Tag Archive | "marathon"

Where RUN IT FAST RUNNERS Are Running This Weekend (April 27-28, 2013)

Where RUN IT FAST RUNNERS Are Running This Weekend (April 27-28, 2013)

 

Here is a look at where everyone is running this weekend. We had 27 responses this week. Good luck to everyone and Run It Fast!

To join Run It Fast – The Club then click HERE to read more details.

WHERE RUN IT FAST RUNNERS ARE RUNNING THIS WEEKEND (APR 27-28, 2013)

Storified by Joshua Holmes· Fri, Apr 26 2013 13:33:42

@runitfast I will be running Country Music half marathon in Nashville on Saturday #runitfast #4Marjorie Mitchell
@runitfast Back to back longish runs for me this weekend! I think 14 on the road Sat and 12 on the trails Sunday. #runitfastLisa Gonzales
@runitfast Big Sur Marathon! #runitfast RIF#140Dennis Arriaga
@runitfast No races this weekend as I’ll be close to home trying to get in some training runs for next weekend’s Strolling Jim 40 Miler.Joshua Holmes
Ready to run @RunRocknRoll #RunCMM with @runitfast and @RunKino! Hopefully the weather holds up! #ChasingBostonJeff Le
@runitfast I’ll be at ZERO Prostate Cancer halfmary at Memphis Botanic Gardens tomorrow!Kristy
@runitfast running the Green 6.2 @TheGreenRun on Saturday.Stephen G
@runitfast Running #countrymusicmarathon this Saturday in Nashville with lots of other RIF members.Mark Watson
@runitfast I will be racing the Country Music Half-Marathon with 30,000 of my closest friends. #RunCMMJackson Miller
@runitfast St . Jude Country Music 1/2 MarathonRobin Robbins
@runitfast Eugene marathon with @julieschuesRDLaura Raeder
@runitfast @KMMarathon !! #runitfast #halfmarathonChristy Bowers
@runitfast – 12 mile recovery on Sunday after last weekends 50 mile ultra. My first, btw. Jumped from 10k straight to 50m. :)Jacob Bergmeier
@runitfast Frisco Marathon Saturday in Springfield, MO.Gregg Lynn
@runitfast the Shakespeare half marathon in beautiful Stratford Upon Avon on SundayRunners Knees
@runitfast Lake Murray San Diego. Training for Patriots 5k 5/25.Loreen vS
@runitfast St Jude Rock N Roll Country Music Marathon, NashvilleJohn Fesler
@runitfast running Plymouth UK half marathon for children’s hospice southwest :-)Laura Brandwood
@runitfast Holland, Mi lakeshore. Going to enjoy spring!David Cook
@runitfast Kentucky derby festival half marathonshannon bryan
@runitfast Run For the Wild 5k at the Bronx zoo. I’m running almost 23 weeks pregnant :)Britton McDermott
@runitfast Baltimore Annapolis TrailSteve Coleman
@runitfast OKC Half — can’t wait!Michelle K
@runitfast @TheGreenRun #HoustonDonica’ Beckett
@runitfast the Park to Park Half Marathon in Waynesboro, VaPenelope
@runitfast Glass city HM, Toledo Ohio! Going to burn through the course!Matt Ambos
“@runitfast: Where are you running/racing this weekend?” @TheGreenRun #Green62 #Houston NaomiPipes

Posted in RunningComments (0)

London Marathon Medal 2013

London Marathon Medal (2013)

This is the medal the finisher’s of the London Marathon received on April 21, 2013 in London, England.

No change from last year’s (other than the year) but still a pretty solid medal.

MORE PHOTOS OF MARATHON/ULTRA MEDALS AND BUCKLES

[Submitted by Peter Smith. Follow him on Twitter @TigersHull1904]

Posted in Bling, Featured, International, Marathon, MedalsComments (0)

Griffith Park Trail Marathon Buckle 2013

Griffith Park Trail Marathon Buckle (2013)

Here is the race bling for the inaugural Griffith Park Trail Marathon that was held on April 13, 2013 in Griffith Park in Los Angeles, California.

All finishers of this tough trail marathon received the buckle in the middle of the photo above. Yes, I said a buckle. Not the norm for a marathon but a very cool buckle. The medal at the bottom of the photo was also provided to those who signed up in the in the initial lottery for the race.

And finally, congratulations to RIF #1 Josh who was 10th Overall Male and got to take home a mug as well!

MORE PHOTOS OF MARATHON/ULTRA MEDALS AND BUCKLES

[Medal photo submitted by RIF #1 Joshua Holmes.  Follow him on Twitter @bayou]

Posted in Bling, Buckles, Featured, Marathon, Medals, THE CLUB, TrailsComments (0)

Big D Marathon Medal 2013

Big D Marathon Medal (2013)

This is the finisher’s medal for the Big D Marathon that took place on April 14, 2013 in Dallas, Texas.

