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'We rocked it today'': Ireland's marathoners proud of their Olympic moments

Fionnuala McCormack crossed the line in 20th position.

โ€“Sinรฉad Oโ€™Carroll reports from Rio de Janeiro 

FIONNUALA MCCORMACK RUNNING her third ever marathon. Breege Connolly, at 38 years old, in her first ever Olympics. Lizzie Lee, a full-time employee of Apple, also in her first Olympics.

An eclectic and charismatic bunch, the Irish womenโ€™s marathon team lit up the Irish area of the Sambodromo in Rio de Janeiro today as they came over the line, delighted with their performances โ€“ a PB, a sub 2:40 and a placing way above her rank.

McCormack expected to be at the top of the bunch and she was.

Her finishing place of 20th with a personal best of 2:31:22 an excellent result but not quite enough to send the Wicklow woman into celebration mode.

Top 20 is โ€˜niceโ€™, but itโ€™s not where she wants to be.

โ€œI think it was better than my other two Olympics,โ€ she says honestly, referring to outings in the 3,000m steeplechase in Beijing and the double 5,000m and 10,000m in London four years ago.

I think it was positive. Iโ€™m not sure what to make of it. Twentieth after where I started from is probably OK.

Her teammates were more effusive in their praise for both the 31-year-old Wicklow woman and the Olympic experience.

โ€œItโ€™s brilliant. Iโ€™m thrilled, absolutely thrilled. Iโ€™m delighted for Fionnuala and Breege,โ€ exclaimed a pumped-up Lizzie Lee after coming across the line in 57th position and with a time of 2:39:57 in what she described as a โ€˜horrendous race worse than childbirthโ€™.

โ€œWe rocked it today, we really did. We did everything that we could have done.

โ€œTop 60, sub 2:40 in those conditionsโ€ฆ I cannot argue with that. You stand on the start line of a marathon and half of you just want to make sure you actually finish. Then when you get to 20 miles and youโ€™re in good knick, everythingโ€™s fine and then you just dig in.

Lizzie Lee James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO

Iโ€™m just so proud, Iโ€™m just so happy. A 36-year-old full-time working mother and now Iโ€™m an Olympian.

โ€œThereโ€™s not one ounce of me left out there. In terms of effort, in my head I ran a PB out there today. I know Iโ€™m in PB shape. Looking at the girls โ€“ the Hahner sisters (Anna and Lisa from Germany) came in behind me and theyโ€™re sub 2:30 girls. There were tonnes of girls in or around me who would have the same kind of times.

โ€œI just dipped under the 2:40 and not one girl passed me from the 10k onโ€ฆ. except for [Anne] Baumeister (of Denmark) in the last 200 metres but we have a bit of a rivalry so that was a bit of craic.

โ€œIโ€™ve been quite emotional since I finished. Iโ€™m an Olympian. Cโ€™mon, said in a really Cork accent. But Iโ€™m an Olympian and no one can ever take that away from me. No matter what I do in inter-clubs or inter-counties or European cross country from now on, Iโ€™m an Olympian.โ€

Briege Connolly James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO

Connolly, at 38, was unperturbed about her placing.

โ€œIs that good?โ€ she asked the reporter who told her she had come in 76th.

โ€œYes,โ€ he said. โ€œThatโ€™s well above your ranking and you beat more than half the field (of 156).โ€

Considering her debut at the Games, she told the same reporter, โ€œItโ€™s brilliant, I would highly recommend itโ€ โ€“ as if qualication was attainable to anyone who fancied it.

Despite โ€˜dreadingโ€™ the race during the summer months of training and the pressure of performance, she said the past seven days have been the โ€˜best running week of her lifeโ€™.

Much of that has been down to the support the three women have received from their coaches, back-room team and families.

All three mentioned how fantastic the presence of many Irish people with their tricolours around the route were.

โ€œThe support was amazing, amazing for such a small country,โ€ said Connolly, while Lee was aware of the multiple Cork accents she could hear across the city, 12,000km from her home in Bishopstown.

โ€œ[There was] unbelievable support. I had about three different crews from home and they scattered themselves and they were everywhere. They were amazing. I could hear Cork accents all over the place. It was brilliant. I couldnโ€™t have asked for better support.

โ€œIโ€™m so happy. There are so many people behind this. You donโ€™t just rock up to a marathon.โ€

And when they got to that start line in Brazil this morning, they were aware it was going to be a battle.

They say Ireland experiences four seasons in a day but Rio has been doing its best impression of the Emerald Isle this week.

โ€œIf this was two days ago, that would have been five minutes faster. It was raining and cold and cloudy,โ€ explains Lee.

But today was different โ€“ not a cloud in the sky, or a breath of breeze in the air. Temperatures soaring to 27 degrees Celsius.

โ€œI didnโ€™t actually feel hot โ€ฆ the sponges and everything were brilliantโ€ฆ itโ€™s an accumulative effect. You know that it is happening and youโ€™re just slowing,โ€ said Lee.

McCormack, not one to shy away from heat or tough conditions, also knew she would have to pace herself to ensure the wheels didnโ€™t fall off.

โ€œI slowed down anyway, itโ€™s just that other people around me probably slowed down more. It would have been nice to catch the Japanese girl at the end but, yeah, I think everyone knew you had to be a bit conservative at the start today and yet there are always going to be people who arenโ€™t.

โ€œThen itโ€™s the Olympics so there are always people who will go off. I thought there would be a lot of people coming back and thereโ€™s going to be carnage at some point. And you always hope it might be more than what it is.โ€

The immediate aftermath of a gruelling 26-mile run isnโ€™t the best time to digest a result but Irelandโ€™s women were feeling the glow of the Olympics.

โ€œIโ€™ll have to come back again now,โ€ said McCormack, the already-three-time Olympian.

Lee, meanwhile, canโ€™t wait to return to her โ€œbaby girl in Ireland in two daysโ€.

Three very different races, three very different athletes, one shared experience.

A pinnacle, perhaps, for Connolly and Lee; a learning curve for McCormack.

More from The42โ€ฒs team in Rio: 

Michael Conlan is sick and tired of people talking about Billy Walsh

Irelandโ€™s Fionnuala McCormack finishes in 20th place in Olympic marathon

This Olympics needs to be the start of Irish hockeyโ€™s adventure, not the end

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    Mute B7584
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    Jan 8th 2012, 6:54 PM

    Oh it is ON.
    Like never before, Lโ€™pool v United will be a cracker.

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    Mute Martin O Donnell
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    Jan 8th 2012, 6:19 PM

    grand draw โ€ฆ.double is onโ€ฆ..GGMU

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    Mute Eamonn Fallon
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    Jan 8th 2012, 6:39 PM

    Cracking draw to be fair. Will be interesting to see what reception Evra gets. I hope he doesnโ€™t get any racist abuse from the crowd. The idiot who abused the Oldham player the other night has been arrested thanks to information supplied by the club. Hopefully this will send out the right message.

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    Mute Jimmy Dunphy
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    Jan 9th 2012, 6:40 PM

    What about Chelsea and QPR โ€ฆโ€ฆ Terry and Ferdinand

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