Hot headed running

Faster and Fitter than Ever

At the Lotto SA Half Marathon Champs in Port Elizabeth on 2 July, Zintle Xiniwe came home second in 1:13:15, just 16 seconds behind winner Rene Kalmer, and a mere 13 seconds off her personal best, set on this same course in 2008. Zintle, who won this title in 2007 and 2008 and also finished second in 2010, had gone to PE aiming not only to finish amongst the medals, but also to break her PB – and she would undoubtedly have done so had the lead car not missed a turn and taken the runners an extra 180 metres. Her estimated finishing time, based on average pace, would have been around 1:12:35, meaning she should have shattered her PB in PE!


Naturally disappointed about this, Zintle says she was still happy with her second place and good time, because it is just another step in her continuing improvement since making her comeback in late 2009 after giving birth to her son, Iviwe. “He is the greatest thing that has ever been given to me by God, but making a comeback is hard, and I have to thank my training partners and my coach, Marshal Moloi, as well as my mom and my friends, for helping me to get back to this level.”


ON THE ROAD AGAIN
Some months after giving birth, Zintle finished a 10km in just over 40 minutes, way off her normal sub-35 let alone her 33:29 PB. “That really hurt, because I am always at the front with the top girls, but I kept training and ran 38 in my next race. Then early in 2010 I ran a 36, and that was soon followed by 35:03 and two more low 35s in the Spar Women’s races.”


“I saw that I was getting fit again, so I told myself I am going to train even harder. Next I won the Western Province Half Marathon Champs in 77:08, and then I went to Robertson and ran 74 minutes. I felt in my body that day that I would run a good time, but it was still unbelievable to go that much faster. Now I have run another 73, which should have been a 72 – that was disappointing, but it will come!”


PEDIGREED ATHLETE
Born in 1986, Zintle began running when she was eight. In high school she specialised in the 1500m and 3000m, and still holds the Western Province 3000m junior girls’ record. She was soon representing the province, and has gone on to represent her country all over the world, from Zimbabwe, Kenya and Algeria to Mauritius, China and Hungary. Having started her running career with the RCS Gugulethu Athletic Club, she had spells with Atlantic Athletic Club, Celtic Harriers and Mr Price Western Province before joining her current club, Nedbank Western Province. She still lives and trains in the Gugulethu township where she grew up, and she studied sports management at college, but is currently a full-time athlete, which allows her to spend a lot more time with her son.


Zintle has consistently been one of the leading female athletes in South Africa for the last few years. Besides her SA 21km Champs success, she was also runner-up in the 2010 SA 10km Champs, and she has finished on the podium in various Spar Women’s Series races around the country as well as the Old Mutual Two Oceans Half Marathon. Meanwhile, on the track, she was second in the SA Champs 5000m in 2007, 2008 and 2011, having already represented South Africa in the 3000m at the World Youth Champs in 2001.


Unsurprisingly, there have been some disappointments along the way. Having won the 2008 SA 21km title, Zintle was selected for the SA women’s team for the World Half Marathon Champs in Brazil, but having fallen pregnant, she had to withdraw. Happily, with her return to form in 2010, Zintle was once again selected and went to the 2010 World Half Marathon Champs in Nanning, China, where she put in a strong showing to finish 37th. This saw her recently honoured as the 2010 Western Province Athlete of the Year.


FORWARD THINKING
Zintle says her immediate goals now are to represent South Africa once again in the All Africa Games and World Half Marathon Champs, and then hopefully to step up to the marathon in time for the 2012 London Olympics. At the rate that she is currently improving year on year, her chances of achieving her goals look good right now.


ZINTLE’S PBs
3000m 9:37.00
5000m 15:58.47
10km 33:29
15km 53:10
21km 1:13:02


Kalmer and Mokoka Take Gold
Lotto South African Half Marathon Championships, Port Elizabeth, 2 July


Ren? Kalmer won her 31st South African title, but first over the 21km distance, while Stephen Mokoka clinched his 10th in the recent SA Half Marathon Champs. Their respective winning times were 1:12:59 and 1:02:07, but due to the course being 180m long, the winning times should have been closer to 1:01:35 and 1:12:20. Mokoka also won this title in 2008 and 2009, and turned the tables on third-placed Lucky Mohale, the defending champion, who beat Mokoka for the 10km title earlier this year. Two-time former champion Zintle Xiniwe was second in the women’s race for the second year running, while 2009 champion Annerien van Schalkwyk came home third. Defending champion Irvette van Blerk, who recently posted a blistering 1:10:56 in the USA, unfortunately could not run due to an injury.


MEN
1 Stephen Mokoka (AGN) 1:02:07
2 Xolisa Tyali (CGA) 1:02:43
3 Lucky Mohale (CGA) 1:03:04
40-49
1 Piet Mosebedi (AGN) 1:09:19
50-59
1 Vladimir Kotov (BLR/WPA )1:12:01 *
60+
1 Awie Veldsman (WPA) 1:24:35
Juniors
1 Melikhaya Frans (EPA) 1:08:59


WOMEN
1 Ren? Kalmer (CGA) 1:12:59
2 Zintle Xiniwe (WPA) 1:13:15
3 Annerien van Schalkwyk (AGN) 1:13:58
40-49
1 Maya Lawrie (AKZN) 1:22:47
50-59
1 Annatjie Botes (ASWD) 1:32:17
60+
1 Liz Ruickbie (CGA) 1:35:47
Juniors
1 Jessica van Wyk (ACNW) 1:40:00


* Kotov, although a foreigner, has permanent residence status and is thus eligible for the national championships.

What’s That Smell?

World Champs Medal Hunt

Ask most sport fans what the three biggest sporting events on the international calendar are and chances are good they’ll immediately get two right, the Olympic Games and the FIFA Soccer World Cup, but few will know that the IAAF World Athletics Championships rank third on this list. With some 2000 athletes from just over 200 countries heading to Daegu in South Korea at the end of August, this means that the World Champs will be the world’s biggest sport gathering of 2011!