Definitely an appropriate medal for the 10th anniversary of this marathon. Congratulations to RIF #60 Christy for completing her first marathon! Check out the glass she also received:

MORE PHOTOS OF MARATHON/ULTRA MEDALS AND BUCKLES

[medal photo submitted by RIF #60 Christy Bowers. Follow her on Twitter @run2bake]

Posted in Bling, Featured, Marathon, Medals, THE CLUBComments (0)

Rotterdam Marathon Medal 2013

Rotterdam Marathon Medal (2013)

This is the medal the finishers of the Rotterdam Marathon received on April 14, 2013 in Rotterdam, Netherlands.

Very nice medal. Love the orange shirt too.

MORE PHOTOS OF MARATHON/ULTRA MEDALS AND BUCKLES

[Medal submitted by Attilio Bottegal. Follow him on on Twitter @abottegal]

Posted in Bling, Featured, International, Marathon, MedalsComments (0)

Martian Marathon Medal 2013_2

Martian Marathon Medal (2013)

This is the awesome medal for the Martian Marathon that took place on April 13, 2013 in Dearborn, Michigan.

Perfect medal for this race. It’s going on my list. Here’s another view of the medal and the fun ribbon:

MORE PHOTOS OF MARATHON/ULTRA MEDALS AND BUCKLES

[Medal submitted by RIF #108 Mark Sikkila – follow him on Twitter @MarkSikkila, and by Jeff Windham – follow him on Twitter @jwind911]

Posted in Bling, Featured, Marathon, Medals, THE CLUBComments (0)

Brighton Marathon Medal 2013

Brighton Marathon Medal (2013)

This is the medal the finisher’s of the Brighton Marathon received on April 14, 2013 in Brighton, United Kingdom.

Beautiful medal.

MORE PHOTOS OF MARATHON/ULTRA MEDALS AND BUCKLES

[Medal submitted by Craig McElroy. Follow him on on Twitter @Craigatcogs]

Posted in Bling, Featured, International, Marathon, MedalsComments (0)

Hogeye Marathon Medal 2013

Hogeye Marathon Medal (2013)

This is the fun finisher’s medal for the Hogeye Marathon that took place on April 14, 2013 in Fayetteville, Arkansas.

MORE PHOTOS OF MARATHON/ULTRA MEDALS AND BUCKLES

[medal submitted by RIF #116 Nicholas Norfolk. Follow him on Twitter @absolut_zer0]

Posted in Bling, Featured, Marathon, MedalsComments (0)

Out of the Ashes, Humanity Will Win the Boston Marathon

Out of the Ashes, Humanity Will Win the Boston Marathon

We have no answers from the senseless Boston Marathon bombings that took place yesterday. When we finally have answers they won’t make sense. They will just point a finger at some radical lunatic that decided to kill innocent people to make some sort of deranged point.

I covered yesterday’s Boston Marathon for 16 hours straight. Running is one of my passions and it’s part of what I do for a living. I had just finished most of the race coverage for Run It Fast when the bombs went off at the finish line in Boston.

It’s not the first time I’ve heard reports of ‘bombs’ at a sporting event. Usually those reports are erroneous or false.  So naturally at first I thought maybe a car backfired or some fireworks went off that wrongly set off the social media first responders with incorrect tweets and status updates.

However, the videos from the attack quickly reached the internet, TV, and we all realized that something very serious had just happened.  I created Run It Fast – The Club fourteen months ago and had been tracking all of our runners that were running the Boston Marathon. About half of our runners had crossed the finish line at that point, but the rest of them were on target to finish just about when the bombs went off.

That’s when it all started to hit home. The runners became real to us and you feel connected to the terror that unfolded collectively. The tragedy that happened yesterday, that happens 20x a day in Iraq and other countries, becomes surreal and a terror to you and those that have loved ones that were present. You may have begun thinking about your family, when you would have been finishing the race- if you had been there running it, and where your family would have been, waiting on you to watch you finish your first Boston Marathon.

Likely my family would have been near the finish where the bombs went off, and I would have been finishing within minutes of detonation.  Maybe I would have been over there on the sidewalk reconnecting with my family and waiting for fellow Run It Fast members to finish. What if? What if? What if?

Then at some point you start to think of the tragedy of the entire thing. Those poor people that were wounded or killed were just the victims of a random act of violence.  But really it wasn’t random to them. Random acts of violence are never random. They are deliberate and the victims are almost always selected beforehand even if their names aren’t known.  Someone intentionally set out to kill, injure, and maim dozens of people at the finish line in Boston.

