Sunday, November 29, 2009

MY FIRST SUB-1 HOUR 10K!


Thanksgiving Day, I visited Cincinnati to participate in the historic 100th Annual Thanksgiving Day 10K Race. The weather was nearly perfect, with temperatures in the upper 30s and lower 40s and only an occasional gust of wind. The course was fairly flat, hills were mainly on the two bridges crossing the Ohio River. With over 17,000 registered runners, this was the second-largest 10K race I've run, eclipsed only by the the 30,000-plus runners at the Ukrop's Monument Avenue 10K in Richmond, VA early this year.

I was mired in slower traffic at the start of the race, but the Garmin 405 Forerunner GPS watch that I purchased at REI in Missoula, MT kept me apprised of my pace status. I wore the fracture shoe on my right foot just in case, but I think I can discard it now.

It was great to revisit this race thirty years after I'd last competed in it. My son ran the first few miles with me, but my pace was faster than he cared to run, so I had to move on. Normally, I would have just stayed with him, but I really wanted a sub-60 minute finish.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

State #10: Richmond Marathon










I'm back on track! Yesterday, I completed a marathon in the tenth different state ... in my home state of Virginia. The organizers call this one "The Friendliest Marathon In America". I don't. I'll try to write more about why it's definitely NOT the friendliest of marathons. It was a good marathon that was well-run, but it wasn't the friendliest. In fact, if I rank the ten marathons I've completed, I'd rank it dead last. That's not to say it was unfriendly, it wasn't. But when you call yourself "The Friendliest", you better back it up. Talk is cheap, but at $95, this marathon wasn't.

First, you don't force people to spend the night before the race in town. "Absolutely no packet pick-up on race day"? That's friendly? Not in my book! The only two hotels near the start were between $200 and $300+ per night. That's not friendly. That's extortion. For $95, they should have let me pick it up on race day. The organizer, Sportsbackers, pull this same crap with the Ukrop's Monument Avenue 10K, so that's "the way they roll".

Second, if the marathon starts at 8:00AM, don't block off all the roads that lead to the parking lots before 5AM. I'm sure the locals know their way around, but us out-of-towners can have great difficulties. Following the detour signs doesn't get you around the roadblocks, they just seem to dump you out-of-town. That's not friendly. Once I found my way near the starting line, all parking lots either said they were for monthly renters only or warned that unauthorized parkers were subject to booting or towing. No signs said "Marathon parking here". THAT would have been friendly. After nearly one hour, I finally found an on-street parking spot. THAT'S not friendly, either.

Third, you need to do SOMETHING to get more neighborhood participation. The Flying Pig Marathon had much better involvement, with many neighborhoods having a party-like environment. Most of the areas in Richmond were ghost towns. I appreciate the few who DID show, but where was everybody else???

Finally, after I've just completed 26.2 miles, I'll be sore, tired, and, more than likely, unstable on my feet. Don't fuss with me. If I exit the food tent, don't tell me I can't pass back through it to get to my car. Don't make me walk the extra distance by forcing me to go all the way around the outside of the tent. The tent was practically deserted by this time. What would it have hurt? To the unsympathetic lady who denied my passage, I say "This kind of treatment was NOT friendly!".

In summary, a good, well-run marathon, but "The Friendliest"?DREAM ON!


- Posted From My iPhone


Saturday, November 14, 2009

GODADDY IS MESSIN' WITH ME!




... But I still got 45 straight weeks in!


- Posted From My iPhone