Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Race Report: Broad Street Run

I really wanted to do the Broad Street Run before I could even run a mile without dying... several friends of mine have been doing it for years, so I've heard about how much fun it is and have been dying to do it.  Last year, I had a final the day before and another two days after, so it didn't happen.  I was so excited to finally do it this year.
First things first: Registering for the race when it opened back in March was a nightmare.  The server couldn't handle the sheer volume of people who wanted to sign up, and the site was either taking forever to load or not loading at all.  I finally got it to work and managed to register about an hour before all 30,000 spots sold out.  Thankfully, my friend Christie managed to get in, as well.

Christie and I met in Philly around lunch time on Saturday and headed to Lincoln Financial Field for the expo.  When we got there, the line seemed forever long and wrapped around the ramps of the stadium for several levels.  However, the line went pretty fast--we waited maybe 20 minutes before we got in.  Number and t-shirt pickups were quick and easy.  The expo itself was so-so, with just the typical vendors there (I loved RNR Philly and all the free stuff that the expo had, and that was my first big expo, so I was spoiled).  We didn't spend long in Link, which was just as well, considering we'd be on our feet for a good part of the day and running early Sunday morning.

After tossing and turning all night and ultimately getting about 2 1/2 hours of sleep, Christie and I woke up at 6 a.m. and were out the door by 6:30.  We picked up the subway at the Walnut-Locust station, and the train was empty--clearly sent just for our stop.  It was a pretty easy train ride up to the Olney station, where the run started.  We were there in plenty of time to grab a bagel at Dunkin' Donuts, down some water and Gatorade, and wait in line for the porta potties twice (there definitely weren't nearly enough, even with about 100 of them).  We were in the gray corral because we pegged our expected finish time as 1:30.  I wasn't feeling too sure of myself with that goal, since my longest run since the marathon had been 6 1/2 miles and I was sick most of last week, so I didn't get out much.  Luckily, the gray corral was for the 1:30-1:40 finishers, and I figured I could easily pull off a 10-minute mile.

Excitement on 2.5 hours of sleep!

Before the race... aren't those compression socks sexy?



I have to say, for as packed as the starting area was, and for having 40,000 runners, it was pretty easy to figure out where we were supposed to go, and it was pretty well organized.  It was a wave start, so we got to work our way up to the start line, pause, and take off to the horn.  We started about 20 minutes after the elites, which always throws me off with the clock timing.  Anyway, around 8:50 a.m., we were off!

I stayed with Christie for about the first mile and decided I should drop back, because she's been running a lot longer than me and has always been a good bit faster.  I had no idea exactly where I stood when we got to the first mile marker and the clock said 28 minutes and some seconds (I think 48).  I did figure out pretty quickly that this meant I wanted to be at the second mile marker somewhere in the 37 range, and when I got there in the 36 minute range, I was a little nervous that I might have taken off too fast, but I didn't try very hard to make myself slow down.  The crowd support as we ran through North Philly was decent--there was a few members of a church congregation out cheering us along; part of the Temple marching band, cheerleaders, and football players were supporting us, as well.  My favorite group in North Philly had to be the group of guys playing traditional African drums and instruments, though.  Pretty awesome.

I had my MapMyRun app going, and I'm not sure if it was interference from all the tall buildings or all the other people using the same app, but the mapper-lady came on at about Mile 4.75 and said I had made it 5 miles in a 7:34 pace... I knew that definitely wasn't right, so I wasn't going to be able to rely on that.  However, based on the clock, I was going faster than I thought I should, and I kept telling myself to slow down, but never did.  Mile 5 came right before City Hall, and once we went around City Hall, the entire street was lined with people cheering for us for the rest of the route.  I noticed a girl with a really well-behaved golden retriever-looking dog and thought how nice that must be, because Alby would try to catch/beat everyone (he always has to be the leader of the pack).  I passed our family friends, the Dandreas and their assistant Allan, outside the Residences at the Ritz, and even though we didn't make eye contact, knowing they were out there cheering for me meant a lot.  The area around City Hall was also the only place where I really had to do much weaving to get past people; otherwise, the road was pretty wide open and passing wasn't too hard.

I was still keeping a fast pace and wasn't winded, but thought I should be slowing down.  I kept going though, and kept picking points in the distance to make it to--a pizza billboard on a tall building, the sports complex, and finally, the naval yard.  MapMyRun told me I had made it 10 miles when we had just passed the sign that said "1/2 mile to go," so that was useless.  When we came into the naval yard, I knew there was still 1/4 mile to go, and I told myself not to, but I took off and ran as hard as I thought I could/should. I was SO proud of myself when I crossed the finish line, even though I didn't know my exact time, because I knew I beat a goal that I thought was going to be a stretch.  About a minute and a half after crossing, I finally thought to look at my phone, because the app would at least have the right time!  It said 1:27:03, and I was ecstatic.  After you cross the finish line, the race volunteers instruct you to keep moving until you get to one of two areas where you're given your medal, water, gatorade, and your food.  All the food was already in a bag, which I thought was brilliant--why don't more races do this?  The food was reflective of Philly, too, which I loved: a soft pretzel, Tastykake snack bars... no cheesesteak, though.  Bummer.  It was a bit of a mess trying to find Christie, especially because our cell phone signals were on the fritz with 20,000+people trying to find their friends and families, too.  Side note: I met a lady with a bright green, zebra-printed flag that she said she always uses to find her family at races when they finish--what a great idea! I'm making my mom one for my races.

Christie (left) and I after the race


All in all, I was super happy with my time, when I finally got it (race results were posted around 1 p.m. that day).  For a race of 40,000 people, I thought things went pretty smoothly.  And more than anything, it's clear that Broad Street is one of those races that you do for the sake of saying you've done it.  I mean, there's a buzz in the city for the week leading up to this race.  If you don't like large crowds, you'll hate it.  However, I give a lot of credit to the RD's and the City itself for how organized this event was.  Even with the size of the race growing, I'll probably do it again next year just because the even was truly so much fun.


Screen shot of results from my phone


3 comments:

  1. I found your blog on the RWOL sites and thought I'd check it out! Nice race report, and congrats on beating your goal by so much. That really is great that the food at the end of the race was pre-packed. I hate trying to hold all the little items most races have (water, gatorade, banana, bagel, etc.).
    Emily

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  2. Thanks for the kind words! I agree on the food--at the marathon I ran in March, I kept dropping things after getting a sweatshirt, a hat, water, gatorade, banana, granola bars, and more stuff at the finish line. It doesn't give you much chance to drink that water and gatorade when you need it, either!

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  3. Cute outfit Ashley! Nothing wrong with bright! And great race! ~snowsuz from RWOL

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