Saturday 28 August 2010

UTMB: The Race That Never Was

After all the many hours of deliberation over whether to run yesterday or not I threw myself into the race and committed around lunchtime by finally registering. I spent the afternoon sleeping, managed to eat my first proper meal in 72 hours and had no repurcussions to that point of the stomach problem.

At 5pm, Eberhard came up to our hotel and I finished getting ready. 10 minutes before the start I wandered out of the hotel. Ive honestly never felt so relaxed before a race of even half this magnitude. The fact that Id been so unsure I was actually going to start, for so long into the run up, meant that the pressure was off. I had one plan, finish, and that simply meant reaching each aid station by the cut off point. I hate racing this way. I am a competitive person and gain a lot of mental strength during races from being able to push hard and cover the course in good time. To have to endure a suffer fest over 2 full days of running non-stop was going to be a whole new arena for me and I wasn't relishing the thought. I was however excited to see this fabled course up close, to see how serious the climbs really were and to test myself over a mountainous 100 for the first time.

Well nobody got the opportunity to do so last night. We left chamonix at 6:30pm. The start, whilst incredibly uplifting as one huge celebration, was incredibly frustrating for me. I was literally at the back by the time we got across the start/finish point and it took me 15 minutes before we could actually break into a jog, once almost a km down the road out of Chamonix. There were people lining both sides of the street, 5 deep, photographers, giant screens and of course 2300 other runners. I didn't care about being at the back because frankly thats where I knew Id have to spend the race, what bothered me was that Id wasted what could have been an invaluable 15 minutes if I really did start struggling to meet the cut offs.

The first 9km are 'flat' (rolling trail) down to Les Houches. It began raining a few minutes before the start and it really started falling hard on this first section. I ploughed on rather than getting out my poles or waterproof jacket and enjoyed the fading light. At 9km we hit the first climb up to le Charme. This is a 7km climb up a ski slope passing underneath a bubble lift from 1000m to 1776m (about 2300ft).



About half way up I bumped into James Adams and finished the climb with him before getting to the descent. This was way worse than the climb as the rain had turned it into a bit of a mud chute. Loads of people went over, there were poles everywhere but I didn't see the point in getting them out for now, I would wait until 35km to do that.

We dropped further down the mountain all the way back to the height we'd just come from the other side and into the town of St Gervais at 21km and the first major aid station. I felt rough on this descent it was taking me a while to find my legs, I felt light headed, weak on my feet and clearly just devoid of decent energy reserves from days of not eating. I had to keep banging gels in just to stay focused and I knew I was in for a long night in the cold and rain but had just prepared myself for getting on with it. Just before I came into the checkpoint I passed 3 British runners coming the other way back up the hill shouting 'they've pulled it there's a massive landslide'. I carried on anyway and got to the checkpoint. The guy on the line just said to me 'finit' The race was over, there were runners everywhere struggling to understand what had just happened. I moved through the checkpoint and found an american guy who had flown in just for the race and he was pretty much in tears. The decision was a brave one from the organisers as the chaos this caused and is still causing has been monstrous, but of course runner safety is the most important thing. In those conditions it is hardly suprising that they did what they felt they had to do. They have come up from criticism already but I think that is wrongly placed, it is, however, about how they now make it right for 2300 runners whom have been training for months for this event and who have spent a fortune on getting here to run it.

They shepherded us towards a sports centre in the town where it became clear that the weather had created the threat of landslides around 20km further up the course and that it was just too dangerous to pass. There were all kinds of rumours about another race start tomorrow morning and questions over whether we would be allowed back next year. They sent us towards the train station but I was lucky enough to run into Paul who we'd met at the South Downs Race in June & an English girl Josie who kindly offered us a lift back to Chamonix in her friends camper van.

When we got back to the hotel I stayed up until 3am pretty wired from all the gels Id been hammering, trying to find out what they had announced in the press conference but nothing was appearing so I went to bed.

This morning I woke at 9am, checked online and found out that the organisers had text 'everyone' in the field at 5am to let them know buses would be leaving Chamonix at 6am this morning to take people to Courmayeur where a 100km race (the CCC course) would be run in place of the UTMB. I didn't receive the text so wasn't even given this option. 100s of runners are in the same boat including Geoff Roes who was pre race equal favourite for the win, so clearly this wasn't an elitist texting strategy. I rang Mimi who had received the text but had decided not to run. I probably would have made the same decision even if it had been mine to make. I think if Id got the text, my year was empty from here on out & I felt 100% over my stomach trouble I would have got on the buses, but not in this condition was I going to optionally run a 100km mountain race which I wasn't fussed over completing, it is not after all the UTMB I came here to run. With other things only weeks away I will instead plough all of my energy into those events and PRAY that they give all of us a chance to come back and run this thing next year. After 2 years of coming here and running a total of 13 miles in that time I would be devastated if I didn't get a crack at finishing this in 2011.

Tomorrow Im going to start putting the training miles back in, beginning with a nice long alpine trail run, a pretty rare & awesome opportunity.

Here's to the race organisers, please get it right and open 2011 back up!!!!

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