Addicted in SA

It began with “Luisa, we have great news for you,” the mail that informed me about my gap year placement in South Africa. So in August 2014 I came to Durbanville in the Cape and started to volunteer in a children’s home, and from the first day I enjoyed the time with the kids, but after a while I was looking for a physical challenge… – BY LOUISA ORTH

I missed the feeling of being absolutely exhausted after a rugby match or boxing session back in Germany. So I registered in the nearby gym, where I could be found on the treadmill. Starting with 2km, I was able to run 10km non-stop after two months, but after four months my improvement slowed down. I needed a goal to keep me motivated. That was when I met Jacques. He used to run the previous year, but lost it somehow, so we decided to meet for a short 5km run through town. We have run every week since, and then registered for parkrun, and eventually decided to train for a race, “just to try it out.” And so in November I finished the Edgemead 10km in a time of 57 minutes.

Hooked for life
From there my addiction grew. Just a few days after my first race I signed up for the Sanlam running club, and every weekend we are now participating in at least one race. Trail runs, road runs, orienteering… I tried everything, and half of my life is now about carbo-loading, speed training, magnesium and mindsets. It’s not just about finishing a race any more, because I am heading towards sub-44 for 10 kays, and in the 15km I have improved from 79 minutes in my first race to winning my age category prize in 71 minutes!

Now I am sure there was a reason why I got the project place in South Africa: To find my passion for running! It fulfils me incredibly to reach a goal that I have trained for, and to be part of a running community that shares the same ‘addiction’ is simply breathtaking. So even if I have to leave South Africa soon – with more running equipment and medals than anything else – I will never stop running!

Dedicated supporter all around the world

Hints for Shinsplints

One of the most common overuse running injuries is shinsplints, a burning pain that results when small tears occur in the muscles around your shin bone (tibia). If you have it, here’s what you need to know to rest and recover. – BY SEAN FALCONER

The most likely ‘candidates’ for shinsplints, or medial tibial stress syndrome, is new runners or those runners returning from an extended break, and this injury is usually a sign that you've done too much mileage, too soon. Basically, it’s your body saying it can’t handle what you’re putting it through – or that you’re wearing shoes that don’t provide enough cushioning, either because they’re worn out, not meant for long mileage, or just not suited to your biomechanics.

Time to Rest
Many runners try to run through the pain, especially if they’re following a training programme building up to a goal event, but when the first twinges of pain strike, the best thing to do is cut back on mileage and intensity to a comfortable level for a few days or up to a week – in other words, to a level of running where your shins don’t hurt – then slowly up your mileage again using the tried and tested 10 percent rule: Never increase your mileage by more than 10 percent per week.

If all running makes your shins hurt, the best advice is to take a complete break from running and rather ride your bike, do some pool-running or swim, to give your shins a complete rest. Regular icing of the affected area is also recommended, and taping the shins can also relieve the pain and speed up healing, but the easiest and best way to avoid shinsplints is to increase mileage gradually – and have the patience to rest long enough if you do get shinsplints pain.

A handy self-test is to run or hop on the spot. If you feel pain in your shin, rather stop running and rest. (If it is severe pain, even caused by walking, it could be a stress fracture.) If the shin is just tight when you run or hop, run with caution. If the shin tightens up or starts to hurt only once you have been running for a while, back off your mileage and intensity for a while.

Rene with Andre at the Berlin Marathon

Comrades 2016: It Will Humble You

The 2016 Comrades Marathon campaign was launched by the Comrades Marathon Association (CMA) in Johannesburg on Thursday 13 August, with the proudly South African 2015 Comrades Marathon winners, Gift Kelehe and Caroline Wostmann in attendance, along with the nation’s other top runners, sporting personalities and stakeholders.

The 2016 campaign for the world’s most famous ultra-marathon is centered on the humbling aspect of the race, with the slogan: ‘Izokuthoba – It Will Humble You’. CMA General Manager, Chris Fisher unveiled the 2016 campaign saying, “With its 90-year history, the Comrades Marathon is recognised as the biggest and oldest ultra-marathon in the world, and also the most challenging. The beauty of this event is that it is a humbling experience and you may never be the same person again once you have completed it. My call to you is to get involved, either as a runner, a volunteer or a supporter.”

CMA Chairperson, Macdonald Chitja adds: “We are pleased to unveil our 2016 Comrades Marathon campaign. Any Comrades runner will tell you that running The Ultimate Human Race is indeed a humbling experience. We welcome all of our runners, supporters and stakeholders to share in the humility, camaraderie and beauty of race day on Sunday 29 May 2016.”

The 91st Comrades Marathon will be a Down-run, starting at the Pietermaritzburg City Hall at 5:30am and ending 12 hours later at the Sahara-Kingsmead Cricket Stadium in Durban, covering a distance of around 90km. 1 September 2015 is the opening date for entries and the entry period will close on 30 November 2015, or as soon as the entry cap of 20,000 has been reached. Prospective entrants are encouraged to get their entries in early to avoid disappointment.

Entry fees for the 2016 Comrades Marathon are as follows:
• Local Entries: R420.00
• Rest of Africa: R700.00
• International: R2400.00

South African runners will be eligible for the ‘early bird’ entry fee of R380 if their entry is received before 30 September 2015. The regular South African entry fee of R420 will kick in from 1 October 2015 until the entry process is closed. Entry is free to all runners who have completed the Comrades Marathon 25 times or more.

