The event's official website can be found HERE. Photos from 2014's run are courtesy of Ben McCall Photography HERE. Results form 2014's run can be found HERE. The Rivalry Run 5k is one of my favorite events all year. It comes with an aire of heated competition and camaraderie alike, and always is an absolute blast. Whether you're a KU, KSU, MU, Pitt State, WSU, Washburn, NWMS, etc. etc. fan or alumni, you likely have partiality to just one state on either side of the Kansas City Metropolitan area. If you are runner or walker, such is the perfect venue to exercise those biases. Enter the Rivalry Run 5k. And of course, I will be running for Kansas (although given our suits' political shenanigans this year, I can sympathize to the point of near-jealousy). The run itself provides an incredible challenge, actually, with just a spot over 300 feet in climbing over the route, all within only two climbs. With that, let's take a look on-course... Course Preview (CORRECTION: Race route was previously posted incorrectly and has since been re-reviewed) Packet Pick-Up & Race-Day Parking Bank of the West has long been primary sponsor for the Rivalry Run. As such, they invite you to packet pick-up at any of three of their many KC-Area locations: Overland Park at 9400 Antioch Road, Lee's Summit at 740 NW Blue Parkway, or the Northland at 5245 NW 64th Street. Packet pick-up at these locations is on the Friday before race day from 9am to 6pm. Expect non-existent lines, as three different pick-up locations along with long pick-up hours spread out picker-uppers quite a bit. Pick-up is also available on race day onsite. Anyone familiar with the Power & Lights District will know exactly where to park, as offerings are all the same, given the start/finish at Sprint Center. Three main garages are the parking spots of choice, with one between Walnut and Grand Streets and 13th and 14th Streets, one on the Northeast corner of 13th Street and Grand Boulevard, and one on Walnut Street between 12th and 13th. Though downtown can always get a little nuts, I've never had a problem with getting in or out on race day. Run Course As mentioned, this course is surprisingly difficult. The route itself is a nearly-straight-North-straight-South route in to and out of the well-known Grand/Main Street Hill, which also provides the main climb on route. From the Sprint Center, the route travels South and downhill along Grand all the way through Crown Center, before beginning its climb across Union Station and heading up the Main Street Hill at the turnaround on to Main Street. The route usually takes a right and meets back up with Grand at 20th, but with bridge construction, this year's route will turn back on to Grand as early as Pershing, just in front of Crown Center. Though the fall from the wall is as much descent as the main climb, the road picks back up about 1k before the finish, on the approach in to the Power & Lights District, which provides another 65-foot slow ascent all the way to the finish line. The two only significant climbs are the only climbs on route (no mini-ascents), and are as such... *Main Street Hill, 0.57-1.52mi (0.95mi), 781-944ft (+180ft), 5.5%avg/>15%max grade *Grand to PnL, 2.55-3.12mi (0.58mi), 796-861ft (+65.4ft), 2.8%avg/4.7%max grade Race Day, In-Brief As noted, race-day parking is simple and open, although if you plan on using the garages, bring $5 in cash. This year the city smarted-up and decided to start charging for garage access. On-street parking is free (I believe). Remembering last year's run, the competition is a bit stiff for this event, and the start indicated that this year would be no difference. Runners were very fast off the line, with myself settling in to about 25th or so. The start is fast -- with an even down-hill trot until the Grand Street bridge over the train tracks, parallel to Union Station. Then things go from pitch-down to pitch-up, with the only flat portion being the bridge itself (and even that has a bit of a bulge in it). At the turnaround at the corner of Grand and Main, things drop again -- fast -- and though speeds should pick up, for me, my quads were toasted. You need quads for running downhill.
My first mile was slower than normal first-miles, and mile 2 and 3 were much slower than normal 2- and 3-miles. I would like to say I was "saving myself for tomorrow morning's duathlon," but that would be a lie. At the same Grand Street bridge, the drop from the start became the climb to the finish. I was able to pull out a few pushes, but ultimately gave up on placing tops.
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This is part two of my six-part series on the 2015 Walt Disney World Marathon Weekend. Part two covers the history behind the race series, as well as step-by-step instructions how to register (for the 2015 event).
The event's official website can be found HERE. The event's official Disney Event Guide can be found HERE. Welcome back! Now I'll walk through some background on the event's history, followed by the registration process point-by-point (which often feels like a daunting process). Onward! Background on the Walt Disney World Marathon Surprising enough, other than results and records, the history of the Walt Disney Marathon is few and far between. The WDW Marathon's first running was in 1994 with just short of only 7,000 runners. Over the next two decades, the Marathon Weekend would actually struggle to meet registration quotas, forcing Disney Parks to reconsider. In 2012, Disney offered free admission to the parks on the Monday following the event for participants of any of the events of Marathon Weekend, which did help boost sales. 2013 marked the 20th running of the WDW Marathon, and, despite the incentive being removed, saw its largest registration year in the Marathon's history. Though official numbers for 2014 have not been released yet (that I know of), given the quickness with which registration filled up, another record year seems almost likely. Due to the rise in popularity of marathons and half-marathons, registration across the US have spiked in the last few years. Not surprisingly, to match the rising demand, runDisney now hosts 9 event weekends at their two US parks. All races have kids-specific races if the offered 5k's may be too much for the little tykes. At the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida, runDisney hosts the following, as of 2014 (and 2015):
Finally, the focus of this race report series, the Walt Disney World Marathon Weekend. For the WDW Marathon Weekend, eight running events are offered...
