Note:
If you are keen and have queries, please contact Coach Rameshon at 9100 4369 or you can email him at m.rameshon@gmail.com or swift.rameshon@gmail.com. Please refer to website http://flexifitness.com.sg (for more information on him and his programmes)
By Rameshon
Bsc (Hons) Degree in Physical Education, Loughborough University (1992-1994)
If you are keen and have queries, please contact Coach Rameshon at 9100 4369 or you can email him at m.rameshon@gmail.com or swift.rameshon@gmail.com. Please refer to website http://flexifitness.com.sg (for more information on him and his programmes)
By Rameshon
Bsc (Hons) Degree in Physical Education, Loughborough University (1992-1994)
Masters in Education (University of Western Australia, 2005-2008)
Mo Farah's half-a-race debut on the London Marathon
course delighted the crowds lining the streets of the capital who had
turned out to catch a glimpse of the double Olympic champion but left
many in the athletics world scratching their heads as to what the 30-year-old had gained from the experience.
Running
the first half of a marathon is one thing but understanding how the
body reacts to the latter stages is entirely another. As Farah himself
had admitted before the race, he would have no idea where the pain would
hit him over a 26.2-mile distance; he will have to wait until next
year, when he makes his full debut, to find out the answer.
Still
the Briton defended his decision to run, describing the experience as a
huge learning curve. "I've learned the biggest lesson of my life,
really," Farah told the BBC. "If I would have come out here next year and made a mess of it, mentally it's hard to deal with that. So it's a
good practice for me – waking up here in the morning, being round here,
dealing with the media and everything. I've learned a lot, for sure.
I'll probably watch back this race and see how much of a mess I made of
the drinks."
Before the start, there had been some confusion over
Farah's race preparations, as the Londoner was captured live on-air
telling BBC Radio 5 live that he had overslept and was in danger of missing the athletes' bus. Farah later revealed this to be a joke tweeting, "Just to clarify, I had breakfast at 5am today, my comment about sleeping in was just a joke. I was one of the first athletes on
the bus to the start."
Dropping out before the halfway mark,
having run for just over an hour, the Briton did reveal his surprise at the enduring speed of the elite front runners. "As I was coming off the
bridge I thought, 'Are they going to keep this pace going?' I got quite a
shock at that point."
By now well accustomed to defending his
decision to run the unorthodox race, Farah also made the point that
others had trialled the event before him in their own way, such as
Stanley Biwott, who ran as a pacemaker in 2011 and finished eighth this
year.
Once Farah dropped out, however, the rest of the field were
left to get on with the business end of the race. That process looked
gruelling as the pack struggled to cope with the effects of a speedy
first half – the elite pack hit the half distance in 61min 34sec, just
inside Patrick Makau's 2011 world record time.
Race organisers had
described the men's field as the greatest ever assembled in London and
in the end, it was left to the strongest to win, with Tsegaye Kebede of
Ethiopia overtaking Emmanuel Mutai, the course record-holder, in the
final 800m to become champion for a second time. Kebede, the 2010 winner
and 2008 Olympic bronze medallist, had initially looked set for second
place behind the Kenyan, Mutai, but he fought hard to make up a 30sec
deficit and left his rival trailing to claim the win in 2hr 6min 4sec.
Afterwards
Kebede, who was overlooked for selection for the Olympics last year,
complained at the pace of the race. "The pace was too high, because of that I am too tired," he said. The 26-year-old said he hoped his performance will have convinced the Ethiopian selectors to pick him for this year's world championships. "I know I'll show them my talent."
Meanwhile
Britain's Scott Overall, Farah's former training partner from their
junior days, dropped out at 25km after experiencing problems in the
build-up to the race and Derek Hawkins was the first Briton across the
line in 2:16.50 in 13th place.
In the women's race the world
record-holder, Paula Radcliffe, was left to sleep easy after Priscah
Jeptoo won in a time of 2:20.15, close to the Kenyan's personal best
time but almost five minutes slower than the world best mark set 10
years ago by the Briton. Jeptoo, Olympic silver medallist in the
marathon who last year finished third in London over this same course,
took advantage of the Olympic champion Tiki Gelana's race-changing clash
with a wheelchair racer, Josh Cassidy, at a drinks station which saw
the Ethiopian tumble and, though she got up and kept on running, she
could not recover her form and finished 16th overall.
Jeptoo, a training partner of Rita Jeptoo who won in Boston last week, took the
lead from the world champion, Edna Kiplagat, around the 21st mile and
said she was thrilled with the win. Susan Partridge was the only British
woman home in a world championship qualifying time, beating her
personal best by over three minutes to cross the finish line in 2:30:46
in ninth place.
In a fitting tribute to the victims of the Boston Marathon bombing, the American wheelchair racer Tatyana McFadden –
Boston's winner who promised to carry the memory of those killed or injured last week – won in 1hr 46min 2sec. The three-time Olympic gold medallist in 2012 was hit by a puncture in the Olympic marathon but put on an impressive display on the streets of London on Sunday. Meanwhile
Britain's Shelly Woods unexpectedly finished out of the medals in fifth place.
David Weir suffered a shock defeat in the men's race, the
Paralympic hero dubbed the "Werewolf" had been hoping to secure a
seventh win in London but crossed the line in fifth place, two seconds behind the winner Kurt Fearnley, after a closely fought sprint finish.
www.runningcoachsg.com
By Narayanan
He also has a Coaching group and he trains them on Tuesdays and Thursdays, 7pm at Botanic Gardens. Those interested can call him at 91004369 for coaching assistance, to improve performance. There is also personal training that he does for many in a week. You can e-mail him at swift.rameshon@gmail.com.
www.runningcoachsg.com
Note:
By Narayanan
Rameshon has taught in Hwa Chong Institution, plus several schools, and Republic Polytechnic as well. He has won many accolades and he was awarded Merit Award for 1991 marathon performance in breaking the national record of Singapore, at that time. He has made 22 male athletes do a marathon in sub-3hrs. He has made 7 female runners do sub-4 hours for the marathon, as well. He was inducted to the ‘Roll of Honour’ by the then College of Physical Education, organised by Singapore Olympic Academy, in 1998, for breaking the National record repeatedly 4 times, till he did 2hr 24min 22sec).
He also has a Coaching group and he trains them on Tuesdays and Thursdays, 7pm at Botanic Gardens. Those interested can call him at 91004369 for coaching assistance, to improve performance. There is also personal training that he does for many in a week. You can e-mail him at swift.rameshon@gmail.com.