Monthly Archives: March 2026

Using Artificial Intelligence to Schedule Athletics Meets

Artificial Intelligence (AI) sometimes gets a bad press, but we’ve found it extremely useful for a variety of tasks at our athletics club, Vale of York Athletic Community. Here’s a brief overview of how we’re using it to help plan our FMC (Funetics Multi Challenge) competition on 27 June at the University of York.

Scheduling an event timetable for an athletics meeting can undoubtedly be a complex task. It’s even more challenging if you’ve never done it before, as we hadn’t.

England Athletics provide a helpful club guide including an example timetable for anyone wanting to put on an FMC meet, which covers event sequencing, group sizes and timings. But our specific challenge was adapting EA’s morning timetable to an afternoon slot, with our own particular athlete numbers and group structure.

We fed the EA guidance document and our requirements into Claude, and it produced the Master Timetable for our meet you can see below. A handful of revisions later — mainly adjusting buffer times and the long jump duration whilst compensating for some inconsistencies in the original document — we had a print-ready schedule in a total of fifteen minutes.

Beverley’s London Diary: No News is Good News

Sunrise at Scarborough

So, after a full month of ‘real’ training in January, I was looking forward to building on those foundations in the short month of February. As my fitness has increased, it’s been fun to go out and choose my pace. I do follow the plan like it’s my new religion, however, there is some flexibility between the top end and low end of the training paces so when I’m feeling fresh, I’m naturally running easier and faster. A total of 113.6 miles done in February and my parkrun time has dropped to mid 27 minutes.

Words from Kevin

I just wanted to share a few words after seeing some of you on Sunday 8 March 2026 at the Middleton Woods PECO Cross Country Relay. It was the first time I had seen members of the running community since the first Saturday in September 2025 and the welcome I received meant more to me than I can properly put into words.

For those who may not know, on 15 September 2025, I fell critically ill at home. I was placed into an induced coma and spent something like 7 or 8 days in this as well as a further couple more within Pinderfields Hospital intensive care being treated for Viral Encephalitis and pneumonia. The virus attacked and caused damage to my brain and has left me with a large number of ongoing physical and neurological challenges. Even now, many months later, I am still learning to live with the effects of these and every day brings new challenges.

PECO Cross Country Relay Fancy Dress

For the last two years, Vale of York has made dressing up for the PECO XC Relays a tradition. Inspired by our University of York members, who have their “challenge week” at the same time as the relays, raising money for their University Athletics and Running Club, fancy dress is just too much fun to miss.

And 2026 proved to be the best for fancy dress participation we’ve ever had.

Standout costume this year had to be Bananaman, A.K.A James Leadbeater, father of Ewan and Isabella. His full length costume as the 1980s TV cartoon superhero, was accompanied by three giant size bananas (Sarah, Beverley and Steve) for good measure.

Putting Welfare First: Introducing Our Junior Athlete Profile

At Vale of York, we like to encourage all our young athletes to perform at the best of their abilities. We’ve seen league wins, national qualifiers, personal bests and solid commitment from children across all age groups. But medals and times are not the measure that matters most to us.

Athletics is a long-term development sport.

Children develop at different rates, and while some mature early and look physically dominant at twelve or thirteen, others develop later and quietly catch up. Some balance athletics with football, hockey or other sports. Others just enjoy turning up once a week to work out and be with friends. All of those pathways are valid.

Our responsibility as Vale of York Athletic Community is to protect long-term development, wellbeing and enjoyment so that young people stay in sport for a lifetime.

Henry Hits 100 Junior Parkruns

Henry Henderson at Brayton Academy junior parkrun raising his arm to show his 100 junior parkrun wristband.

Vale of York athlete Henry Henderson was awarded his junior parkrun 100 wristband this Sunday by the volunteers at Brayton Academy Junior parkrun.

Now nine years old, Henry has been running junior parkrun since 2021, starting as a four-year-old as soon as Covid restrictions were lifted. Since then, he has turned up regularly on a Sunday morning with his mum, dad and younger brother to complete the 2km run.

His consistency over five years at his age is impressive in itself.