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Editor’s note: the below race report was drafted on the day of the race, as the competitor rode the High Speed Rail train back to Kaohsiung. At the time he wrote this, the running human did not have a chance to access media or news reports about the race, nor to examine his own results. An addendum will appear at the end of the post that adds some clarifying information in these regards. Read on…
The "writing salon" aboard the HSR train where this post was drafted |
My aims for the race were quite modest. I no longer establish “finishing” a race like this on as a goal – I’m sorry, but barring some type of catastrophic injury or natural disaster, I am going to complete a half marathon, it’s no longer such a long distance to run for me. I wanted to finish in less than 2 hours, a decent but not too difficult pace that under normal circumstances should be attainable quite easily for me. I wanted to run easy for the first hour (~the first half of the race), and then step it up in the last hour for a nice “negative split.” I reality, because of the crowds of runners, my pace during the first hour was far slowed than I figured it would be, so I changed strategy, trying to “keep the horses in the barn” until about the 9 mile mark. Then I ran harder during the last 3-4 miles to produce the negative split I was looking for. (I have yet to have had a chance to review my race data, but I’m quite sure that it was a pretty decent negative split run).
(Note: this map is not my personal results/pace, etc., but of another competitor that I found online)
The race was on a very flat course that made a loop of Taipei City. The only elevation changes of note during the entire ½ marathon course were a few on- and off-ramps traversed when moving from regular streets to elevated highways or underground tunnels. Coupled with the fantastic weather for the race today (about 60 degrees F and clear at race start), conditions were ripe for a fast race – that is, if you started with the elites at 6:57 AM.
Why? Well, go back to the first sentence in this post. I have never, in all the races I have done in the past 10 years, seen anything close to the number of people turn out for a race that I saw today. In my mind, I consider marathons like those held in Chicago or New York City to be very large (I have not yet run either one, but have heard that they boast something like 40,000 participants). I do not know as of yet how many people were out there with me today, except to say that it was A LOT. So many that at no point on the 13.1 mile half marathon route did the congestion ever go away. There were tons of people from the start to the finish. Usually in these races once you make it several miles in, the crowds of runners start to thin. Not so today. I was trying to duck and weave in and out to find running room from beginning to end. It’s not a set of conditions that are conducive to fast finish times (again, unless you are out in front of the pack, like the elites runners).
Gear staged the night prior to the race |
Another needed improvement is related to the lack of on-course restrooms. Just as I remarked on in my write-up of the 2010 Ironman 70.3 Taiwan triathlon a couple months back, the race today had far too few restroom facilities on the course. In fact, I didn’t see a single race-provided venue for this type of need until after 6 miles into the race. I saw some people, prior to that point, running off the course to businesses and fire stations along the course to use their facilities, but if the race was doing what it should in terms of providing adequate ON COURSE facilities, this behavior shouldn’t be necessary. Finally, about 5.5 miles into the race, near the river, was a toilet provided for use by people who use the riverside recreation path. Because the race did not have any on-course toilets to that point, there were some people waiting to use the facilities (women, and presumably men who needed to “sit”), but far more men who chose to use the nearby bushes and treeline for their “facilities.” This would not have been the case if portajohns had been placed on the course in sufficient numbers and often enough to relieve the (literally!) pent-up demand. On later portions of the course, near the aid stations, there were generally a couple portajohns, but even so these were insufficient in number to prevent long lines (and the concomitant choice of convenience for many men, trees or bushes nearby). The race would be better for everyone if this issue was successfully redressed in future iterations.
I was able to see some of the elite runners at the end of the race – the marathoners, that is. The top men were finishing the full marathon as I was coming in to my finish. It’s a bit depressing to be “lapped,” so to speak, by these runners, but quite amazing at the same time to see up close how fast they are moving in comparison to a “regular” runner like me. I heard (but have yet to confirm) that a new course record was set today.
Post-race "snacky-treats" |
GJS
Editor here again: check out this page on Flickr (note: it is not the running human’s Flickr page – he did not take a camera with him during the race; http://www.flickr.com/photos/future77/sets/72157625503659903/) for some photos from the marathon. See also this report (http://focustaiwan.tw/ShowNews/WebNews_Detail.aspx?Type=aSPT&ID=201012190019) from Taiwan’s official news agency that puts the competitor estimate at 110,000 (with 31,000 in the marathon itself). A course record was NOT set yesterday; the top male finisher crossed the line at 2:14:04 (course best is 2:11:05) and the top woman finished in 2:30:37 (course record was set last year by the same woman, at 2:30:05). Finally, while final results for all runners were not available at press time (they will eventually be posted here: http://www.sportsnet.org.tw/en/, some unofficial times for the running human are 1:51:14 (from the Taipei Marathon Information and Results Finder here: http://marathon.taipei.gov.tw/change.action?request_locale=en_US; screenshot below) and 1:55:45 (from his wrist-mounted GPS unit). As posited above, the runner did indeed increase his pace throughout the race, averaging 9:40/mile over the first ~5.5 miles, then 9:23/mile for the next ~4 miles, and a swift 7:23/mile over the balance of the race (about 4 miles). Both of these times seem to be a bit low, as in, faster than the actual finish time. This post will be updated when the official finish time is available.
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