In 2009, the USA topped the medal table with 10 golds and a total haul of 22 medals, with Jamaica second on seven golds and a tally of 13 medals. Russia and Kenya each took home four golds, and a respective total of 13 and 11 medals, whereas no other country could claim more than two golds or hit double figures overall. South Africa finished ninth on the table with two golds and a silver. Only 19 out of 202 countries participating could claim a gold medallist, and only 37 country’s athletes made the podium across all the events – down from the 22 and 46 respectively of 2007 – so you can see how tough it is to earn a World Champs medal.


SOUTH AFRICAN HOPES
At the time of writing (late June), the final South African team had not yet been announced by Athletics South Africa, but there were some safe bets as to who would make the team and be likely medal contenders in Daegu.


Men’s 400m Hurdles
LJ van Zyl owns the five fastest times run in 2011 thus far, and also look out for Cornel Fredericks, who ran the seventh and ninth best times of the year, with only American Jeshua Anderson getting between the two South Africans, and then only by one hundredth of a second faster than Fredericks. If both South Africans can get into the final in Daegu, we could see an incredible double medal haul in an event that has long been one of this country’s strongest.


Men’s 800m
South African hopes will be pinned on defending World Champion Mbulaeni Mulaudzi, who hasn’t been in the best of form this year – although that said, his best of 1:45.50 in Rome in May is not too far off the year’s best 1:43.68 run by Sudan’s Abubaker Kaki, while world record holder David Rudisha of Kenya has run 1:43.88. The 800m final at major championships often becomes more of a tactical race than a flat-out speed race, and if Mulaudzi can avoid getting boxed in, he may be able to bring another medal home.


Women’s 800m
Nobody will forget the political hot potato that Caster Semenya’s disputed gender testing became after she won the 2009 World Championship title, and having finally been allowed to return to competition late in 2010, she is slowly regaining the form that saw her blow the field away in Berlin. Fastest this year has been Halima Hachlaf of Morocco (1:58.27), with Caster fifth on the list with 1:58.61, and the South African is one of only five women to break 1:59 thus far this year, and one of only three that have done so twice, so looks a good bet to medal once again.


Men’s Long Jump
Having won the silver medal in Berlin in 2009 to go with Olympic silver in 2008 as well as World Indoor Champs gold in 2008 and silver in 2010, South Africa’s Godfrey Khotso Mokoena is one of the favourites for 2011 in terms of pedigree. However, in terms of form, Mokoena’s best in 2011 has only been 8.19 metres, meaning nine athletes have jumped further this year, led by Australian Mitchell Watt’s two 8.44 leaps. Second in the rankings is Zimbabwean Ngonidzashe Makusha (8.40), followed by 2007 World Champion and 2008 Olympic Champion Irving Saladino of Panama (8.30), so Mokoena will have to lift his game in Daegu if he wants to finish on the podium again.


Men’s Javelin
If he can find another three to four metres, Robert Oosthuizen could emulate South Africa’s first ever World Champion, Marius Corbert (1993) by bringing home a gold medal in the javelin. His best of 84.38m puts him 11th on the world list for 2011, behind the world leading 88.22m of Vadims Vasilevskis of Latvia. Next best is Germany’s Matthias de Zordo on 85.78m, so Oosthuizen is clearly within reach of a podium finish if he has a good meet.


THE MAN TO WATCH: LJ VAN ZYL
The 400m hurdles star is the only South African going into the World Champs with a world number one ranking, having posted the five fastest times in the world in 2011, and the only man in the world to dip under 48 seconds this year, which he has done four times! He was also unbeaten on the world stage until June’s IAAF Samsung Diamond League Series meeting in New York, but that could be good going into the World Champs, to keep him on his toes. Granted, he also went into the 2009 World Champs with the world’s fastest time of that year, and only made it as far as the semi-final round, prompting some critics to say he had peaked too soon in the season, but Van Zyl has hopefully learnt from that experience and will go into these World Champs older and wiser.


With the 2002 World Junior Champs title and Commonwealth Games gold (2006) and silver (2010) medals behind his name, he will be looking to add to his honours in Korea. He will also be looking to improve on his World Champs record, as his best result thus far was fifth in 2005. In 2007 he was eliminated in the heats and in 2009 he made the semi-final, just a year after finishing fifth in the Olympic final in Beijing. His confidence will have been boosted by beating Llewellyn Herbert’s long-standing South African record when he ran 47.66 seconds in Pretoria in February, and then ran what is still the year’s third-fastest 400m time in the world a month later, clocking 44.86. However, it will be his specialist 400m hurdles event where he will be aiming to bring back World Champs gold.


SOUTH AFRICA’S WORLD CHAMPS MEDALS
Since readmission to international sport in 1992, South African athletes have participated in nine World Champs meets and brought home 13 medals. The three medals of 2009 were a big improvement on the zero return in the two previous meets, and our athletes will be looking to build on this success in 2011.
1997 Gold Marius Corbett Javelin
1997 Silver Llewellyn Herbert 400m Hurdles
1999 Silver Hezekiel Sepeng 800m
1999 Bronze Jopie van Oudtshoorn, Hendrick Mokganyetsi, Adriaan Botha, Arnaud Malherbe 4x400m Relay
2001 Gold Hestrie Cloete High Jump
2001 Gold* Morne Nagel, Corne Du Plessis, Lee-Roy Newton, Matthew Quinn 4x100m Relay
2003 Gold Jacques Freitag High Jump
2003 Gold Hestrie Cloete High Jump
2003 Silver Okkert Brits Pole Vault
2003 Bronze Mbulaeni Mulaudzi 800m
2009 Gold Mbulaeni Mulaudzi 800m
2009 Gold Castor Semenya 800m
2009 Silver Khotso Mokoena Long Jump
* The South African team actually finished second to the American team, but was promoted to the gold medal position after the Americans were stripped of the win for some members of their team admitting to using banned substances.

Perfect Winter Warmer Soups

Saluting Chet

As you run down Chapman’s Peak Drive into Hout Bay in the Two Oceans Marathon, you pass East Fort, one of the oldest working batteries of original canon in the world. On race day, the Honourable Order of Hout Bay Artillerymen fire a canon when the leading man and leading woman pass by, to officially welcome them to ‘The Republic of Hout Bay.’ – and until a few years ago, a third canon shot was fired, when Chet Sainsbury came past. It was a mark of respect for the Two Oceans Race Director from 1981 to 2008, and something he always felt very honoured to receive. “I used to tell the guys around me to expect a big bang, and this happened for a number of years until I retired as Race Director, when I asked them to stop firing the canon for me,” says Chet.


