a wink.

Oh what to do?

Don't get greedy, I thought, Be happy with your lot. You can't be strong enough to race a Half and then Comrades. It's too big a bite.

Not wanting to decide just yet, I checked in with my brother, Alberto. Not renowned for retreat or anything tantamount to common sense, Alberto's response was "Do both!"

I then turned for advice to my friend, John, a sage in such affairs. John thought a moment and responded: "What do you think the Vikings would have done when raiding the villages? Would they have taken a few days leave after marauding or would they have kept at it?"

The suggestions from Natalie, Albie and John percolated. A plan began to formulate.

Later on I would read an article from one of my favourite writers, Garrison Keillor, who summed it up best, "A man needs to extend himself when called upon."
The Plan: harvesting lightning
THE PLAN
 
 
The plan was simple, yet elegant. Do a 12-week 70.3 training block. Run lots.

To survive Comrades I'd have to heal up as quickly as possible after the 70.3. I jotted down some points for after the triathlon:
  • leg rub down
  • ice bath
  • protein shake
  • good clean food
  • no alcohol
  • check feet for blisters (pop blisters, drain, clean, bandage, repeat til healed)
Followed by:
  • Dubbins leather polish for the feet before bed (sleep with socks so bed doesn't get dirty)
  • 2 x sports massages mid week (not too deep)
  • 1 x Lynotherapy session
  • 1 x easy run
  • early to bed
  • stretching
Part I - Durban Boardwalk (3 June)

Writing this, I am reminded of the 1979 movie, Alien. When John Hurt finds some large eggs on a foreign planet and everything seems to be going according to plan. But then he gets an octopus-creature stuck to his face. Luckily it is removed and things perk up. Feeling fully recovered, he comes down to eat at the staff canteen. But then suddenly - and no-one expects this - an alien creature bursts out of his stomach. And there's a lot of screaming and blood. And teenagers watching this are scarred for life.

I was 9k's into the run moving along at 4m48s per k. I was holding back waiting for the half way mark. At which point I would flick the nitrous and rip up the boardwalk. So far my race had been like this:
  • The swim was zippy and uneventful. I hung onto the feet of my mate Craig and let him tear through the course. I felt myself a pilot fish. Craig was 2nd in the age group. I was 3rd. 30m4s.
  • The bike was rolling and fast. I stayed aero - 38kph on the flats, at least 30kph on the ups - and tried to be brave and strong. 2h34m. 35kph ave. I made it onto the run in 14th place. 
After a few k's into the run Natalie called out that I was 8th.

The gods have been kind. It's incredible how good I feel. Someone up there likes me.

And then my Alien moment. 9k's into the run.

Not prepared to surrender
Still cruising at a decent clip, I tore open a gel and - not wanting to litter - slipped the torn off piece of gel packaging under my tri shorts. To reach, I dropped my left shoulder slightly. My hamstring immediately tightened into a ball. And out of nowhere a small Moby Dick with teeth like scissors ripped out of my right hamstring with a mixed spray of blood and whale oil. I avoided a face plant and halted, probing the hamstring to see if the alien would bite, or if the hamstring had been torn away from the butt cheek. Neither was true.

I tried to stand upright a few times. But a knobbly cramp reared its head out of my hamstring forcing me to bend over. A movement which repeated for the next unimaginably slow minute or so. As runners went by.

A cramp? Seriously? Cramps are for civilians and dehydrated body builders. Cramps are not for Vikings who have gone off marauding.

Still bending over, I swallowed the remainder of the open caffeine gel with one hand and with the other reached for an emergency Rennies from my back pocket. (Great tip Nige!) I tore at the foil and chewed the spearmint flavoured tablet. After a few seconds, the muscles in my hamstring eased and allowed me to stand upright. I shook my legs out and started up again. Within a few metres, I eased open the throttle and was soon back on 4.50s and on the plan.

That lasted for another two k's until someone shouted GO COWS! and I spontaneously did my cow horns over my head with my fists and dangling pinkies. As I did that BAM! The Alien cramp.

Someone up there is annoyed with me. This is payback for past wrongs. Vengeance is being extracted, one cramp at a time.

I had a chat with my hamstring, not unlike Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) speaking to Ash, her Science Officer on the Nostromo spaceship.

