"I want to see Richmond," President Lincoln famously said after
the long-anticipated fall of the gutted Confederate capital.
Nearly 150 years later, the historic River City as a
destination is much more desirable, especially if participation
in the SunTrust Richmond Marathon is part of the package. "America's Friendliest Marathon" celebrated its 31st running on
November 15 with a record 14,601 entries divided evenly among
the marathon, 8K, and the half marathon, which was
reestablished after a 10-year hiatus. On an
uncharacteristically warm and windy morning, Jynocel Basweti,
from Kenya, won the marathon in 2 hours 22 minutes 22 seconds.
Former Washington-area runner Kyle Smits (29), now living in
Baltimore, ran 2:34:37 to finish sixth. Olympic trials marathon
qualifier Kristin Price, an all-American at N.C. State and now
living in Raleigh, was the first woman in 2:45:02.
Ethiopian Derese Deniboba ran 1:06:50 to edge Kenyan Elijah
Kitur by one second in the half marathon, and Ethiopian
Alemtsehay Misganaw won the women's half in 1:18:34. Kenyan
Robert Letting, based in Albuquerque, NM, won the 8K in a quick
22:42; countrywoman Jane Murage took the women's race in 25:48,
with Washington's Veterans Day 10K winner, Salome Koskei,
second in 26:04.
The marathon starts downtown within a few blocks of the
recently renovated state capitol originally designed by Thomas
Jefferson. The city tour begins with a run through Virginia
Commonwealth University on Broad Street, takes in some of the
world's most famous equestrian statues to Civil War heroes and
native son, tennis star Arthur Ashe, in the Fan District on
Monument Avenue, crosses the James River and traces an arc on
the city's south side before crossing again at the Robert E.
Lee Bridge for the final eight miles in the north side, with
the finish just a few blocks from the start.
The half marathon hits the downtown and Monument Avenue
highlights all on the north side, while the 8K is a flat and
fast, a nearly out-and-back downtown course; the races begin at
staggered times but all share the same finish line, which makes
for great crowd support on the downhill finish. Families are
more than welcome - a one-mile kids' run takes place the night
before the race at 7:00 a.m.
Washingtonians other than Lincoln have felt the president's
yearning to see Richmond and have supported the race in droves
over the past three decades. And no wonder--it is an easy drive
to a charming and still genteel city that thrives on history
and tourism. Downtown hotels are reasonably priced and
plentiful and the Saturday start allows for an extra day of
visiting Richmond's historic sites and touring up-close the
city's architecturally notable neighborhoods.
Matt Barresi (25), from Arlington's Pacers-Brooks team, made
the trip and finished fifth in the half marathon, running
1:10:11 to be the first American. "The crowd support was
great," Barresi said. "The course was tough and with the
weather, I'm pleased. Next year I'm coming back for the 8K,
which I've heard is a PR course."
As should any runner with a desire to run in a historic,
competitive and attractive venue. Did we mention it is
America's friendliest marathon as well?