Welcome Home, Colleen

It’s been years since US-based Colleen De Reuck competed in a South African running event, but on 26 March she will line up for the Old Mutual Two Oceans Marathon, thanks to sponsors KPMG, and then in May she will take on the Comrades Marathon, to finally run two of her all-time bucket list races, and make one of the most anticipated ultra-marathoning debuts in the history of SA road running! – BY SEAN FALCONER

She’s a four-time Olympian, a World Cross Country Champs bronze medallist, holder of two former world records, winner of Big City marathons in Europe and the USA, as well as holder of multiple SA and US titles, and can even lay claim to being an age-group World Champion at both IRONMAN distances, but now Colleen De Reuck (52) is set to finally take on the two biggest ultra-marathon races in her mother country. Naturally, the pundits can’t wait to see how she goes, but she is taking it all in her stride, simply saying that she has always wanted to run both races.

“My husband Darren was fourth in the Two Oceans Marathon in 1992, and my brother Colin was 10th the previous year, and my sister-in-law Kerry also ran it in 1991. In the Comrades, my Dad, Frank, ran it 15 times – we used to second him along the route – and Colin has four medals, including a gold for seventh place in 1995, while Kerry also earned a medal in 1992, so both races have always been a family affair. Recently I spoke to Helen Lucre, telling her I was interested in running them and asking if she knew of any clubs who would sponsor me. She put feelers out, spoke to Bob De La Motte, and next thing I was invited to come over by KPMG. They’re sponsoring me and I will be running for them, so I am very fortunate.”

Having grown up in KwaZulu-Natal, Colleen says she understands the incredible history of the Comrades, and that running it is a real achievement in most people’s eyes. “One year Colin and Kerry moved into a new house, so Darren and I visited for a house-warming party. Now that year Colin, Darren and I had all made the KZN Marathon Champs team, but when the new neighbours heard Kerry was training for Comrades, she was the instant hero of the day. Now I will finally be able to say I also did it!” she jokes.

World Class Talent
Colleen is one of the best female long distance athletes ever produced by South Africa. Over 10km, she has the second-fastest time at 31:16, just three seconds slower than Elana Meyer’s SA Record, and she has the sixth-fastest 15km time at 48:19 and tenth-fastest time over 21.1km at 68:38, with only Elana having ever gone faster. In the marathon, Colleen’s best is the 2:26:35 she ran to win the Berlin Marathon in 1996, which was on a record-legal unaided course, whereas Elana’s SA Record 2:25:15 was run on the aided Boston Marathon course. Colleen also won the Honolulu Marathon in 1995.

Unfortunately, the first 10 years of Colleen’s running career were limited to competing only within South Africa due to the country’s expulsion from international sport during the Apartheid years, but in 1992 she finally got her chance on the world stage at the Barcelona Olympics, finishing ninth in the women’s marathon. In 1996 she ran the 10,000m at the Atlanta Games and finished 13th in the final, followed by 31st in the marathon at the 2000 Sydney Games. She also placed fourth in the 1995 World Half Marathon Champs, was eighth in the 1997 World Champs 10,000m final, and 15th in the 1998 World Cross Country Champs.

Having moved to Boulder, Colorado in the USA in the early 90s so she could pursue a pro career in running, Colleen and Darren became US citizens in December 2000, and she brought home individual bronze and team silver medals for her adopted country at the 2002 World Cross Country Champs in Ireland, as well as a team bronze in Switzerland the following year. Then in 2004 she won the US Olympic Trials Marathon to qualify for the Athens Games, where she finished 39th in the marathon, and also won the US Cross Country Champs in 2004 and 2005. Back on the road, she finished fourth in the 2005 Chicago Marathon, eighth in the 2009 Boston Marathon, and won the 2010 Copenhagen Marathon.

While Colleen had an amazing career before she turned 40, including world record times over 10 miles and 20km, she posted some of her most impressive results after turning 40, setting 10 American masters records, including a 1:16:19 half marathon and 2:30:51 marathon when she was 46, and was voted the 2009 Master’s Athlete of the Year by USA Track & Field magazine. In 2012 she also turned to triathlon, winning an IRONMAN 70.3 age-group World Title in 2013 in Las Vegas, then adding a full IRONMAN age-group World Title in Hawaii last year, with a marathon run leg of 3:19:09, the 18th fastest among all female competitors on the day!