RobbyRicc: How do we kill it Ash, there's got to be a way of killing it, how, how do we do it?
Ash: You can't.
RobbyRicc: That's baloney!
Ash: You still don't understand what you're dealing with do you? Perfect organism. Its structural perfection is matched only by its hostility.
RobbyRicc: You admire it?
Ash: I admire its purity. A survivor, unclouded by conscience, remorse or delusions of morality.

Once more to the breach, dear friends, once more.
The alien would rear its head six times stopping me in my tracks each time. Eventually I figured out, I need to avoid using the hamstring. Turning my feet in like a pigeon, I thumped the side of the thigh muscles as a wake up call, and shuffled forward. This worked, in the way spit and mud works to plug a dam, and after sputtering and grinding out a 1h49m run, I managed to get to the finish line in 5h01m. 17th place.

Slot allocation for Worlds was later in the afternoon. Only 10 slots for my age group. But many top athletes already had their slots. So I hoped for a roll down. My gut told me 50-50.

I had two conversations after the race that stand out.

Conversation #1: Alby phoned. I told him the race was terrible. Bad pacing, not strong enough. One of the worst races ever. An abject failure.

After hanging up, I went to the jam-packed roll down and wangled for myself the 8th of the 10 slots.

Conversation #2: I phoned Alby and told him that I had a slot to World Champs in PE on 2 September and that - with hindsight - I had executed a flawless race, was over the moon and that this was potentially the greatest race of my life. Ever.


In the early 2000's, the Comrades cut off time was increased from 11 to 12 hours. Since then some of the old school runners don't consider anything over 11 hours a legitimate Comrades finish.

Part II - Pietermaritzburg to Durban by foot (10 June)

The amazement that my body was in good nick and would survive my 10th Comrades unscathed encountered reality mid-way up Inchanga with the same grace as a marmot playing chicken with a freight train.  My quadriceps told me to go jump in the lake and those treasonous little tendons that connect the hips to the top of the quads pressed the "Eject Button" shouting "You are on your own Kimosabi" as they jettisoned themselves off into outer space.

That was the beginning of the downfall....

So many things happen over Comrades weekend you could write memoirs based just on the weekend's events. It's all peaks and doldrums, love and misery, deflation and elation, supporters and racers, broken people and rock stars.

This was the 93rd Comrades Marathon. It would be Alby's 15th run, my 10th. Completing it would ensure that I would join the Green Number Club and that the number #47714 - given to me for every run - would be mine. All that was to be done was to complete the 90.184 km's.

Our brother and manager, Stef, once again provided stellar advice. Aim towards the Moses Mabhida stadium. Don't stop til you're done.

Our training had its usual hiccups. Alby and his hip were having a trial separation and they weren't talking. My quads and I were still living together but sleeping in separate rooms.
We chose our pacing strategy: run 8 minutes, walk 2 minutes. Remain flexible. Change is inevitable.

We agreed to run in our Elvis suits for a number of reasons:
  • First, we are Cows and The Cows (who raise money for CHOC - helping kids with cancer) were honoured by being invited as an official Comrades charity.
  • Second, our training did not warrant a serious attempt at a Bill Rowan.
  • Third, Elvis suits are much easier to run in than cow suits.

As usual, we stayed at the home of our Pietermaritzburg friends, Nicholas and Nicky, who live not too far away from Polly Shortts. They're like family after the number of our sleepovers we've had at their place. While Nicholas stayed at the sportsclub to watch the rugby, Nicky fed us our traditional lasagna and sent us off to bed early.

Our 3am alarm went off and we realised that Nicholas (our driver to the start) was not yet home. Nicky went about making a few phonecalls trying to locate him while we wolfed down a breakfast and lubed ourselves up with fistfuls of Vaseline.

Nicky received a text from a medic. There had been a car accident and Nicholas was in hospital. His condition was stable. The mood changed from excitement and focus, to trepidation and confusion. A smelling salts moment. The seriousness of the race dissipated as it became apparent that this was far more important.

Nicky, however, is made of strong stuff. Without missing a beat, she commandeered the situation and told us we'd put her sleeping girls in the car, drop us off at the start, drop off supplies to a supporters table and then head to hospital to tend to her husband.

(We found out after the race that Nicholas had flipped his car down an embankment on a dark road and broken his neck. Miraculously, someone found him and called emergency rescue. There was no nerve damage and a week or so after Comrades would undergo surgery with "a cage and screws to his spine" and eventually take his first few steps a week later. It still blows my mind thinking about this).

We were rather dazed from our start to the day, concerned about Nicholas and Nicky and the girls.

