I completed just two runs this week. The first was the Thursday evening group run with the Plymouth Musketeers: the Barne Barton route (5.5 miles) which I completed with the 9 minute/mile group. It was a pretty uneventful run – even the infamous Bridwell Hill is starting to lose a lot of its fear factor these days.
Then, on Sunday morning, I went over to Siblyback Lake for the Dig Deep 10k race. I ran the previous Siblyback 10k in September in a time of 51 minutes 35 seconds and with a recent 10k PB of 49 minutes 13 seconds in the Mad March Hare 10k at Saltram just a few weeks ago I was looking for an even better time on what is a mostly flat course. The route has a fast downhill start on a road and then two loops around the lake mostly on a gravel track (not the quickest surface to run on). Towards the end of each loop there is a short but rather nasty rise up to the car park and the race ends with a wicked short climb to the finish line. I struck out quickly from the start and simply tried to maintain my pace as best as I could for as long as I could. It was difficult; I found my legs tiring and feeling heavy quite soon and had several moments when I wondered whether I really wanted to keep going. I was helped for much of the second half of the race by the presence of another runner just a few metres behind me. I could hear his footsteps and breathing loud and clear and was mentally preparing for him to pass me from about the 6k mark onwards, but his presence obviously spurred me on and helped me to keep going because he never did pass me and, in fact, as we took the last rise to the car park I pulled ahead a little. I finished up with a time of 47 minutes 47 seconds which is a new 10k Personal Best by a margin of 1 minute 26s. It is interesting to compare this time with my time on the Plymouth 10k in early November (just a few seconds under 50 minutes) – a 2+ minute improvement which could, perhaps, be even greater on the same, flatter, course.