It would actually be quite appropriate for Chet’s salute to be reinstated in 2012, because earlier this year he became the only runner/cyclist to have completed 30 Two Oceans ultras and 21 Argus Cycle Tours, with both races coming down Chappies and passing through Hout Bay. That means he has a triple blue permanent number in the Oceans and is a member of the prestigious Argus Club 21. “I think there are five guys who have done every Argus and there are 13 or 14 guys ahead of me in the Two Oceans, but I’ve checked and I’m the only one with 30 Two Oceans and 21 Argus medals, so it was quite an honour to pass both milestones this year.”


LATE STARTER
Chet only got into running aged 35, when his rugby-playing days came to an end in 1977, and he ran his first marathon the following year, finishing the Peninsula in 3:18. His best marathon would be 2:41:47 in the same race in 1983. He went on to run the Comrades Marathon 14 times, with a best of 6:56:53 and 11 consecutive silver medals, and he’s also done three Puffer 80km trail runs and finished the Rhodes 52km ultra three times. However, it is the Two Oceans that he is most widely associated with, and he says he would have had more medals had he not become Race Director.


“When I took over in 1981, I didn’t run it for five years because I was too scared to leave the finish on race day in case anything went wrong. Later I ran the race on the Friday, but with only 25 or so runners out there, that got boring, so eventually I said to the club I wanted to run on the Saturday to experience the race proper. I knew I could only do that with Annemarie behind me, and a strong committee and staff who did a wonderful job while I was running.” (His wife Annemarie was Race Secretary for 21 years.)


He rode his first Argus in 1980, finishing in 3 hours 39 minutes, despite riding his son’s school bike, which had a basket in front and a carrier rack at the back. “The bike had a bell, which I cheekily rang to pass other riders, and I didn’t even take off my son’s heavy lock-chain, wound around the saddle stem!” His best time of 3:37:21 came in 1995, and he has 14 sub-4:00 finishes. “I don’t race the thing madly, and I don’t ride in the big pelotons. When riding so close, it’s very easy for 30 guys to be pulled down through one guy’s carelessness. I always enjoy it, but am always relieved when it’s over.”


LONG SERVICE RECORD
Chet worked for Old Mutual for 42 years until retiring in 2003. He started as a clerk in the revenue section and worked his way up to National Sponsorship Manager, where he helped get the company into road running as the national sponsor of the sport, which included sponsoring the Two Oceans. He also served on the SA Road Running Commission, and was Vice-chair of Western Province Athletics and Chair of Western Province Road Running for many years.


Nowadays he is only semi-retired, because when he stood down as Two Oceans Race Director in 2008, he was immediately approached to become Race Director of the Landmarks Half Marathon, which in 2010 was judged the best half and overall runner-up race of the year in the Western Province. More honours followed in 2011 when Chet was awarded Civic Honours by the Protea Sub-Council of the City of Cape Town, in recognition of his work to promote the area through the Two Oceans and Landmarks.


STILL CRUISING
He shows no signs of slowing down just yet. “I’m 69 and want to carry on running and riding as long as everything in my body is still working, but I am more cautious these days. I just do two marathons a year, the Peninsula and Winelands, as well as Two Oceans. I really think your body can only take so much.” He says his only disappointment is that he can’t get a Sainsbury medal, the new Two Oceans medal introduced in 2006 for a finish between four and five hours and named after him. “I gave it a go in 2006, but could only run 5:04, and sub-5:00 is now beyond me. Still, running the Two Oceans is always a fantastic experience, because many people know me. I’m called Oom Chet, Madiba Chet, or Madala, Old Man. Runners chirp me and we have a friendly chat, and I find it very uplifting.”


LEFT ARM ANTICS
Chet Sainsbury ran his first Comrades in 1978 and earned a bronze medal. A second bronze followed in 1979, and then came a streak of 10 silvers in 10 consecutive years, including two sub-7:00 finishes in 1984 and 1986. However, it is the 1987 run that has stayed strongest in Chet’s memory, because it was the most painful.


You see, he was accidentally tripped near the start and fell to the ground, smashing his left elbow against the hard tar surface of the road. When he picked himself up, in great pain, he discovered that he had a dislocated olecranon bone. In layman’s terms, that means the pointy knob of the elbow was nearly halfway up the outer side of his upper arm! And he couldn’t swing or lift his arm at all. But having trained for months for the Comrades, and with another silver medal firmly in his sights, Chet just clamped his arm to his side and ran on, despite the great pain. He had to stop at every water table and turn around to pick up drinks, because the tables were all on the left side of the road, but he pushed on and eventually finished in 7:20:09 for another silver!


After finding his wife Annemarie at the finish, they headed over to the medical tent, but when the medics wouldn’t allow her to go with him into the tent, Chet decided to leave it, go back to the hotel and fly back to Cape Town the next day. Only then did he get to see a doctor, who diagnosed a fractured elbow and booked Chet in for an immediate operation.


As luck would have it, Chet has had two other bad falls in his sporting career, both while riding his bike, and both times he landed on his left arm. After the second injury, when his wheel got stuck in railway lines in the Cape Town Harbour while he was measuring a race route and he was flipped over his handlebars, he still ran the Puffer 80km trail race a few weeks later with his arm in a sling. Everything was fine until he reached MaClear’s Beacon on top of Table Mountain and had to be pushed up one section by a fellow runner, because he couldn’t use both arms to pull himself up when a little bit of climbing some rocks was required.


But nothing was going to stop him running!

Fitting IT in

Richard the Lionheart

Richard Murray has been competing for years in many different sporting disciplines, and he is clearly talented, but it is his drive, dedication and passion for the sport of triathlon that has seen him grow over the last three years and achieve remarkable results, especially in the last couple of months. And it seems as if this is just the start of things to come!


INTERNATIONAL SUCCESS
Richard’s first big international breakthrough came on 20 June in Germany when he made South Africa proud by winning his first international triathlon in Schaumburg. He followed it up with a fourth position at the Brasschaat ITU Triathlon Premium European Cup a week later, and then to top that off, he was crowned 2011 African Champ at the recent ATU Triathlon African Championships in Maputo on 3 July. Three stunning victories in less than four weeks!


