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2006 race reports and results: March
< Race report and results index
 

Report for 26/03/2006

Southern Area 20km Championship:

 

Although missing its internationals and also most of the usual team members due to holidays, Surrey Walking Club did complete a team and brought home 3rd place medals to prove it.

The very flat course near the Met Police Sports Ground in Hampton was probably beneficial to those less prepared for the step up from recent 10km to 20km and the weather was benign compared with the previous very cold days. In view of lack of distance training our team set off steadily. It was not a day for heroics and Surrey didn’t provide any! However they were all committed to finishing and although Hannell slowed the others had a race long battle to finish less than a minute apart over the two hours. The fairly lowly placings hardly merited medals but at least Surrey all finished on a day when judging was strict and several of the faster walkers were disqualified. On a lap of just over 1 km our team certainly saw plenty of the leader, Nick Ball, who is a very promising young talent from Steyning and went past lapping more than once.

Results:

 

Men:

17.P.Hannell 2 hr 10 min 34 sec; 19.T.Sliwerski 2 hr 19 min 40 sec; 20.D.Hoben 2 hr 20 min 23 sec.

 

Teams: 3.Surrey Walking Club

 
Bourges 170km / 200km 4-5 MARCH 2006
 
Report from Sandra Brown

Kevin Marshall and I went to Bourges last weekend for the 200kms. We arrived on Friday in heavy rain (in N Europe it had been raining and snowing for some days), but we were ready for 24 hours of rain if necessary. Unfortunately the organisers weren't quite ready for what happened.

We got up on Saturday to a Christmas card scene - thick snow lying and still falling. This continued all day. At 15.00 the race started as scheduled, pretty much with everyone in their woolly hats, gloves, jackets etc. There were lots of jokes about needing our skis. The going was hard as it was typically snowy conditions with feet slipping and sliding, especially whenever there was a corner or slope on the 2.6kms circuit. There was,  surprisingly, no attempt to grit or sand the course, until a truck appeared after about 5 hours and sanded a stretch along a main road, which was about a quarter of the circuit - but only that.

 

Suddenly, after about 6 hours, we were told "last lap" as we passed through the hall where the organisers and recorders were. I must confess I protested - although the conditions were bad, walkers had come from several countries (including Bernardo Jose Mora from Spain, and others from Holland and Belgium, as well as we two from the UK) all with the intention to walk for 24 hours. And of course some of us had walked 100 miles in snow and ice in Golden, Colorado, and knew it was possible, so long as you walked steadily and were well wrapped up. Of course the organisers were bound to take a risk averse approach - and I think everyone fully understood their decision, and sympathised with them in their terrible dilemma. I also sensed that the organisers were frustrated that the local authority didn't come out with grit and sand for the roads.

 

In any event, by 21.00 hrs (ie after 6 hours) when the race was stopped, the weather forecast was for temperatures to fall to minus 5, so the snow and slush would have frozen and lead to very dangerous conditions. So the decision to stop the race was probably very wise, but of course many walkers were very disappointed. The organisers made presentations on the basis of positions after 6 hours, when many walkers had completed 50kms or more.

 

Given the weather, the turnout was surprisingly good, from all over France and beyond. Some big names who were down to race, including Urbanowski and Rodionov, did not turn up; I expect they had listened to the weather forecast! Kora and I were walking together for several laps, until she sprinted off with a lap or so to go, obviously expecting the race to end shortly.
 

The race organisation seemed very professional and helpful (a new club has taken over the job following the cancellation of the event last October.) Bourges is also a lovely town, very historic and attractive, especially coated in snow! We would go again with pleasure, not least to show solidarity with the  organising club for whom the weather was very bad luck. On Monday, when we made our way back across France, the melting snow had caused quite a bit of flooding in the fields around Bourges and further north. Let's hope for better weather next year!

Selected results:

 

1 Sergei Dvoresk RUS 56.007 km
2  Stephane Paille  FRA 53.340 km
3 Patrick Langlois FRA 53.340 km
4 Pascal Biebuyck BEL 53.340 km
5 Thierry Heinrich FRA 53.340 km
6  Urbain Girod  SUI 53.340 km
7 Kora Boufflert (F) FRA 50.673 km
8 Pascal Dufrien FRA 50.673 km
9 Daniel Dien  FRA  50.673 km
10 Pascal Bunel FRA  50.673 km
11 Sandra Brown (F) GBR 50.673 km
12 Jean-Franck Vanoosthuyse FRA 50.673 km
13 Jean-Loius Bruck FRA  50.673 km
14 Louison Payen FRA   50.673 km
15 Alain Costils FRA  48.006 km

 

 

 

 

        

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This page updated:  19 January, 2008