And then Shosholaza was sung, followed by the South African anthem and the cock crow. And soon we were on our way down through the frosty dark to Durban with Chariots of Fire permeating the soul.

The weather was icy and we wore our fabric race covers for the first 15k's. As the sun broke across the hills, these were tossed aside and people came to the roadside to cheer. We put on our sunglasses and, despite the rough start, it soon became apparent that this would not be a normal day. In fact it would turn out to be one of the most memorable day of our lives.

Elvis Presley, it soon became clear, is big in the road between Pietermaritzburg and Durban. And when I say big, I mean behemoth. People from the entire smorgasbord of South Africa's colourful and varied ethnicities went wild. As we approached the first groups lining both sides of the road, people laughed and grabbed for their kids.

"Quickly, kids, come look at Elvis. And another one. He's also a Cow!"

Old ladies' eyes would sparkle, children would "mooooh!"with all their might and pretty girls would let go of the hands of their boyfriends and beam at us.

Pensioners called out to us, "It's now or never!" "Where are your blue suede shoes?" "We're caught in a trap!" "A little less conversation!"

The moment we threw out our arms in an Elvis karate pose, our red tassels would grab at the reflection of the sun and people lost all inhibitions and folded themselves in two they laughed so hard. Being two brothers who have been accustomed to being shunned by girls all of our lives, it caught us off guard that so many beautiful girls would call out to us, "Rockstars!" "You guys are sexy!"

One radiant beauty saw us and shouted, "I have seriously been waiting for you two guys my entire life!"

Our feeling was beyond elation. More like transcendence allowing us - for those brief moments of joy - to hover above the pain and discomfort.

Even towards the latter part of the course, where my quadriceps had packed their bags and moved into a motel, and my Achilles (a mean old ex) had gone full metal jacket and was sending electrical eruptions through my left calf, the supporters kept at it.

Walking up one of the hills, I could barely move my foot in front of the other without baring teeth. I noticed a guy in dirty jeans walking towards me. It seemed as though life had served this guy some testing times laced with whiskey, controlled substances and parole violations. He took one look at me, gave me a crooked smile and whispered, "Sex, drugs and rock n' roll baby. Sex, drugs and rock 'n roll."

I cracked up. My jawbones hurt from laughing. The humour carried me for the darker patches which lay ahead.

At the half way mark, where weakness resides, the road opens herself up and you endure.  
Alby wears #248 given to him by Trevor who left us
on 28 March this year for the Big Ultra in the sky.

Our average pace of just under 6m10s per k had started to erode after Inchanga and never regained itself. We lost seconds on every hill and my legs were unable to recoup any time on the downhills. On Fields Hill, I started to run with a hitch in my step as the Achilles beneath me began to disintegrate causing my hip to shimmy to one side in order to navigate through the discomfort.

"Look mommy, he even runs like Elvis!" shouted one little girl.

It's the little things that keep you going during the dark times. The little kid who hands you some sweaty jelly babies, the old ladies who smile at you when you do an Elvis pose, a salty potato, eyes of your supporters as they try to take away the pain. A few of the sub-11 hour buses came by with their singing and soldier rhythm. I could not muster the effort to hold onto them.

Alby kept pace a few steps ahead of me. He and his hip had reconciled their differences. Where I was faltering, he was like titanium. Like he was bulletproof, nothing to lose. And he kept chipping away at the course. Pushing when it felt like we could push no more.

I turned to him once we had the stadium in our sights, still a few k's down the road.

"Just so that we are clear, I don't give a rat's behind what time we finish today."

He didn't say a word. He just kept chipping away.

We entered the stadium, with its mesmerising roars and emerald grass. We spotted our wives, brother and friends, and smiles beamed.

The finish line was crossed at 10h55m. 25 consecutive runs completed between the two us.

Alan Robb (Germiston Callies golden boy and first runner to go sub 5.30 for the race) handed me my green number for a celebratory picture. I asked if Alby could join us. Alan Robb said no problem.

Afterwards Alby and I walked under the stadium to get our gear and, when all was quiet, he turned to me. It was the first time he had spoken to me in a few hours.

"No way on God's earth my brother runs his Green number with anything other than a sub-11."  

My precious

Elvis's have left the building.

     *Drop mike*
     *Walk away*
     *Wait for building to explode*
     *Don't look back*

~RobbyRicc

East Rand Gold

Nine Sherpas - My 9th Comrades

Sherpa. 1. a member of a people of Tibetan stock living in the Nepalese Himalayas, who often serve as porters on mountain-climbing expeditions.

