FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Margaret Reddan retraces 'four wins' glory days
WHEN Kenyan maestro Kenneth Mungara's svelte frame slices through the crisp
Gold Coast morning air, possibly en route to an amazing fourth marathon win
here, quietly looking on will be someone who has already climbed that
Everest.
Sixty-six-year-old Benowa grandmother Margaret Reddan is keen to be
roadside, somewhere along the 42.195km course, soaking in the 2019
atmosphere and reflecting on some golden memories.
Mungara is a giant of the Gold Coast marathon with victories in 2015, 2016,
and 2018. He is the current race record holder at 2:08:42 and has a PB of
2:07:36.
If he can achieve a fourth win this year he will join a unique club. Only
Reddan and Australian marathon legend Pat Carroll have won this event on
four occasions.
Reddan is proud yet understated about her achievements.
"The standard of female marathoners then was nowhere near what it is now,"
she said.
"And looking back, my times were not particularly fast. I did what I had to
do to win."
Not only does Reddan's accomplishments at the Gold Coast Marathon grade her
as one of the true elite within the sport of marathon running in Australia,
they also position her as a real pioneer of endurance athletics.
When Reddan won her first Women's Gold Coast Marathon in 1981, that event
had not yet been included in the Olympics Games. Its debut was in Los
Angeles in 1984.
She vividly recalls her first win, in what was her first marathon.
"My husband Greg was my coach and advisor and I had done lots of
cross-country and road races up until then and just decided to give the
marathon a go," she said.
"He suggested I target a sub-three hours run. It was not until I was
actually running in the race and talking to some of the other male runners
that they sort of suggested that time was a bit optimistic on debut.
"However I kept going at that pace. A few of the runners around me started
to drop off and I ran the final few kilometres with Brisbane runner Ernie
Smith. I told Ernie how painful I was feeling and he encouraged me to keep
going."
Reddan crossed the tape in 2:58:33 - winning the women's race and setting a
PB under three hours.
From there the marathon bug had bitten and her running career blossomed. By
the time she had retired, after the London Marathon in 1989, Reddan had
completed 22 marathons across the globe.
Her biggest success and her favourite course was on the Gold Coast.
After her initial win in 1981, she came back to win three in a row - 1984,
1985 and 1986. She is the only person to have achieved that on the Gold
Coast. She ran in one other Gold Coast Marathon in 1988 when she placed
fifth.
"That first marathon was special because I broke the three hours and only
later realised just how few Australians had done that at that stage,"
Reddan said.
"The three in a row was also special because there was a fair bit of
publicity around that. Both Pat Carroll and I were trying to get the three
in the same year. However, he came across a very fast Melbourne runner
Peter Mitchell, who won the race in that year.
"I guess the key thing for me about the four wins, was that I felt it was
important for me to keep competing in the Gold Coast Marathon. It really is
a great race. The home crowd knew me. I had lots of support and of course I
knew the course very well."
Reddan ran her PB of 2:43:40 in Melbourne in 1984.
Her husband Greg is also a well-known Gold Coast sporting identity. He was
a successful surf lifesaving competitor for the Freshwater (Sydney) and
Southport clubs before transitioning to triathlon, becoming the first
Australian to complete the Hawaiian Ironman, placing seventh in 1982.
He has been a lecturer in sports science at Griffith University since 2001.
Margaret Reddan said being a busy mum meant she never had a chance to be
nervous before marathons.
"When my two boys, Tristan and Brendan, were young they would get sick of
waiting near the finish line for mum to finish a race," Reddan recalled.
"So we used get them babysat. I remember being late for one race because
Brendan was adamant he had to have a certain toy at the babysitter's. Of
course it took us ages to find the toy, rush to the babysitter's place and
then I had to literally run to the toilet at the event and then run to the
start line.
"So no, I never had a chance to get nervous!"
Reddan said the overriding recollection of her glory time through marathons
on the Gold Coast in the 1980s is of 'excitement'.
"The atmosphere around the event was just so exciting," she said.
"It is nice sometimes to just sit back and reflect.
"The support from everyone, especially the running community was amazing.
And it is lovely when someone would come up to me years later and say: 'I
remember you running in the marathon'."
Reddan offers simple advice to elite runners right through to first timers
ahead of this year's event.
"Pace yourself, don't go out too hard. And, hydrate - have lots of water."
###
|