debbieandroo
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2008
- Messages
- 2,085
No you won't! You will be pushing through because you trained for that race and will not go down without a fight this time!![]()
Thanks, I sure hope so!

No you won't! You will be pushing through because you trained for that race and will not go down without a fight this time!![]()
Count me in the slow camp. Due to a lower back injury years ago, I can't really do much running before I start to feel the pain flare. But I really wanted to try the Disneyland 1/2 Marathon after being at the park for Labor Day weekend two years in row. After talking with some friendly runners who had finished, they emphasized that if I trained for it, I could walk the entire course and finish on time.
Last year, I had been training using Jeff Galloway's run/walk method with a 15/45 split until about 3 weeks before the Disneyland 1/2. For whatever reason, I started to experience severe pain in my legs about 5 minutes into my training that I couldn't get to go away. I had to cut a couple of sessions short. Not wanting to miss out on important training sessions with the race itself so close, I did the only thing I could. I walked my training sessions in their entirety, maintaining a 15 minute per mile pace. Since it was my first, I was in the last corral.
On race day itself, I tried to run a little bit, but found the pain returning, only all over the place this time. So less than a mile into the course, I could either drop out or walk the thing. So I started walking. It was hard. I hoped I could maintain pace for the entire course. At mile 1, the volunteers told us we were about a minute ahead of pace. That was the last I heard from them. At every mile marker, I knew I was doing okay. As the race went on, I actually picked up my pace and finished in 3:05.
I share this in the hopes that anyone who wonders whether or not they can do this will see it. If you train for it and maintain the finishing pace, you can do it. There will be times during training when you either don't want to go train or don't feel like it, especially on the longer runs. But these are the times when you must train and finish each session. This is what builds endurance. And at least for me, having maxed out at 14 miles before the race, I knew I could do 13.1. Now I just have to do it two more times so I can get my Coast to Coast medal.
Have read this thread with great interest because several years ago I read an account posted on these boards by a woman who was swept at mile 2 of the Half.
Several things made me seein her post
1) She had not gone more than 3 miles in her training
2) She complained how far it was from the drop off area at EPCOT to the starting corrals. I didn't know whether to laugh or scream when she commented that the walk from the corrals was just too far and did her in before the race start. She thought Disney should have the start next to the drop off point.
3) She ended by saying that she KNEW she was not going to finish when she registered! This is the one that really set me off. That year, the half had closed in MAY! Here was someone who knew they weren't going to train, weren't going to finish and they took a spot from someone who was willing to make the commitment to train to do the entire race!
I completely understand that even with training some race days "it is what it is" and you can't finish, but why for the love of Mike would you enter something KNOWING you have no intention of finishing!!
I volunteer for a local race company and act as the "caboose" in their races. At the last half marathon I worked I had 15-20 people who were not on pace and I had to tell them that they had a choice of hitching a ride in the sag wagon to the finish or they could turn in their bibs and continue on the course, but they were no longer part of the race, but rather on a long walk around town. EVERY SINGLE ONE ASKED IF THEY WOULD GET THEIR MEDALS
They are FINISHERS medals people - not "I showed up" medals! My sister and I have discussed this endlessly and the thing that bothers us about people with these attitudes to quote a coach friend is that they "Don't Respect the Distance".
Okay, now I will get off my soapbox.![]()
rundisney said:*Participants must attend Packet Pick-up at Disney's Health & Fitness Expo to receive their race packet, bib, and tech shirt. Finisher medals will be distributed to finishers during the race. None of these items will be mailed to registrants that did not participate.
Count me in the slow camp. Due to a lower back injury years ago, I can't really do much running before I start to feel the pain flare. But I really wanted to try the Disneyland 1/2 Marathon after being at the park for Labor Day weekend two years in row. After talking with some friendly runners who had finished, they emphasized that if I trained for it, I could walk the entire course and finish on time.
Last year, I had been training using Jeff Galloway's run/walk method with a 15/45 split until about 3 weeks before the Disneyland 1/2. For whatever reason, I started to experience severe pain in my legs about 5 minutes into my training that I couldn't get to go away. I had to cut a couple of sessions short. Not wanting to miss out on important training sessions with the race itself so close, I did the only thing I could. I walked my training sessions in their entirety, maintaining a 15 minute per mile pace. Since it was my first, I was in the last corral.
On race day itself, I tried to run a little bit, but found the pain returning, only all over the place this time. So less than a mile into the course, I could either drop out or walk the thing. So I started walking. It was hard. I hoped I could maintain pace for the entire course. At mile 1, the volunteers told us we were about a minute ahead of pace. That was the last I heard from them. At every mile marker, I knew I was doing okay. As the race went on, I actually picked up my pace and finished in 3:05.
I share this in the hopes that anyone who wonders whether or not they can do this will see it. If you train for it and maintain the finishing pace, you can do it. There will be times during training when you either don't want to go train or don't feel like it, especially on the longer runs. But these are the times when you must train and finish each session. This is what builds endurance. And at least for me, having maxed out at 14 miles before the race, I knew I could do 13.1. Now I just have to do it two more times so I can get my Coast to Coast medal.
