In the run up to Manchester Marathon I’ve wanted just one thing – an injury free training cycle. It was all going so well. My training sessions were being ticked off without missing one, despite some pretty crappy personal stuff I had to deal with. My legs were feeling strong and I nailed a 20 mile run at marathon goal pace.
Finally it looked like the stars had aligned and this was going to be the marathon where I could lay down a time that would not only bag me a ‘Good for Age’ qualification for London Marathon, but smash it and finish with time to spare.
Then I went shopping for jeans.
My legs have behaved so well this training cycle that I thought it would be nice to treat them to something – a new pair of skinny jeans. I was weaving my way through the crowds on Oxford Street in a pair of Converse when bang – it felt like I’d stepped on a nail.
A pain was stabbing at the arch of my foot. I hobbled about and then headed home to spend some time with Dr Google. When, two days later, the pain hadn’t gone, walking was proving a problem and my long run had been cancelled in favour of a cycle, panic had taken over.
All those training runs, all those intervals, all those miles that had gone so well wasted. I wasn’t going to be able to run my dream marathon in Manchester. As the words ‘Plantar fasciitis’ ran round my mind I couldn’t see a way that I was going to be able to make the start line, let along smash my PB.
I emailed friendly physio Julia. She suggested I stretch my calves three times a day as this could be the cause and roll my foot on a frozen bottle of water. I wanted to go for a run to test it out, so she told me to get some heel gel pads.
After 10 days of not running I nervously stepped out for a run, gel pads in my shoes and kenisiology tape on my foot. After a niggly first mile my foot felt ok but running after 10 days of not running felt weird and clunky. The next day I headed out again. It should have been my last long run before the marathon – a 20 miler. But this wasn’t going to happen.
I headed out to find some flat ground – going uphill was still causing me problems. I ran hard not knowing how many miles I’d be able to cover and figuring that a few fast ones would compensate for lots of slower ones.
After 13 miles I was still running, but I’d gone off to fast and had run just shy of half-marathon pace. It felt horrible but I did two more miles and wrote a respectable 15 on my training plan where the 20 should have been.
Now it’s taper time. There’s nothing more I can do now but hope the next three weeks allow my foot to recover fully, not push it by running too much or too fast, and trust that the training I did before those missed 10 days will prove themselves come race day. We’ll see.
Oh no – you poor thing! Stay away from completely flat shoes as well as stretching those calves is what I was told when I had a similar issue. Apparently I have freakishly tight calves and high arches – who knew?! Good luck – am crossing fingers for you. 🙂
how awful. fingers crossed your leg will hold up and you’ll get a bit rested during your taper.
Thanks guys. One thing I’ve learnt from my previous injuries is that I’m pretty good at resting and my body can heal quickly when it wants to. Hoping I haven’t used up all my lives just yet.
Laura.
Sorry to hear this, Laura – I’ve got my fingers and toes crossed for you! Hopefully the short break from running won’t have impacted too much, especially if you’ve got a few 20 mile runs in the bag (at race pace too – that’s a real advantage).
Fingers crossed for you hon – I read somewhere that needing to rest because of injury/illness just before the taper period isn’t as disastrous as you think, you’ll have already built your fitness up prior to now. Rest up and I hope you’ll be ok! x
So sorry to hear that Laura. Hope some R&R means you can make it to Manchester with the rest of us. Fingers crossed!
Oh no! Fingers crossed the taper rest will work wonders and that your foot will be ok!
Last year my foot went ping 3 weeks before London, I was completely unable to run. I cancelled all training there and then. By race day it had healed and I had no problems. Good luck!
You lot are very lovely with all your messages. Fingers crossed all will be OK.
Laura.
Ouch 🙂 It’s certain though that your training has not been in vain, your body will heal while you’re tapering and you’ll be fine!
PS. Love those socks.
Oh I am so sorry to hear this. I haven’t run a marathon myself, but a close friend of mine was training so hard, just like you and had to pull out in the week leading up to the London Marathon. She was gutted. Sending you healthy vibes, so that you heal quickly and you can still run.
Fingers crossed you will recover in time! Unfortunately I’ve had to pull out of Manchester and I know how you feel being this close. Good luck