Lessons learnt.

Seb Hillard
As well he might smile !
Ava Sheppard and Martha Silvers
This week we start off with a report on last weekend’s Combined Events National Finals in Chelmsford. 3 of our talented track and field athletes having qualified to represent Warwickshire, with Seb Hillard competing in the decathlon and Ava Sheppard and Martha Silvers in the heptathlon.

The continued success of our young athletes to compete in competitions of the highest levels is testament to the club’s philosophy that Combined Events….run throw and jump….. are the backbone of the way the juniors’ are organised, in what are fundamentally multi events groups, especially in the U11 to U15s.

In the words of Paul Bearman, the club recognises that specialisation can come as the athletes mature both physically and mentally, the belief being that young athletes should grow at their own pace and try the different parts of athletics.

And now for something completely different. Next up is Paul Faithfull’s report on his performance at the Ironman World Championships in Nice. I should warn the faint hearted amongst you that there is perhaps a little bit too much of an emphasis on Paul’s bodily function during his superb performance.

Another week another marathon report from Susan Hunt. This time it is a list of 10 lessons learnt in her completion of the Berlin marathon. I personally love her comment on Deliveroo cyclists.

Simon Penson has sent in his report on the Brutal Bach Triathlon Snowden. Having read this report I can fully understand why the word brutal is part of the event’s title.

Closer to home we have reports on both the Chedworth 5 and Roman Trail 10 mile races, with the dynamic duo of Seb Wolstencroft – Dodds and Stuart George occupying the top two places in the 5 miler.

Finally we have a superb full page of coverage in this week’s Stratford Herald on our recent memorable club championships.

Take care.

David Jones 
Back in the day Seb was a committed endurance runner. Looking at the photo above I can’t begin to imagine why he would opt for track and field as opposed to the wonders of cross country ! Seb is seen alongside Joe Lewis another convert to the track!
Ava also used to enjoy (!) the delight of XC running before jumping ship to T&F. I also seem to remember Martha Silvers at many endurance training session. XC’s loss is most certainly T&F’s gain.
 
English Schools Combined Events National Finals

Chelmsford – 20th and 21st September
 

Paul Bearman has previously stated that Combined Events….run throw and jump….. is the backbone of the way the juniors’ are organised, in what are fundamentally multi events groups, especially in the U11 to U15s. 

Paul has gone on to state that specialisation can come as the athletes mature both physical & mentally and the belief is that young athletes should grow at their own pace and try the different parts of athletics. 

Stratford juniors have had a long reputation for producing multi eventers who compete in the various Combined Events (CE) championships, including representing Warwickshire.

Paul has also previously stated that every tenth of a second and centimetre counts for points and the prize for winning the discrete age/gender team and individual competitions is to go forward to these national championships in September.

This year the club had 3 of our many talented athletes representing Warwickshire in theses National Finals.

Seb Hillard has detailed his monumental performance at this event in his comprehensive account below. Many thanks Seb. You can have a rest now!

Seb’s grit and determination to drive himself ever forward was exemplified by the last event of the weekend, the 1500m race. By his own admittance the 1500m is not a decathletes favourite event. However despite this he pulled out all stops to win the race comfortably and force his way in to a top 6 slot in the competiton overall, just 3 points separated him from the 7th placed finisher, as he finished with a haul of 5894 points. Words fail.

Ava Sheppard really enjoyed competing at these finals. She states that it was a great experience to compete against some very strong athletes….and strong wind on the 200m straight!!!

She came away with 3 pbs and helped the Warwickshire girls team finished 5th overall.

Ava was particularly pleased to come away with an 800m pb as this is not her favourite event!!

A very tiring and long weekend but definitely worth the hard work, training and effort she says 

Like Seb, she is also looking forward to next year!

Our 3rd competitor was Martha Silvers, one of the talented 3 Silver sisters. Unfortunately Martha had a tough experience, getting injured landing on the bar in the high jump and badly bruising her back. As such she was unable to complete some of the disciplines and struggled in some of the ones she did do. Which is such a shame considering all the hard work Martha had put in to qualify for these finals. Get well soon Martha.

We should be extremely proud of the achievements of these athletes, achievements that exemplify Paul Bearman’s philosophy, stated at the start of this article, a philosophy that continues to produce so many talented athletes.


English Schools Decathlon Finals

Report – Seb Hillard


I was really pleased to have qualified for these finals in my first year of competition.

After a restful morning with a much needed lie-in we arrived at Chelmsford at 10am. 

Despite a minor scare when my number went missing, I quickly shook it off and dived straight into Heat 3 of the 100m. Despite a -1.9 headwind, I clocked a time of 12.24, which, though slightly off my personal best, gave me the confidence to keep the competition rolling.