In Fine Form
On 13 February this year, Colleen ran in the 2016 US Olympic Marathon Trials race in Los Angeles, which she qualified for by winning the 2013 Indianapolis Marathon in 2:39:22. Even though now much older than most of her competitors and unlikely to qualify for the Rio Games, just being invited to the Trials is a huge honour in American running, so Colleen says she wanted to race it – and it would be great training ahead of Two Oceans and Comrades. Colleen duly clocked an impressive 2:49:57 in very hot conditions, and says “I’m in good shape, so now I hope to keep it going to Two Oceans, then step it up to Comrades. I don’t think it would be wise for me to race both, so Oceans will be a build-up for Comrades, but I am a competitive athlete, so when the gun fires, we’ll see what happens.”

Looking ahead, Colleen says her plan is just to keep fit and healthy, as her top level competitive days are behind her now, and she is focused on her career as a personal trainer. “It’s nice to compete, not just train, but I had originally decided that I didn’t want to race any more, because I was getting slower and it was not fun any more. However, running is part of my lifestyle, and Two Oceans and Comrades have given me a new goal and put the spark back into my running.”

“I’m also really looking forward to coming back to South Africa because it’s been two years since our last visit. My mum will be coming down to Cape Town, and we’ve plenty of family and friends to catch up with when we go to Durban. We might not live in South Africa anymore, but my daughters Tasmin and Tara tease me about some of the words I still use, like ‘petrol’ instead of ‘gas’ for the car, and I still say ‘ja’ now and again. In some ways, I will always be a South African.”

Camera in Hand

When it comes to getting the most out of races and just enjoying being out there, few runners do it better than Caroline Lee, who seemingly has a camera glued to her right hand. – BY SEAN FALCONER

It is unlikely that Caroline Lee will ever run another personal best in a South African race. Even a fast time is improbable, because this 51-year-old anaesthetist from Johannesburg chats to everybody in races, from fellow runners through race volunteers to spectators, and takes hundreds of pics as well. “I’ve made so many friends along the way and now everybody wants to chat, even when I come down to Cape Town, and all my PBs were run overseas, including 4:00:24 in the Munich Marathon in Germany. One of my running goals is a sub-four marathon, so I was close. Then again, I did take 360 pics along the way that day,” she laughs. “I usually take a few hundred pics per race, and do about 60 races a year – some trail events I took over 1000 pics! So I have many great memories.”

What’s Up, Doc?
Caroline (51) was born in Taiwan, then moved to Africa aged 13 when her diplomat father was transferred and the family spent two years each in Lesotho and Swaziland before moving to SA. She matriculated in Bloemfontein, then studied medicine at WITS in Johannesburg, specialising to become an anaesthetist. Today she is divorced with two sons, aged 20 and 15, and operates out of various hospitals in Joburg. She also has a reflux-testing unit at Donald Gordon Hospital, attached to WITS, and it was thanks to her medical training that she kind of ‘fell’ into running in 2007.

“I was not a runner at all, but a friend was worried her husband would collapse in the Valentine’s 10km night run, because he’d recently had Achilles tendon surgery, so she asked me to run with him and keep an eye on him. We finished in 1:09 and I quite enjoyed it, and when I saw the Morningside club tent at the finish, I decided to join them. My second race, still with no training, was the Two Oceans 21, which I only ran because friends had invited me down to Cape Town for Easter. At the finish all the spectators were banging on the sideboards, so I thought I was about to miss the cut-off and I sprinted home, only to see my finishing time was 2:00:10, way under the cut-off!”

Later in the year she was hit by a truck while training for the 94.7 cycling event, so was out of action for about a year, and then in early 2009 she was involved in a car accident, but by the end of that year she was able to run two half marathons in one weekend. “The Club Captain said if I can do two 21s in one weekend, I can do a marathon, so they invited me to go with to the Kaapsehoop Marathon. I ran the first half in two hours, then walked the whole second half – couldn’t run another step – but I finished in 4:57 and qualified for Comrades. It had been a dream of mine since 16 to run the Comrades, so it only took me 30 years to fulfil, but I got my medal. Of course, I said never again, but the club told me I would not only get a second Comrades medal, but a third medal for running them back to back – and I do love my medals!”

Say Cheese!
Meanwhile Caroline had also started running overseas marathons. In 2010 she went to Amsterdam, then New York in 2011, and Berlin in 2012. “I just couldn’t resist running, and I wanted to see the world, so the two went together naturally for me. The problem was, I ran Amsterdam and couldn’t’ remember anything of the route afterwards, so in New York I carried my camera and took about 10 pics. I realised it was quite easy to run with a camera, and that’s how I became a running photographer.”

