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A friend is running the marathon on Monday and asked me to pace her for the final 5 miles. I am torn. I want to support her but I don't want to take anything away from those who have run the whole thing. Any advice?
Re: Marathon bandits
Peter Sagal of NPR had a good essay in this month's Runner's World on the subject of race bandits. He may come off as a bit flippant to those who feel strongly about the issue, but I enjoyed his perspective. Also of note here (and of particular interest to you) is the fact that Boston tends to turn a blind eye to bandits.
Here's the article: http://www.runnersworld.com/article/1,7120,s6-243-297--14300-0,00.html
I don't really feel strongly one way or the other. I get that it's bad, and why people shouldn't do it--I personally wouldn't because I'm kind of a goodie two shoes when it comes to these things and afraid of getting in trouble--but if you're jumping in, not drinking their water and not trying to claim a medal at the end...meh. Don't kick any puppies along the way and you probably won't be headed for eternal damnation.
it really sucks when you are nearing the end of the race, feeling exhausted, and someone drops in to help the person next to you. it sucks the most if its when you are competing for age groups (it has happened to me) but it sucks even when you know you are not getting an award...because it just seems unfair at the time. its like, where is my friend to help me??
that is just my light opinion - its not an issue that i feel strongly about. i actually have ran parts of marathon courses to help my friends. its fun. but never at the end - just a few miles in the middle when they are still happy, lol.
I am anti-banditing, period. Especially for a race like Boston.
Has she thought this through? I'm pretty sure I'd want to punch someone with fresh legs at mile 21 of a marathon.
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A bandit's results won't count anyway. So I don't think it's that big of a deal.
Lol. Truer words have never been spoken.
its not that their results count, its that when a friend jumps into pace you, it helps you run faster. that is why its unfair if you have potential for an age group award.
i think in general, its ok to pace people in a race like Boston because most of us wont be winning awards like that. but still, it is discouraging at the end of a marathon when someone jumps in and helps someone else, especially if you are struggling.
I don't think running 5 miles of a 26.2 mile race is really being a bandit. .. I've had someone jump in and run with me for a mile at a time during a half marathon. They didn't drink any water, and he cut out before the finish line - IMO, banditing would be running the whole race, and using resources that were for runners that paid..
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