London win a good test for Lakatos, who plans to race marathon at Paralympics
Canadian wheelchair racer Brent Lakatos has one workout he loathes.
He wheels for an hour on rollers in his garage, maintaining a heart rate of 165. It’s close enough to his maximum heart rate of 182 to be 60 minutes of pain. But it’s the monotony he truly dislikes.
“If my heart rate goes a couple beats lower, I’ll push a little bit faster. If it goes too high, I’ve got to slow down. It’s horrible,” Lakatos said, laughing. “The hard part isn’t physical, it’s the mental one. It’s just so long and boring. I’m in a little bit of pain, but it’s boring at the same time.”
Lakatos is an 11-time world champion and seven-time Paralympic medallist — in sprint races. And so when the 40-year-old from Dorval, Que., was in the lead heading down the homestretch of the London Marathon on Sunday, BBC commentators wondered aloud if he’d have enough left in the tank to hold off the field.