But glory does not come without dedication and a strong mental attitude, as Richard proved with his win in Germany. It was by no means an easy victory, more a gutsy performance that made many realise why he is SA’s hottest triathlete. Firstly, he started in a slower swimming batch before being penalised because he did not put his helmet on in the box in T2. But anyone who knows Richard will tell you he has a winning attitude! With less than 3km to go, he passed 2007 world champion Daniel Unger before surging ahead to cross the line in a time of 1:44:22, with the fastest run split on the day, 29:54 for 10km.


Richard describes his first international win as “major” and says the feeling is on par with the World Duathlon Champs title he won as an under-19 athlete. “Swimming just over 18min, biking about 55min and running a sub-30min for a 10km was amazing for me. I find that I have moved forwards in triathlon in the last three years – and bigger things are to come!”


BORN AN ATHLETE
Richard, who was born in Cape Town and has been involved in sport since an early age. “My love for sport started at about age seven or eight when I was mountain biking with my father. I did every sport I could when I was young – cross-country, mountain biking, duathlon, motorcross, biathlons and biathle. All this led to competing in duathlons between the ages of 14 and 18. I then realised that duathlon was very small, and took up swimming in 2009, but my true love for triathlon only started in 2010 when I started to compete full-time. I find that in triathlon, the variation of sports gives me a lot to think about, and this makes training and perfecting very difficult. I guess you could say I love a challenge!”


His cross-training experiences have definitely helped him develop into the triathlete he is today. “As my father says, if it weren’t for mountain biking and duathlon, I would not have been the athlete I am today. There is a huge amount of bike skill and raw power needed for mountain biking, and leg speed is crucial for duathlon! So I think that these elements have given me a great base to head forwards with triathlon.”


MAKING WAVES
And Richard certainly did head forward! In 2010 he won several titles, including the SA under-23 and African under-23 triathlon titles. And his success was not limited to triathlons – he also won the African and SA under-23 duathlon titles.


He sees his biggest achievements up to now as being crowned Junior World Duathlon Champion in 2007 and 2008, as well as his eighth position in the under-23 category at the World Triathlon Championships in Budapest in 2010, and of course his recent success at elite level in Germany.


A DAY IN THE LIFE
Ever wondered what a day in the life of a professional triathlete looks like? Well, this is how Richard does it. Muesli and coffee is a must to start his day with before he tackles his first training session. This is followed by a late breakfast, a snooze of between one and two hours followed by lunch and a second training session about two hours after lunch. “My sessions are normally a variation of swimming/running or cycling/running.”


Richard trains in 10-day blocks, ending with a track session on a Tuesday followed by four days’ recovery. This is normally done twice a month, with the day after recovery being a race day. “So it’s train, train, rest, race, repeat! I don’t normally have a full day off. But in the days preceding a major race, I take the following day off at times. At the moment, running is my favourite discipline. I don’t have a worst – positive thinking gets me through swimming,” chuckles Richard.


He believes in consistency when it comes to eating habits, but with the occasional treat, of course. “I have the same dinner most nights: Pasta, chicken and vegetables with a ‘condiment’ added, such as fruit, vegetables and dark chocolate. You can’t go wrong with that!”


DREAMING BIG, STAYING HUMBLE
Through all his recent success, Richard has managed to stay level-headed and humble. “I find that keeping humble, focused and dedicated is more important than fame. I love triathlon, and I put in the hard hours when it’s needed. I appreciate all the attention I am getting, but I expect bigger and better things from myself every day. World’s best triathlete is where I’m headed!”


Competing at the Olympics next year is his biggest dream, where the triathlon consists of a 1 500m swim, 40km bike and 10km run, a gruelling, fast-paced event where world class athletes usually complete the event in just below two hours. In order for this to happen he needs to race World Cups and World Championship series races to gain ITU points. “From there I will need to gain a top 20 overall ranking before I will qualify through my federation towards Olympics. To race at the Olympics in itself would be my goal achieved, but once on the start list a top three finish is all I would go for! All or nothing!”


MENTAL FITNESS
These days he does not get that nervous before a race, as he has done so many now that all his experience contributes to making him comfortable with getting to the start line. “But I will admit to still getting a bit nervous in race briefing, and when they say, ‘On your marks,’ followed by the air-horn blast.” However, once he gets going he gives it his all. And when the going gets tough in a race, he tells himself several things to stay motivated. “I tell myself to HTFU… And then I put my head down and do what I can. I find that if it’s not my day, then I pull the cord and save my energy for another day. In triathlon, I have found that if you don’t have the swim you want and you lose a lot of time, then your race is over! But if there is hope, I do all that I can.”


Richard is currently based in Sigmaringen, Germany, till 10 September, as it is easier to get to European ITU cup races from there. “The summer weather here also allows me to train and race all year round! When I’m back home, I train in Cape Town, my ‘home town’, before moving on to Pretoria for altitude training with my coach Lindsey Parry and team mates at the High Performance Centre in Pretoria.”


His favourite local place to race in is the windy city of Port Elizabeth, and of course the Cape Town leg of the BSG Energade Tri-Series. Internationally, it is Brasschaat in Belgium, as the course allows for fast swim, run and bike splits.


Competing internationally takes some time to get used to, but Richard says he has become very independent and self-sufficient. “I have become quite a self-provider when in Europe. I rely on myself for almost everything, apart from flights from ‘Ma and Pa’ from time to time. I love being alone, and stuck in random places trying to get to races! For me, this is fate testing me before something even harder. I think that without lows, I would never appreciate the highs.”


“My parents are my biggest supporters and the backbone of my career. They are always there to help out and to come watch me race, even if it’s internationally! My brothers Collin and Andrew are both IT specialists and also have a track record of athletic abilities!”


A BRIGHT FUTURE
His short-term goals include gaining ITU points to get into the World Cup and World Championship Series events hosted by the ITU. In the long term, he wants to become the best triathlete in South Africa and race at the 2016 Olympics.