Runners can enter as follows:
• Online via the Comrades Marathon website: www.comrades.com;
• By posting their completed entry form with proof of payment to the CMA Office in Pietermaritzburg: P.O. Box 100621, Scottsville, 3209;
• By handing in their completed entry form together with payment at the CMA office in Pietermaritzburg.

Entry forms will be available at local running clubs, provincial sporting federations and the CMA; as well as selected qualifying races which the Comrades Team will be attending from September to November. Qualifying for the 2016 Comrades Marathon will be applicable from 30 August 2015 till 2 May 2016. Runners are advised that the 2015 Comrades Marathon will not be an automatic qualifier for next year’s race. The Substitution window period will be from 1 – 21 April 2016.

For more information, visit the Comrades Marathon website

Wayde van Niekerk

Backwards for the Bees

Running the Comrades forwards is hard enough as it is for most runners, so just imagine how much harder it must be to run it backwards! But that is what Farai Sinomwe did this year, and it should go down as one of the most incredible Comrades runs of all time… and he did it to raise awareness of the plight of bees, because they are so important to all of us. – BY SEAN FALCONER

Just before the Old Mutual Two Oceans Marathon earlier this year, Farai Sinomwe of the Manoni Running Club in Johannesburg contacted the organisers in Cape Town to ask if he would be allowed to run the race backwards. Not the route in reverse, take note, but actually facing the wrong way. The reaction he got was “I never heard of such a thing. Why would anyone want to?” In fact, every time the Rastafarian beekeeper enters a race, he soon finds himself listening to all the usual jokes: “Most of the time I get ‘You’re going the wrong way,’ but I also get asked what I’ve been smoking! Still, people are supportive, and that helps to keep me going.”

With Oceans behind him – if you’ll excuse the pun – and having also run backwards in the Old Mutual Om Die Dam 50km ultra, Farai next set his sights on the Comrades, and finished in 11:41:31. Along the way he received an incredible reaction, from spectators and fellow runners alike. As Modern Athlete’s graphic designer Caroline Collings explains, “I had a wonderful chat with him when I caught up to him, since he was facing me the whole time, but it had taken me till past halfway just to catch him! What he did was just incredible.”

Inspired to go Back
It all started a few months ago when Farai was called out to collect a swarm of bees and was driving home in the early hours when his car broke down. “It was one o'clock in the morning and I was driving on a very dark Corlett Drive on the outskirts of Alexandra in my battered old Peugeot, with the bees buzzing angrily in the boot, when the car simply died. I realised I'd have to push the car to the top of the hill before I could coast the few kilometres back home, but I soon realised I wouldn’t make it pushing the car the normal way. So, I turned around, with my back to the boot, and found it far easier.”

Two hours later Farai made it home, transferred the bees to their new home and finally got to bed, but the next day he noticed something when he got out of bed. “My quads felt like they got the most amazing workout, and I realised that the bees had helped me discover a really useful training technique, so I decided to add some backwards running to my training.” That saw Farai enter a few 10km races as a backwards runner, and then he stepped up to 21km at the Pick n Pay Half Marathon. “I ran a 2:10 and had many people asking me questions, and that got me thinking about doing it for a good cause, so I decided that since I am a beekeeper, and the bees are in trouble right now, I would run backwards for the bees.”

All around the world, bee populations are in decline, due to a combination of insecticides, loss of habitat, disease and global warming, and this in turn threatens the very food sources that humans rely on. Nearly 85 percent of the world’s flowering plants depend upon pollinators like bees to reproduce, and this includes more than two-thirds of the world’s crop species of fruits, seeds and livestock feed. The bees are thus vital to the food chain, and people like Farai are helping to bring much-needed attention to their plight. “I decided to run races backwards to raise awareness about the importance of bees in the environment, and all funds I raise will be used to establish and manage new hives, as well as for creating training opportunities and jobs for new beekeepers, through my business, Blessed Bee Africa, which does bee removals and relocating in the city.”

Big C Backwards
So, with a backwards half marathon ticked off and a new cause to run for, the dreadlocked runner next moved on to the marathon mark at the Township Marathon, clocking in at 4:35, and then he ran the Om Die Dam 50km in 6:15 and Oceans in 6:10. Next he decided to run the Comrades backwards as well… Now, keep in mind that Farai already had four Comrades medals, with two 11-hour finishes in 2010 and 2011, but then came a Bill Rowan 8:03:20 in 2013 and a 7:06:26 finish last year for a silver medal, so this man can really run! Forwards, that is… but he gave up on another fast time to run for the bees this year.

“Physically it was a bit tough and my quads were burning at the end. Also, at some points there were too many people next to the road, so I had to turn around to see where I was going, because I was bumping into people, but soon as the road was clear again I turned around again. I was so impressed with the running community and spectators, for all their support, because it made me feel like I was doing something good. Even now, weeks after the race, I hear people asking about the backwards runner, whether I made it, and I want to thank them for all their support. I will be back for more backwards races, so people must look out for me and say hello.”

You can support Farai’s efforts to save the bees at Blessed Bee Africa on Facebook, or call him on 084 662 8761. He says he really needs help with transportation and building materials for hives, so any assistance will be much appreciated.

Sidenote #1: Benefits of Backwards
Various studies have shown that backward running can be hugely beneficial to athletes, including helping you maintain a more upright posture, improving balance, and lessening the impact on your knees due to a softer footfall. A study at Stellenbosch University even found that backwards running can burn more calories! Added to that, it promotes a better relationship between your muscles and helps them deliver more power, safely, say the experts.