The next event was the long jump, where a nice tailwind helped me achieve a personal best of 6.37m—a 10cm improvement. This saw me a move up from 17th to 14th in the standings after just two events, setting a positive tone for the rest of the day.

Next up was the shot put. I felt great during the warm-up, and my first attempt resulted in a 10.85m PB. With the events keeping me on my toes, it was time for one of the highlights of my competition—the high jump.

I began cautiously at 1.59m and worked through the rounds, eventually clearing 1.86m for a 9cm personal best. I even got close to clearing 1.89m on my final attempt.

This moved me up in to 11th place overall with one event left on Day 1.

Fatigue was definitely starting to settle in as I headed into the 400m, the final event of the day. I had a strong first 300m, which put me in first place heading into the final stretch. However, the wind was relentless, making it a real challenge, and I ended up placing 2nd in my heat with a time of 54.48.

Still, I was pleased with the strong finish, wrapping up Day 1 in 10th place overall with 3105 points—50 more than my score in the regional qualifier.

The second day kicked off with the 110m hurdles. It wasn’t the perfect start—an initially slow reaction and clipping a hurdle—but I finished strong with a time of 15.38. Not the best time, but a solid way to get the ball rolling.

The discus was up next, an event I had been focusing on for the past few weeks after a rough showing last year in the Octathlon. I was thrilled when my final attempt landed at 29.77m, a personal best and a six-meter improvement from the Midland Regional Qualifier.

After that, it was time for the pole vault, though things didn’t go exactly as planned. Two separate incidents with the upright bars being broken led to significant delays but after the hold-up, I managed to clear 3.10m, setting a new personal best by 40cm.

The javelin followed shortly after, and with near-perfect weather conditions, I was able to throw 46.88m—yet another personal best, bringing my tally to six PBs across the nine events.

As pole vault athletes were still competing, we had to wait for an update on when the 1500m would take place. After a brief 5-minute warning, it was time to line up.

Though the 1500m is not exactly a decathlete’s favourite event, I knew if I wanted to crack the top six, I had to give it everything. I went out hard and ended up running alone for nearly three and three-quarter laps, finishing in a time of 4.53.

With that final push, I completed the decathlon and finished in 6th place overall. My final point tally was 5894, an impressive 300-point improvement from the regional rounds. The achievement was made even more special by the fact that I became the highest-placed ever Stratford male athlete in the outdoor English Schools Senior Boys Decathlon.

Reflecting on the experience, I felt proud of my performance. Now, after such a rewarding competition, it’s time for a well-deserved week’s rest before I gear up for the winter season and come back stronger for next year . The journey continues what will year 2 bring!

 
Paul Faithfull

Ironman World Championships 2025

 Nice, France 

 

Report – Paul Faithfull

Nice in France is a lovely place, sit, have a drink, maybe a dip in the ocean….or compete in the Ironman World Championships. My wife and son chose the former, I embarked on the latter.

It was perfect weather in the early morning, sea was flat(ish), well it looked that way and super warm, so much so that wetsuits were banned.  I’ve never raced without a wetsuit, nor done a deep water start (basically think rugby maul in the ocean when the race starts!). But all good, swim went, well swimmingly, felt comfortable and relaxed, didn’t over cook it and finished about 3 mins of my personal target time in 1h 8mins.

Onto the bike and having reccied the course back in May, I knew that the first easy stretch along the coast would soon give way to stunning views, and lots and lots of climbing.  In fact the bike course involves 2500metres of ascent, the equivalent of climbing Snowdon 2.5 times.

 As far as the eye could see a string of very expensive TT bikes wound their way along the road and I was comfortably cruising past one rider after another with only a few doing the same to me.  It was getting warm but the eating competition that is an Ironman was going well and all felt good. 

At 60k I summited the main climb and onto the flat plateau section, a fast flowing section for about another 60km where aero is king.  A quick projectile vomit (maybe I had been pushing myself a bit harder than I thought) and I was off and whilst it was windy, I was still making decent progress, hampered only by the undulating nature and turns which took a brave pull to stay on the tri-bars.

At the half way point, the course goes down a country road and switches back.  I dropped a  couple of gears, swung round the turn and then the athlete in front just stopped, right on the racing line. With nowhere to go I managed to stop and fumble an unclip so no fall, but in doing so I dropped my chain which duly wedged between the chainring and the frame.  8 long minutes of cursing, blood, torn fingers and scrapped carbon before I finally managed to free it. I would later discover than 21 competitors in my age group had passed me during this incident and overall it had cost me 10 places in the final standings.  Still at least I was going again, took a while to settle in but I knew the descent and I had been practicing so could make back some time.

