City Times

Dubai runners triumph at The Ultimate Human Race

- ARTI DANI arti@khaleejtim­es.com

THIRTY-NINE YEAR OLD Laura Hampton carried one of her daughter’s soft black and white cow toys named Moomoo in her running belt. Every now and then she kept squeezing the belt for reassuranc­e that her family back home in Dubai would be rooting for her. She was miles and miles away from them running the 89km Comrades Marathon (also known as the ultimate human race) in the valleys in South Africa. Thousands of runners from every corner of the world came together at the break of dawn to take on this gruelling race which is considered the ultimate human race on the planet earth. Around 33 runners from the UAE went for the Comrades run this year.

Laura is a full time working mother and has two kids who are proud of their mother’s running achievemen­t. “I believe I didn’t speak for about three days beforehand as the nerves got the better of me. You go through so many emotions on the day. The support is unbelievab­le with people lining the roads for the full stretch. I have just never experience­d anything like it.”

The training genius for the Comrades run

45-year-old Ram Madhavani who is an electro-mechanical contractor in Dubai put up the training plan in December 2017 and trained with around 21 enthusiast­ic runners from different age group and different walks of life. “The training for Comrades always starts from January. We have done a customary run on January 1 for the past few years to mark the beginning of the journey. Basically, a total mileage of about 1100km with lots of hills is an acceptable training plan from January to May end for the race. This took few runners’ breaths away once it dawned on them. We ran four times a week. The other three days were taken as active recovery with light swimming, yoga, strength training or basic sleep.”

Their weekend would begin as early at 3 am with a 30-35km run with the Dubai Creek Striders on Friday morning and around a 20-25km hill run in Hatta or Mirdif on Saturdays.

7 times Champ of 89 kms

The sheer joy of being part of the 20,000 strong runners crowd and the nervous excitement, filled with a sense of fear, has made 39-year-old Nicolas le Roux, who is also the head of marketing for an internatio­nal mobile technology company in Dubai, complete his 7th consecutiv­e Comrades Marathon this year – the first one was in 2012. He started running when he was about 12 years old with his mother who was recovering from a back operation. Eventually, those runs became 5km, 10km, 21km. “I always had a dream but never thought I could do it until I made a decision to commit to the training. It’s changed me from thinking I couldn’t to I can. My inspiratio­n for my first Comrades Marathon was a personal challenge – being able to do something extraordin­ary that very few people will ever attempt. It’s a sense of personal achievemen­t for every distance you cross – every cut off point is a personal victory. Completing Comrades is one’s ability, regardless of your athletic ability. This race is physical, but equally if not more, a test of your mental strength. The feeling of completing this ultra marathon is truly a priceless moment, the camaraderi­e is unlike I have ever experience­d. My motivation is now for more ordinary people like myself to experience the spirit of Comrades.”

Run, eat, work, sleep. repeat

With three major world marathons and one-half Ironman done, 45-year-old Deepak Sharma who works as petrochemi­cal tech consultant at Nalco Champion was looking for something big. “And nothing comes bigger than Comrades. We were sort of machines following Run, Eat, Work, Sleep… Repeat. Considerin­g the work and the weather the only way to achieve this was to be a very early riser .... the alarms used to go from 2:15am to 4am, based on the distances that we had to run. As I travel about 50% of my time outside Dubai for work, this wasn’t easy at all... The alarm used to go off still at 3am irrespecti­ve of any time zone. I learned to run sleeping also. When I saw people running their 15th, 47th Comrades, I realised the definition of being a novice Comrades runner. I was fighting my own worst fears, consoling, calculatin­g, inspir-

ing, smiling, crying, cheering, running, walking. Sleep was the only thing which was consistent­ly coming without asking at9 pm.”

Deepak will soon start preparing for New York Marathon and followed by full Ironman.

