Thursday 7 February 2013

Marrakech Half Marathon - Jan 2013


The Marrakech Half Marathon
January 2013
As our EasyJet flight took off from a wet and gloomy Gatwick towards sunny North Africa I did wonder what I'd let myself in for. Months earlier I'd challenged a running and cycling friend, Warren (though a non-swimmer), to try a triathlon. He'd accepted, but the quid pro quo was that I had to do a half marathon with him. I saw an ad for the Marrakech Half Marathon to be held on January 27th and thought that if I had to put myself though 21km of pain I might as well do it somewhere good. Warren agreed.
Marrakech! Of all the place names in the world that appeal, that has to be in the top 10, along with others such as Casablanca, Timbuktu, Istanbul, Buenos Aires and Reykjavik. Places that have lodged in the collective consciousness since childhood as exotic, nay romantic, destinations to visit, to see if they could match up to the images we have of them.
Our wives granted our respective visas, so early November our entries were lodged via Running Inspired travel organisers, and the training commenced. To start with all went well. I developed a target – break 2 hours and be in the top half of the field. We ran several times a week, though rarely together as he lives in Norwich. We separately entered different 10k races, and completed them in times just 6 seconds apart.
Christmas came, and all was good. I was ready to step up to do some training sessions of more than 10k. This was a key distance for me, as that is the furthest I'd run since I did my one and only half marathon over 30 years ago. But then the snow came. And then work sent me to India for a week. I did a couple of runs while out there, but only for 45 minutes. On my return came a head cold.
And then came Jan 25th, the date of departure, and no long training run had been achieved. Still, how hard could it be to run twice the distance I can already do?
Marrakech immediately lived up to expectations. On arrival the bags were dumped at the hotel and we went to a tented rooftop restaurant overlooking the souks of the walled city. The spice smells, the tagines cooking, the call to prayers, all meant that I immediately knew that whatever happened during the race this would turn out to be a Good Trip.
Saturday we spent far too long walking around the old city. Yes, we should have been resting, preparing, but how could you not explore? We bartered for goods, we ate delicious freshly cooked foods (on another roof top restaurant with amazing views towards the Atlas mountains), we soaked in the atmosphere of a buzzing city. Did I mention the blue sky and the temperatures of around 23?
Sunday morning, and our race started at 9. We jogged to the start, just 5 minutes away from the hotel. There were over 3600 entrants queuing, with another 500 or so already out there doing the full marathon (two laps of the course).
The race started, and for the first few minutes it was a case of walking, barely able to jog let alone run. Relatively quickly the runners fanned out and the race proper started. I felt good, got into a nice 5mins/km pace, and settled into the rhythm. We left the city, and started running though orange groves. And then Warren stated that he needed 'a pit-stop'. He said he'd try to catch me, as I was not going to stop and wait.
So I ran on. And on. And on. As we returned to the city there were crowds everywhere cheering us on. Aged and hooded Berbers with expressions of incredulity. Hundreds of kids shouting. Ordinary Arab families just smiling and waving. Soldiers at every junction holding back the tide of motor bikes, motorised tricycles, donkey carts and cars. We ran along the old city wall, and then I saw the 12.5k marker and thought 'it's uncharted territory here, mate”. And my legs started to complain, and the suffering commenced.
Still, Warren was behind me somewhere, so that spurred me on. The course was unbelievably flat. So flat that post race the single hill in the entire race became a talking point. It consisted of an incline no more than100m rising no more than3m!
Just after this 'hill' came the 17.5km marker, and that gave me renewed energy. Only 3.5km to go! I can do this! A runner started to pass me, so I managed to up my pace and stay on her shoulder. A km or so later there was another drinks station, and in the melee I lost contact with her and couldn't get back the ground. The others around me were either much faster or much slower. It is so much easier running with someone, so again my pace fell.
The last couple of km were so hard. The heat had really come on, the legs were hurting. All that really kept me going was that Warren was behind me. I just did not want to be overtaken. The end of the course is twisty, and there were 100s of spectators that kept shouting 'Nearly there!”. After each bend I'd be hoping to see the finish, but still it wouldn't come. I swear the last km marker was not correctly positioned.
Then, finally, the finish was in sight. I kicked on, determined not to be overtaken by anyone around me. I stopped the clock at just shy of 1h 56. I had met my first target (though during training I was hoping for 1h 50). To put that in perspective the winning time was 1.01.09. And the marathon was won in 2.06.35.
In conclusion – a fantastic weekend. Huge thanks have to go to our wives for allowing us to go. It was the most enjoyable race I've ever done. If Tri Sport Epping members or The Swimmer runners ever want to do a winter sun race I cannot recommend this one highly enough. For what it's worth, next year is the 25th anniversary of their first one.
Oh, and the second target, to be in the top half of the 3034 male runners?
I came 1510th!






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