Mara ready to step out of Radcliffe's shadow
A flight from Albuquerque to Denver. A long wait. Another flight to New Jersey, another to Lisbon. Six-hour taxi ride to Madrid, two-day drive in a hire car to Paris, an endless queue at the Gare du Nord. Emergency hotel. Taxi to Le Touquet, specially-chartered prop plane across the Channel to Shoreham and finally a private car to London, just in time for Sunday's marathon.
Starring in your own special version of is not the ideal preparation for running 26.2 miles. Not even had to deal with the aftermath of an erupting Icelandic volcano. But Mara Yamauchi was doing her best to look for silver linings in the ash cloud that almost ended her marathon hopes.
"There were times when I thought we wouldn't make it," she admitted, appearing simultaneously weary and delighted to be within touching distance of Tower Bridge. "And there were times when I thought I'd be the only one to make it, and I'd win by 10 minutes."
Six days on the road can do strange things to anyone's well-being, let alone an elite athlete for whom the right combination of taper-week training, rest and low-fat carbs is an absolute essential.