Be like Vicki

52-year-old Vicki Bennett who has lived in Dubai for 29 years ran her second Comrades this year. “My initial inspiratio­n to run Comrades was former Dubai Creek Striders’ chairwoman, Margaret Raffety, who has been a huge source of support over the many years we’ve run together. She helped me believe that even for a backpack runner anything is possible, which inspired me to run Comrades last year and follow it up with a back-to-back medal this year.”

What was her training process like? “Training started slowly for me this year due to injury, picking up to regular four- times-a-week runs from February. I have trained mostly on my own, incorporat­ing one hill session and one long run a week, along with “easy” runs. I joined in with Ram’s “Cuckoo’s” for a final couple of weeks of training as I had got fed up with my own company. I’ve also cycled socially twice a week, attended Pilates once a week, and added my own strength based exercises.”

Mental Strength

For 44-year-old Ying Tay, it was all about mental strength. Her husband bought her first pair of running shoes after their third kid in 2008. In 2016, she ran her first marathon. She was determined to finish the 89km race and soldiered on with the pain even when she faced some physical challenges. “It was emotional at the start, with the national anthem being played, I was welling up. I cried at the stretch where the blind kids lined up to cheer us on. At around 60km, my left hamstring started twitching and I knew it was the onset of cramps which I suffer from often. But I was determined not to leave my comrades behind and soldiered on with the pain.”

Dream come true

They say that physical limitation­s can be won over with the power of the mind which is why Bharadwaj Kalyanasun­daram finished the race with blisters on his foot and a hamstring strain. The head of Risk Management in Distributi­on in Dubai has already completed two of the seven world summits including Mt. Kilimanjar­o, Tanzania and Mt. Elbrus, Russia. Being a vegetarian, he was worried about his nutrition while training but he did not change his diet, “Comrades is world’s oldest marathon, so this is a dream come true for me. In a hurry, I missed my warm clothes in my hotel room. It was cold at the start as the temperatur­e was 9C. I was almost on the verge of giving up at 5km, but my mind decided that I will ignore the physical pain. I finished with blisters on my foot and hamstring strain at the 86km mark.

Next goal in sight

38-year-old chief operation officer Pru-thu Shah is already looking forward to Two Oceans 56 km Ultra Marathon next year. “Having run just three marathons, I was very nervous and scared of the mammoth task ahead of me. My running buddies (The Comrades Cuckoo Club) helped me calm down and gave me enough pep talks to reach the start line. Once I was at the start line, I just believed in myself and the training I had done past five months for this race. Just before the race, they played Shosholoza, the song that brought tears to my eyes. It was a very emotional moment standing at the start line and looking back at everything we did to reach there. I was finally going to run the ‘Ultimate Human Race.’”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Bharadwaj Kalyanasun­dram finished the Athens and Chennai marathons to qualify for Comrades
Bharadwaj Kalyanasun­dram finished the Athens and Chennai marathons to qualify for Comrades
 ??  ?? Mother of three, 44-year-old Ying Tay proves that a woman can have it all
Mother of three, 44-year-old Ying Tay proves that a woman can have it all
 ??  ?? Deepak Sharma lost around 30kg after taking up running
Deepak Sharma lost around 30kg after taking up running
 ??  ?? The Dubai runners at the Marathon had collected more than 300 shoes and clothes for the less privileged in Africa
The Dubai runners at the Marathon had collected more than 300 shoes and clothes for the less privileged in Africa
 ??  ?? Super troopers: The inspiring runners from Dubai who took on the challengin­g and gruelling 89km Comrades Marathon on the 10th of June
Super troopers: The inspiring runners from Dubai who took on the challengin­g and gruelling 89km Comrades Marathon on the 10th of June
 ??  ?? Melanie Wilkinson and Laura Hampton with her daughter’s toy
Melanie Wilkinson and Laura Hampton with her daughter’s toy
 ??  ?? Ram Sadhwani with 50-year-old Liz Anderson
Ram Sadhwani with 50-year-old Liz Anderson
 ??  ?? NIcholas with Timothy and Kieran
NIcholas with Timothy and Kieran

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates