You can read my personal race recap here. In this post I will give an overview of the event to help others decide if it's the right marathon for them.
As a whole, it was clear the race was designed by runners for runners. A 12-person board, including 3 friends of mine, organized the event. I didn't meet everyone on the board, but I know 4 of the members are competitive runners, and I am betting that the other 8 are as well!
The expo was small but enjoyable, and we even picked up some free items, which is becoming more and more rare at race expos. My daughter and niece got free balloon animals, and there was also face painting available for kids. It had the usual vendor offerings centered on running gear, gadgets, shoes, and fuel. Packet pick up was fast and the race tech t-shirt was one I'll wear. If you like to get in and out at expos, you'd love this; if you want to spend hours at the expo, this is not for you.
As a whole, it was clear the race was designed by runners for runners. A 12-person board, including 3 friends of mine, organized the event. I didn't meet everyone on the board, but I know 4 of the members are competitive runners, and I am betting that the other 8 are as well!
The expo was small but enjoyable, and we even picked up some free items, which is becoming more and more rare at race expos. My daughter and niece got free balloon animals, and there was also face painting available for kids. It had the usual vendor offerings centered on running gear, gadgets, shoes, and fuel. Packet pick up was fast and the race tech t-shirt was one I'll wear. If you like to get in and out at expos, you'd love this; if you want to spend hours at the expo, this is not for you.
Expo photo op area |
The course |
The weather anywhere in the Midwest in the spring is a complete roll of the dice, but we had a great race day in 2019. It was around 45 degrees at the start. As I mentioned, the wind picked up some towards the end of the race, but the temperature didn't rise much above 50 degrees by the time I finished at 10:27 a.m. I think we all know that any race day can bring any weather, so it's just about playing the weather odds. If you're going to run a marathon in Kansas, the best times to do it are probably late March and late October to early November, so they picked a good time of year for this one!
The course is not pancake flat, and my Strava measured it as having 451 feet of elevation gain. Other runner's Stravas that I
This looks worse than it was |
The half marathon and full marathon started 0.1 apart so they could share a finish line (since the marathoners didn't go back on the little tail of the course to the start/finish before starting the second loop). The full marathon started 1-2 minutes before the half. They started the full and then when the full leaders came even-ish with the half start, they started the half runners. The road was divided for the first bit, and the finish line had two clocks. At my pace there were no problems with merging the two races down the road, but other paces may have been crowded.
Further, I was never crowded on the course, and in this race you are more likely to have the opposite problem (no one to run with). There were significant gaps between the top several finishers. The top man finished in 2:21 and I was 10th overall runner in 2:57, so only 8 people came in within those 36 minutes, and the top 3 women were within less than a minute and a half (so the spread from 2:21-2:55:59 was pretty major). Looking at the results, most marathoners probably didn't have a lot of company out on the course for the second loop. The half was larger so you'd be more likely to have others to run with at that distance. I was worried about passing the back of the pack of half runners in the final miles of the marathon, and this did occur, but wasn't as big of an issue as it has been in some other marathons I've run. It would be nice to have the road divided for the final 3 miles or so to prevent this in the future, but this year it wouldn't have been possible due to road construction in some of that area that had the course quite narrow as it was, and also made for uneven footing on the roads in that area.
Not crowded/running solo |
The race had pace groups for many different paces in the full and half marathons. I did not run with a group, so I am not sure on their strategies, although I did pass the 1:30 half pacers around the 10K mark. My 10K split was 42:04 (6:46 pace), so they were a bit fast (1:30:00 = 6:51.9 pace - although everyone in that group probably wanted 1:29:5X). The race course was not lined with spectators, although there were many enthusiastic ones out in spots. If you are someone who needs crowds to run in and/or by, this race is not for you, though!
The race had course clocks and timing mats at the 10K, half (13.1 mile), and 19.1 mile marks. The 19.1 was because that was the 10K mark on the first lap. I wasn't clock watching during this race, so wasn't too worried about these, but it might be nice to have one at mile 20. There were cones lining the whole race course, and in general it was easy to follow, but in some places the cones curved in odd ways, probably due to how they were blocking traffic. On the final loop I almost turned left a mile too early (on Rock Rd instead of Woodlawn) because of this, but the officer stopping traffic redirected me. The intersections were well-controlled, with police at all of the busy crossings.
The announcers called everyone's name as they were coming in, and also did a great job mentioning placings and awards. The race gathered a lot of publicity from local news stations, newspapers, etc. and was active on social media.
The finisher medals were really cute, and for age group awards the race gave free entries into next year's event for 1st place, and discounted entries for 2nd and 3rd (I believe 75% and 50% off), which I thought were fantastic awards. They offered a quick awards ceremony next to the finish line for the top 3 overall male and female finishers in both races. My award was a check, which is my favorite type! If you love a plaque or trophy, these awards would leave you disappointed - or if you run this as a one and done marathon but win a free entry for next year (although, who really follows through on that one and done marathon thing?!).
I grabbed a banana and bottled water after the race, but didn't pay too much attention to the refueling options because I had to go to the media tent and awards quickly, so someone else will have to review those! There was also a post-race party I didn't take part in. During the race there was some entertainment for spectators who were waiting at the finish line, such as an Indian dance and maybe live music?
As far as lodging, I stayed with my parents who live just outside of Wichita, but there are plenty of hotels in the area. Parking was easy as well, although keep in mind I was with people who know the area very well and I know it fairly well. Wichita is not a huge city or major vacation destination like Houston or New York, but it is large enough to have things to do and any food you'd want.
Awards ceremony, wearing the race shirt |
Shirt & finishers medal |
I grabbed a banana and bottled water after the race, but didn't pay too much attention to the refueling options because I had to go to the media tent and awards quickly, so someone else will have to review those! There was also a post-race party I didn't take part in. During the race there was some entertainment for spectators who were waiting at the finish line, such as an Indian dance and maybe live music?
As far as lodging, I stayed with my parents who live just outside of Wichita, but there are plenty of hotels in the area. Parking was easy as well, although keep in mind I was with people who know the area very well and I know it fairly well. Wichita is not a huge city or major vacation destination like Houston or New York, but it is large enough to have things to do and any food you'd want.
#dyingsohard |
I didn't even think about there being long sections into the wind since there aren't many turns. That's a good point!
ReplyDeleteMy main fear in point-to-point races like Grandma's, CIM, and Phoenix has always been having a headwind for the entire race! It hasn't happened to me, but it happened in Boston 2018 in an extreme way.
DeleteThat's what scares me about Boston. Running half the race into the wind in a half is bad enough. The whole race into the wind for a full would really suck!
DeleteI agree that would be really tough for a marathon - although at least in Boston you'd have a lot of people around to block the wind. I ran a point-to-point half marathon against the wind and it was the longest half of my recent life (Dam to Dam)!
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