Richard is part of the BSG Elite team. “BSG has a new slogan: ‘Unlocking potential and accelerating performance.’ I find that this is very similar to what I am trying to do. BSG is a great sponsor and the team is very organised and focused on delivering great performances around South Africa and internationally. Without them, my future wouldn’t be as bright!”


ADVICE
Richard advises novice triathletes to listen to their bodies and take it easy in times of recovery. “Many athletes don’t know the word easy! It’s not about who is the fastest in training. It’s about who wins on race day.” He says that the most important pieces of equipment a novice triathlete should invest in is a wetsuit and a pair of tri-bars, while experienced triathletes should know that a pair of smooth racing wheels or light racers will help improve efficiency in racing.


According to Richard, the biggest mistake age group triathletes sometimes make is to take it too easy in transition. “I don’t want to put age groupers down, but transitions for age groupers must be the main issue. Many athletes have a picnic in transition. The goal should be in and out of transition as fast as humanly possible!”


INSPIRATION
He is inspired by the joy of being fit and the ability to train every day injury-free. “I find life is a journey and that without setbacks, life would be boring! Sport is my life! Being able to train every day isn’t easy, but I look forward to travelling, meeting new people and living a life less ordinary. Sport is pain, and I love pain.”


Any chances of seeing this great athlete at longer races such as Ironman 70.3 and Spec-Savers Ironman in future? “I will most likely do 70.3 next year. I think after base, a longer race will be great, but I intend to stay with Olympic distance till I am 32 years old, before I make my move across to Xterra in America.”


THE BSG ELITE TEAM
A number of elite athletes recently competed in the first ever championship event on the Maputo shore of Mozambique. The 2011 All Africa Triathlon Championships are held every year and are a chance for elite athletes to earn ITU World Ranking points. Mozambique was chosen as the host country so that the African Triathlon Union could use the African Championships as a ‘test event’ for the 2011 All Africa Games Triathlon event in September this year. While Richard Murray won the elite event, team mate Chris Felgate finished seventh overall. The women’s field was won for the fifth time by South African BSG athlete Kate Roberts. Other remarkable performances from the BSG Elite team included Wian Sullwald winning won gold in the Junior Men category to become the African Junior Champion for 2011.

No Stopping Thulani

A True Comrade

Each time people call me ‘Comrade’, it fills me with pride. I started training for the first time on 1 September 2008 by running four laps on a soccer field in my neighbourhood. Thereafter, I found myself running 12 laps and two weeks later I ran for the first time on the road. As hard as it was, I never stopped since then.


My first road race was the Striders 15km in Springs in 2009, which I finished successfully. The same year I ran my first marathon in Eldorado Park, followed by the Soweto Marathon later that year. It was beyond my wildest dreams when I finished Comrades last year and then the Two Oceans Marathon this year.


I thank people like Sir Richard Branson, my former teachers, my nephew and my family who inspire me and who always encourage me to believe in myself and to live life to the full. I wish that more young people would take sport seriously and realise that it can take them to new heights in life. – Henry Mngomezulu


Lucky to be Alive
I’m lucky to be alive, and it’s because of you blokes. Sometime just before Good Friday, a fair-sized DVT had formed in my right calf, unbeknownst to me. On Good Friday, a big chunk of this broke away and travelled up the veins into my heart, where it should have stopped everything in my body from working.


However, my heart is in such good condition that it managed to pump it clean through all the chambers and valves and spit it out the other side without missing a beat. I thought I had some sort of digestive pain, but four weeks later the doctors decided that the symptoms weren’t those of indigestion, and worth looking into further. A scan showed a pulmonary embolism and a DVT in my right calf. If I was as fit as a normal 56-year-old, I would probably have had a heart attack and be pushing up daisies by now. But I’m not, and it’s the regular cycling at a good pace with all you blokes for the past 25 years that I can attribute that fitness to.


Thanks lads (and lasses), it’s probably a fair thing to say I owe you my life. You never know what’s in store for you, but being fit and healthy isn’t going to hurt your chances of survival. Keep riding and keep healthy. See you on the road in about two months. – WANDY


Thank You Hein!
It’s Friday 27 May and I have been to the Comrades expo, got my first goodie bag and am ready to run this gruelling challenge called Comrades. My numbers are attached to my vest and I am as ready as can be, but the nerves and ‘have I done enough’ haunts me. Time to put my feet up and read my Modern Athlete mag, which I collected at the Expo.


Well, if I ever had any jitters, a man called Hein Wagner has just inspired me. One becomes so introspective, and then I look at Hein’s achievements and his sense of humour and attitude, and I am humbled and know that I can do this and take his advice: ‘If you are at the end of the rope, tie a knot and hang on’. So thank you, Hein – you are amazing! And to Modern Athlete: The advice you give is sound and easy for greenies like me! – SANDY MULLINS


Run for Health
I am a very young runner and have realised there is no sport where running is not included. If you are a runner you are able to participate in most other sports which help you with your health. Some people may think that running is a hard sport, but what they don’t realise is that running can be fun and has so many health and weight-loss benefits. – SBONISO


The Meaning of Comrades
I ran my first Comrades in 1997 and it does define you! For me it was a day to truly get in touch with myself. Spending 11:51 with ‘me’ was a fantastic experience. I realised how goal-orientated I was, how dedicated I was to achieve, and that Comrades is truly a mental race.


Nothing comes close to the people I have met along the way and the training buddies that have become close friends. I have finished four Comrades and as I sit here with my tender and bruised body, I am anxious to do it all again.


When I run and finish Comrades, it makes me feel like nothing is impossible. And nothing is… I have such a positive attitude and spirit, and I know that when I apply my mind I can do anything. I have truly defined myself, thank you Comrades. – JEANINE FOLEY


Why Run Comrades as Fast as You Can?
I suppose by now your magazine has been bombarded by letters from readers telling more about their Comrades experiences. Well, I will be no different, but have a question in my letter as well.


I completed my first Comrades this year, but it was my second attempt. Last year I did not enjoy myself due to overloading on carbo products and landing up just short of renal failure. This year I used nothing and felt on top of the world!


I finished in 11:32 and would not change my running pace at all. I don’t know why people want to race through this race and not soak up everything on offer? If it was not for taking it easy, the people I interacted with along the route and the beautiful and breathtaking surroundings, I would have easily bowed out to the ‘brick wall’ I hit at about 30km.


