A BBC newsreader blacked out during the 2011 London Marathon after becoming dehydrated
BBC presenter Sophie Raworth has said it was “awful” blacking out during the London Marathon.
The newsreader recalled the ordeal ahead of this year’s London Marathon, which she is gearing up to take on once more, competing for the 13th time on April 26.
During an appearance on The One Show, Sophie revealed that she had been aiming to complete her debut 26.2-mile race in under four hours, but became dehydrated and collapsed just a few miles from the finish line. She told the BBC show’s hosts Alex Jones and Roman Kemp she ended up having oxygen in a medical tent, reports the Mirror.
The presenter — who didn’t take up long-distance running until she was 42 — explained that when she first attempted the race in 2011, conditions were “really hot” and that she “didn’t drink enough water”.
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“And I got to about mile 24, and I blacked out,” she said. “I don’t actually remember quite what happened, but I did black out.”
“And I woke up about 20 minutes later with people putting an oxygen mask on and people pouring ice all over me. And I had a temperature of 42 Celsius, and it was awful, actually.
“And I had a good two hours with St John Ambulance, who were amazing, and looked after me.”
She continued: “And then they said, ‘We’ll put you on a bus back to the finish.’ And I’d raised all this money for charity. I was like, ‘I can’t come on a bus back to the finish. I have to finish this thing.’ So I made them let me walk. So I walked to the finish line, and it was six hours, 22 minutes, and 57 seconds was my first marathon time.
“But what it taught me was that if you fall, if you crash like I did, if you just you can pick yourself up and get back on it again. Because I went back a year later, did the training again, and I came under four hours, which is what I was trying to do that year.”
Host Alex noted that Sophie had shared the medical tent with Kaiser Chiefs’ Ricky Wilson.
“Yeah, so that was his first marathon too, and his last, actually, because he also collapsed,” Sophie revealed.
The star had been completely unaware of this until she spotted the musician discussing the incident on television, during which he mentioned that she had been brought into the tent while he was present.
She recalled: “And then he started saying, ‘Oh, yeah. I mean, honestly, I saw things no man should ever see.’ And I was out there going, ‘Oh, no’.”
The star admitted it took her several years to “pluck up the courage” to ask what he had witnessed, and that while penning her new book Running On Air she rang him to ask. However, she teased: “I’m not going to tell you here, now!”
The One Show airs on BBC One from 7pm on weekdays.

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