Violence is an epidemic. It is in certain parts of the world. We can claim to be the land of the free in America but we live in a dangerous society. Some of us are privileged to live away from where most violence takes place, but our lives interweave us all, of every background and origin, into each other’s lives as our stories unfold.

I was jumped after a high school football game, at the inner city high school I attended, when I was a 14-year old freshman. That same year I was an innocent bystander in a race-riot at my high school. SWAT teams, police, dogs covered campus as most of us were simply trying to learn American history when in fact we were being caught in the middle of it at that very moment.  When I was 19, I was robbed at gunpoint in my apartment with a gun to my head. Six years after that I awoke in my apartment in Athens to the Greek mafia staring down at me.  What went down in that apartment in those early hours have never fully been discussed outside of myself and my roommate during that intense early morning wake up.  For now let’s just say that what Hollywood puts in most action/suspense movies is more believable.

Each incident was worse than the prior one. I always thought that my odds of being the victim of ‘random acts of violence’ had to finally be down to like infinity to one since I’d already been randomly selected multiple times. But I’m just as likely tomorrow to be the victim of some senseless tragedy as you are.

Most would consider that to be very bad luck. It was traumatic in part, but I was actually lucky.  Besides a busted lip from getting jumped I was uninjured physically. However, those events always stick with you. They hide for the most part, and you might think it never happened, but then something ‘random’ like yesterday happens and it all flashes forward to reality again and you start to think once again of ‘What if?’  You feel the pain more than most and your heart bleeds and your heart cries for those that lost a loved one or were injured.

The victims from yesterday will be told by many that they are lucky to have survived.  They won’t always agree with that assessment. They will have wounds that will never heal. They will have nightmares that will never resolve.  They’ll see a neighbor jogging down the street and be struck with tremors from what happened in Boston on April 15th.

But from the concrete absoluteness of obscurity comes small blades of hope and brightness as time passes and wounds heal.

When evil strikes it makes a massive splash that dashes the hopes from humanity, at least for a small microcosm.  Then great starts to surface because simple goodness wouldn’t be good enough to whitewash the atrocities of what that evil has done.

For good is better than evil and great trumps evil. Greatness is dormant in most of us and often needs a powder-keg, sadly perhaps literally, to set it off. But once ignited you start to see the best of humanity. Hope starts to rebrand itself in society when this happens.

When the bombs went off yesterday, we saw runners and first responders run towards the smoke and explosions to help and hopefully save our fallen brothers and sisters.

As Andy Durfresne said in The Shawshank Redemption, “Hope is a good thing, perhaps the best of things, and no good thing ever dies.”

Runners are tough people…some of the toughest people on the planet. Often what others might confuse for a white flag is a dirtied handkerchief that we take out of our pocket to tie around our bloodied leg so we can get up and keep marching forward.

A lot of humans that run do so because they’ve already dealt with something traumatic or overcome some bad injustice, act of violence, rape, death, cancer, depression, or life-altering event.

For when we run hard and run far everything leaves our systems as we become squarely focused on the most basic things like breathing, survival, where our next step will land.  It detoxes us and removes all the toxins from badness, heartache, confusion, and what troubles us in our daily lives.

But even the best of us can’t run forever and when we stop or the race is over we have to figure out how to survive and how to respond when evil strikes and fear starts to consume our lungs that were just filled with oxygen and endorphins that made us think that we could do anything.

And life is perhaps best summed up with just that. Where will our next step land when the race is over?

The events of yesterday and humanity’s track record would strongly suggest that step is towards the smoke and flames and out of the ashes, humanity will win the Boston Marathon!

Posted in Marathon, RunningComments (1)

Sports Illustrated Cover – Bill Iffrig – Boston Marathon Bombings – 2013 – Run It Fast – WM

Sports Illustrated Cover: Fallen Bill Iffrig from the Boston Marathon Bombings

The cover of this week’s Sports Illustrated is powerful with the famed photo of marathoner Bill Iffrig collapsed on the ground, after the bomb had exploded, with Boston Police officers surrounding him.

As we reported last night, Bill was uninjured and actually got up off the asphalt and walked the remaining 20-feet to the finish line (read more about Bill Iffrig HERE).  Bill’s a tough 78-year old grizzled runner.

Two things: 1. Bill never would have believed yesterday morning that he’d be on the cover of Sports Illustrated today and 2. There is no way in hell he would have ever believed the reason for him being on the cover.

The photo is powerful, iconic, and will be the lasting image from a horrible day in marathon and U.S. history.

More Posts from the 117th Boston Marathon

Posted in Marathon, RunningComments (0)


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