Workaholicrunner’s Weblog

November 1, 2009

Why Mary Wittenberg is the best race director in the world

Filed under: Uncategorized — workaholicrunner @ 4:10 pm

Over the last few days, there has been lots of buzz about a controversial New York Times article regarding plodders in the marathon.  This article was widely circulated and generated a lot of letters to the editor.

I will post the article below then the response of Mary Wittenberg, head of New York Road Runners and race director of the ING New York Marathon.

———-

October 23, 2009

Plodders Have a Place, but Is It in a Marathon?

 

 

Every weekend during this fall marathon season, long after most runners have completed the 26.2-mile course — and very likely after many have showered, changed and headed for a meal — a group of stragglers crosses the finish line.

Many of those slower runners, claiming that late is better than never, receive a finisher’s medal just like every other participant. Having traversed the same route as the fleeter-footed runners — perhaps in twice the amount of time — they get to call themselves marathoners.

And it’s driving some hard-core runners crazy.

“It’s a joke to run a marathon by walking every other mile or by finishing in six, seven, eight hours,” said Adrienne Wald, 54, the women’s cross-country coach at the College of New Rochelle, who ran her first marathon in 1984. “It used to be that running a marathon was worth something — there used to be a pride saying that you ran a marathon, but not anymore. Now it’s, ‘How low is the bar?’ ”

Tens of thousands of runners are training for marathons this time of year. As the fields continue to grow — primarily by adding slower runners — so has the intensity of the debate over how quickly an able-bodied runner should finish the once-elite event that is now an activity for the masses.

Purists believe that running a marathon should be just that — running the entire course at a relatively fast clip. They point out that a six-hour marathoner is simply participating in the event, not racing in it. Slow runners have disrespected the distance, they say, and have ruined the marathon’s mystique.

Slower marathoners believe that covering the 26.2 miles is the crux of the accomplishment, no matter the pace. They say that marathons inspire people to get off their couches, if only to cross off an item on the Things to Do Before I Die list. And besides, slow runners are what drive the marathon business, they say.

John Bingham, a runner who is known as the Penguin, is often credited with starting the slow-running movement, in the 1990s. “I have had people say that I’ve ruined the sport of running, but what I’ve been trying to do is promote the activity of running to an entire generation of people,” he said. “What’s wrong with that?”

Bingham added: “The complainers are just a bunch of ornery, grumpy people who want the marathon all to themselves and don’t want the slower runners. But too bad. The sport is fueled and funded by people like me.”

Trends show that marathon finishers are getting slower and slower — and more prevalent — according to Running USA, a nonprofit organization that tracks trends in distance running. From 1980 to 2008, the number of marathon finishers in the United States increased to 425,000 from 143,000.

In 1980, the median finishing time for male runners in United States marathons was 3 hours 32 minutes 17 seconds, a pace of about eight minutes per mile. In 2008, the median finishing time was 4:16, a pace of 9:46. For women, that time in 1980 was 4:03:39. Last year, it was 4:43:32.

In a debate on the Web site slowtwitch.com, someone posting as Record10 Carbon wrote that more than half of the people at a marathon are just overweight and “trying to get a shirt and medal … looking to one day tell a story about the saga and the suffering of their 11 minute pace ‘race.’ ”

In response, someone wrote: “Being a participant isn’t bad. Yes, there should be a cutoff on some events. But, what that cutoff is can be a raging debate.”

Race directors often struggle to find the right cut-off time, when water stations are closed, roads open to vehicles and volunteers abandon the course. Some directors, however, avoid that problem.

Runners in the Honolulu Marathon have no limits. Race rules state, “All runners will be permitted to finish, regardless of their time.”

Last year, 44 percent of the field for that event finished in more than six hours — with some marathoners stopping for lunch along the course.

“For every race director, there’s a very fine line between putting on a community event and putting on a race,” said Chris Burch, race director for the Des Moines Marathon, which stays open for seven hours. Last year, it stayed open for eight hours, but Burch found that only 4 percent of the participants needed more than seven hours to finish. In the end, that extra hour was not worth it, he said, because of the costs of keeping the course open.

“It is a huge budget item because you have to pay municipal services, like police, fire or trash, and volunteers have to stay longer,” he said. “But it’s not a simple decision. Those back-of-the-pack runners are income for the event, too, and they’re just as important for everyone. There’s a feeling of ‘I paid as much money as the other people to enter, so I should be treated the same.’ ”

At the Marine Corps Marathon, in the Washington, D.C., area, runners must keep a pace of 14 minutes per mile or risk being booted from the event near the 20-mile mark. A bus looms there, waiting to pick up those who fail to cross the 14th Street Bridge before it reopens to traffic. Those who choose to continue on the open course do so at their own risk, taking to the sidewalks or dodging traffic.

