Modern Athlete Magazine Issue 147, Dec 2021 December 2021 | Page 30

Debbie ’ s Comrades Results
BEST OF 2021

Debbie ’ s Comrades Results

YEAR
RACE
TIME
MEDAL
AGE
1995
Down
10:15:37
Bronze
29
2008
Up
10:05:06
Bronze
42
2009
Down
9:29:23
Bronze
43
2010
Down
9:42:39
Bronze
44
2011
Up
9:10:34
Bronze
45
2012
Down
9:53:47
Bronze
46
2013
Up
9:40:10
Bronze
47
2014
Down
10:31:14
Bronze
48
2017
Up
10:27:22
Bronze
51
2019
Up
9:44:05
Robert Mtshali
53
A relieved Debbie celebrates finishing her 10th Comrades
first , then slowly working her way up to 3km . “ It was amazing , because there was absolutely no pain , and I felt liberated . Before the op , just walking to my car had been painful , so now to be able to walk with absolutely no pain at all , it felt like an enormous weight had been lifted from me .”
Permission to Run Again
Four months to the day after having her full hip replacement , Debbie headed to her biokineticist with a note from Dr Chuck , with the sentence she had been
He simply said to me , come on , we need to see how strong you are . I was petrified I would do something to my hip , but he knew better , and soon I was doing strength training , getting stronger and stronger with each session .
waiting for : “ Debbie can start training for running .” While she had overcome the first hurdle , it did not mean the rest of her recovery would be plain sailing . “ I remember Gareth , my bio , pointing me to a weight machine Giving that the tests the strength in your legs , and putting Two on Oceans more weight than I thought I could handle . He Half simply another said to me , come on , we need to see how strong go in you 2017 are . I was petrified I would do something
to my hip , but he knew better , and soon I was doing strength training , getting stronger and stronger with each session .”
A month later , Gareth gave Debbie her first running programme . “ I was so nervous for that first run , so I told Riaan he had to come with me . I also remember telling him , I got you into running , now you have to run with me ,” says Debbie . They only ran 200 metres , but for Debbie , it was a dream come true , as there was no pain , nothing dislocated , and her new hip was working perfectly . From there it was simply a case of gradual progression , till she could run 2km non-stop , and just a few more months down the line , Debbie managed to run her first 15km .
To date her longest run has been 25km , but she makes sure she does no more than 60km a week . “ Normally
it takes nine months to get where I am , but it took me only six , so that is an achievement right there , but I am just grateful that I can run at all , so being limited to 60km a week is okay with me ,” she says with a big smile .
Of course , she does admit that it was hard to accept that she will never run the Comrades again , but she is quick to add that she feels she ‘ went out ’ on a high note , finishing her tenth . And now , with all her experience , she feels she can give back . “ I will be at that 60km mark on the Comrades route , the hardest part , encouraging all the runners to keep going , just like I used to do on the road . Although my Comrades running career is over , my running career is not , and my goal is to run a sub-1:40 half marathon . After all , my hip is going to outlive me . There is a reason for everything , and like the song says , ‘ I am Titanium !’”
Images : Action Photo SA & Courtesy Debbie Fass
30 ISSUE 147 DECEMBER 2021 | www . modernathlete . co . za