After the tragic events that occurred at the finish line of the Boston Marathon on 4/15/2013, the Salt Lake City Marathon was to be one of the first distance races that would be taking place in the U.S. since that horrific day. Security at the race was a major concern. The safety of the runners, the race volunteers and the spectators would be of paramount importance. Would the additional security and heightened tensions surrounding the event have an effect on those in attendance? The Trail Monkeys wouldn't really know how the race turned out, because none of the OTM were signed up for the SLC Marathon.
Until Tuesday.
On Tuesday, I got a call from my brother-in-law, who had been training all winter for the Salt Lake City Marathon to be his first marathon. Unfortunately a bad case of shin splints were forcing him to withdraw from the race, and he wanted to know if I wanted to run in his place. Sounds fun, right? Does it really matter that my longest run this calendar year was 15 miles? No way! That's plenty of practice. Should I be concerned that on Friday, the day before the race, my legs were still incredibly sore (Dead Quads are an Olympus gift) from the previous Saturday's Olympus climb? Not at all! Is it really a problem that I've sworn off marathon distances because of pain and injuries sustained from other distance runs? Forget all that! And so I decided to ignore everything practical about this event and run in my brother-in-law's place (ssshhhh, don't tell anyone. I think taking the place of another runner is illegal).
Front of the Tech-shirts passed out by Altra. Back: "Keep Running" |
The race itself was cold and wet, as it rained for the first 3 hours of the race (maybe it was a nod to Boston to have such cold weather). This made for some painful chaffing. Remind me not to wear my heart-rate-monitor on long and rainy runs. The course was fairly flat, however, and I stuck to my race plan of being the tortoise, not the hare (start slow and steady, finish slow and steady). My time was much better than I could have hoped for with so little preparation (3:52:40). And it may have been a stitch long (my Garmin showed 26.4 miles, as did three others I checked with after the race. If you don't think there's a big difference between 26.2 and 26.4 miles, you haven't run a marathon).
My Boston "Run Now" Bracelets. These babies made it all 26.2 miles. |
This week, despite the challenges of weather, lack of preparation, fatigue, and whatever else came along, the support from those around us on the course helped us run stronger. Boston Strong.
Wet, Sore, and Smiley. |