The descent is about 45 minutes of continuous downhill, sharp bends, speed bumps and whilst beautiful, it is also treacherous. I passed 10 athletes on the way down being attended to by ambulances where corners or bumps had been overcooked.  It was hard to pass  so many people who clearly were not used to descending, and pushing when tired (about 5 hours in to the event by this point), I decided to take it steady and wound my way safely back to transition for the run.

After the worlds longest pee (I have to learn the art of peeing on the bike, a full bladder is a good sign for the hydration strategy but most uncomfortable for 6 hours) I was on the run and making good pace.  Too good, tried to slow but that just felt awkward so I just waited for the inevitable decay in pace which duly came after 15km as my legs tightened. 

It was not really hot, especially with heat soak on the black asphalt, but the crowds and DJs were fab and it all felt managed. 

Top tip from fellow SuAAC triathlete Ash to put ice in my cap at the aid stations, this kept temperatures in check and the four 10km laps passed steadily, I kept running (between aid stations!) and with 5km to go had a bit left to push, just holding off cramp to finish in 11 hours, 14mins with a 3h34 marathon.

I had wanted to be top 50, I am right at the top of my age group now so up against it from that perspective and came in 46th out of 330.

 Given you have to qualify for the event, I’ll take that!  Very happy, it was time for a McDonalds and a rest (well once everything was packed for the early morning flight – that was an error!). 

I’d have thought a big apple would have been more appropriate for the New York Marathon
10 Lessons from the Berlin Marathon

Susan Hunt
  1. It can get really hot in Berlin
  2. Maurten drink mix is more beneficial thrown down your throat than thrown over your head
  3. Before choosing to saturate your entire running outfit, consider whether the benefit of the slight cooling effect outweighs the risk of extreme chafing
  4. Any part of your body that makes contact with wet clothing can chafe (especially over 4 hours, 11 minutes and 33 seconds)
  5. If you put your face close enough to a fireman’s hose, the strength of the water jet will dislodge your contact lenses
  6. Even when you’ve paid €200 to run on a World Marathon Major course, Deliveroo cyclists will still expect you to give way
  7. There’s a man who runs multiple marathons while balancing a pineapple on his head
  8. Before downing a post-race beer; make sure it’s a beer (and not cold tea)
  9. Once you’re 60, you no longer need to seek post-race privacy and get changed in a portaloo… just strip off in public and everyone will look away
  10. Don’t believe everything that you read on an apple 
Simon Penson suitably attired.

Brutal Bach Triathlon Snowdonia

20th September

 

Report – Simon Penson


After enjoying my first triathlon in July (the Compton Verney Sprint), Fiona thought it a good idea to do a more mountain-based second event so she kindly identified the Brutal Bach (Standard) triathlon, based in Llanberis, North Wales.

The event comprised a 1km swim in Llyn Padarn, a 29 mile circuit on the roads around Northern Snowdonia and a 10 mile run up (and down) Yr Wyddfa via the Llanberis Path.

Aside from the swim, the route was familiar to me so hey ho!

Despite the weather looking good a week before, come the day it was dodgy with very heavy on the Friday and also forecast for the event

 Everything was wet and there was standing water in the transition marquee and bike racking area. it was also difficult to see where the lake started!

The lake was at 13 degrees and the swim was a floating mass start, which was new to me. After a bit of a panic in the melee of arms and legs, I settled into a rhythm and focused on the drills from swim training with the club. I got into it and enjoyed the leg, warming up well without using my legs too much. I would definitely avoid crowding at the start next time.

After a leisurely transition, it was onto the bike and some favourite roads. The weather was drier than forecast and pleasantly warm.

Economic riding paid off and the climb up to Pen y Pass was steady. The steep descent to Nant Peris was drier than expected and so I relaxed for the arrival at the transition.

I was so keen to start the run that I did not pay enough attention to my nutrition-I didn’t eat or drink anywhere near as much as I needed to. The run started well despite torrents of water on the path and torrents of tourists who could not figure out which way to move! I felt the lack of running fitness and nutrition toward the summit and I had to dig deep but was able to descend comfortably despite walls of walkers in the way. Goodness knows why they were going up Yr Wyddfa in such poor weather-and I’m sure they thought the same of me and my fellow competitors!

I knew I’d done ok as I only saw a handful of runners descending on my way up and was pleased to finish 6th overall and (probably) the first old geezer (no age groups unfortunately).

Come  Sunday the weather was bright and dry-where’s the fun in that!