However, developing the right technique is vital to avoid injury or accident. First, find a safe training venue, such as a park, beach or athletics track. Then it’s shoulders over your feet, arms held low and close to the body, and push off from the balls of your feet, trying not to lift them too high off the ground. Oh, and remember to look over your shoulder. Or better yet, take a training partner along to act as your guide, and if you both want to run backwards, take it in turns to be the guide.

Sidenote #2: Backwards Records
There is actually a recognised sport called Retrorunning or Reverse Running, and world records have been recorded from the 100m sprint all the way up to the marathon. At present the fastest time for the men’s backwards 100m is 13.6 seconds, run by German Roland Wegner in 2007. At the same meet in Horgau, German Isabella Wagner set the women’s record at 16.8s. The men’s marathon record of 3:42:41 was set by Germany’s Achim Aretz in 2010, while Kerstin Metzler-Mennenga of Liechtenstein holds the women’s marathon record thanks to her 4:42:39 effort in Rome in 2008.

There is also a South African connection here: On 12 October 2004 new world records for women in the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay were all set on the Coetzenberg track in Stellenbosch by Riana Truter (100m – 20.3s), Marjorie Isaks (200m – 43.5s) and Marjorie, Deidré Gerstner, Ilse Gideons and Eloïze Fry in the relay (1:26.9s). By 2008 all of these records had been bettered by German athletes.

There are also recorded ultra distance runs, such as Plennie L. Wingo of the USA walking 13,000km backwards from Santa Monica in California to Istanbul in Turkey in 1931-1932. In slightly more recent times, Arvind Landya of India set the Trans-USA record for walking 5100km backwards from Los Angeles to New York in 107 days from August to December 1984. So Farai’s run from Durban to Pietermaritzburg is nowhere near being the longest backwards run ever recorded, but it is the first recorded Backwards Comrades, and he is thus in the record books.

Winter Alternatives

Winters are not for sissies. They’re dark and cold, and can be downright miserable. But that doesn’t mean you have to take months off from training only to start from scratch come early spring. There are other options to beat the cold. – BY RAY ORCHISON

If you’re not one of the brave souls willing to tackle the dark of night or skate across the tar on frost then your first option is to hit the gym, which gives you a number of cross-training options. During a jam-packed running season, there is often little time for anything other than running, so the winter months are an opportune time to get back to some strength work. Key muscle groups to focus on for runners include the glutes, quads, calves, hamstrings and core.

Spending some time on strength work will go a long way to keeping you injury-free and will make you stronger and faster come the start of the new running season in September. Here are a few recommended cross-training workouts and their benefits:

1 Rowing machine
Time: 32 minutes
Workout: 5min easy warm-up, then 5x2min on high resistance as fast as you can with 3min easy between, then 5min easy cool-down.
Benefit: Develops all-round body strength and cardio capacity.

2 Elliptical trainer
Time:
20 minutes
Workout: 20min easy
Benefit: Reduces impact from the road (especially good if coming back from injury) and develops base fitness.

3 Stair master
Time:
20 minutes
Workout: 5min easy on bike to warm up, then 10x30sec fast with 30sec easy between, then 5min easy on bike to cool down.
Benefit: Develops strength, speed and cardio capacity.

4 Swimming
Time:
20 minutes
Workout: 5min easy to warm up, then 10min of 1 lap hard/1 lap easy, then 5min easy to cool down.
Benefit: Develops core strength and lung capacity. (Start with short swims if you’re a beginner.)

Hamster on a Wheel
Some countries get so cold during winter that it’s not actually possible to train outdoors, and in these countries, many top runners do the bulk of their training for months on treadmills and still achieve some amazing results. The treadmill is a great option for getting your easy runs done – I say “easy” runs, because it’s very difficult to do proper quality sessions like hill repeats or intervals on a treadmill. It’s difficult to gauge correct pace, build up to correct pace or work out what the incline for your hill repeats should be. Also, trying to maintain your running pace while pressing buttons and pulling levers is bound to end up with you on the floor behind the treadmill with a case of ‘belt-burn.’

When you do quality sessions outside, you’re working harder and therefore generating a lot more heat, which makes colder mornings or evenings far more doable. Therefore, my advice is to use the treadmill for your easy runs and hit the road or the trails for the balance.

Midday Running Break
Another great option is to head out for a quick run during your lunch break or between meetings. Instead of sitting at your desk putting calories in, hit the road and burn excess calories while setting yourself up for a great running season. Here are a few great lunchtime workouts to keep you improving your fitness during winter:

Midday Run 1: Take the Stairs
Time:
45 minutes
Workout: 20min easy warm-up, then 20×20-30m stair sprints with walk down recovery, then 15min easy cool-down.
Benefit: Develops your explosive power and fires up your fast-twitch muscle fibres.

Midday Run 2: Run Hard & Rest
Time:
46 minutes
Workout: 20min easy warm-up, then 4x2min hard with 1min rest between, then 15min easy cool-down.
Benefit: Develops your speed endurance.

Midday Run 3: Short Sprints
Time:
40 minutes
Workout: 20min easy warm-up, then 5x30sec sprints with 2min easy jog between, then 10min easy cool-down.
Benefit: Gets the legs turning over and develops base speed.