However, she doesn’t need photographs to remember her experience at the 2013 Boston Marathon. That was the year that two bombs went off right near the finish line, killing three spectators and injuring an estimated 260, and the race was immediately called off as emergency services flooded the area. “I was just 600m from the end when they went off,” says Caroline. “I heard the first one go off and thought it was a 4:00 cut-off gun, but then a second one went off 30 seconds later, so I asked a guy next to me what it was and he said he thought it was probably a cannon being fired to celebrate Patriot’s Day. Then a policeman ran in front of us and stopped us. Everybody just stopped dead, nobody tried to go past, and we stood there for close on two hours, in two degree temperatures, not knowing what was going on and still hoping to be allowed to finish. They just said there had been an incident at the finish.”

“The worst was for the runners around me, many of whom had family waiting for them at the finish line, so there was huge panic amongst the runners. By the time I got back to the hotel, it was already dark, and then I realised people back home had been panicking about me, because they had been tracking me online and my running time had me down as finishing in 4:09, the exact time the bombs went off! However, the race is run mat-to-mat with chip timing, and I was actually a little bit further back after only crossing the line a bit after the starting gun. It was a frightening experience.” But that didn’t stop Caroline going back in 2014, when the organisers invited some 5000 non-finishers from the previous year to come back and run it again, without needing to meet the normal strict qualification criteria. “They did give us a medal in 2013, but I went back and finished the race officially.”

Busy Year Ahead
Today Caroline can look back on over 8000km in race mileage, including 10 marathons in 2010, 11 in 2011, 12 in 2012 and 16 in 2013! “Ok I went a bit overboard in 2013, but not bad for somebody that does no training at all because I have no time in the week to run. My races are my training runs, and if you do two marathons in one weekend, I think that is enough for the week!” She has the Tokyo Marathon this March and will then run Comrades again later in the year, followed by the Frankfurt Marathon in October. Of course, her camera will go with to all these events…

She also has some long trail runs pencilled in. “I’ve done most of the long trail events, including the Outeniqua Quest, Cederberg Challenge, and the Mutter in the Drakensberg, but there are others I still want to do, like Blade Canyon, and the AfricanX is on my bucket list – when I can find somebody slow enough to run at my pace, and who doesn’t mind stopping for me to take hundreds of pics!”

Run, Mr President

On 18 January, Cape Town-based runner Kim Stephens wrote a Facebook status update about President Jacob Zuma and running. Within days it had gone viral and been shared over 20,000 times, featured in the news, and Kim had been asked to do interviews for several radio stations and newspapers. As the 36-year-old explains, it was just something she felt like saying, and she had no idea the effect it would have on people… – BY SEAN FALCONER

“I feel like Zuma needs to go for a run. Takkies on, lube up, head out for a trot, sir. One foot in front of the other, on the pavements of your country. Pass your voters, and non-voters. You can't tell them apart via race, sir. Foot in an uncovered manhole? Sorry about that. Dodge the human waste of the homeless. Run on. Wide berth around the tik-head that might take your emergency R20 Coca-Cola cash. Run. Run some more. Pass the businesses advertising closing down sales, the derelict office blocks. Pass the homes with laundry hanging on communal fences. High-five the babies playing in dirt. Steer clear of the children that should be in school. The school with the long drop, no text books, and an underpaid teacher. Run, Zuma.

Greet the doctors and nurses stumbling bleary-eyed on to public transport to return home after a 48-hour shift for pittance. Breathe deeply as you pass the sewerage pumping into the sea. Smell that? Nearly halfway now, Zuma. Sweating? Run some more. The committed flower-seller, the Big Issue peddler, the beggar. Another beggar. Oh, look sharp, Zuma! Stay right, blue light brigade coming through. Big cars, flashing lights. Someone more important than the man voluntarily patrolling his neighbourhood to protect his children and neighbours. More important than the Big Issue salesman, the beggar. VIP in a big ass car. Run on.

Pass the men sitting on upturned boxes waiting for manual work. Any work. Around the pothole. Climb higher. Run that hill, now. Report the water gushing out of an unkempt pipe as you run by. Spare a thought for the farmers suffering through the drought while you do so. Climb. Push up, past the sprawling informal settlement awaiting housing. You might want to keep your head down here, sir, as you promised them service delivery in return for their votes… years ago. Keep going.