I had a friend running his ninth and he has always run sub-9s. This year he ran a 10:30 and said it was the best experience he has ever had!


I know there are thousands of runners that will shoot me for what I have to say and they will say it is the Ultimate Human Race and you have to push yourself. I ask why? Is it not enough for us select few (and I say that, as there are not many in the world that can say they have run The Comrades Marathon) just to accomplish and enjoy the race and take in everything the Comrades Marathon has to offer?


A very big thank you to the Comrades Marathon Association and every person along the route. It was an awesome experience. It makes me want to run it every year. – STEVEN VIENINGS

Better Late Than Never

Vibrant Health PureGreen Protein

Plant proteins have historically been poorly suited for human use, because most lack one or more essential amino acids needed by the human body to build muscle tissue. However, by combining a variety of plant proteins and adding a few select free amino acids, it is possible to create a purely vegetable protein with an amino acid ration that surpasses egg albumin and whey proteins, which is what Vibrant Health has done in PureGreen Protein. Protein from peas, rice, spirulina and alfalfa are joined with four select free amino acids to create the first all-vegetable protein ideally balanced for human consumption.
Available from various health stores, 447g tub (R299 to R345) or box of 10 x 28g sachets (R199 to R240), with natural, vanilla and chocolate flavours. More info: 021 852 3021, [email protected], or www.naturalvibrance.co.za.


Comrades Marathon: The Ultimate Human Race
The Comrades Marathon is not just the world’s largest ultra-marathon, it is also one of the oldest and has an incredibly rich history, filled with inspirational and interesting characters, and stories of incredible courage, sportsmanship, camaraderie, glory, heartbreak and humour, all interwoven with the history of South Africa over the past 90 years. This new hardcover book chronologically describes every race in detail, from the first Comrades in 1921 to the 85th in 2010, telling not only the compelling stories of the legends like Newton, Ballington, Hayward, Mekler, Robb and Fordyce, but also the stories of the backmarkers, those ‘ordinary runners’ behind the front-runners. Written by John Cameron-Dow, a Comrades permanent number holder and author of several books, notably The Two Oceans Marathon Story and Bruce Fordyce: Comrades King, it is a must-have for anybody who loves the Comrades Marathon
Available from Exclusive Books and other leading book stores at R280.


Yunnan Baiyao “The Chinese Spray”
Yunnan Baiyao is a totally natural pain relief product, imported from China, where it has been used for over 100 years for the relief of painful joints, arthritis, muscular pains, sprains, strains and bruising, and can also be used to stem bleeding and for the healing of cuts and grazes. It is produced from various wild herbs renowned for their healing powers, which are found only in the Yunnan Province, famed as China’s kingdom of medical herbs. It is the widest used medicine in China, including being used by the Chinese Olympic team and issued in all Chinese armed forces medical kits. It has a strong smell at first, but this soon dissipates and becomes unnoticeable.
Available from Dis-Chem Pharmacies and Clicks Stores nationwide, select Pick n Pay stores in the Western Cape, and several local pharmacies, at R89 to R99 per box. More info: 021 555 4549, [email protected] or www.yunnanbaiyao.co.za.


Hi-Tec Brown Soft Shell Jacket
At home, in the street or on any mountain, the Brown Soft Shell Jacket from Hi-Tec is a great addition to any outdoor girl’s cupboard. The stylish jacket has chest and waist pockets, is fleece-lined, has an adjustable elastic hem draw lining as well as adjustable sleeve cuffs. The jacket is functional but also stylish, and you can wear it to a night out at the movies or when doing what you love most whilst outdoors.
Available from Due South and Hi-Tec factory outlets at R599. For more info, visit www.hi-tec.com/za.

From the Cape to Kili

Be Part of It!

SPAR Women’s Challenge 10km & 5km, Pretoria


The SPAR Women’s Challenge is a five-race series run at major centres around the country and includes the biggest women’s races on the South African calendar. It not only allows thousands of women from all walks of life to take part in the 10km run/walk or 5km walk, but the Grand Prix Series also offers the elite SA women runners substantial cash prizes and prestige. The Pretoria leg on 27 August is the second-last of the series, which is currently being led by defending champion Irvette van Blerk.


With only about eight weeks to race day at Super Sport Park in Pretoria, it is time to dust off those takkies, get out from under your winter duvet and start training with your girlfriends, mother, sister or family members for a race that is sure to be one of your best memories yet.


Remember, whatever your goal on race day, you will be part of a charity campaign that makes a difference in the lives of thousands of less fortunate people. The race has a firm focus on social upliftment and community, and a percentage of the race entry fees collected will be donated to charities such as the Chrysalis Foundation, a Pretoria-based foundation providing counselling and support to young women aged 14-18 who have been victims of abuse, Help-net, which provides a safehouse for children who find themselves in abusive circumstances, and The Good Morning Angels Jacaranda 94.2 initiative, which received a donation last year of R50 000 from SPAR North Rand, to donate to a worthy cause.


A new initiative at the 2011 race will be a ‘Takkie Drive’ to encourage all runners to bring an old pair of usable sneakers to the race, to be donated to charity. Through lucky draws, a few fortunate takkie donors will be rewarded with a brand new pair of New Balance Rainbow running shoes for their support. Speaking of lucky draws, the main attraction of the prize-giving will be a lucky draw for a brand new Nissan Micra, the multi-award winning compact city car, courtesy of Global Nissan.


The day is all about having fun, so regardless whether you’re running for fun, to set a PB on the day or just want to support your girlfriends, make sure you diarise 27 August. You will get to see top elite runners such as Irvette van Blerk, Ren? Kalmer, Diana-Lebo Phalula, Annerien van Schalkwyk, Charn? Bosman and Dominique Scott in action.


The first 22 000 entrants to the Pretoria race will receive bright green T-shirts – the brightly coloured race Tees have become synonymous with the SPAR Women’s challenge over the years – and all finishers will receive a medal and goodie bag. Entry forms are available at selected SPAR, SuperSPAR and KwikSPAR stores or online at www.ladiesrace.co.za.

POTCH SETS THE BAR

Dare to TRI!