I’d do the event again, taking the learnings to help improve my time. All on all a grand day out!

Stu George and Sebastian Wolstencroft-Dodds collect their well earned trophies.

Chedworth 5.

Report – Stuart George

With Cardiff half impending I was unsure about fitting this one in but after a summer of racing I wanted one more hit before the dark mornings take over our lives.  

After the 10 mile version’s success, Chedworth decided to introduce a shorter event.  How anyone would want to do the 10-mile version after that I will never figure out.

I am a road runner that’s for sure but it’s good, apparently, to get out of your comfort zone and boy was I ever.  With a waist deep river crossing at mile 3 and shoes that retained half the river after that it was never going to be an even effort all the way round but I never thought I’d run a 6 min mile followed by a 9 minute one.  But with hills that make your eyes water I did just that.

Seb was there from the club too and when he announced to me that he was just doing an easy effort I thought I bet that’s going to be quicker than my all out.  I wasn’t wrong.  However, we both went out hard at the beginning on the road stage and kept up a healthy lead from the trailing pack.  At mile 2.5 the 5 and 10 mile runners peel off.  This is where the real fun began as I noticed it was only Seb and I from the leading pack who went down the 5 mile route.  We had about a minute’s lead on the third place.  Now I’m not going to lie, with it being smaller race I thought a good age based finish was in my future but, all of a sudden, a true podium place beckoned.  If it hadn’t, I think I would have packed it all in as taking on a Goliath of a hill with 2kg of water in each shoe was a slogfest.

As we crested that hill the Marshall said it’s pretty flat from here on in.  HE LIED as the hill at mile 4.5 was equally arduous.  I did walk on two of the hills for 10 seconds to regain my breath as I was honestly running slower than I walked.  Luckily for me the gap remained from 3rd.  Seb had now run off into the distance and claimed his win.  But I was ecstatic to follow him in for a Stratford 1, 2 finish.  We got a nifty trophy but were denied the box of celebrations we wanted to share, even when we were announced as the 2nd placed club.

Long standing club stalwart Dave Maundrell completed the trio of SACers who completed the race.

A great day out, a super hard trail run. But as always amazing to get the colours on and even better to actually win something.  The taking part is what matters but boy after an absence of 32 years to win something in running felt good (Cooper and Jordan School Aldridge fun run winner aged 11 if anyone is interested in my past glories lol)

L to R: Mark Barker, Lesley Kirk and Yumi & Seth Turner
 
Chedworth Roman Trail 10 Mile.
 
Report – Lesley Kirk.

I was a bit nervous about entering Chedworth, despite having run it many years ago, as it would be my first proper event in eighteen months. I had fallen out of love with running, didn’t like the pressure of racing anymore, had gotten older, so not surprisingly, a lot slower! 
 
Mark Barker and I arrived, having no idea whether anyone else from the club would be there. However, no sooner had we parked in a grassy field, than we came across Seth and Yumiko Turner, followed by Dave Maundrell. He, along with another couple of Stratford’s finest, Seb Wolstencroft-Dodds and Stuart Lawrence-George, had entered the 5 mile version.
 
After eyeing up the display of cakes in the village hall, we lined up for the start at 10.30am. Soon we were off, and within a mile, we hit our first hill. Mark disappeared off into the distance, followed by Seth and Yumi, while I just tried to settle into a comfortable pace. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen. I spent most of my time trying to keep my breakfast down, being more used to running early, and on an empty stomach.

Thankfully, a lot of the course was across reasonably flat grassy fields, with one small stream crossing. It’s the only time this summer I’ve been thankful for the lack of rain!

I walked the hills, took a few photos on the way round and just hoped I wouldn’t see my breakfast again. I was quite relieved to see the finish line, but pleased to have done it. The weather was perfect and it was a lovely course, which I would definitely do again.
 
It was great to discover afterwards that two of our 5 mile runners had finished in first and second place. Unfortunately, I missed them collecting their trophies, as still out in a field somewhere. I was more than happy with my finishers buff, though.
 
Results as follows:
 
10 Mile
48th – Mark Barker – 1.32.41
87th – Yumiko Turner – 1.45.25
88th – Seth Turner – 1.45.27
90th – Lesley Kirk – 1.46.39
138 finishers
 
5 Mile
1st – Sebastian Wolstencroft-Dodds – 1.04.10
2nd – Stuart Lawrence-George – 1.07.23
40th – David Maundrell – 1.31.11
57 finishers
 
The Stratford Herald.

Once again this week we have extensive coverage of our activities in The Herald and  have been granted a full page to cover our Club Championships.
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