Saturday, October 18, 2014

Kansas City Marathon Relay

This morning my wife and I ran as part of a five-person relay team for the Kansas City Marathon. Our team was one of two sponsored by Rock & Run Brewery, the same restaurant we run to and from during our Wednesday night runs.

The marathon was obviously split up into five segments, one for each runner. I had leg number one, which was 3.4 miles. I felt I did very well. It'd been over a week since I ran, mainly because of laziness and the Kansas City Royals amazing postseason play, but I stuck to my intervals the whole time (.5 miles running, .1 mile walking) despite some serious hills. Overall I was very pleased with how I ran.

This was the first race I've done that I've actually taken seriously. Looking back on it, if I had to choose one word to describe it, it would be: Cold. It was only 45 degrees out when we showed up a bit before 6, and I was dressed only in a tee shirt and shorts. Alot of people (mainly my wife) tell me that this is the perfect temperature for running half-marathons and marathons in because as you run your body heats up. While I can attest to this as I did heat up during my 3.4 miles, I'm a summer kind of guy and would have much preferred temperatures to be a bit warmer.

But, nothing is ever going to be perfect and when things don't go as you'd like, all you can do is deal with it. So deal with it I did and ran my mileage. Both R&R sponsored relay teams ended up crossing the finish line at the exact same time, and I have to admit that was a pretty cool feeling (those of us that had already finised our legs met the last runner .2 miles from the finish and ran in together). We were all dressed in identical shirts and spread out to take the whole road. It was quite the rush.

The relay was a good experience, and is a good way to get introduced to racing if you don't want to do a 5K by yourself. You have someone waiting on you to finish so you have to keep going and can't simply quit, but those other people on your team are there to pick you up and help you through. It's something I'd consider doing again.







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