Midday Run 4: Hop to it!
Time:
36-40 minutes
Workout: 20min easy warm-up, then 2-4x100m single leg hops (50m on right leg, then 50m on left leg) with 3min easy jog between, then 10min easy cool-down.
Benefit: Develops base strength. (If you’re a novice, start with 1 or 2 reps and gradually build up from there.)

No More Excuses
Before you know it the smell of spring will fill the air and the weekends will be packed with races. Don’t waste the last six weeks or so of winter tucked up under the duvet or stuck behind your desk. Get out there and start working on your weaknesses. What you do now will go a long way to ensuring a great and fulfilling running season.

Mid-race family pic

Super C!

Mostly known for its flu-fighting properties, Vitamin C can also pack a punch and influence your performance out on the road, as well as help you recover quicker. – BY ESMÉ MARÉ, R.D. AT CHRISTINE PETERS AND ASSOCIATES

Vitamin C is a powerful antioxidant, which may help lower the risk for cancer by reducing free radicals and lipid oxidation in body tissues, and it is also involved in reactions that form collagen, a connective tissue protein. Added to that, vitamin C is also required for wound healing and is a water-soluble vitamin essential for normal growth and development. However, we cannot synthesise our own Vitamin C, and excessive amounts can easily be removed from the body through our urine, within 24 hours, rather than it being stored. This means that we need to consume Vitamin C on a regular basis.

Special Help for Athletes
Vitamin C has some distinct functions that can influence athletic performance, such as:
• Assisting in the synthesis of carnitine, which is important for energy metabolism.
• Assisting in the production of epinephrine and norepinephrine, which makes glucose available to your working muscles.
• Assisting in the transportation and absorption of non-heme iron (mainly from fruits and vegetables).
• Assisting in the resynthesis of Vitamin E to its active antioxidant state.
• For runners taking on the bigger distances, Vitamin C is a powerful antioxidant that limits the damage from oxidative stress that one undergoes during a long run or race.
• It plays an important role in the healing process by building protein, scar tissue, ligaments and blood vessels.
• Vitamin C also helps the body maintain bone tissue and cartilage.

Good Food Sources
Fresh fruits and vegetables have the highest vitamin C content while meats and dairy products are low in vitamin C, and cereal grains contain none (unless fortified). Fortified beverages and cereals are good sources. Vitamin C can easily be destroyed when exposed to heat (cooking) and oxygen (air) and can easily be removed from foods boiled in water and strained, as it is water-soluble. Methods of cooking less likely to compromise the vitamin C content of foods include steaming, microwaving and stir-frying.

Top Tips
• The recommended dietary allowance of vitamin C for men is 90mg/day and for females it is 75mg/day. (Smoking increases a person’s need for vitamin C, so smokers need an additional 35mg/day.)
• It is easy to meet the body’s requirement for vitamin C by eating the recommended amount of fruits and vegetables a day (five a day). Remember that a serving of vegetables is half a cup cooked or one cup raw, or one cup of vegetable juice. A serving of fruit is one medium fruit, a cup of chopped or canned fruit, or one cup of fruit juice.
• Have a fruit at breakfast or at each snack, or have some fruit juice before, during or after training. Include one or two portions of vegetables (including salads) at lunch and dinner. Remember, foods high in vitamin C also contain fibre and other vitamins, including A and K.
• Taking megadoses of vitamin C is not fatally harmful, but side-effects are common when exceeding a dosage of 2000mg/day for a prolonged period of time. These include nausea, diarrhoea, nosebleeds and abdominal cramps.

Fruits and Vegetables High in Vitamin C
Sweet red pepper, raw, 1 cup – 283mg
Sweet green pepper, raw, 1 cup – 120mg
Hot chili peppers, raw, 1 pepper – 109m
Broccoli, cooked, 1 cup – 101mg
Brussel sprouts, cooked, 1 cup – 97mg
Kale, cooked, 1 cup – 80mg
Peas, boiled, 1 cup – 77mg
Tomato paste, 1 cup – 57mg
Red cabbage, raw, 1 cup – 54mg
Potato, 1 large – 39mg
Tomato, 1 large – 32mg

Papaya, 1 large – 188mg
Orange juice, 1 cup – 124mg
Cranberry juice cocktail, 1 cup – 107mg
Strawberries, 1 cup – 98mg
Grapefruit juice, 1 cup – 94mg
Kiwi, 1 medium – 76mg
Mango, 1 large – 75mg
Pineapple, 1 cup – 74mg
Orange, 1 large – 70mg
Cantaloupe, 1 cup – 59mg

Pre-race family pic

Following Pheidippides

Michael Botes is set to run nearly 250km this September in the Spartathlon Ultra in Greece – and tick an item off his bucket list – as he retraces the footsteps of the mythical hero Pheidippides. – BY SEAN FALCONER

According to ancient Greek legend, when the Athenian army faced the invading Persian army at Marathon in 490 BC, they sent a messenger named Pheidippides to run 240km to Sparta to ask for help. The Spartans said they would help, but according to their law could only march once the moon was full, so Pheidippides ran 240km back to Marathon to report that no reinforcements were coming, then joined in the fighting at the Battle of Marathon, which the Athenian army won. He was then despatched some 40km to Athens to report on the great victory, and allegedly collapsed and died after uttering the words, “We have won.”