At the Berlin Marathon, where the cut-off time is 6:15, the “slow police” are notorious for lurking at the back of the pack. “If runners aren’t able to finish in the time we put in our information book, we ask them to leave the course and find their way to their hotel, or get in the bus,” the race director Mark Milde said.

The New York City Marathon, scheduled for Nov. 1, will have a field of about 40,000. Last year, about 21 percent of the field finished in more than five hours. The race officially ends after 6:30, though runners are scored through 8:40, when the timing system is finally carted off, said the race director Mary Wittenberg.

Longtime marathoners like Julia Given, a 46-year-old marketing director from Charlottesville, Va., still find ways to differentiate the “serious runners” from those at the back of the pack.

“If you’re wearing a marathon T-shirt, that doesn’t mean much anymore,” Given said on the eve of this month’s Baltimore Marathon, where vendors were selling products that celebrate slower runners. One sticker said: “I’m slow. I know. Get over it.”

“I always ask those people, ‘What was your time?’ If it’s six hours or more, I say, ‘Oh great, that’s fine, but you didn’t really run it,’ ” said Given, who finished the Baltimore race in 4:05:52. “The mystique of the marathon still exists. It’s the mystique of the fast marathon.”

 

———-

Mary Wittenberg’s letter to the editor:

A Marathon, Not a Sprint

To the Sports Editor:

Re “Plodders Have a Place, but Is It in a Marathon?” Oct. 23: We at New York Road Runners stress the strenuous, demanding nature of the marathon. We don’t say that it’s for everyone. We conduct more than 50 events a year — from the mile to the marathon — and hold beginner clinics and classes.

We promote the marathon as the Mount Everest of running. In other words, the ultimate goal. One that takes careful and rigorous preparation. But we specifically don’t say, “You’ve got to be fast to do it.”

We don’t encourage people to walk the marathon or to take eight hours to complete it. It is a running event, after all. But it is 26.2 miles — a huge challenge, no matter how fast you are.

You need to walk a little? Then walk a little. Do what it takes to accomplish the goal of finishing, and be smart about it, too.

A marathoner is a marathoner regardless of time.

Mary R. Wittenberg

New York

The writer is the chief executive of New York Road Runners and the race director of the New York City Marathon.

 

3 Comments »

  1. 350 Van White Memorial Blvd. # 105
    Minneapolis, MN 55405

    November 1, 2009

    Mary Wittenberg,
    New York Road Runners
    9 East 89th Street
    New York, NY USA 10128

    Dear Ms. Wittenberg:

    The deaths that have happened recently to healthy young people during a marathon can be prevented. The cause is toxic shock precipitated due to an incomplete soft bowel elimination. I speak from experience because I almost died from this same cause.

    Because of botched hemorrhoid surgery eighteen years ago, my lower intestinal tract was severely damaged and weakened. I had to carry an enema bottle with me for a number of years to “jump start” a bowel movement. Fortunately, I have now healed past that condition.

    One day while exercising at a YMCA, I did very intense “spinning” on an exercise bicycle for an hour and felt wonderful. I was in excellent physical condition. Shortly after going back to my locker I was hit with overwhelming nausea and shock, and I felt as though I was dying and my heart was about to stop. Fortunately, my locker was open and my enema bottle was at hand. I had barely enough strength to crawl to a toilet and give myself a quick enema. The nausea and sickness disappeared instantly.

    Also, from my experiences in dealing with the problems resultant from that surgery, I learned that the way a standard toilet is constructed is a causative factor in poor bowel elimination. Complete elimination is best achieved by far in a squatting position. I would like to suggest that such facilites be constructed before the marathon for the use of runners.

    Tom Washington, Ph.D.

    Comment by Tom Washington, Ph.D. — November 1, 2009 @ 8:11 pm

  2. Natamaan ako dun. Buti na lang sinagot ni Mary Wittenberg. I can still call myself a marathoner!

    Comment by DATC — November 3, 2009 @ 3:52 am

  3. DATC,

    That’s why she is the world’s greatest race director. Becuse of all the controversy that the article created, New York Road Runners published Mary Wittenberg’s full response in the front of their web page.

    “Missing The Essensce Of The Marathon”

    http://www.ingnycmarathondaily.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=64:missing-the-essence-of-the-marathon&catid=42:the-marathon&Itemid=71

    Comment by workaholicrunner — November 3, 2009 @ 12:40 pm


RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Blog at WordPress.com.