Now from that summit, as you sweat, look down. Look at your people, voters and non. See the big shot businessman quietly funding a school project. See the housewife paying school fees for another woman's children. Look at that beach clean-up team, the students volunteering in an orphanage and the food parcels arriving from a leading grocery chain. You didn't, so they did. Observe the community spirit when a fire breaks out and ravages the shacks of an under-resourced community. Or when a fire ravages part of our precious natural heritage.

Look far from your vantage point and note the unity, mixed marriages, mixed families, students of all races standing together for a common cause. See the colour-blind children of South Africa. Observe keenly the pain and suffering of the poor, with their lack of role models and inefficient education. Take note of the growing force that is standing up against you, to uplift the poor and bring about true equality. See the privileged communities becoming aware of their position, and using it to improve the lives of others. You didn't, so they did. Now run home, Zuma. Back to your 20th child. Back to a life of luxury and total lack of empathy. Mind you don't trip on your shoelace as you go.”

Overnight Fame
Kim says that she put her thoughts into a running context because the sport plays such a central role in her life, but the post was just something she felt like saying, given her concerns about what is happening in SA at the moment. “I am passionately pro-SA and all its beauty, diversity, and complexities, but I don't claim to know it all, and this was just a Facebook status update. I certainly did not pen something with the intention of gaining such a vast reaction, and never in a million years did I think I would be managing personal media appearances and permissions over a Facebook status update.”

“Some people sharing my post absorbed my intention and the messages I received from around SA blew me away. We're beautiful, the citizens of this crazy land, and hopeful, and so strong. Unfortunately, others turned it into something else and sprinkled it with their own agendas, but every negative comment was an opportunity for me to learn. And to those who said that I was posting from a privileged perspective – you're right, I am very privileged, compared to the vast majority of South Africans. That is what moves me to want to see change. I am also passionate about understanding our divides, and finding ways to bring us all closer together, because united we’ll thrive. We need to be cognisant of our past, and positive about our future. We need to give back, uplift and listen.”

Late to Running
Born and raised in the Western Cape, Kim moved to PE at 15 and finished her schooling there, but says she was definitely not sporty. She studied business communications after school, then started a family, moved back to Cape Town, and after her third child, a friend encouraged to her to start walking to lose the baby weight. “I entered the Knysna Forest Half Marathon, which I ran to raise money for a charity that created maternity packs for hospitals. It took me forever to finish, over three hours, but when I came in, I said to my dad I think I’m ready for Comrades!”

As Kim upped her mileage, so she found that she loved the ultras most, and today she has run Comrades twice, done the Two Oceans ultra twice, plus two Puffers and three Otters. “I have an equal love for road and trail – trail running is a spiritual place with beauty that can’t be beaten, but on the road I can just switch off and meditate through the motion. Also, I love road running because it’s one of few communities in SA that is fully integrated. Once we’re all in club kit, nobody knows how much money you have or what job you do – that can’t make you run faster.”

Mixed Reactions
Kim says that the initial media circus around her post lasted a week or two, but things soon quietened down again. Still, she says her efforts to get people thinking will not end there. “I am still getting three or four friend requests a day, and I’ve had amazing conversations with people from all over SA who wanted to converse, not fight. It was very uplifting to see how many people are willing to hold hands and run for the finish line together. That doesn't mean we must stop talking and listening, learning more about the communities around us, and letting go of the prejudices that hold us back. We need to keep running and connecting. Also, I have learnt much through the journey… including, if you write something that might catapult you to some kind of temporary internet fame, use paragraphs!”

Ed’s Note: The publication of Kim’s piece is in no way a reflection of any political views held by Modern Athlete magazine and its staff. Also note that we inserted paragraph breaks in her original Facebook post to make reading it easier.

MiWay sponsors 40th Wally Hayward Marathon

2016 is shaping up to be a big sponsorship year for MiWay Insurance with the announcement of its second sponsorship deal this year. MiWay has been announced as the title sponsor of the 40th Wally Hayward Marathon, taking place at Hoërskool Zwartkop in Centurion on 2 May 2016. Earlier this year, MiWay and B-Active Sports announced their three year partnership of the ULTRA Triathlon Series, which kicks off on 6 March in KZN.

As Head of Marketing and Brand at MiWay, Nthabiseng Moloi, says, “We are delighted to be partnering with the Wally Hayward Marathon. This is part of our ongoing quest to support home-grown events that give athletes the freedom to showcase their talent and improve their performance, in order to compete in other iconic events.”