Again, this is the oldest of runDisney events, and one of the largest. The Health & Fitness Expo itself is a large draw for many, and given the nice beginning-of-year placement, is often great opportunity for health and fitness companies to roll out new products for the new year (I will be eyeing New Balance's runDisney Special Edition Shoes -- more on that during the Planning and Expo posts). That's it for the background. Let's get in to the actual race (or at least, let's register for the damn thing). For those that will be registering for the up-coming Tinker Bell and Princess HM Weekends, this should provide a great cheat-sheet on the registration process, as runDisney uses all the same portals for registration. Registering for the Walt Disney World Marathon Registration for any runDisney event is a popular demand, so spots fill up very fast. Sometimes, spots for the more popular events will fill up within minutes (seriously!), so make sure you are online as they roll it out. There are also some finicky website things that are important to note going in, so be sure to read on. For the 2015 Walt Disney World Marathon Weekend, scheduled for January 7th through January 11th, registration was set to be open on April 22nd, 2014, at 11:00am Central Time. I made sure to set an alert on my Google Calendar with a link directly to the Marathon Weekend home page. To get to the specific event, all runDisney events are centralized around their runDisney website at rundisney.com. From there you can use the "Events" tab at the top of the page to find the specific event you are interested in. Be it the Disneyland Prices Half-Marathon, or Disney World's new Start Wars Marathon. I, obiouvsly, opted for their oldest-running Walt Disney World Marathon Weekend. I would run the half-marathon. Once you arrive at the WDW Marathon Weekend page, you get a nice little ticker right at the top, including how full each of the offered events are at the present moment. Clicking the "Registration" tab will take you to a list of each of the events (and combination of events) offered, with hyperlinks highlighting those that are still open to registration (aka not sold out). Now...here's the tricky part. Registration opened up promptly at 11:00am CENTRAL TIME on April 22nd, 2014, for the 2015 running. These are very popular events, so you can imagine that right at 11:00am, site traffic skyrockets. Clicking on an event may not work the first one or two (or twelve) times. I recommend clicking on the event, and if (and when) it displays an error message, just keep clicking Ctrl-R (to refresh the page) until you get through. Do not assume waiting for site traffic to slow will help! By the time site traffic clears, your chosen event may already be sold out (yes, they sell out that quickly). After about 10-or-so refreshes, I finally got through to the registration portal, run by popular registration management website Active.com. I clicked in the "Register Now" button, Again, you may hit site traffic here. But don't worry -- once you finally get on the pages where you enter your name and registration deets, you shouldn't hit any more brick walls. After signing in with my Active.com profile, it's time to select my event -- for me, the half-marathon. Any events that are sold out will be noted here. Then you got your "we're not responsible if you die" agreement. Also known as the participant waiver. Then, having signed in to Active.com already with my user credentials, most of my personal information (name, address, etc etc) is already filled out for me. If you sign in as a guest or are creating a new profile, presumably all of this will be empty for you (at least, I hope). After your personal info, you'll have a few additional quiz items to attend to, the most notable being previous half-marathon history. In order to set up corral assignment, you must provide an anticipated finishing time, along with info on a previous half-marathon finish (or a marathon, if you chose that event), including the name of the race, the official distance, the city and state, the date, and the finish time. If you've never done a similar-distance event before, just enter N/A and move on. Likely, you'll be assigned to the last few corrals. Then you got your common quick questions, such as t-shirt size, and you're ready to pay. Once finished, you should receive an Active.com email within 24 to 48 hours (I think it took about 8 hours for me). If you don't a confirmation email within two days, email the event organizer using the runDisney home page's information...there may be a problem. Additionally, you may receive two emails that look similar, but in fact are not: One is your transaction confirmation, the other is registration confirmation.
And that's it! Print off the confirmation and bring it to the packet pick-up and expo. Electronic copies work, too, but you can never trust that you'll be able to pull it up on-the-spot. But all of that stuffs will be covered in my Packet Pick-Up and Marathon Expo post on race weekend. That's all she (or I) wrote for now. Keep posted for Part III next, including info about training & planning. That will likely go up in a few months (late October-ish) once my training gets underway. Keep R/B/S-ing. ~~__o _-/<,_ @/ @ |
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