The Paris Marathon 2009: Miles 16-20

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Between miles 15 and 16 (or roughly kilometres 25 and 26) the course left the Quai des Célestins and joined the Voie Georges Pompidou, which runs parallel to the banks of the Seine and under several of the bridges that cross it. At first the sun had ducked behind another cloud, but eventually it came out again and stayed out for most of this phase of the race (up until entering the Bois de Boulogne).

Running along the banks of the Seine in the sunshine, spotting all the landmarks, including the towers of the Notre Dame Cathedral and the Eiffel Tower was possibly the highlight of the entire race. I was now feeling much better as I had overcome my tiredness and aching phase from earlier and was happily clocking up the miles (or kilometres).

The Eiffel Tower makes its first appearance

The Eiffel Tower makes its first appearance

Whereas before I was running behind the Louvre, this time I was running on the other side of it, but I still didn’t get to see it, because the course entered the Tuileries Tunnel for about a kilometre.It got quite warm down there and I was just starting to sweat again when the course emerged onto the Quai des Tuileries and the daylight again.

Every time the course went into another tunnel, the pacemaker shouted encouragement and motivational comments like “Let’s attack this hill together” (in French of course) and every time we went under a bridge he shouted at the bystanders on top of it to give some words of encouragement. It all helped to keep spirits up.

Just after coming out of the third tunnel, we crossed the Place de la Concorde (again). After turning onto the Voie Georges Pompidou again, It became possible to see the Eiffel Tower appear from behind the trees lining the route. I saw it again as we entered the Albert 1er tunnel.

After crossing the Place de la Bastille again, the course followed the River Seine, running past some of Paris’ most famous landmarks, including the Notre Dame Cathedral and the Eiffel Tower. Watching the spire of the Tower appear from behind the trees and gradually running towards it was a genuinely beautiful sight. There were also plenty of vocal, supportive crowds in the centre as well, which helped spur me on.

Video: Passing the 30km point

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Just before we got to the Trocadéro, we passed the 30km point. Now we were three quarters of the way round the course and the aching in my legs was becoming harder to ignore. Still, ignore it was all I could do and I ploughed on. I actually congratulated myself on feeling this good at this point. Getting this far whilst still feeling like I had enough left in the tank was an achievement in itself when compared to how I felt at this point in my previous marathons.

There was another water and food station opposite the Eiffel Tower where I took on another bottle of water. The discarded orange peel and banana skins made it very slippy and treacherous to try and run through and that wasn’t helped by the fact that this station was on a cobbled road. Once again I had gotten ahead of the pacemaker once I left the water/food station, so I slowed down for a moment until the pacemaker group caught me up again. However, my increasingly achy muscles meant it was becoming harder to starting running again after each walking break.

The course continued south-west down the Avenue du Président Kennedy, moving away from the riverbank and past the Maison de Radio-France. We crossed onto the Avenue de Versailles, then at the Place de Barcelone the course veered off to the right through another sponge station, down the Rue Mirabeau. There was no stopping this time, the pacemaker telling everyone to run straight through. All the sponges were long gone – none left for us – only the buckets of cold water which I willingly splashed on my face and neck. Running through the water/sponge stations always makes me feel like I’m going really fast, but the photos show that I was only moving at about a moderate jogging pace.

Posted April 16th, 2009 by Simon

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