The 40th Wally Hayward Marathon comprises a marathon, half marathon and 10km road race, and a variety of fun runs. It will once again be held in honour of one of South Africa’s greatest long distance runners. Wally Hayward’s exceptional running career spanned six decades. He represented South Africa at the 1938 British Empire Games (forerunner of the Commonwealth Games), winning a bronze medal in the 6-mile race, and then at the 1952 Helsinki Olympic Games, but is best remembered for his remarkable achievements in the Comrades Marathon, which he won five times, and ran again at the ages of 79 and 80 in the late 80s.

The event caters for the whole family with fun activities planned for kids, and Francois Jordaan, Chairman of the presenting club, Alpha Centurion Runners and Walkers, says, “We are extremely proud, as well as excited, to be partnered with MiWay Insurance who share the same passion for service excellence and a client satisfaction as we do.”

MiWay also recently extended the membership in its ASA-registered running club, MiWay Warriors, to its clients and their friends and family at no cost. “Our increasing involvement in sports, is part of our commitment to fostering a healthy and balanced lifestyle not only for our staff, but for our clients too,” says Moloi.

Online registrations for the marathon are now open, and more race information can be found at www.wally.co.za. Comrades Marathon personnel will also be on hand to provide qualifying athletes with information.

TomTom Launches new TomTom Spark

Fitness enthusiasts can now work out to music and track their activities 24/7 through their GPS fitness watch. TomTom has launched the all-new TomTom Spark GPS Fitness Watch with integrated music player, making it easier for fitness enthusiasts to boost their training. Now users no longer have to strap a phone to their arm or worry about wires getting in the way during their workout. TomTom Spark gives them everything they need in one easy-to-use device on their wrist.

3GB of music storage space on the TomTom Spark means users can now leave their smartphone at home while listening to over 500 songs directly from the watch around their wrist. This highly rated, high quality fitness watch, streams music to a wide variety of bluetooth headphones, and comes preloaded with Running Trax – a thirty minute mix of motivating, high energy, upbeat dance anthems – from some of the world’s best DJs, curated by The Ministry of Sound. Playlists can be easily accessed and downloaded to the TomTom Spark from iTunes as well as Windows Media Player.

“We know that music plays an important role when it comes to motivating and improving sports performance, but relying on a smartphone is an uncomfortable experience,” says Corinne Vigreux, Managing Director of TomTom. “The unique combination of an integrated music player, a built-in heart rate monitor, as well as 24/7 activity tracking, multi-sport modes and GPS in the TomTom Spark makes it easier than ever to track progress, improve overall fitness levels and ultimately get more from your workout.”

Steps, active minutes, distance, calories burned, and sleep duration are tracked by the 24/7 activity tracking feature in the TomTom Spark. Users are able to set and track daily, weekly, and monthly goals while following their progress towards these goals on their watch or via the TomTom MySports app on their smartphones. The built-in heart rate monitor accurately tracks heart rate, without the need for a chest strap. The multi-sport mode means that users can track all of their indoor and outdoor sporting activity including running, cycling, swimming, treadmill and gym workouts.

TomTom Spark also includes highly accurate GPS tracking to provide real-time information including time, distance, speed and pace. Users can upload their stats via the MySports app and review their stats wirelessly on multiple platforms including TomTom MySports, RunKeeper, Nike+ and more.

More information on this fantastic product can be found here.

Rest in Peace, Riana

The Modern Athlete tam was saddened to hear earlier this week that one of South Africa’s greatest female ultra-marathon runners, Riana van Niekerk, passed away on 13 February after a nine-month battle with pancreatic cancer. She was just 39 years of age.

Riana was diagnosed shortly before the 2015 Comrades Marathon, when seemingly in top racing shape having just recently posted her sixth win at the Old Mutual Om Die Dam 50km ultra two months earlier in March. She had also won this event in 2002, 2005, 2007, 2009 and 2014, which included a very fast 3:22:39 in 2007, still the seventh-fastest time for 50km by a South African woman on a legal (unaided) course.

Unfortunately, six months of chemotherapy and having parts of her gallbladder and pancreas removed could not save her, and in a poignant message to friends and family on social media just after her passing, her husband Allie wrote, “She fought like the champ she was.”

Riana finished the Comrades Marathon seven times and was a four-time gold medallist (2004, 2006, 2008 and 2011), including being first South African woman home in 2008, when she finished sixth. That same year she had been first SA woman in the Old Mutual Two Oceans Marathon, finishing fifth in 3:53:09, and she earned three Old Mutual Two Oceans Marathon gold medals during her accomplished career, which also featured wins in the Jackie Mekler Ultra in 2008 and the Forever Resorts Loskop Marathon 50km and City to City 50km (both in 2010).