Fact or Fiction
Of course, historians will point out that this story is likely not true, or at the very least highly romanticised, but nevertheless, it has laid the foundation for two modern-day running traditions. The first is the well-known marathon distance of 40-42km, which has become the pinnacle of long distance running the world over. The other is the much less well known Spartathlon event of 246km, from Athens to Sparta, which was first run in 1982, and this year SA runner Michael Botes will be one of just under 400 athletes lining up to take on this historical challenge.

“One of my mates mentioned it to me in 2012 and while I am not a natural born athlete, I love running and extreme challenges, so I decided to go do it, not only for the distance, but also because I love a race with history and culture behind it,” says Michael. “I was fortunate enough to crack an entry first time round, because they normally get about 900 entries from all over the world and use a lottery system to select 390, and there are fairly strict entry criteria as well, including running 100km in under 10 hours.”

Michael adds that he will become just the second South African runner to take on the Spartathlon. “Working through previous results, the only South African I could find was Norrie Williamson in 1992, when he finished fifth in a time of 29:30:41. So this is not a well known event amongst SA runners, but interestingly, while running the Comrades this year, I ran with and chatted to three British and two US runners, and all five knew what the Spartathlon is.”

Black Belt Runner
Michael (52) lives in Johannesburg with wife Ina and their two teenaged daughters, works as an investment adviser and runs for Randburg Harriers. He took up running seven years ago as part of his quest to lose weight after reaching 107kg. “A very good friend was also my doctor and kept nagging me that I was over 40 and needed to do something about my weight. Now my daughter had started judo, and I was spending two hours per week watching her train, so I decided to try it myself. I got my black belt, but because belt gradings were in November and then we had a three-month break, I needed to maintain my fitness, so I took up running. I found that I’m not a fast runner, especially on shorter distances, but as I progressed to longer distances, I made my targets comfortably.”

“The big challenge is that we don’t have many races over 100km in SA. We’ve got the Comrades, then the Washie 100 Miler and a couple of circuit races, but the Spartathlon is 246km and the longest I’ve done is 161km, so it will be unknown territory. Naturally, I am also concerned about the high drop-out rate in this race, mostly due to the high temperatures and humidity. On average, only 41% of participants finish, and in the hardest years, 1987 and 1991, only 23% made it. The best year was 1997 with 59%, and last year it rained during the race, which pushed the figure up as well. My worry is that we’ll be coming out of winter in SA, so I won’t be able to train in the same conditions, although I have been spending time in the sauna to build up resistance to the heat and humidity. Still, I am hoping to touch the feet of King Leonidas’ statue in Sparta on 26 September.”

Running on the Shoreline

Marine biologist, wife and mother of two, part-time TV presenter… that’s what Eleanor Yeld Hutchings has to juggle, but still she finds time to fit in her other passion, running. – BY SEAN FALCONER

The South African coast is home not only to outstanding natural beauty and unparalleled diversity of marine fauna and flora, but also to fascinating people, and that is why the SABC commissioned the TV programme Shoreline in 2008 – and that is how Eleanor Yeld Hutchings came to be on TV. “I was busy with my PhD and working for a marine tourism company when Homebrew Films called me, said they were looking for expert presenters for the series and I had been recommended, so would I do a screen test? I thought about it for all of a split second, did the test and got the job. The filming took about nine months and we had one film crew of five to cover the four presenters, so we each filmed separately for one week out of five, which meant I could be at home for the remaining four weeks to go to work, finish my PhD and graduate, get married, fall pregnant and have a normal life.”

The show proved very popular with viewers, leading to several awards and then a second series being filmed in 2012, which also led to Eleanor being noticed by the makers of National Geographic Wild, who brought her on board to do expert commentary on their Caught in the Act segment. There is now talk of a third series of Shoreline, which greatly excites Eleanor, because she says it was fascinating work, even if not as glamorous as people think.

“There was no hair and make-up, because we wanted a real feel, and our living arrangements depended on where we were, like on Malgas Island: Nobody lives there except a lot of gannets, and the only structures are a couple of wrecked old buildings, so we had to bunk down in sleeping bags on the floor. But that was fine, because the amazing part was travelling around the coast twice and getting to places that the average tourist cannot go. And getting to meet other scientists and learn about their research and work was such a privilege.” Also, being a keen runner, Eleanor made sure to keep up her running while on location, often running with cameraman Chis Lodz. “We had some hairy runs, though, like the one where we went past signs that said beware of hippos. It became an interval session every time we heard a noise in the bushes!”

Marine Focus
A resident of Cape Town all her life, Eleanor (34) is married to Ken and mother to two kids, Daniel (5) and step-daughter Erin (8). Having also previously worked for WWF South Africa, she is currently working for the Save Our Seas Foundation in Kalk Bay, where she manages the Shark Education Centre. “A lot of people have the wrong idea about sharks and don’t understand the role they play in the marine environment. They only hear negative news about sharks, so putting sharks in perspective is what we do, and showing people how important the seas are, that we depend on the oceans not only for our weather, but for the air we breathe.”

Eleanor’s career path was largely influenced by her father, John Yeld, who recently retired after spending his entire career with the Cape Argus newspaper as its award-winning science and environment photo-journalist. His love of running also helped her get into the sport. “He is my running inspiration and we often do races together,’ she says. “He did eight Two Oceans ultras and a Comrades, as well as the Puffer, Three Peaks Challenge and Bat Run, plus heaps of Oceans Halves and Trail Runs, and is still running at 66.”