Last year Modern Athlete ran a series of articles that challenged the runners amongst us to take up the Tri Challenge and compete in Ironman 70.3 in Buffalo City. The programme was a huge success and we had many novice triathletes following the training and finishing the 70.3, including our own editor Michelle Pieters. So this year we are going to do something similar, but this time we are going to take a group of novice triathletes and train, coach and guide them to the finish line at 70.3 Buffalo City. This will be known as the Modern Athlete DARE TO TRI Challenge.


THE INS AND OUTS
Modern Athlete will select 10 athletes to follow a programme designed by our Tri Coach Derick Marcisz. These athletes will follow a basic programme with regular feedback to Derick, who will adjust each athlete’s programme to suit their individual needs as well as help them set intermediate goals for their training and the big event. The programme can be followed by ALL novices or newcomers to the sport, who should easily relate to the experiences of the Modern Athlete DARE TO TRI team.


In conjunction with the programme, we will run a series of monthly theoretical and practical workshops to deal with the various phases of the training, and where all athletes will be welcome to come learn about training and have a chance to meet the Modern Athlete DARE TO TRI team. These sessions will include invaluable practical demonstrations by top triathletes, such as how to move faster through transitions, mount your bike, swim with the correct technique, maintain your bike, change to the correct gears, and more. You will be taught and shown all you need to know about triathlon, from training and nutrition, to biking and swimming skills – everything you need to get you to the finish of your first 70.3 Triathlon.


THE GOAL
Ironman 70.3 takes place on Sunday 23 January 2012 in Buffalo City and consists of a 1.9km sea swim, a 90km hilly bike ride and a 21.1km road run, with an overall cut-off of 8 hours 30 minutes.


THE PROGRAMME
The programme will start at the beginning of October and run for 16 weeks, finishing on race day. Training will be split into a number of phases, starting with base training and skills development, and progressing to harder sessions and finally a taper before the big event. The programme will be designed to make allowances for the fact that most athletes do the sport for fun, have fulltime jobs and family commitments, and would like to still enjoy some social life. The programme will require your full commitment, especially on weekends, but will make allowances for life’s usual distractions.


HOW DO I QUALIFY TO BE CHOSEN?
Firstly, you must be a NOVICE triathlete. This means you can be a runner, cyclist, swimmer or general fitness fanatic, but we are specifically looking at novices, or those with very limited sprint triathlon experience, and not experienced triathletes that want to improve on their previous performances. The aim is to have a good cross-section of gender and ages in the training group.


Secondly, you need to reside in the Greater Gauteng area, as you will be required to attend training workshops and hopefully participate in group training sessions.


You should submit your application to [email protected]. The application should include:
• Full name
• Place of residence
• Contact details
• Sex, age, date of birth
• Height, weight
• State of health and any medical conditions
• Running, cycling and swimming experience, if any
• Sporting goals
• A short motivation as to why you would like to be chosen as part of the Dare to Tri team
Application deadline: 20 July


WHAT HAPPENS AFTER THIS?
Modern Athlete will advise athletes of their selection and they will then meet Derick to discuss their involvement. These athletes will be introduced to the readers in the September edition of Modern Athlete and will be expected to attend the first workshop at the end of September, which will be open to all readers.


TRAINING BEGINS MONDAY 5 OCTOBER
At the start of the programme, the athletes should ideally be able to do at least two of the following:
• RUN: 10-12km at an easy comfortable pace.
• CYCLE: 40km continuously at a steady pace on a road bike.
• SWIM: Must be able to swim. (Swimming, although the shortest leg of a triathlon, is often the most daunting for novices. Our programme is geared to get you to a reasonably competent level of swimming fitness, to ensure that you finish the swim comfortably and well within the time limit.)


Speed is not important here, but ideally you should be able to comfortably complete these distances before you start our structured programme.


Each month Modern Athlete will publish feedback from the Modern Athlete Dare to Tri team on how their training is going and what the next month’s training involves. This will allow ALL athletes to follow the programme as well as relate to the experiences of the coached athletes.


The Modern Athlete Dare to Tri Team will all participate in the race in specially designed Modern Athlete triathlon kit and will be supplied with cool accessories both for training and racing. This is a golden opportunity to commit to a new challenge, receive expert coaching and support, and enjoy your journey to Ironman 70.3 with like-minded athletes!


SO WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR? E-MAIL YOUR APPLICATION TODAY!


Derick Marcisz has 41 years’ experience as a runner, cyclist and triathlete. As a runner, he has competed in track, cross-country and all road events, including Comrades. He has run 25 sub-2:30 marathons, with a PB of 2:17:17, and a half marathon PB of 1:05:36. Derick has two top 10 finishes at the Two Oceans Marathon, including a sixth placing in a PB 3:19.20. He has been involved in triathlon since 2000 and has competed in over 70 triathlons and duathlons at all distances from the Energade sprints to Ironman. Derick is currently coaching runners and triathletes of all ages and abilities.

Play by the rules

Spartan Harriers

In 1903, Spartan Harriers organised its first 50-mile Big Walk, with 61 competitors starting at Greenmarket Square, proceeding along what is now Voortrekker Road to the 25th milestone and back. Future rugby Springbok WA Millar won in a time of 9:23:29, pulling away from JW Lewis at Salt River after reportedly drinking champagne! Unfortunately, the club made a financial loss that day, so it would be 21 years before the second Big Walk, which happily made a profit, and the event has subsequently grown into one of the biggest athletic events in the country. Nowadays, over 35 000 walkers turn out in one of the eight distances from 80km down to 5km.


The club is no longer directly responsible for the event but is still very much involved, says Spartans Vice-chairman Dave Kirby, who serves on the board of the Big Walk Trust. “The Big Walk was started by Spartans, is still run under the auspices of our club, and our members still help on race day, so we still think of it as our event.” And that seems rather appropriate, given the club’s strength in the walking category, including having won the Western Province Road Walking Challenge every year except one since it was launched in 2003.