 
Between episodes of the Walking Dead with the sound of waves lapping at the apartment's ankles, I noted a few thoughts about the race at hand. Writing before an event can be quite an eye opener for afterwards. It narrows the distortion between expectations and reality. We all lie to ourselves I guess. Taking notes helps keep you honest.

After my last sing-it-to-the-mountains post on the real meaning of Comrades, I chose to move away from linking Comrades to an alien invasion of earth in a blog post. There are parallels with District 9, sure. Probably too obvious. Too cliched. And I really wanted to write about Sherpas.

Sherpas you ask? Yes. Sherpas, I respond.

It was triggered by the thought of the Comrades bus drivers. The runners who forego their own race to pace a running bus according to a set time goal (sub-9, sub-10, sub-10.30, sub-11, etc). Selfless saints of the road.

And also by the thoughts of my brother, Alby, and I. Swapping the mantle of Sherpa every time the other imploded on the tarred road between Durban and Pietermaritzburg. The road is unforgiving we have found. Any weakness is exposed and magnified and brings you to your knees. As for any attempt up a mountain, having a guide is helpful.

And so with a flurry of finger tapping, I opted for a new blog title: Nine Sherpas.

*******

Sagarmāthā means "Forehead in the Sky" in Nepalese.
Some sherpas call her Chomolungma: "Mother of the World".

Hardly anyone summited Mount Everest in the 2014/2015 climbing seasons.

A 2014 avalanche killed 16 Sherpas closing the climbing season on Mount Everest before it had begun. 3 more perished: one of altitude sickness, one in an accident, one by lightning.
 
In 2015, an earthquake epicentred 8kms below the Himalayas triggered an avalanche claiming 18 climbers. The earthquake was the worst natural disaster to ever hit Nepal. Around 9,000 deaths.
 
Mount Everest was closed for business.

Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary
 
Some Sherpas had already called the bad omens years before, convinced that Sagarmāthā didn't want them there. Without routes and ropes up the summit, it was doubtful whether future climbers would ever get a chance to climb. Some feared their attempts were gone forever.

In 2016, nine Sherpas headed up Everest to clear the snow and lay down fresh ropes to the summit. To cross the snow and ice laying across the 12 metre high Hillary Step which ridges to the top took the climbers four hours. Their valiant efforts opened up the route to the top. Madame Everest, unmoving and unperturbed, allowed many to climb her that season and in return took 6 climbers to her deathly bosom. 

Sherpas and mountains and quests to the top. It all reminds me of runners and hills and the Comrades.

Queen of all asunder

 Race Predictor

Beer Miler and that weak ankle

This would be my 9th Comrades. My 4th up-run. My race predictor function (which I found on my watch whilst uploading my stats to my smart phone in exchange for a free smoothie at the gym) told me that based on its internal calculations I was capable of a 19.35 - 5k, 40.37 - 10k, 1.29 - 21.1k and full marathon of 3.07. That's all good and well saying maybe-you-could maybe-you-might but until you do, how do you really know? I treated the information with caution. My gut told me that those figures were about right. Maybe could knock a few minutes off the 21k and 42k. If I got angry enough.




My running season volumes were unimpressive. 86k (January), 78k (February), 93k (March), 246k (April), 228k (May). A total of 731ks, ensuring I didn't even make the 800k-minimum on the Comrades predict-you-performance chart. Based on my speeds, the chart predicted I was capable of a 9.27 Comrades.
Bah humbug, I muttered to myself. What do the data scientists know? Should odds be stacked against you, even overwhelmingly so, is it not one's prerogative as an athlete of semi-intellectual yearnings to ignore those odds?



Cankles

Lynotherapy track marks
In order to maintain a factual record (in case I try this again in the future), I need to come clean. My physical condition in the lead up to the race was not stellar. The ankle and calf had been through minor incidents, incidents elicited by:

(i) a shot at the African Beer Mile record (where for a few blessed minutes I was the new record holder until I realised - in a beer induced haze - that I had forgotten to complete the last lap);

(ii) a suburban accident where a boom gate had prematurely descended onto me, pushing me off my bike. At the time I was steering Ben's bike with one hand to Cub Scouts to pick him up; and
 
(iii) blowing out my right calf at the Soweto Marathon. 
 
Creaky ankle aside, I was in good nick.

