The Post

But they can miss the point

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running mumbo jumbo did not put me off seeking accessorie­s.

These days I run with a GPS watch, upload my training to the online running platform Strava and, on long runs, wear a pack which a friend described as something worthy of an astronaut.

(He’s wrong, by the way, it’s not really a pack, it’s a vest designed to... oh, never mind…)

Any time there’s word of a new bit of technology or kit going, my ears prick up.

Rumours about a new shoe for Eliud Kipchoge’s attempt to break two hours for the marathon last year caused a frenzy in running circles.

Weekend warriors were jumping up and down to find out what the shoe was and when you could buy it.

You’d think the shoe had magic powers (update: Nike, sponsors of the Breaking2 attempt, did produce a special shoe, and while Kipchoge was 25 seconds off his target, the shoe appears to be selling like crazy).

But it’s not just kit that runners lust after. The latest training tips or strategies are just as popular – if it sounds right, we’ll give it a go.

Mona Fartleks, Yasso 800s, junk miles, hill bounding – they’re all training sessions or ideas that I’ve integrated into my training sometimes over the years after hearing about them one way or another.

And then there’s diet and nutrition. Once upon a time, the night before a marathon, everyone would go to a ‘‘pasta party’’ to carbo load.

Now, I wouldn’t take a ticket to one of those if it was going free – a light, normal meal the night before a race does me fine.

And maybe there’s a moral in that. In the same way ideas about pre-race fuelling have pulled back to a more simple idea, it’s probably time I grew up and stopped seeking the latest and greatest, and get back to the simple pleasure of running itself.

It’s something that coach and physiother­apist Brad Dixon, our guest on the trail running podcast, Dirt Church Radio, emphasises.

Dixon told co-host Matt Rayment and me that when he stopped fixating on numbers and time-based goals, and concentrat­ed instead on getting out into nature and enjoying time with his running mates, he re-discovered the joy of running.

And there isn’t a pill or a gadget in the world that can help with that.

Eugene Bingham and Matt Rayment are hosts of a new trail running podcast Dirt Church Radio. Learn more at dirtchurch­radio.com or get in touch via email dirtchurch­radio@gmail.com

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