A couple of weeks ago I finished Shonan International Marathon. I ran at a pretty good pace (for me) for the first half and a bit. If I had kept it up I would have finished in about four-and-a-half hours. (My original goal time was four hours, but [insert excuses here].) Instead, during most of the second half, I slowed way down. I never felt that I wouldn't be able to finish; I just couldn't get the legs to turn over at anything but the most stately of paces.
I crossed the finish line at 5:32:44, which put me in a strong 9633rd place among the men. I'm certain that for all of the time I was out there the first-place finisher, Takaya Sakamoto, who finished in 2:22:58, was aware of my presence 9,000 or so runners behind him, and was feeling the pressure. Indeed he was probably still feeling the pressure when, though he had finished his shower and was opening his second beer, I was still out there pounding away.
Even when you run them as slowly as I did, the kilometers go by quickly because there's so much to look at. The road is lined with spectators, dancers, cheering sections, cos-players--with, in short, all of humanity--from beginning to end, and the distractions are not limited to the spectators. Several runners wore costumes, too, and the fact that people were running a marathon in those costumes, continues to amaze me. The one that sticks in my mind, perhaps because I ran with him for a while, was the guy in a full-body Japanese eggplant (nasu) costume. That he beat me to the finish line isn't humiliating at all.
I was also amused to see a runner's wife (I assume) waiting a bit past the half-way mark with a bag of McDonald's food which the runner happily wolfed down before proceeding on his way, and a grandmother waving a cap and yelling at one of the runners as he passed "boshi, boshi." Evidently he had forgotten his cap, and she took it upon herself to deliver it to him mid-race.
One thing I viewed with less pleasure, though I understand that it is the done thing at road marathons, is the way so many runners blithely tossed their cups onto the road after downing some water or sports drink at an aid station where--the aid stations were well-equipped in every way--there were plenty of trash receptacles. Okay, if you're going for a world-record I'm willing to cut you some slack: maybe you really can't spare the extra five seconds it would take to properly dispose of your cup, but if you're a week-end duffer who's going to finish well north of three hours there's just no excuse for such slovenly behavior.
Given that there were something like 20,000 participants in the marathon, half-marathon, ten kilometer, and kids races things were astoundingly well-organized Hats off to the organizers, and I'm already looking forward to taking an hour or so off my time next year.
--David