We have moved from last year’s hotel after they ratcheted
the price up. We stay in Motel One which is right near our usual post-race Sunday
Roast venue the Pleased To Meet You.
Motel One is nice, offers free bottled water to ‘members’ (I
only joined to book it this once) and an electronic aquarium on the TV, like
some sort of 90’s screen saver.
Having
checked in we head off to find the Pasta Party, having finally got the
hang of the fact that this is now in Gateshead or rather it was.
It isn’t this year apparently. The Great North City Games which are the
mainly track based athletics events they usually have the day before
the Great North Run have been moved to Stockton. Oh. Although we didn’t
initially realise this
when we got to Gateshead because they still have the big screen showing
live coverage of it.
While the Junior races are still there but the Pasta Party and the Expo
seemed to have
been vaporised. Unless that motley collection of tents is the Expo. They
certainly don’t have any hoodies this year. This doesn’t bode well as
the race
approaches its 40th birthday next year.
In the evening, finding somewhere to eat is difficult, for some reason
everywhere is busy. In the end we eat at the Banyan bar which is full inside
but they let us eat outside. That is until another staff member turns up to tell us that we
can’t eat outside... once we’re finished eating. Then we pop into the delightfully and
prophetically named D.E.A.D. for a pre-race beer. D.E.A.D. stands for Drop
Everything And Drink.
Sunday is the race itself and we follow the throngs to the
start where we join first the loo queue and then the start queue. Some poor
folk probably won’t have even have cross the start line by the time Mr Farah is taking the tape
at the finish. I line up next to a chap who ran 1:27 last year and is hoping to
improve on that this time. One of us is in the wrong start zone.
As I have mentioned in previous years, it’s a pretty dull course so I
mix things up this year by staying on the right hand side of the start which
means you go over the first flyover rather than under it. So daring.
Then it’s the one exciting bit, over the Tyne Bridge but for
some reason my timing is out and the Red Arrows are not overhead this year.
Then I settle in for the grimness, get in a steady pace and high five as
much of the crowd as possible to relieve the boredom until the next highlight
at 10.5 miles where the beer stop is.
I am aiming for a time of around 1:45 but have completely
failed to locate the 1:45 pacer either at the start or since. Then he comes
past me at 12 miles. Are pacers supposed to sprint finish? I get a shift one
and ‘un-lap’ myself finishing in 1:45:50.
Overall I am pleased with that. It’s a PB at my third
attempt here. In previous years I’ve arrived pre-injured and have done a 1:48
and a 1:51.
Then it’s time for some more queuing. First I spend almost
as long in the massage queue as I did running the race, all for what wasn’t even a
great massage. Then I join the beer queue only to find that L has now finished her race and made
the beer tent before me despite starting ages after me. We split three pints
between us before heading off to join the bus queue as we attempt to escape
South Shields.
Our evening meal and post-race drinks is again in the Pleased To
Meet You and for breakfast the next morning we again frequent the Cathedral cafe.
Before the race L said this was definitely her last Great
North Run but... she seems to have really enjoyed this one. We also have one
more year of our three year ‘membership’ and next year is the race’s 40thAnniversary. I rebook the hotel for next year.
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