Veteran distance runner Hayley Yelling is enjoying a new lease of life as she explains to Nicola Bamford.
Veteran distance runner Hayley Yelling is enjoying a new lease of life following her success at the European Cross-Country Championships as she explains to Nicola Bamford ...
Celebrating her twelfth appearance at the European Cross-Country Championships, British distance-running stalwart Hayley Yelling proved she is neither the shy or retiring type as she stormed to an unprecedented and eye-poppingly dominant victory.
Running with renewed vigour following her competitive 'retirement' a year ago, the 35-year-old certainly did not need the luck of the Irish at the Dublin event, as she put in the performance of her life to capture the continental title she last took in 2004.
Yelling looked a far cry from her despondent former self as she took the senior women's 8km race by the scruff of the neck from the outset and maintained a comfortable lead throughout.
Surging through the mud of Santry Park, the maths teacher from Marlow, who made a shock return to competition when winning the European Trials last month, secured a seven-second victory over a classy international field, leading the British women to team silver.
Yelling revealed: "I can't believe it! I feel great - I'm in shock! I just wanted to go out hard because I know that's how I race better - to just go out and hang on for as long as possible. I expected them to all come, but luckily they didn't. I was running scared!"
Understandably overjoyed to be back competing well in a British vest after her sabbatical, Yelling explained: "Dublin was amazing - the support was too. The course was perfect for me, even though I'm not the best in mud. Even though I was knackered, I was smiling to myself during the race in disbelief."
The sister-in-law of British Olympic marathon runner, Liz Yelling, Hayley continued: "I had no expectations at all - I just wanted to enjoy it. I was thinking about the team really. I've been back in training sessions for about a month."
Yelling only attended the trials in Liverpool to accompany a friend and certainly had no strong aspirations. Her shock win there, however, was only a glimpse of the perfoemances to come.
Refreshed
Evidently, it is Yelling's laid-back attitude and refreshed outlook towards her training that is reaping the benefits: "I think it's just from all the years of training. What was all that 100 miles a week about!? I'm enjoying it so much, I want to get out of the door and run."
A handful of extreme adventure races over the summer, followed by a windsurfing holiday ensured Yelling kept her fitness base high. She then returned to her long-time coach in Windsor - Conrad Milton but still insists on not having a training schedule to rule her days and only running during the week so she can "have fun at the weekends".
"It's nice to not have the pressure anymore - I want to run when the alarm goes off in the morning," she explains.
The infectiously-bubbly runner is back in school to work this week but plans to use a couple of Christmas parties as "an excuse to celebrate" her recent achievements.
Her latest outstanding performance comes after years of agony; she missed the 10,000m qualification standard for the past three Olympic Games by between a mere 0.14 and 4.29-seconds.
Although understandably thrilled by her return to top-class form, Yelling insists she is not planning a permanent switch back into the international spotlight: "I might do a few more races and see how I'm doing but I'm not looking as far as the World Cross or anything. I'm just enjoying my athletics and not putting any pressure on myself and it seems to be working."
Long-term, Yelling is adamant that she'll be too old for the 2012 Olympics, but for 2010, the BUPA Great Edinburgh International cross-country in January may crop up next on her spontaneous calendar. Fans may also occasionally spot her on the track this summer and a possible tilt at the Commonwealth Games 10,000m in New Delhi in October is not off the radar - but only if "I'm still enjoying my training."
Judging by this athlete's new lease of life, running's never been so fun.