 
 
  
Many things were still in my favour: brain had seen it before. Stress levels read Camomile green. Legs purred. Plus pacing will be easy:- walk often and early; don't mess with the hills; conserve energy. And - importantly - the Riccardi Brothers don't fold. Often. The Riccardi Brothers don't fold often.


The plan was simple:
4h12 first half (4.05 for first marathon)
4h36 second half  (4.28 for second marathon)

That's an 8h48 minute Comrades at an average of 6mins5secs per k.

Lyndsay Parry (official Comrades Coach) suggested a half way time of 4h22 to 4h27 for a Bill Rowan. Alby and I think that those times are better suited to someone who has done higher volume training and not suited to guys going in half baked. If you are confident in your speed and not your endurance, better to get yourself ahead of the game at half way to allow a conservative second half. It's either visionary thinking or the thinking of idiots. Suspicions suggest the latter.

So we used the 4h27 as our fall-back position. Worst case scenario and all.


More airbrushing required

Keith

The last time Alby and I had the pleasure of running the Comrades with a Buhr, it was with the twins, Steve and Keith. It was highly memorable watching the twins turn on each other every few minutes for some reason or other: the pace is too fast, the pace is too slow, the hills are too steep, the running buses are too close; the running buses are not close enough. Alby and I kept ducking to avoid the handbag swinging. A highly memorable run.  

For this year's edition, Keith "The Blur" Buhr would be the sole representative of the Buhr Clan. He was in good condition having completed a few long runs at 5 mins per k pace. However in the few days before the race his inner demons had surfaced and would not keep still. Self-sabotage was afoot. Keith decided to braai the day before the race - barefoot - and stepped on a hot coal. For  the rest of the day he walked around with his thousand-yard-stare and wearing only one sock.

The burn was not too serious. But it added to the mind games.

Keith, we agreed, would run with us until half way. After that he would be unleashed onto the course that remained towards his first Bill Rowan.

Last good luck wishes

What it Takes to Get up a Mountain
 
In 1953, the 38-year old Sherpa Tenzing Norgay and 33-year old Edmund Hillary were part of the expeditionary team led by Sir John Hunt to be the first to summit Mount Everest.  Tenzing had 6 previous attempts notched on his belt dating back to 1935.  Hillary, the 6 foot 5 beekeeper from Auckland, had recce'd Everest only once before.
 
To get them to the summit required 350 porters, 20 Sherpas and 10 climbers.

Expedition Commander

 
The Expedition Commander

My second eldest brother, Stef, is the key piece of the puzzle. He plays the role of expedition leader to the Riccardi Express. He honed his running skills from being privy to our various Comrades' attempts, including numerous bomb craters and sparse moments of running greatness. He is renowned for his annual gate-crashing of the highly-secured Green Number tent at the Comrades expo.


Stef tells a great story about Comrades. One of my favourites.

Every year we have an annual pre-race lunch with good friends, the Boakes, and are reminded by Doug Boake of his sub-7 hour Comrades. His sub-7, he swears, was done on a few hundred kilometres of running, and because he had a train to catch to get back to Joburg. His time? 6h58 in 1976. Incendiary.

 

The Boake's, The Riccardi's and Keith Buhr.
Doug is far left.
 With all the Boake-Riccardi talks of running lore, the rivalry inspired Stef to throw his hat into the ring. He contemplated running Comrades. 2 things over the weekend changed his mind.

1. Getting a crick in his neck looking up through the clouds to the cliffs of Inchanga. It was like sniffing smelling salts he recalls.

2. Bowlegged runners, broken from their race, leaned up against wee-walls, unable to step onto the ledge to relieve themselves. They held onto the wall with one hand and angled their pelvises inwards in order to hit the target. Stef watched on in amazement.

The events left him scarred. He knew then he was cut out more for commanding expeditions, than running. With Alb on his 14th, me on my 9th, Stef was lining up for his first 20+ run, having earned his double green the year before.

 
Ernesto and G-Man - The Porters




The Cyclone

G-Man, the Angry Kenyan
Up in Joburg we run with a great salt-of-the-earth group of runners at Bedfordview Athletics. Two of our running partners, Ernesto "The Cyclone" Ciccone and Graham "the-world-famous-Angry Kenyan" Parker, drove down to support their team mates in the Coelho Club (a club for runners who eat rabbits). T'was a noble gesture. Camaraderie at its finest. They would keep an eye on us throughout the race and would not judge us too harshly when they found us walking and eating ice cream lollies up Drummond.
 
