10/17/2007

Chicago Marathon: Poor Race Organization

By Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am — Filed under:

It was hot at this year’s marathon. The incredible heat lead to the death of one of the participants… well, that and the lack of water at the water stations. Sadly, most of the mainstream media is blaming the participants. Mark Iocchelli at Complete Running Network voices my reaction perfectly:

Chicago Marathon organizers say they were prepared for the heat and had plenty of water on the course, but marathoners say something completely different – that there wasn’t nearly enough water. Many runners have said some of the first water stations were dry very early on in the race.

While watching the Chicago Marathon organizers and media spin their spin, I’ve become compelled to speak out against what I think is a grossly inappropriate attack on the majority of people who took part in that marathon and, for that matter, all marathons.

I’m angry and disheartened to see attention being deflected away from the real issue – poor race organization – by suggesting that the runners were unprepared, poorly trained (even fat and out of shape), and had no business lacing up their shoes in the first place.

I have ran poorly organized races before, most notably, the first two years of the SLC 5K. It ran concurrently with the marathon, but they didn’t care about nor prepare for the crowd of 5K runners. When I finished, things were backed up behind the finish line with a huge crowd of people in front of me trying to get their running chips off their shoes. It took me an extra two minutes just to get to the finish line.

Not only that, I was suddenly stopped cold. Anyone who had ever run a hard race knows that if you stop suddenly, you will pass out because all the blood in your body pools in your legs. I literally had to run in place to prevent myself from losing consciousness. Unfortunately, not everyone knew this and their first aid station was packed with people who had been stopped by the crowd.

It took them TWO years of poor organization like this to fix the problem. TWO YEARS of filled first aid stations and fainting runners. Last year, they finally figured out that if they have us walk 500 yards away before they force us to take off our chips and have more than four people available to take them off, then we might be able to prevent huge crowds pushing past the finish line.

Race organizers are to blame for the death at the Chicago Marathon this year, not the runners.


Wendy Bumgardner at About.com has an EXCELLENT article about how to prevent becoming a statistic in poorly organized races:

Previous:
Next:

3 Responses to “Chicago Marathon: Poor Race Organization”

  1. earme Says:

    The man who died in at the Chicago Marathon died of a heart attack, not from the heat. http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/10/07/chicago.marathon.ap/

    I agree that they should have had more water, but seeing a temperature of 88 degrees in October in Chicago is extremely rare. The race was planned for more ‘normal’ October Chicago day.

    The heat did cause a number of issues that day though. There wasn’t enough water and they decided to cut the race short because of the heat (and probably water issue). Unfortunately, this didn’t get communicated to all the runners and here in the Chicago-land area we heard reports of streets opening back up and marathoners running through traffic because they didn’t know that the course had been changed to cut it short.

    Hopefully in the future the Chicago Marathon, and others, will be better equipped to deal with unexpected issues that may arise on the day of the marathon.

  2. Megan Says:

    Laura,

    Great post! Thanks for sharing. I have been thinking about entering a 5k next summer, and this information is so great to have for when I do enter my first race.

    Megan

  3. Mark Says:

    Hi Laura,

    Thanks for the link. I thought you should know you are being scraped. Take a look here:

    http://www.theirway.net/2007/10/17/chicago-marathon-poor-race-organization/

Leave a Reply

-

Powered by WordPress
(c) 2004-2017 Starling Fitness / Michael and Laura Moncur