GLORY YEARS
Spartan Harriers was formed on 26 April 1901 when a general meeting took place at the Cumberland Hotel for the purpose of forming a Harriers club “to foster cross-country running and promote athletics in general.” Besides that first Big Walk in 1903, it also presented the first marathon in South Africa, in 1907. The race was won by Chas Childs of Spartans in 3:12:55, and there was so much public interest that the crowds stood up to twelve-deep in places along the route! Another landmark date saw the Ladies’ Section formed in 1926 and women allowed to compete in the Big Walk for the first time.


Spartans became a force in Cape athletics, winning the Western Province cross-country team championship 27 times between 1906 and 1940, amongst other titles, but the club’s star waned somewhat until Ewald Bonzet joined in 1972 and set various national records and won numerous national and provincial titles as a Spartan. Other notable performers included walker Connor Johnstone, who set several age group world records in the 70s, the famous ‘Galloping Granny’ Mavis Hutchinson, who joined in 1988, and John September and Thabang Baholo, who dominated the Western Province racing scene in the early 90s.


Today the club can boast a number of top walkers, like Ross McDonald, who won three medals at the 2009 World Masters Championships in Finland, and Peggy Reid, who at the age of 74 won the Western Province Road Race Walking League Challenge for the second year running. The club also has a talented father-son duo in Malcolm and Alphonsus Salida. Club President Malcolm was the first walker home in the Two Oceans Marathon for the last two years and in the 2010 Comrades, while 16-year-old Alphonsus has walked the fastest 10 000m in South Africa this year for youth boys.


FAMILY ATMOSPHERE
Spartans currently has about 300 members, with a diverse age spread, says Chairman Maajid Warley. “Our youngest athletes are eight years old, while our oldest are walker Sam Milner and runner Ralph King, who are both still active in their 80s. Our average age used to be quite high, especially when the legendary Philip Rabinowitz was still with us – you’d be amazed how much one 103-year-old can affect the average!” (The late Philip famously broke the world records for 100m and 200m for the 100-year-old age category in 2004 and is listed in the Guinnes Book of World Records.) Malcolm adds that “The family atmosphere really attracts many people to the club. It is amazing to have such young and old athletes together in the same room, with such a great vibe.”


The club’s training runs, time trials and social functions all take place at its clubhouse on the Meadowridge Common Sports Grounds, with pack runs and walks on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and longer sessions on Saturdays. There are also speed training sessions on Mondays and race walking training on Wednesdays. “We have experienced coaches and try to cater for all levels and ages, and we offer separate routes for the walkers because they generally prefer flatter routes,” says Malcolm.


The 5km time trial takes place on the first Thursday of each month, followed by a monthly social where the Spartan of the Month award is announced. Other social highlights include the Chairman’s Breakfast Run (which often includes a swim), Two Oceans Breakfast Run a week before the race, pasta evenings, Birthday Bashes on the last Saturday of each month, Section Socials, the Annual Club Dance in September, and the Pub Run in December. The club’s AGM and Awards Evening usually takes place at the end of April.


GETTING PEOPLE ACTIVE
Spartans is one of the leading clubs in the Cape in terms of bringing beginners and underprivileged athletes to the sport, says Maajid. “We have two beginner groups each year, one in February and one in September, and we also have a talented development squad based in the Masipumelele community near Kommetjie, which is run in conjunction with the Western Province Race Walking Commission’s Adopt an Athlete Scheme. We were the first club to buy into this scheme, starting by funding 10 athletes, which has grown to 42 now.”


“The funding for this development work comes from the Big Walk Trust,” says Dave. “Part of the Trust’s mandate is to reinvest part of the profits of the event into the community, so the club has created a fund to send coaches to Masipumelele three times a week, buy the kids shoes and kit to train in, and also organise outings for them. It’s our way of giving back.”


Spartan Harriers Athletic Club
Clubhouse: Meadowridge Common Sports Grounds
Secretary: Lorna Rensburg 082 337 9483
Email:
[email protected]
Website: www.spartanharriers.co.za

A family affair

Comrades Hopefuls Report Back

Reiner Stucky 34616
Age: 51 Club: Volksrust
Comrades run: 15 (plus 1 DNF)
2011 time: 10:51:29

My 2011 Race: I had a great race, and just took it easy. I have been totally buggered after this race before, but this time I felt OK. I had wanted to finish under 10:30, but I was always on the edge for that, and when I went through halfway, I knew I wasn’t going to get it, so I just wanted a sub-11:00. So I walked all the way up Polly’s because I knew I had enough time, then cruised home, finishing between the two sub-11:00 buses. I actually put down 10:30 for myself in our club’s time prediction competition, but there wasn’t enough money riding on it to push any harder.



Donna Lee Meyerson 31014
Age: 38 Club: Run/Walk for Life CG
Comrades run: 1 DNF
2011 time: Did not finish

My 2011 Race: It just wasn’t my day. My legs felt great after they warmed up, but I just had no gas in the tank and I struggled from the start, so I decided to stop at 60km when I knew a finish was not on the cards. I made the Cato Ridge cut-off by 45 minutes and would have made Camperdown as well, but the last cut-off at Polly Shortts would have left me 6min/km for the last 8km, which would have been impossible for me. On paper it was the right decision, but I have to live with the sting for a year before I can put it right. I will earn my Comrades pride in 2012!



Nikki Campbell 18595
Age: 48 Club: Fish Hoek
Comrades run: 14
2011 time: 11:39:44

My 2011 Goal: I was aiming for bronze, but had to settle for a Vic Clapham, because I wasn’t in the game until 30km in the race. I was very distracted, and was running it like a fun run, until at the top of Fields Hill I realised I was behind and had to refocus and start again. The highlight was catching my daughter Heather just over Polly’s and finishing with her. But I learnt a lesson this year: I wasn’t disrespectful of the race, but was not focused enough. The beauty of the Comrades is that you have enough kays to fix mistakes and pull back time.



Daryl Heffer 22141
Age: 34 Club: Westville
Comrades run: 1
2011 time: Did not start

My 2011 Race: My knee started hurting two weeks before the race, and despite going to the physio, resting and strapping the knee, it just wouldn’t come right. The day before the race the physio just said don’t even try to run. I have a friend who ran two years ago on a dodgy knee and it’s taken him till now to be able to run properly again, so I had that at the back of my mind. Obviously, I’m very disappointed, because it would have been my back to back run and medal, and can I never do that again, but I will be back to try again.