Showing posts with label running. Show all posts
Showing posts with label running. 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

District Nine - Pre-Comrades #9 - Up Run 2017

Image result for district 9
 
In just over a week, I run my 9th Comrades alongside my brother, Alberto. He runs his 14th. A race report may be required. Writing, not only for the catharsis, helps nail down thoughts, elusive and ephemeral, which arise from a physically and emotionally charged day in the life.
 
With it being my 9th outing, I did a quick search on movies containing the number 9. District 9 was the only real contender to act as a suitable race report title. And it got me thinking....
 
When District 9 hit the movie circuit in 2009 no-one knew quite how to react. The movie's co-writer and director, little known ex-Joburger Neill Blomkamp, was young and inexperienced. Expectations were low. The backing from Pete Jackson (still cloaked in his Lord of the Rings glory) nudged people to take a closer look.
 
It's about an alien spaceship which chooses - refreshingly so - to land over Johannesburg, South Africa, resulting in the government establishing an alien district for its newbie second-class citizenry. It oozed originality and grit. What gave it grit, was the parallels with the South African Government's policy of Apartheid and its maltreatment of its people. In particular, it evoked the infamous relocation abuse in the 1970's where the government relocated about 60,000 people from District Six in Cape Town to the Cape Flats 25kms away.
 
South Africans of all colour wriggled in their movie seats. The rest of the world took notice.
 
For anyone who has ever been into a pre-1994 South African police station, what gave the documentary-style movie its edge was its protagonist, Wikus van de Merwe, the government appointee responsible for the relocation of the aliens (or prawns). The South African actor, Sharlto Copley, resurrected prickly memories of officials armed with eviction notices and batons.
 
The movie has traction. Especially in our world of despots building walls and cultivating whatever the English word for Apartheid might be. It is the subtle undertones of racism and xenophobia that get under the skin. To the extent that it calls to mind the tactics engineered by South Africa's current regime in cahoots with its financial exploiters to divert attention away from their pilfering of state coffers. Tactics to muddy-the-water and stir artificial racial discord to the extent of employing a public relations company to assist with the shenanigans.
 
What does District 9, the Apartheid government, the current Government and any other system of rule have to do with this blogpost and the Comrades Marathon?
 
The reason is simple. Over time, regimes come and go. And distorted leaders in the pursuit of self serving agendas dust off the blue prints of power and propagate confusion and fear to feed the greed and keep the people down. Artificial constructs to keep people separated, placated and conquerable.
 
However, and we should not forget this, it is all make believe.
 
And there is no better day to be reminded of this on the 4th June 2017 - Comrades Marathon Sunday.

The day that confirms that the people are together and will not be kept down. United in their many colours, their many languages, their many creeds, their many tribes. On that day they will come from across the country: the suburbs, the provinces, the townships, the cities. Leaving for Durban from their mines, farms, factories, kitchens and offices by cars, trains, taxis, buses and planes. Some will cycle to the start in red socks all the way from Cape Town. Our friends, Hazel and Tumelo, will run to the start from Joburg. 900kms of running. One Comrades marathon (about 90ks) every day until the start at city hall.

Many will come from far off countries where they have been dreaming about, and planning for, the Ultra of all Ultras for a very long time. The most insane of South African races - soaked in mountains and folklore - which has to be completed to ensure legend status back home.

Nearly all will start the race. Many will finish. And many will not. But what is true is that each year the race unites us. And bring us closer. It becomes more than the sum of its parts. It transcends. And when the choir begins its singing of anthems and worker songs in the race paddocks outside Durban's city hall, with winding roads aiming for Pietermaritzburg, the people understand that when the gun sounds and the smoke clears, that we will not stand for tyranny. Together, with our blood and our sweat and our tears, we will move forward - always forward - and we will remember that no man can divide us. Because us is all we have.

Siyofika nini la' siyakhona? (When will we arrive at our destination?) - Johnny Clegg
~RobbyRicc  
Dad and the troops at 48 of the 56k Two Oceans Ultra Marathon

The Hateful 8 - Comrades 2016

 
 
Before the completion of my recent Sub-10 hour Ironman Quest, I anticipated and prepared myself for the abyss that would follow. Cowboys from the Old West had a suitable expression to deal with this hole, "Depression can't keep up with a man on a good fast horse". Winston Churchill called it the Black Dog. Some consider it a category of gloom brought on by endorphin depletion and physical breakdown.

I call it Nothing To Do.
 