The Race (in a nutshell)
 
Two things of note occurred. Both within the first 30k's.
 
Thing of Note #1
 
Keith missed his gels at the 20k table. He had relied on his accounting background to precisely calculate his nutrition consumption: 1 gel every 45 minutes. 3 pristine gels awaited his arrival, but no table could be found. And, ever so gently, Keith began to unravel. 
 
Keith (his voice warbled with emotion): - Did you see the table? They have my gels? I've trained on these gels. Without them I am screwed.
Rob:- I've seen nothing. Don't place too much hope that you'll actually find them.
Keith (emotions kaleidoscoping between extreme despair and violent flare up):- I'll never make it. Where's the table? I'm dead. Dead I tell you. I'm not feeling well. Are you guys feeling woozy?
Alby:- We don't take gels. We scavenge. Keeps us in touch with our primal senses. Just take some sugar. That's all gels are.
Keith:-  Forsooth! My gels don't have sugar. They are isotonic carbo gels perfectly designed to cater for my first attempt at the Bill Rowan. Without them, all is lost. I have no chance. No chance at all.
 
Keith would break out into a soliloquy of Shakespearean proportions. To gel or not to gel. And so on. Alb and I picked up jelly babies, dropped by grubby children with sweaty palms, off the road. Try one, we would encourage Keith, revelling in the brief sugar quanta that would kickstart our neurotransmitters.
 
Up ahead we saw the Bedfordview Tent near the 30k mark.
 
Keith: A gel! A gel! My kingdom for a gel!
Rob: Withdraw my lord, I will find you some gels.
Keith (considering his wilting Bill Rowan attempt): Slave! I have set my life upon a cast, and I will stand the hazard of the die. 
 
Keith grabbed his gels, smiling like a child in a Roald Dahl book. Immediately his youthful exuberance returned, alleviated by positivity and the blessed gloop from the tubed casing.
 
Alb and I looked at each other and nodded. It was time to have a chat with Keith. He was strong. Way too strong. It was time he be nudged from the nest. Despite his protests of never abandoning his Italian brothers and some nonsense about standing on the heads of giants, we convinced him to use us as a slingshot to his Bill Rowan.
 
Keith would leave us at about the 35k mark and endure a magnificent run to bring in an 8.58 Bill Rowan. His first. Which he barely remembers as his memory sort of went black and he found himself in the medical tent with a drip in one arm, not quite remembering how his fist had ended up clutching the silver-bronze medal.
 
Thing of Note #2
 
I knew something was wrong the moment I looked to my right. We were in the thick of Comrades' chunky thighs. 30k's or so in. 60 more to go. Keith had taken off and was a glimmer up the road. The sun's rays were angling out of the sea misting the air with a thin layer of salt. It tingled the nostrils. And it struck me.

Where was Alby? 

Normally my wingman is on my right. Not ahead of me. Not behind me. But on my right. I know that he is there without having to turn my head. Our foot strike and arm swing are pretty much in sync. And now I was forced to turn my neck and saw that he had fallen back a foot.
 
The plan had been simple. Alby had relinquished the pacing duties to me. I erred on the side of caution. After 20 minutes of easy running, we employed a run-8 walk-2 minutes protocol. My watch kept an eye on the pace and slowly brought us down from a 6m20s to 5m55 average pace after 25k's. Every few k's or so I gauged Alb's heart rate and the sweat trickling down his temple. His heart rate in training had been pretty low, which was good. Mine a bit higher, which was not good. As the Shosholoza singing of the runners in the starting paddocks had died down at the start of the race we compared heart rates. Both read 72. A propitious omen.
 
The pace was sensible. Sensibilish. And we allowed the race to come to us. We were ready and engaged with what she had to offer. Her camber, her turns, her descents, the angles that lean to the heavens, her Afrikaans named roads pronounced with English accents (Kloof rhymes with hoof, Botha rhymes with motor) and her mountains sounding like the battle cries of Zulu warriors.
 
Inchanga, they tell me, is the sound a spear makes as it is taken out of the body.
 
Alby, I know, is famous for suffering in silence and has been known to implode like a nuclear bomb detonated below the Pacific. Whereas I whimper like a hungry puppy in a kennel (and let you know the immense pain that is permeating through the body, how it is like steel-ed knives penetrating the quadriceps, like child labour for men, allowing tears to freely stream down the face to extract pity from bystanders), Alby says nothing. Even when probed, he'll deny the pain because he thinks to do so will jeopardise the team effort. His selflessness is as noble as it is delusional. And therefore it is clear that he cannot be trusted.
 