While ultra’s were her strongest area, she also won the SA Marathon title in 2009, having finished as runner-up in 2008, and boasted a marathon PB of 2:43:00 and half marathon best of 1:15:48.

So rest in peace, Riana, you will be sorely missed in running circles, and all our thoughts are with Allie, her husband, coach, manager and chief supporter.

The memorial service for Riana will be held on Thursday 18 February at 11am at the NG Kerk Wierdapark, 275 Piet Hugo Street, Centurion.

Two Loves of my Life

Running has always meant a lot to me, so when I met the man of my dreams through running and we could share running as well, it made me so incredibly happy. – BY NANDI ZALOUMIS-MITCHELL

My running is my closest friend, my counsellor and my confidante. Running is who I turn to in dark times, and also in times of joy. I am running, and it is me. That’s because running saved me when I was a teen suffering the depths of despair as an anorexic. It was my freedom to just be me. Running never judged me. As I grew stronger and was able to gain control over the anorexia, my running remained a vital part of my recovery, and to this day is a constant in my world.

I know that I run faster than my daily challenges and problems, because after a run it takes them a while to catch up to me. I am also inspired by the strong women at the sharp end of the field who do not make excuses in times of adversity and when training is difficult. They simply find a way to get out and make the sacrifices necessary to be a top runner. That motivates me to run 80 to 90km per week, enjoying both trail and road running, and I have now run the Comrades Marathon on two occasions, clocking a 10:19 in 2014 and an 8:40 in 2015. I have also run the Maritzburg Marathon and the Mandela Day Marathon, and I traditionally do a New Year’s long run as well, and this year I did 65km.

Best Running Shoes Ever!
I met my love through running and we were married in October. Jody has also run the Comrades, and he knows how much running means to me. That even inspired his proposal. We went into the Nike Store at Gateway Mall and there was a surprise waiting for me: A pair of customised shoes, with the words “I Love” on the right shoe and “Nandi” on the other, along with a stunning diamond ring tied to the laces. He proposed to me right there in the store!

Our shared love of running is amazing, as it gives us the opportunity to share our sport and be the best partners we can be to each other. We start our day together with a 4am run, and on most afternoons we also run a few kilometres on the trails together. Our world would not be the same without running, and I know that running will still take us on many adventures together, and that we are going to see amazing places, share special moments and meet new friends along the way.

No Horsing Around
We were married in October, which turned into quite an adventure in itself. We planned a Saturday morning 5:30am sunrise ceremony on Mpate Mountain just outside Dundee, where we run each morning, thinking it would be the perfect time and place to share with our family and friends, some of whom flew out from the States and Australia for the wedding. Then on the Friday afternoon I was washing my one horse when he kicked me, shattering my arm in four places and dislocating my elbow. I was rushed to Newcastle for emergency surgery and the doctors told us to reconsider the wedding, as I would only be released the next morning.

So we phoned around to postpone the ceremony, and when I was discharged at 7:30am, we still had the reception at 9:30, which carried on through the day, and then we had the wedding ceremony on the Sunday at 5:30am. I had planned it as a weekend away for many of the guests, including an early morning run on Sunday, so luckily quite a few could stay for the ceremony. It was simple, no chairs, misty conditions on the mountain, my mother played the flute for my wedding entrance, and it all went well, but I have to be honest, I don’t remember that much due to the morphine I was on for the pain!

Stronger Than Ever
Two weeks later I started running again, against the doctor’s wishes – they ended up replacing my cast twice due to it stinking so much from sweat – and funnily enough, I ran my fastest marathon in training just after that, so two weeks off did me the world of good! Now my goal is to get my marathon time under three hours, and after that I want to get as close to a silver medal as I can at Comrades.

Ant gets some moral support from Wife Susan and daughter Claudia.

Breaking Barriers

In the last three years, Anel Oosthuizen has established herself as South Africa’s best senior female race walker since the reign of 2004 Olympian, Nicolene Cronje, who was also coached by Carl Meyer. – BY MARK MUNDELL

In 2015 Anel took her 20km PB time from 1:42:40 to 1:38:03, an improvement of 4.81%, and the University of Johannesburg athlete says her sights are firmly set on Rio in August. “Olympic qualifying of 1:36:00 is my goal for 2016, and everything that comes with it will be a bonus,” says Anel. “Last year was my first senior year, and just like 2014, I had a phenomenal year, despite some setbacks when I twisted my ankle badly, which carried over into 2015, but through proper care I managed to race well.”

