Monday, November 06, 2006

Running of the OBL IV

“Which way to the hot tub?”
That was Our Boy Lance's final comment after finishing the New York Marathon in just under three hours Sunday.
Writes Juliet Macur in the New York Times:
His dark green shirt was soaked with sweat, his gait stiff. He said his calves felt as if someone were squeezing them, hard. And his shinsplints were flaring up again.
“That’s when I started to feel helpless,” Armstrong said afterward, while being driven back to his hotel opposite Central Park. “I thought: Uh-oh, maybe I should have trained a little harder for this. I think I’m in trouble.”
And:
Exhausted and nearly walking, Armstrong crossed the finish line in 2 hours 59 minutes 36 seconds. He was 869th, with a pace of 6:51 a mile.
“I can tell you, 20 years of pro sports, endurance sports, from triathlons to cycling, all of the Tours — even the worst days on the Tours — nothing was as hard as that, and nothing left me feeling the way I feel now, in terms of just sheer fatigue and soreness,” [OBL] said, looking spent, at a news conference.

1 comment:

citizen***146 said...

"nothing was as hard as that" interesting, I suppose it shows that old adage to be right, practice makes perfect. still 2.59, not bad!

Monday, November 06, 2006

Running of the OBL IV

“Which way to the hot tub?”
That was Our Boy Lance's final comment after finishing the New York Marathon in just under three hours Sunday.
Writes Juliet Macur in the New York Times:
His dark green shirt was soaked with sweat, his gait stiff. He said his calves felt as if someone were squeezing them, hard. And his shinsplints were flaring up again.
“That’s when I started to feel helpless,” Armstrong said afterward, while being driven back to his hotel opposite Central Park. “I thought: Uh-oh, maybe I should have trained a little harder for this. I think I’m in trouble.”
And:
Exhausted and nearly walking, Armstrong crossed the finish line in 2 hours 59 minutes 36 seconds. He was 869th, with a pace of 6:51 a mile.
“I can tell you, 20 years of pro sports, endurance sports, from triathlons to cycling, all of the Tours — even the worst days on the Tours — nothing was as hard as that, and nothing left me feeling the way I feel now, in terms of just sheer fatigue and soreness,” [OBL] said, looking spent, at a news conference.

1 comment:

citizen***146 said...

"nothing was as hard as that" interesting, I suppose it shows that old adage to be right, practice makes perfect. still 2.59, not bad!