However, Eleanor admits that she was not a fan of running when younger. “I loved sport, but I was a swimmer and water polo player, and absolutely detested running. Then I hit university and couldn’t afford a gym membership, so I needed something to keep fit and healthy, and running was cheapest and most convenient. I started by tackling a ‘Couch to 21km’ programme with two friends ahead of the 2004 Two Oceans Half, and somewhere along the line I went from hating it, to hating it but enjoying post-run feeling, to realising I actually enjoyed running. And then that feeling of finishing the race with my Dad and friends really got me hooked, even though I couldn’t walk the rest of the week!”

Fitting in running
Eleanor has to fit her running in around her day job, family life and part-time filming, but she says she makes it work. “I actually schedule regular runs on my calendar and consider them appointments. In summer I get up early before work to run, and in winter I usually run after work with a headlamp and lots of reflective gear. That’s the beauty of running – I can do it anywhere, any time, whether I have 20 minutes or two hours. And if I am really pressed for time, I just find hilly terrain or run faster.” She adds that Ken is very supportive of her running. “He is also very active and has his own sporting interests, including surfing and mountain biking, so we make sure we get a good balance. He shoulders a fully equal share of all domestic duties, including cooking and cleaning, and that’s probably the most important part of making it work, that we both respect each other’s sport, and give each other time and space.”

Today Eleanor runs between 10 and 20 races a year, mostly on road in her Fish Hoek AC colours, but she also does trail races when she can. “I’m not the world’s fastest runner, but this year I’ve done my fastest times for 10, 15 and 21km, despite being a working mom. I’m really kicking my 20-something’s butt!” Her longest race was the Two Oceans ultra last year, where she finished in 6:40. “It was something I had always wanted to do, and even though it was hard and I was cramping towards the end, I was never in doubt about finishing. I want to run it again next year and finish in sub-six hours, and later I would like to run Comrades, but only after I turn 40. All the runners in my family say it is better to be older, plus I want the kids to be older before I give that much time to my training.”

Almost Famous…
Naturally, being a TV presenter means that Eleanor gets recognised, but she jokes that Shoreline certainly has not turned her into a celebrity. “I get people saying I look familiar, but they can’t quite remember from where, and usually the only place I get recognised is by retired folk in grocery stores, and during trail runs. My dad thinks that is hilarious… during races he says ‘OK, we’ve been running for 20 kilometres, you’re sweaty and your hair is messed up, so I’m sure somebody will recognise you soon.’”

I’ve found my runner

What is better than a PB, a qualifying time or winning a race? Getting asked to spend the rest of your life with your best friend… who is also a runner. A month ago this dream came true when André asked me to marry him. Whilst the romantic how and where will remain my secret, I have to admit that I was wearing my Adidas tracksuit and a stopwatch at the time… – BY RENE KALMER

Andre and I have been friends for almost 30 years, because his sister, also Rene, and I have been best friends since nursery school. We were always known as Rene 1 and Rene 2. Little did we know that years later she will not only be one of my bridesmaids, but also my groom's sister…

In 2012 I asked Andre to be my date for the Olympic Banquet before Team SA departed for London. The next day Andre booked a ticket to London to come and support me, and as they say, the rest is history. Even though Andre and I share the same love and passion for running, he often jokes that it is actually two different sports we participate in. Andre would ask me how I can run a marathon in 2 hours 30 minutes? I would reply: “How can you take 2 hours 30 minutes to finish a half marathon?” Andre would ask: “How can you train 180 kilometres in a week?” I would ask: “How can you only run 180 kilometres in a month?”

Different Strokes
No need to point out that I’m extremely competitive, while he would rather run an hour slower on a race just to have company, or to help a friend qualify for Comrades. When we started dating, I thought I would have a positive/faster effect on his running, but he proved me wrong by clocking his slowest time in the Comrades that year, 11:58. While I race at the front of the pack, Andre is usually in his own race trying to finish just before the cut-off gun, and hearing his stories from the back of the pack often leaves me speechless. He prefers running in the bus with the cymbal, while it drives me mad if someone is running near me with change in their pocket. Although I can't imagine all these things during a race, I can see the fun he has in doing the same, but oh so different sport…

However, we both have running as an integral part of our lives, and I think therein lies the secret. We both get up early to get to races. We both have our rituals the evening before a big race. We both understand the challenges, the commitment and also the emotional support needed when a race doesn't go according to plan, or when injuries take their toll. I’m also really grateful for him supporting my lifestyle as a professional runner. He understands the time and effort needed to succeed. The commitments to sponsors and fans, the press conferences and appearances, the prize-givings and doping tests, the agony and the ecstasy. Holidays, weekends and even weddings are planned around my races. Early mornings to get up training and going to bed earlier because of a hard session the next morning are all part of the game. He never asks if I “really have to go and train,” but instead he drives for hours behind me, seconding me or playing photographer on my long runs.

He doesn't care if I finish first or clock a fast time in a race. What matters most to him is that I enjoy it. I also appreciate the fact that he was willing to sacrifice a December holiday at the beach to join me for altitude training at Afriski in Lesotho. We have also had some amazing ‘running experiences’ together, notably the London Olympics and Berlin Marathon, and having him in Boston with me when the bomb exploded was of course very comforting.

Best Friends
A runner is a special type of person. We enjoy a healthy lifestyle. We are committed. We understand a blister on a foot or a lost toenail. We fight, we conquer, we struggle and we both know about ‘vasbyt’… but between all the blood, sweat and tears lies the most beautiful friendship. I have found my runner… Have you found yours?

Sprinters on Fire!