Anel had very good coaching as a youth and junior athlete, where a good foundation was laid, but it’s when she teamed up with Carl Meyer in her last junior year in 2013 that her performances improved markedly. “Since then I have learned how to train at the correct intensities. Other than that, the only other secret is to follow my programme – achieving the small milestones helps me to believe in my goals, and with the help of my coach to set realistic goals.”

“In the last three years I have also overcome my fear of disqualification, as my coach helped me to improve my technique to the extent that I have not had any judging problems in any of my local or international races since 2013. I became more confident and I can now focus more on racing well.”

Dreaming of Rio
Like 2015, this year promises to be another one of excellence for South African race walking, with the possible inclusion of four race walkers in the Olympic team. Two have already qualified, Marc Mundell and Lebogang Shange, and all eyes will be on Wayne Snyman and Anel Oosthuizen, the two walkers most likely to achieve qualification as well. “I plan to have my first Olympic Games qualifying attempt in March, when I will be doing two 20km events in Europe,” says Anel. “Thereafter I hope to have another opportunity at the World Race Walk Team Championships, and possibly a final attempt towards the end of May at another event in Europe.”

Regular Race Waking columnist Marc Mundell is a 2012 Olympian and the SA and African 50km race walking record holder (3:54:12).

Phindi comes closes in on her COmrades medal in 2012.

Little journeys

On 31 December 2014, I had a little drinks session on my balcony to welcome the new year in. As part of the fun, I put up a whiteboard for everyone to write down their goals for 2015, and most of the 30-odd guests wrote something down. Mine was to do 12 marathons and 21 half marathons in the coming calendar year, a commitment of about 33 weekends of the year. – BY JONATHAN KAPLAN, FORMER RUGBY TEST REFEREE

The year got off to a slow start, as I was still recovering from a nerve issue developed towards the end of 2014, and I could only really start running again in the middle of January. The Peninsula Marathon was my first, which I had to do – it starts practically outside my house! Besides a little hurricane in Lakeside, it was a fine plod, although running a familiar route (my fifth) didn't make the last bit any easier – the sun really starts to beat down as you approach the last little mound leading to the finish – but there are no time pressures for me these days.

The Cango Caves 42 has always been one of my favourites, and my AAC club had quite a large contingent going through, so it made it a lot more fun! Essentially a downhill marathon with a sauna waiting at about the 32km marker, it was nevertheless the same fun as before. Thanks to my old mate Jonny Aitken of Wanderers for keeping me company for about 10 kays and reminding me that I'm a little heavier than when he used to chase me round the rugby fields in Joburg.

My seventh Two Oceans was run in perfect weather, with a light drizzle accompanying us for the first 21 kays. Then we climbed this unfamiliar 7km hill that is Ou Kaapse Weg, from the back side, and it became a little tougher. It did, however, give me time to absorb the incredible damage that the recent fires had done to our environment. The highlight of the race was encouraging a much younger and fitter athlete, who was having a bad run, to plug on to the finish. For about 8km I cajoled and confused him into not just going home – he lived “around the corner.” My medal has more colour than those finishing ahead of me… it appears to have been reserved for those that are slightly older, more mature and a little heavier.

Overseas Expeditions
I had planned a trip to France to run the Paris Marathon and I wasn't disappointed. I joined up with a group from Regents in KZN, and the greatest photographer I know, Brett Florens (20 Comrades as well). A little night out with an extended group and the race was upon us, setting off down the Champs Élysées towards the Louvre. The initial group of friends eventually splintered, but I was happy to share the maiden journey of Sam Edwards (along with new running friends Paul, Melissa, Vanithay, Ed and Paige). My race itself was one of my all time fav’s, with many sights along the way, massive support and lots of amazing and very noisy bands! What a privilege to have run this race. We went for a few drinks afterwards and that quiet little afternoon decision turned into a huge night for some. We ended up at the Buddha Bar. That's all.

Next I hopped over to England for some chill time with friends, and the next Saturday, six days after Paris, I was in a tiny little village in East Anglia called Bungay. After a few of the local beers and a pizza to prep for the race (Prof. Noakes would not have been impressed), the next day I ran the Black Dog 42 along with about 350 others. The weather was unreal, staying around 10 degrees, and the course was mostly flat. We did two loops of Bungay to Beccles and back, on country roads through some really quaint places, and as I was finishing the first lap, I had to run past the half marathon start and got a round of applause from the 1000 odd runners. A couple of minutes later, I got swallowed up as they started their race.