Alb's falling a step behind was a sign of apocalyptic proportions. Although less than a ruler length, it was a chasm. And to me, tantamount to mutiny.
 
I turned to look at him. Sweat rate? Good. Relaxed shoulders? Good. Hands? Unclenched and relaxed. Mouth? Slightly open sucking in air as though it was his first no-oxygen Everest attempt. That aside, he looked like he was out for a jog.
 
Rob: What's your heart rate? Mine is 160.
Alb:  Mine's 135.
Rob: 135 is good. 160 is a bit rich. I feel good, but let's tap off. Still early days.
Alb: The watch says 135, but my heart feels like its 220. Could we have a quick walk?
Rob (voice breaking): 220? Walk?
Alb (starting to walk): I wanted to ask you, for next year's silver, how do you think we should go about it?
 
His last sentence was a bright light, flashing white-hot to reveal a black and grey globe of smoke and doom. The wind, hot and radioactive, caused me to wince and squint. No sound. Not a f*#$ing pin drop. And like that, I knew he was toast. And that meant I was toast. And that we could stop now. And the voices would leave me alone. And it made me happy.
 
Halfway and Beyond
 
Alby and I hit the half way mark at 4.32, 5 minutes off the 4.27 target. It sounds pretty close when I look at the numbers now, but really that 5 minutes is The Grand Canyon.
 
There was a significant slow down. We walked lots and spoke to everyone and anyone we could find. I told Alb about a few good books that I had read about human exploits and of how we are all powerful if we need to be. On the harder sections, I hummed an Arcade Fire song in my head We're just a million little gods causing rain storms turning, with my lightning bolts a glowing, I know where I am going. 

At some stage I saw my mate Jamie Wardell. Jamie had a cool looking kid with him. I said hello and told him I looked forward to his comeback once he had finished his breeding years. People laughed. And as I ran off, I smiled. And then I thought again and wasn't sure if what I said was as funny as I had meant it to be. And I worried about that for a bit. 
 
Up Inchanga, where spectators are few, the only sounds you hear are the chants of the running buses as they come past you like Zulu warriors in battle formation, heaving and shedding heat. A solitary runner looked at Alby and me and asked if we were brothers. He slowed down to walk and talk with us.
 

Lolly loving attention from her sweaty family
"It's good to run with your brother. I had a brother. We were twins. He died in 2001. We ran together for many years. Sometimes we ran a 6.28. Once a 6.29. Always together. Lots of silvers. Next year, I will be 60. And it will be good that I still run. But to run with your brother is good."
 
We shook hands and before he left I asked him for his brother's name. Fred is his name, he said. I am Derrick and he was Fred. That conversation stayed with me for a while.



 The clock would turn as it always does and we stopped caring about the time or the running. We were on cruise mode. And fully engaged in experiencing the day. Our eyes scanned the crowds for Stef and Lolly and Ernie and G. And for the Bedfordview tables. And for friends. 
 
Michael Peter, an old school mate who we had overtaken earlier that morning, came by us again and pulled us out of the doldrums. Come on boys, let's run he said. So we did. 



There was a bit of running. Not much.
 

Finishing strong: me, Alb and Mike

Dusk was closing in as we neared Pietermaritzburg. We had agreed to push for the sub 10.30. An arbitrary dangling carrot of time. We put the walking behind us and started running. Really running. Striding out. Chests heaving. Passing people. Chewing up the road. The strength was still in the legs and the hearts were strong. Michael was running like a champion. Alby and I were just running. Happy to have the opportunity to obliterate ourselves one more time.

The clock would welcome us in with a 10.27. Just a few arbitrary hours off our target time.


Done!
Later I thought about Sherpas and how they help other climbers and that it's sometimes a calling and sometimes just a way to make money. And how people help each other in tough times. Brothers. Friends. Family. And I thought of how competition is good, but sometimes it is not everything.
 
Norgay and Hillary, the first climbers to summit Everest, were asked who was the first and who was the second to summit the mountain. Their expedition leader, Colonel Hunt, was quick to reply "They reached it together, as a team."

Edmund and Tenzing

 With my lightning bolts a glowing, I can see where I am going,
~RobbyRicc