To say that South African sprinting is looking good right now would be one of the biggest understatements ever made in the history of track and field in this country, because so far this year we’ve seen the men’s 100m, 200m and 400m SA records fall and the women’s 100m record equalled, we’ve seen two more SA men join the elite sub-10-second club in the 100m, we’ve had two sprinters crowned World Champions, and we’ve seen Ilse Hayes become the fastest female Para-athlete of all time. The sprinters in SA are well and truly on fire at the moment! – BY SEAN FALCONER

Part 1: The Sub-10 Club

Up until just over a year ago, sprinting in South Africa appeared to be stuck under the same ceiling it had reached in the late 1980s. Johan Rossouw’s 100m record for men of 10.06 seconds had been on the record books since 1988, while Evette De Klerk’s women’s record of 11.06 had stood since 1990. Simon Magakwe did equal the men’s record in 2012, and Geraldine Pillay was just one hundredth of a second out in 2005 with her 11.07, but both marks still stood in 2014, like fortress walls defying a besieging army. Then everything changed.

Dipping under 10
On 12 April 2014, Simon Magakwe burst past not only the SA record, but also became just the 90th man in the world to go under the 10-second barrier, as he clocked 9.98 at the SA Champs meet in Pretoria! (In second place was Akani Simbine, who also dipped under the old record as he ran 10.02.) Unfortunately, Simon was banned for two years for a doping-related violation in December 2014, leaving a cloud of suspicion hanging over his sub-10 performance, but happily that is now no longer of much concern, thanks to the scintillating performances of Akani and Henricho Bruintjies in recent weeks.

On 1 July Akani clocked 9.99 as he won the 100m in the European Athletics Classics Meeting in Slovenia (with Henricho finishing second in 10.15), thus giving SA its second sub-10, and the first not only at sea-level, where times are traditionally a little slower than at altitude, but also in an international race. “I must admit that I was pleasantly surprised when I saw the time I had run, but with a good start it was easy for me to put the rest of my race together,” he said shortly after the run. “To run 9.99 seconds in a ‘minus headwind’ is very special, but it was more a relief that I was able to get this out of the way. I said I was going to run nine seconds in Europe and I fulfilled my promise. And in the right conditions, against the right competitors, there is no reason why I won’t be able to do so again.” How true that would turn out to be…

The record goes… and goes again
The proverbial dust had barely settled on Akani’s PB before Henricho also joined the sub-10 club four days later at the Resisprint International meeting in Switzerland, with an incredible 9.97 to take the SA record and become our third sub-10 sprinter, in spite of a bad start. “The first 30 metres were bad, but then I caught the guys and just ran away from them,” says Henricho. “When I saw the time I was just running around and screaming. It was a really great moment! Then I phoned my sister back home to tell my mom that I had broken the 10-second barrier.”

And then the unbelievable happened just five days later as Akani won the 100m final at the World Student Games in Gwangju, South Korea on 10 July, equalling Henrichos time with another 9.97, having won the semi-final in 10.00 seconds. Once again quite understated after a scintillating performance, he simply said, “I am very happy with my run. I never thought about running a fast time, it was more important for me to win the gold medal, so I concentrated on getting through my phases and to stay relaxed. At 60 metres I was able to relax a bit and just powered through.”

Friends, housemates and rivals
Interestingly, Akani and Henricho are both studying at the University of Pretoria and training at the High Performance Centre, but with different coaches, and they live in the same student house on campus. Off the track they are good friends and often support each other’s racing, but on the track the friendship is temporarily put away. “On the track it is each one for himself, and may the best man win,” says Henricho. “Afterwards we will play video games again. Normally, Akani beats me in that.”

While Henricho missed the Student Games due to a tight gluteal muscle, both will now focus on preparing for the World Champs in Beijing, China at the end of August, and then move on to the Rio Olympics next year. Besides hoping to do well individually, they should also be part of the SA 4x100m relay team, with big expectations on their shoulders. The SA record in this event stands at 38.35 seconds, which saw SA finish fourth at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, and which replaced the 38.47 mark that Team SA set in 2001 at the World Champs in Edmonton, Canada to claim the silver medal position. (We were later promoted to the gold medal position when the USA was stripped of the win due to one of its athletes being caught for doping). Just recently, the SA student relay team won bronze in South Korea at the Student Games with a 39.68 result, with Akani anchoring the team home, and with Henricho and Anaso Jobodwana (2012 Olympic 200m finalist who has run 10.13 this season as well as broken the SA record for 200m twice, clocking a best of 20.04) also in the mix for the full SA team, we could also see that SA record fall at last in Beijing, or Rio, hopefully with medals to go with the record.

Side Note: Leading sub-10 Nations
Jim Hines of the USA was the first athlete to break through the 10-second barrier for 100 metres in 1968, and thus far 106 athletes have broken 10 seconds. However, only 22 countries can lay claim to one of its athletes dipping under the 10-second barrier, and of those, only 11 have more than one sub-10 athlete. Thanks to Akani Simbine and Henricho Bruintjies, South Africa is now joint sixth on that list with three sub-10 sprinters.