DisneyRunnerGirl said:Have read this thread with great interest because several years ago I read an account posted on these boards by a woman who was swept at mile 2 of the Half.
Several things made me seein her post
1) She had not gone more than 3 miles in her training
2) She complained how far it was from the drop off area at EPCOT to the starting corrals. I didn't know whether to laugh or scream when she commented that the walk from the corrals was just too far and did her in before the race start. She thought Disney should have the start next to the drop off point.
3) She ended by saying that she KNEW she was not going to finish when she registered! This is the one that really set me off. That year, the half had closed in MAY! Here was someone who knew they weren't going to train, weren't going to finish and they took a spot from someone who was willing to make the commitment to train to do the entire race!
I completely understand that even with training some race days "it is what it is" and you can't finish, but why for the love of Mike would you enter something KNOWING you have no intention of finishing!!
I volunteer for a local race company and act as the "caboose" in their races. At the last half marathon I worked I had 15-20 people who were not on pace and I had to tell them that they had a choice of hitching a ride in the sag wagon to the finish or they could turn in their bibs and continue on the course, but they were no longer part of the race, but rather on a long walk around town. EVERY SINGLE ONE ASKED IF THEY WOULD GET THEIR MEDALS
They are FINISHERS medals people - not "I showed up" medals! My sister and I have discussed this endlessly and the thing that bothers us about people with these attitudes to quote a coach friend is that they "Don't Respect the Distance".
Okay, now I will get off my soapbox.![]()
cobbler said:1. Yes they do remove people from the race if they can't keep pace
2. I have heard it both ways. I think a couple of years back there was an issue with the half (or maybe the full) where people were cut off right outside the entrance to MK. I thought I read they didn't receive a medal.
Recently I have been hearing that you get one regardless. Someone posted this info on the RunDisney facebook page. Obviously neither are completely reliable sources but that is what I have read. I was honestly quite surprised to read that you do in fact receive a medal but I guess (again from reading the post on fb) that people complained that they paid a lot of money and whatever and deserved the medal.
I suppose I'll chime in also!
I would be bummed to come home without a medal after having paid for the race and spent the money to travel to Disney...just to be empty handed. But if I received a medal when I didn't finish, I'd forever look at that medal as a reminder that it was just handed to me when I didn't actually earn it. There would be no real satisfaction in it. And I don't get the desire for a medal when you don't have the personal satisfaction of crossing the finish line to actually receive it. That said, I am not sure how I feel about people being swept within the last mile or so and still receiving the medal. On one hand I can understand the frustration of being swept so close to the end. On the other hand, it's an issue of personal satisfaction for me again. But someone getting a medal after being swept at mile 2? No way.
I am a slow runner...do 14-15 minutes per mile, but slowly increase my miles. No matter how much I train, I struggle to go any faster than that, but don't really find it much of a struggle to add distance. I had not thought of putting 2:45 as my time for a cushion as was mentioned here...I based it off 15 mpm, which is the slowest I go (usually closer to 14). So I'm hoping I didn't screw myself over as a result.![]()
You wouldnt be empty handed.. you'd have a shirt![]()
Two thoughts...
Second, anyone watch 'How I Met Your Mother'? In one episode Marshal was training for the NYC marathon but got hurt days before the event. Barney, the day before boasted he could run it, with NO training. To prove a point, he took Marshal's bib and ran the WHOLE race with no training. However, the great part was that when he sat down on the subway afterward he could not get up at his stop and spent the ENTIRE day riding the subway because he couldnt move.![]()
Two thoughts...
However, in reading I was shocked (I guess I shouldnt be) to hear that people actually ran half and full marathons on lackluster, unprepared training. That amazes me!
EMHDad et al, this thread has kind of morphed into a stack of I can do it less prepared than you and lower my training 5 thread.
By no means as a coach will I condone running a marathon on no training. I think it unwise.... but I know it can be done and I know through training runners the programs we develop are full of overkill. Is it wise to pare back a plan? Not really, the build up most plans have is pulled together following age tested rules of thumb that have worked through the years. Can you do well on less? Yes, most runners can do better on less - IF they have the mental game. The mental game is 90% of a marathon. If you can convince the brain that this is normal and it really will not hurt in the morning, then you probably can do with less.
But, everyone here should resolve to follow their appointed plans. Run the hard runs hard and the long runs, well...long. Maybe it's better to say aerobically but it kills the rhyme. DO NOT beat your self up for missing one long run or even two. Know that a missed run is a missed run and just let it pass. That missed run will take some funds out of the training bank, but a run here and there is ok.
There is no reason that anyone who has signed up and is not with broken limb or torn soft tissue cannot make the 20th in fine fashion. Even those who may read this and say I dunno, I am only able to push 17:20 on my last couple long runs. Remember, its hot and you have to slow up to dissipate heat. Mid fall is like a speed pump. The cooler drier weather will take time off in a hurry. Also, those dreads midweek hard runs will push times down.
Train hard and eat clean.