Charleston Marathon: mixed review
As you can tell from the title of this post, I have some mixed feelings on this one so here it goes.
First, this was my first attempt at pacing a half
marathon. I loved it!
My running partner CSR and I paced the 2:30 group for
TrySports. We got to wear some cool
bright yellow pacer shirts and hold “2:30” signs the whole race (that was the
hardest part of the race – the signs, not the shirts).
CSR and I had just run the Goofy Challenge
last weekend, but the 39.3 miles did not bother either of us at all. CSR came up with a new name for what we were doing, “Marathon
Sandwich”. That’s a half marathon, full
marathon, and another half marathon within a week. I think the name will stick!
I was so inspired by the people I met on this run. Some people were either running their
first half marathon or were going for a PR in this distance. I met a guy who had lost over 100 pounds
(like me!) and a woman who just had a baby ten weeks ago (not like me)! I ran with locals, people from other parts of
the state and several people from out of state.
I absolutely loved hearing their stories, I loved crossing the finish
line with all of them and I loved being part of their amazing journeys.
Here is what I did not love…
There were only 14 port-a-lets at the start of the race
(there were over 3,000 people registered for the race). There was very little signage at the start to
direct people and I cannot even remember if there was an emcee at the
start.
I don’t really have much to say about the route. It’s a long race - some parts are nice, some
parts are not. What I did not like was
that at mile four there were no cups! In
fact, there were no cups after this point until the table at mile twelve!
Luckily, the weather was cool enough that
this did not become a safety issue. But
I could tell that the people around me, who had never run this far, were starting
to panic. People were even picking up used
cups from the ground to get some water or PowerAde. The volunteers were so apologetic and I could
see they were really upset that the race organizers had not given them enough
cups for the runners.
The finish was not
much better. There was food, but no water
bottles. We did manage to find some
volunteers who were filling up cups with water toward the back of the finish
area.
I later found out that the race
had run out of medals for the finishers after our pace group (almost as bad as not
having cups).

I do want to end this post on a positive note. My son ran the Youth Marathon the day before
and had a blast! He received an awesome
shirt and his medal was over the top!
I really hope this race gets better.
Charleston is an amazing place to run and I want people to come here and enjoy this place I call home.