Melbourne Marathon 2025

Melbourne Marathon 2025

This is another marathon blog penned by Geoffrey.

Please contact me if you are interested in knowing more about anything related to this Marathon event.

Over to Geoffrey …

Ten days before the Melbourne Marathon I participated in a 5km race  – an event that I have run many times before.  Just 500m from the finished I suddenly felt totally out of breath and had to stop.  This had never happened before as I wasn’t pushing anything like 100% so it was a little concerning.   Was my fitness that poor leading up to a mayor marathon event?  After a minute slouched over my knees, I jogged my way slowly to the finish feeling poorly and despondent.  Half an hour later and now feeling much recovered I looked at my watch which records a lot of data about the run.  It clearly indicated that my heart rate suddenly spiked to 215 bpm for around 3 minutes which had caused my ”out of breath” moment.  The following days I noticed that I didn’t feel great for my final training runs so I made the sensible decision on race day to take it easy and to make an appointment with a cardiologist to discuss the incident…

Melbourne turned on a perfect morning for the early 6:30am gun time.  The marathon field was around 14,000 but with the Half Marathon, 10km and 5km events the total number of runners was around 50,000.  The marathon course is a scenic, predominantly flat loop through the city’s iconic landmarks.  The race starts outside the Tennis Centre and finishes with a memorable lap inside the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG).  You run around Albert Park Lake (the same route as the Formula One Australian Grand Prix) and there is a long out and back stretch from St Kilda to Port Melbourne.  The finish inside the spectacular MCG is truly memorable.   

I stuck with the 4hr 30min pace group for the most part and managed near perfect splits to finish 4:29:32.  I ran like it was my regular Sunday training run with no pressure to push myself. I found that by running a bit conservatively you get to enjoy and appreciate the event so much more and the recovery after is exponentially faster.

PS:  I met with the cardiologist a couple of weeks after and it was very informative.  Although not able to replicate exactly the tachycardia on the stress test I did learn a lot about what may have caused this.  I am also thankful that my Garmin was able “record” the incident and further proves how much an essential tool smart watches have become.

Finish line just ahead…

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

four × one =