I returned to SA and made the trip to George to run my fourth marathon in 21 days. The Outeniqua 42 is a beaut of a race run from George to Wilderness, with breathtaking scenery, and I was running slow enough to enjoy most of it. The last 10km are mostly downhill, which gave me a chance to find that delusion once again that I am actually Superman. Or is it Kaplan America?

Tough Day in the Office
After a few weeks’ break, I ran my seventh Comrades. I thought the prep went ok, but I suppose I just had one of those days. The huge doses of echinacea that I was taking before the race to offset a little cold could possibly have hidden illness, but I really had a poor run. The special event that this is, is made by the camaraderie of the runners and the support of the public, and there was plenty of it. I had some retching and vomiting for about 20km from about the 28km mark, and from then on I was a mess. Too proud to stop, I just continued on at a really pedestrian pace (pun intended) and finished 10 minutes before the cut-off. Thanks to Candyce Hall for parting with her flavoured milk at the finish as I attempted to put a smile back on my face, and Craig, our club captain, was incredibly helpful after the run as my body went into a cramp frenzy. I must have resembled a spastic break-dancer as I lay on the ground recovering!

A winter fattening up of sorts followed, but the lure of Knysna proved too enticing, and before I really had time to recover, I found myself lining up at the start of the Knysna Forest 42. I don't remember the first 15km, because I hadn't yet woken up… which was a good thing… and I shuffled through this very tough expedition to finally arrive at the festive finish with another one in the bag.

I love a little weekend getaway, and Riebeeck-Kasteel is one of my fav destinations, with the Royal Hotel one of my fav hotels. A near perfect run weekend followed with a great crew of five of us running one of the best social runs known to mankind – Jana, Craig, Caroline and Terry stuck with me for most of the way and waited when I wilted, so that we could all finish together (in a heap). The gin and tonics at the Royal are beyond tasty, and we drank them dry, joined by Kenny and Lisa Jackson. We had the time we were all after.

The Cape Town Marathon is one you simply have to do if you live here. The course was improved from previous editions as the race attempts to stamp itself in the World Class category, and I ran a bit with Marius Hurter (Bok prop) and Ryan Williams (UCT & False Bay), and finished with a wet sail storming home strong on the inside rail!

‘Heatwave’ in England
Whilst doing some ‘work’ at the Rugby World Cup in England, I snuck in a marathon in Chester. What a fantastic event! Run in perfect conditions, it didn't stop some of the locals complaining about the boiling temperature – it never rose above 16 the whole day – or the hillock at the end, which was nothing more than an oversized footbridge! I wasn't the only AAC runner there, and neither was I the only South African, as I was met at the start by my running friend Adnaan from Central Athletics. At the start they introduced some bloke who had done nearly 400 marathons – made me think my attempt to get to 100 was child's play! The race itself was bloody awesome, and if I'm ever in that neck of the woods again, I will definitely be going for an action replay!

My 12th was the Winelands Marathon in Stellenbosch. It was my fourth take on this race, but my first in 25 years… Long time between drinks! Anyhoo, I arrived in time for the start, only just, but fell behind looking for some of the others whose numbers we were holding. I had told Sabine I was going to run her first with her, and whilst there were some gaps missing from the picture, I did start and finish with her. For me, the finish line was a big relief as the commitment finally came to an end. I did enjoy every step of the way… almost.

Just one more…
Not having had enough, I decided on the spur of the moment to drive through to Heidelberg for the Vlaktes 42. I stayed at Swellendam the night before and woke up at 4am to get to the start on time. After an initial bit of climbing to get through to the 12km marker, we were treated to a gradual downhill drag to Witsand. The weather was very good, the finish on the beach was lekker, and the baker’s dozen was in the bag.

One last plod awaited, and such a friendly mob in PE easily distracts one from the inevitable windy conditions, but the route itself was flat and pretty forgiving. It was my 50th standard marathon and 70th overall, and with that I finally caught up with the number of test matches that I had done as a referee. I have 30 to go to reach the magical 100, and it all starts again in 2016 with the Miami Marathon on the way to my nephew’s Barmitzvah in Toronto.

These marathons are just small journeys, little steps joined together to form the greater journey. I know there are others who have done much more for much longer, and I take my hat off to them all, but it doesn't make me any less proud of my little steps.

Frankfurt Marathon Finish

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