Canadian team preparing for soaring temperatures two years out from Tokyo Games
TORONTO — When Canada’s Lanni Marchant and Krista DuChene stepped up to the marathon start line at the 2013 world championships, it was 2 o’clock in the afternoon, the sun was high, and the temperature in Moscow had soared to a sizzling 35 degrees with the humidex.
It was the perfect storm of hot air and little shade, the type of conditions that cause the body to shut down. And 23 women — a third of the field — didn’t make it to the finish line that day.
DuChene collapsed 12 kilometres in, and was whisked to hospital in an ambulance ride she barely remembers.
Marchant experienced cramping so severe that, at the suggestion of a fellow racer, she stabbed her contorted left thigh muscle with a safety pin to try relieve the spasms. She would eventually cross 44th of the 46 runners who finished.