1 United States 47
2 Jamaica 14
3 Nigeria 8
4 United Kingdom 6
5 Trinidad and Tobago 5
6 Canada 3
6 France 3
6 South Africa 3

Part 2: Carina equals Women’s 100 Record

South Africa’s sprint revolution continued in Madrid, Spain, on 11 July when Carina Horn sprinted to a time of 11.06 in the qualifying heat for the women’s 100 metres of the World Challenge Meeting, thus equalling Evette de Klerk’s 25-year-old South African record. She could ‘only’ manage a 11.10 in the final to clinch third place, citing tired legs for the slower time, but she was still ecstatic about her record-equalling heat, which is the fastest time run by a South African woman at sea level. “The conditions were ideal for the final, but unfortunately my legs were dead and I just could not get them to go faster. But I am looking forward to the rest of the season, and I think I still have a few good races left in my legs. I did not sleep a wink after I ran 11.06. Actually, I am still battling to believe that I have really done it!”

Carina started the revival of South African women’s sprinting last year when she ran times of 11.21 and 11.17 at European meetings. Then in recent weeks she clocked 11.19 and a (then) PB 11.16. Having moved to Linz, Austria to train with sprinting specialist coach Rainer Schopf, Carina has now seen her 100m PB plummet from 11.59 to 11.06, and she attributes this massive improvement to her training. “Rainer keeps emphasising that the 100m is a very technical race and he has me working on small technical details for hours on end to help me to become faster.” She has also focused on the indoor 60m event, to work on her explosive power, and earlier this season twice improved her own SA record, clocking 7.21 and then 7.20, so she could cause a surprise at next year’s World Indoor Champs.

Part 3: World Class, Wayde

In June Wayde van Niekerk showed that he was in fine form for the 2015 European season as he clocked 31.63 over the seldom-raced 300m distance at the IAAF Diamond League meeting in Birmingham in the UK, setting a new SA and African record. He then followed that with an SA record 44.24 in the New York Diamond League meet to finally beat the old SA record of 44.59, jointly held by Arnaud Malherbe (1999) and Hendrik Mokganyetsi (2000). And he wasn’t done yet…

Next, on 4 July, he became the first South African to dip under 44 seconds as he crossed the line in 43.96 at the Paris leg of the Diamond League, setting a new SA and African record, and handing Olympic and Commonwealth champion Kirani James of Grenada his first loss of the year. But Wayde was not done yet: On 14 July he became the first SA sprinter to di under 20 seconds for the 200m, clocking 19.94! (This beat Ansao Jobodwana’s still shiny new SA record of 20.04.)

The good news is that Wayde thinks he can go even faster. “It wasn’t easy, but I think I planned it well and really felt good in the last 200m. The first 200m was a bit relaxed, but that meant I saved a lot for the last 200m. I just feel there should be more, and there’s definitely still room for improvement. My goal this year is to continue pushing myself to improve, and because Kirani is the guy who inspires me, my victory was even more special. I hope this was the beginning of great things ahead for me.”

Part4: World Champion status

South Africa’s latest world champion is Justine Palframan after she powered to a personal best 51.27 to win the 400m women’s sprint at the World Student Games in Gwangju, South Korea on 10 July. “I felt really good in the race and all the training paid off, especially the work we put into my finishing. I stuck to the race plan and I got a personal best time out of it,” said the Stellenbosch-based Maties student after her big win.

When asked how it compared to her 200m/400m SA Senior Championships double title win earlier this year on her home track in Stellenbosch, she said, “This is definitely my highest achievement. Winning the double at the SA Seniors was a great feeling, but in comparison this is a world title, and it feels great to go into the history books of the Universiade as a gold medallist. And I think I can go quicker. I had a very successful championship, going through three rounds successfully and still being able to produce a personal best, so I have no doubt that I have the ability to go faster, especially with more opportunities at international level coming up soon.”

Part 5: Fastest Woman Ever!

Ilse Hayes became the world’s fastest female para-athlete of all time when she sprinted to victory at the IPC Athletics Grand Prix in Sao Paulo, Brazil, at the end of April. Clocking 11.89 seconds, she took 0.02 off the previous overall fastest mark run by China’s T12 world record holder Guohua Zhou. (Ilse competes in the T13 category, but often races T12s in mixed races.) At the same meet, she added the 200m title the next day in 24.70, then in June she did the 100/200 double at meets in Italy and Germany as well, continuing her fine form as she builds up to the IPC World Champs in Doha, Qatar in October.

“My aim was to break the 100m World Record at the World Champs, but I did it in Brazil already. Getting the record just motivated me to train even harder, because records are there to be broken, and there’s nothing stopping me from doing it again. I just want to train harder, and maybe do it at an even bigger event – like the World Champs or the Paralympic Games in Rio.”

Ilse won gold in the long jump and silver in the 100m at the London Paralympic Games in 2012, an exact repeat of her medal haul at the 2008 Beijing Paralympics, to go with the bronze she won in the 400m at the 2004 Athens Games. However, from 2012 to early 2014 she was plagued with various injuries and struggled to train consistently, until finding the right balance, which included withdrawing from the long jump to focus on the sprints. “I’ve put more focus on recovery, nutrition, and maintenance with the chiro – all things that have contributed to me being healthier, meaning I can give more on the track, which shows in my results.”

“I ran a PB at the 2014 SA Nationals, and after that came PB after PB, SA and African records, and now the World Record. The downside was not knowing I had broken it, but that’s one of the challenges of being visually impaired, and I couldn’t understand the Brazilian commentator, so I only heard later when I was at doping control. I’d like to go after the 200m World Record as well – it is 24.24 and I’m currently on a best of 24.27, but with stronger competition, working on the bend and getting my speed-endurance up, anything is possible.”