Cat Macdonald finished 3rd in the Scottish Trail Race Championships held in humid and dry conditions over a 6-mile loop in the grounds of Falkland Estate, Fife and using part of the Fife Lomond Hills.
32nd overall, Cat managed to make the podium this time out, having finished in 4th last time, but narrowly missed out on a 2nd place by a margin of only a single second after a ding-dong with Edinburgh University AC runner Alice Goodall (38:02). Gala’s Sara Green was 1st Female home in 37:31, with first overall finisher Hamish Hickey of Central AC in 31:25. It was another busy day for the Macdonalds, with Alistair 72nd in 44: 44 and Margaret 113th in 1:06.5. Lindsey Quinn competed in the Anne Allan trail race last Saturday hosted by Alnwick Harriers in memory of a past runner.
A new event, the race was held over a circular 9kms route round the Ingram valley, taking in woods, fields, roads, and hills. Low numbers with it being the inaugural year, but Lindsey commented that it was a great course and one she would definitely recommend for the future. She also came 2nd overall and was 1st female home, with Liam Gutcher first finisher. Cross country racing returned to the North East at Farringdon on Saturday afternoon, with the return of the annual Sunderland Cross Country Races for Young Athletes and Relays for Seniors in Sunderland.
A low-key curtain raiser for the forthcoming season, there were nevertheless Silver medals for both the club’s Senior Men’s and Senior Women’s teams, with a 1st, a 2nd and a 3rd in the Young Athletes races. The 1st place was down to Oliver Tomlinson, a winner by a commanding margin of over 30 seconds in the Under 15 Boys, with U/17 Ryan Davies coming home 2nd in the U/17 race having taken a fall en route and finishing behind Elswick’s Elliot Kelso. The 3rd place came courtesy of Jacob Thompson in the U/11 race, with Eli MacSparron finishing 13th. Also competing were Emma Tomlinson, who just missed out on a medal in the U/13s when finishing in 4th place, brother and sister Thomas and Molly Roche, and Michael Leeson. Thomas was 16th in the U/13s Boys, where Michael Leeson was one place behind, and Molly 16th in the U/15s Girls. In the Senior Women’s Relays, for teams of three, there was a welcome return to competition for the club for Veteran Morag Stead, whose 11 minutes 4 seconds on leg 1 put the club in an early lead. Jane Kirby ran a game 12m 52s on leg 2 which gave final leg runner Rachelle Falloon something to chase down on the final leg. In the event, her time of 11m 15s saw the club back up to 2nd and finishing half a minute behind winners Birtley Harriers, with Houghton in 3rd. Final event of the day was the Senior Men’s Relay, this time held over four stages, and once again it was a Morpeth vs Birtley showdown. Joe Anderson ran 9:13 on leg 1 to come home 3rd, behind early leaders Tyne Bridge and hosts Sunderland Harriers. Youngest competitor for Morpeth, and in his first race with the Seniors to boot, was James Tilley, whose 9:24 very much kept the club in contention, although he also faced the challenge of Birtley Harriers, for whom Chris Perkins’s 8:21 was by some margin the fastest time of the day. Connor Marshall dipped under the 9 minute mark with a strong clocking of 8:56 on leg 3, which saw Morpeth at the sharp end of affairs with Birtley a strong 2nd. Last leg saw a terrific tussle between experienced runners for both clubs, with Morpeth’s Sam Hancox (8:45) pipped by Birtley’s Adrian Bailes (8:29) and a youthful team having to settle for another well-deserved set of Silver medals. The renowned Ultra Trail Mont Blanc trail races took place at the end of August, with some 10,000 runners, including the best in the world, participating in a range of trail ultras high in the Alps.
Among those who descended on the race HQ at Chamonix were John Butters and Tony Holt, partner of Emma, who can both be justifiably proud of their achievements. JB took part in the UTMB CCC 100k event, with a high altitude route and potentially very difficult weather conditions, over a route that begins at Courmayeur Italy, enters Switzerland and finishes at Chamonix in France. Finishing in a time of 16 hours 34 minutes 42 seconds, John was 358th overall and 28th in his Over 45 category. Meanwhile Tony took on the fearsome 171 kilometre race, with a vertical drop of some 10,042 metres, and completed it in a remarkable 39 hours 50 minutes and 56 seconds. At the sharp end, legendary Spanish ultra trail runner and four time winner Kilian Jornet set a new course record of 19:49:30, having apparently got annoyed at one point at another runner daring to overtake him! Sam Hancox’s journey to the mid Cheshire Summer 5k wasn’t without its moments, with a seven-hour journey meaning he made the start line with only 45 minutes to spare.
The adrenaline must have been flowing however, as despite the hassle he was only some 8 seconds off a pb, coming in 19th in 14 minutes 51 seconds. The race on 26 August, which incorporated the EA 5k Road Championships, was won by Adam Craig in a time of 14 minutes 9 seconds from Bristol and West’s Kurt Taylor 2nd (14:15) and Ben Brown, who had travelled all the way from Southampton, in 3rd (14:18). Ellie Wallace from North Somerset was 1st female finisher in 15:48, with Lauren McNeil of Hallamshire Harriers 2nd in 15:50 and Stockport’s Jip Vastenburg 3rd in 16:06. |
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April 2024
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