In anticipation, and purely to cover all bases, I downloaded Gabor Mate's book "In the Realm Of Hungry Ghosts". A must read for anyone experiencing the adrenaline doldrums. It's insightful as to how bad things can really get and how to change the light at the end of the tunnel from an oncoming train to an escape hatch. Having managed to brace things into perspective, the post-Ironman South Africa-blue-period was rather pleasant as I eased my running back to speed to conquer the Comrades Down Run alongside my brother, Alberto.  
Bruce Boake, Doug Boake, Stef Riccardi (Manager of Team Riccardi),
Graeme Boake, Trevor and Julia Boake,
RobbyRicc, Alberto Riccardi, Donovan Fraser  Kevin Boake
To kickstart this blogpost, some of you may need some back story. I find it helps. 2015 was my 7th Comrades: a 9h11m up run. To satisfy the intellectual yearnings of my readership, I took blog posting to a new level by linking my seventh Comrades to David Fincher's movie "Se7en". Call me what you will - trailblazer; frontiersman; astro-wizard; smartarse - but I thought that Comrades 2015 blogpost might work. Forever nudging  the boundaries, I decided to continue along that same vein. Once you strike gold, dig deeper.  
Team Riccardi (excluding 4th brother
Marco) trying on Green Number
gear in the forbidden
and  hallowed Green Tent 
The American filmmaker, Quentin Tarantino, has been involved in numerous movie projects. However there are only eight Tarantino movies: Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, Jackie Brown, Kill Bill, Death Proof, Inglourious Basterds, Django Unchained and The Hateful Eight.
 
I thought it uncanny that Tarantino would be on his eighth movie at the same time I was attempting my eight Comrades. Who would have thought? As such, I had to find a way to make this piece fit the title.

The Hateful Eight says it all.

You know the story line: eight travellers caught in a storm on their way to Red Rock. You could replace "eight" with "twenty thousand", "storm" with "ultra road race" and "Red Rock" with "from Pietermaritzburg to Durban" and the movie title would be a perfect fit. Uncanny. Remarkably uncanny. 



The writer,
Caroline Wöstmann  (last year's winner;
this year's incredible runner up),
and Alberto

Alberto and I arrived at the start at 3.59am. We spent the night before Comrades, as we always do at the home of our Pietermaritzburg friends-who-are-like-family, Nick and Nicky. Trevor Hoskins, our running mate who was out for 2016 having exchanged his 24th Comrades with a knee op, had made the introduction. To date, Nick and Nicky have hosted us for every Down Run. Nicky, a self proclaimed farm girl, gave up her bed for our first Comrades when she was eight months pregnant. They don't make many in her mould anymore.

Nick, well aware of the intricacies of race morning traffic, was primed in his car at 3.45am to drop us off at the start. We arrived before the 4am opening of the race paddocks. Alb and I found ourselves as the first two runners in the pen. The road was resplendent in silence and a pink light reflected off the 100 year old city hall. We noted the town hall's clock was running 20 minutes late. Of all the days that time meant anything and everything to the town's citizens. And it was twenty minutes late. A somewhat sinister omen before the downward spiral towards the sea.
 
The Team Riccardi strategy for this year's race was simple: I would drive the Riccardi Bus to the 60k mark at sub-8h30 pace, and then hand over the keys to Alby who would deliver us to the green of Kingsmead stadium to collect our Bill Rowan medals.  The beauty of the plan was its simplicity.

A few things to note: my fastest down run was a 9h23 from Comrades 2012; my fastest Comrades was 2015's up run with 9h11. Sub-9 is a Bill Rowan and I hadn't really been close. Alby on the other hand had been resting on the laurels of a few Bill Rowans clutched tightly between his knuckles with a PB of 8h35m46s. Give or take a few milliseconds.

So our proposed 8h30 target was not without its challenges.

The Brothers Not So Grim
(photograph taken at Bedfordview Athletic's
1st helpers table at the 21k mark)
The mighty Kevin Boake was there too. Head and shoulders above the diminutive crowd of runners. 2,000 kilometres of training in his shoes. All done on the roads and trails of the UK's Birmingham.

"The first time I ran in sunshine was on the 18th May", Kevin stated matter of factly. He trained hard yards in hard Brummie conditions.

The strains of the National Anthem, Shosholoza, Vangelis's Chariots of Fire and Max Trimborn's cockcrow reverberated in our ears as the exodus filtered its way to Durban.

Comrades counts down its mileage (kilometerage?) instead of the other way around. At the 80k's to go sign, we were over 2 minutes ahead of schedule. 6 minutes ahead at 70k's to go. 13 minutes at 60k's to go. I had never been so far ahead of pace and up the field before. Several silver contenders mingled about. It was disconcerting. Did we have any business being here? The inevitable question was posed:

Rob:- Seems like you're setting the pace?
Alb:- No. This is fine. Check there's Kevin.
Rob:- We have no business being near Kevin. Feels too fast.
Alb:- It's all time in the bag. This is fine. Don't worry. Do you think Kevin is putting in a surge?

My heart rate vascillated at 140 to 150 heart beats in sync with the troughs and peaks of Polly Shortts. In my mind I knew the pacing was all Alby's. A few nudges beyond the range of my audacity.
Once past Cato Ridge, with the burning embers from the preceding hills in slow fade, our spirits perked up at the easy meandering of the road to the foothills of the monster that is Inchanga. Alb suddenly exhaled an expletive. Out of nowhere. He clutched his calf with both hands. We stopped by the roadside. No plans had been implemented for anything so dramatic. We tried a little walking. And then a bit of running. Alb hobbled as though a rabid dog had clamped itself to his lower calf.

"It pulled a few days ago while stretching. I thought the niggle would work its way out." We walked a few metres more and then started a slow jog. The limping was pronounced. "You go. I'll be fine."

I was ready for Alb to try take one for the team and immediately responded, "F$*% you Keeto. We'll walk it in."

In the 2011 Comrades, my mate Keeto (he has his own label on this blog) tried taking himself out of running together with Alb and I by calling out his injury midway in the race. A cowardly tactic. That didn't work then and, I was confident, wouldn't work now. Not with the Riccardi Wolf Pack fully aligned as it was.  

Alb was having none of it. We argued a bit about the pros and cons. His eyes squinting all the while.

"Go get Kevin", he smiled. Insisting he gave me a shove shouting after me, "Go catch him".

It broke my heart. Last year I remembered running solo which, for that long, isn't that much fun. My mom's words from earlier in the week popped into my head.

"Make sure you look after your brother. And his heart."

It occurred to me - polishing the edge of my halo - that if I stayed back, it would only make Alb feel bad and force him to run through the pain. Alb never mentions the pain or even the concept thereof except when debilitated by it. So I knew that this flaw, one of many, in his character would come back to bite him. And it'd aggravate the damage.

We said our goodbyes and, moving away from my ambling brother, I recalled how I once played the man servant, Lucius, to Alb's Brutus in a school play of Julius Caesar. And how the roles altered so that I was now the Brutus to his Caesar.
I would run the next 30 kilometres in solitude.

Team Manager, Stef, admonishing
older brother for his injury
Alb walked the next 5k's until the half way mark whereafter he stopped at every physio table to receive attention to his soleus and Achilles. He eventually composed himself to finish in 9h26m. This was quite astonishing really. Only 3 minutes shy of our 2012 PB down run of 9h23.

The solo portion of the run was a kaleidoscope of images: a quick high five with Ironman legend Kris Fessel, some mojo replenishment from the Angry Kenyan, a high five from my London days' mate Jamie Wardell, a quick kiss from the wife, some words from the Manager of Team Riccardi, and some killer salty crisps from Grees whose wife, Kate, was in the race and bearing down on me.

At 30k's from the end (maybe between Hillcrest and Kloof) Kevin's dad, Doug, told me Kevin was a minute up the road.

"Go work together" he shouted after me. It was the nitrous I required. Leaning forward, I switched off the mind. Eventually, fifteen minutes or so later, I saw the tall figure that could only be Kevin looming ahead. He looked worse than I felt which was a ridiculously comforting thing.

Kevin was broken.

Rob:- "Come on Kev. Easy does it my boy. Let's get it going."
Kevin:- "Rob, you go. I can't go any faster."

Another martyr just like Alby.
 
Rob:- "Short easy steps. Let's go."

Kev soon woke from his slumber and started moving again. Fields Hill chasm'd before us. My quads couldn't bear the pain and reduced me to a walk. Kev cruised down its twisting turns and disappeared down the road. Soon we was out of sight. Thank goodness he is broken I thought. The state of play caused me to laugh out loud like someone from an asylum.

As the road levelled, I bridged my way back to him. "Where did you go?" he asked.
 
After that Kev and I hung tough. We ran what we could, walked everything else. I'm quite tall for a short guy, 5 foot 7. It's a smidgen under 6 foot my parents tells me. Kevin is 6 foot 4. He has to lug his unit of a body, mainly muscle and sinew, up and down the hill with a thousand valleys under a hot African sun. Brummie conditions are gnarly in comparison. The two of us alongside each other in Bedfordview club colours must've made an interesting juxtaposition. 

13k's to go.
Rob and Kev chasing PBs
The mind wanders during the hard times. Stef asked afterwards what it was like. I thought for a bit and without hesitation told him something along these lines:
"You know Game of Thrones when they torture the guys in the holding pen by tying a bucket around their waist, inserting a rat into the bucket and heating the bucket with a flaming torch causing the rat to scrape its way through the victim's stomach? Well, as I was running with Kev, I thought to myself what would I rather have: my current predicament or the rat and the bucket? And I thought about that rat...... and the bucket......and the clawing to death....and in that moment with what I was feeling - to be brutally honest - I couldn't tell or comprehend which would be worse." 
Kevin and I had spoken before the race. A Bill Rowan was never the primary goal. Breaking Alby's 8h34 most certainly was. It had to be. It'd invite bragging rights for a whole year. It'd leap you up the pecking order of bravado and with it the sense of well being that comes from being with your friends and knowing that every race thereafter, they'll be gunning for your record. It's runners' street cred.
 
With ten kilometres to go, the distance yawned across the expanse to the Kingsmead Stadium. The last ten stretch much further than the morning's first ten. Almost too impossible to fathom. The last ten are the Mariana Trench.
 
6 minutes per k is all we need for 8.30. Just focus on one kilometre at a time.
 
I leaned forward and thought about Game of Thrones.
 
A few seconds later, I sensed Kevin's presence dwindling. I turned and saw him eyes closed, looking downwards, legs grinding the tar for any inches that it would permit. He looked at me. I understood.
 
It was our Wild Geese moment.
 
 
You know Wilde Geese? The movie where the mercenaries escape the heavily stereotyped African country and chase a plane down the runway to escape a chasing horde of enraged presidential storm troopers and their machine guns.   
 
Allow me to set the scene.

Faulkner (mercenary commander) is on the plane imploring his injured friend Janders (former military tactician) to board the plane. Faulkner promised to look after Janders's son, Emile, if the operation ever went wrong. A highly crucial nugget if you're ever going to understand the scene which played out on or near the 45th Cutting and mostly in my head: 
 
Rob (on the plane):- Kevin! Come on! Come on! Come on, Kevin! Shawn, stop the plane!
Shawn (imaginary pilot):- I can't. If we don't get off on the first run, we've had it!
Kevin (stumbling towards the plane):- Go! Go!
Rob:- Kevin, come on! Hang on Kevin!
Kevin:- Rob! Rob, shoot me! For God's sakes, shoot me!
Rob:- No I can't! No stop the plane!
Kevin:- Emile!! 

[Gunshot echoes]

[fade to black]
 


Kevin clawed his way to the finish in an impressive 8h34m14s. His second Bill Rowan. 32 seconds faster than Alb's PB.  
It is always a challenge to describe the last ten k's of the Comrades.

The engines are over-revved and whining, the chassis is rattling, fuel gauges are flashing empty. The mind's wiring is tangled and smells of burnt iron filings. Thoughts misfire in rapid succession until the wandering mind narrows into a single thought: get to the finish. At all costs get to the finish.
 
The cramps work their way through my arms, hips and into my groin like lightening across a hurricane. A fishing vessel against a storm fighting grey steel waves which pull from all sides. It feels as though my body has been hanged, drawn and quartered and reattached by a demon seamstress using twine from a fisherman's net. Eyes become slits. Breathing becomes ragged, grinding and gnawing at the insides. The crowd's drowning squalls smother the runners. Like salted blankets.
 
The stadium grows from the ground like a harbour emerging from the rocky shoreline. Lines of people beckon you closer. The green of the grass is morphine to the legs. Almost too soft.  
The green grass awaits

The lactic acid weaves its way to the tear ducts and - as you cross the line and lean towards your Hateful Eighth - you smile so broadly your cheeks hurt. 
 
My watch displayed 8h27m and with it the knowledge that I was now the family record holder and that people (probably just Kevin and Alby) would be gunning for me.

I wouldn't want it any other way.

Storing nuts for the winter hibernation,
~RobbyRicc

Stats:
  • First ten k's: 47m35s
  • Last ten k's: 59m24s
  • 1st half of the race: Time 4h03m 5m24s pace (147 HR ave)
  • 2nd half: Time 4h24m 6m03s pace (147 HR ave)
  • Average running pace: 5m42s

The 12 hour aftermath


The only pacing chart that has ever worked

Rob, Shpic (9h47m PB) and Alb

First Bill Rowan


 
Comrades Pacing Graph for Kev, Alb & Rob