Paula Radcliffe hopes to run one more top-level marathon in a defiant act over the foot injury that she believed ended her career.
Radcliffe spoke with tears in her eyes about wanting to finish her career as the world's greatest female distance runner on her own terms.
This foot injury has been problematic at large races, as we've blogged about in the past. She conceded defeat at the 2012 London Olympics and was so uncomfortable in a 2011 marathon in Berlin she thought it would be her last.
Radcliffe has been advising Mo Farrah and the UK Athletics distance group as well as running on the same dusty trails that are essential to Farrah's preparation for the Virgin Money London Marathon in April.
"Ideally I would love to come back and run a marathon and just be able to finish my career on my terms," Radcliffe said. "I would never say retire, because I am never going to finish running. I am still going to be getting out for a run and I don't want to jeopardize that because it's important.
"I don't want to break down because of my foot. I have to listen to it. But I want to ask it to run one more marathon.
"I'd love it to be New York or London. One of those two. This London is too soon. But London would probably be my first choice, for sentimental reasons. It's where I started my career, everything growing up (as a kid she watched her father run London), and missing out on the Olympics at London 2012."
Radcliffe does concede that at 40, she's not likely to be close to her former record-breaking world pace. But she still wants to be competitive.
"I'm not being unrealistic," she said. "I'm not thinking I can get back up and run 2 hours 15 minutes. But if I could come back and run sub 2:30 then I'd like to do it. Really, though, it's just about coming back and running on my terms. That would be nice but very few people actually get to do that."
Radcliffe has clearly been frustrated, however, with how things ended.
"There was a time from July 2012 until last April that I couldn't run at all and I thought I would never be able to run again," she said. "That means I can't do anything silly. I have to be grateful that I can just get up and go on a nice run now.
"I might just have a little race somewhere just to see how close I can get to where I want to be. It's not a question of fitness. It's not about my age. It's not even the pain. It's a question of the efficiency of my foot.
"This morning it was quite good but I was limping and favoring it for the first couple of miles until the joint began to warm up.
"But then, when it gets tired, it becomes a case of me picking up the other leg rather than toeing off. So I'm not getting the same return on effort that I'm putting in. I'm running slower than I would have.
"The doctors really don't know if I can come back. If they scan me it does not look like a normal foot because the bone that had a stress fracture is not the same shape as it should be. If I run every day I might keep wearing away at the cartilage and make it more painful than in 2012.
"I can look back on my career and I am very happy that it went so well. I'm proud of the things that I did. You get philosophical as you get older. I think of things like the kids, that are way more important than anything I did running. I just think, yes, some things didn't come off but I worked hard and sometimes it did come off."
Reference: Daily Mail
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Jeffrey S. Kahn, DPM
Connecticut Foot Care Centers
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Athletes are notoriously hard on all parts of their body, but in particular their feet and ankles. From football to basketball to running, when you participate in any sporting event you need to be looking out for your feet. Let Jeffrey S. Kahn, DPM and his staff at Connecticut Foot Care Centers in Rocky Hill and Middletown take care of you!
Showing posts with label paula radcliffe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paula radcliffe. Show all posts
Friday, February 21, 2014
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
Runner Paula Radcliffe May Never Run Again
Radcliffe admitted last week that she will likely never compete again due to ongoing complications with her foot.
The 39 year old was forced to pull out of the 2012 Olympics, even though she had specialist treatment in Germany in July. Radcliffe later had surgery in August when her foot problems could no longer be ignored. Her foot problems went all the way back to 1994 when she suffered a stress fracture that progressed to a broken left foot. Even after that, Radcliffe had hopes of running a 10km race, as well as the 2014 London Marathon. That dream has now been dashed.
Racliffe told the BBC, "Targets have gone out of the window. I'm very much in that limbo where I know and accept that realistically it may not be possible. But at the same time I have a little window of hope and I would rather be able to finish my career in a race, rather than a race I can't actually get to the start line of."
Radcliffe was often caught in very public moments during and after races. In the 2004 Athens Olympics, when talk of a Radcliffe gold was high, the runner was discovered broken down in the streets of the city, sobbing, sitting in the gutter. She had a repeat performance in Beijing, limping to the finish line in 23rd place, crying.
But Radcliffe did have some spectacular moments in her career. She created world records in Chicago in 2002 and London in 2003. It will be ten years next month that Radcliffe ran the 26 miles of London's streets in two hours, 15 minutes, and 25 seconds, a record that still stands.
"I've not been able to run after the kids in the last few months, and you have to think about the first goal- to get back and be able to have a normal active life and then worry about if I can get back to competing.
"In all honesty with me, it was always probably going to be something going wrong with my body that would make my career start to wind down because I am always going to want to keep competing and keep getting out there.
"I would love to be able to run a couple more marathons before I finish, even if it's just another half marathon. At the same time I would still like to have a healthy foot in 20 years' time," said Radcliffe.
Reference: Sky.Com and The Guardian.
If you are a runner and have a foot problem, call our Newington, Kensington, or Middletown office to make an appointment.
Craig M. Kaufman, DPM
Connecticut Foot Care Centers
Sports Medicine Podiatrist in CT
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