Entertainment

London Marathon’s oldest ‘ever-present’ runner thrilled to be getting 40th medal

Ken Jones, 87, ran around his home town of Strabane, Co Tyrone, with a special app tracking his progress due to the pandemic.
Ken Jones, 87, ran around his home town of Strabane, Co Tyrone, with a special app tracking his progress due to the pandemic. Ken Jones, 87, ran around his home town of Strabane, Co Tyrone, with a special app tracking his progress due to the pandemic.

The London Marathon’s oldest “ever-present” competitor has said he cannot wait to get his hands on his 40th participants’ medal.

Ken Jones, 87, said it felt great to tie up his laces again, despite the most difficult weather conditions he has endured in four decades of competing in the race.

The veteran runner said: “This year was the hardest because of the weather.

“We had heavy rain until the last three miles and we had to change our clothes three times because they were soaked through.”

London Marathon 2020
London Marathon 2020 Ken Jones, 87, faced difficult conditions (Niall Carson/PA)

He added: “I’m very happy to finish. My neighbours had balloons out and signs up, we had a tremendous crowd really.

“It was absolutely dark when we finished, after seven hours and 53 minutes.

“I’m not tired, I’m feeling good now and I’m looking forward to getting the medal.”

He added he will be celebrating with a hearty meal of bubble and squeak cooked by his daughter, before having a well-deserved sleep.

Mr Jones, from Stabane, Co Tyrone, was among thousands of people taking part in the first virtual London Marathon in gale-force winds and rain.

He ran on his own 26.2 mile route around Strabane on Sunday with a special app tracking his progress due to the pandemic.

Mr Jones said he was disappointed Covid-19 had forced the cancellation of the physical event but it was nice to be able to do the race at home.

Ken Jones marathon runner
Ken Jones marathon runner Ken Jones is pictured with some of his previous medals (Niall Carson/PA)

But he said the pandemic had made him concerned he would not get his 40th participants’ medal in the post in the coming weeks.

“I go out early morning when there’s no one around,” he told the PA news agency.

“I train in the morning, but with the pandemic I can’t go out to the shops because I don’t want to catch this virus because that would stop me dead.”

But he said he was glad he was able to compete virtually: “I want my 40th medal. I want that medal. That’s the main thing I want.”

He set out on the marathon in heavy rain and gales on Sunday afternoon with his daughter Heather, who is also a keen runner.

He is the oldest of 10 men who ran their 40th marathon in the 2020 event, known as Ever Presents.

2020 Virgin Money London Marathon
2020 Virgin Money London Marathon London Marathon ‘ever present’ Ken Jones (Dominic Lipinski/PA)

Now in his late 80s, Mr Jones said he has found he has to train for longer to get the same results.

“It’s not that it has gotten much tougher, it’s that you’ve to train for longer times,” he said.

“In the earlier days we’d go out for a run for an hour or so but now I’ve to go out for two or three hours for a training session.

In the lead up to the marathon he said he would train for about six hours per week.

During training he has been zig-zagging through the relatively flat streets of Strabane – 10 miles most Sundays with a couple of 20-mile stretches more recently.

He said it was encouragement from his running club that gave him the drive to keep long distance running all his life.

His personal best was two hours 41 minutes, but times have crept up with the mounting years, and now he mainly walks.

One of his secrets is not to run fast down hills, which helps protect the knees.

Another is bending exercises to stretch his lower back and keep him free from injuries.

Mr Jones said younger runners are always looking for tips from him on how to train: “I tell them about the correct shoes to wear. Never to drink alcohol because that slows you down, about when to go out.

“You’ve got to out when you can enjoy it. Not when it is like it is today pouring with rain. Go out and enjoy it and run with your friends, as many friends as you can.”

Mr Jones is already looking ahead to next year’s race.

“I’m going to enter for next year’s marathon,” he said. “I’ll be 88 then. I might call it a day then. But I’ll see how I feel next year.”