Testosterscone wrote: » Looking at the race calendar this year is it becoming untenable? Few examples; 7th July - Roscommon 10 14th July - Irish Road Runner 10 mile August 12th - Monaghan 10 August 19th - Kilcock 10 mile August 26th - Frank Duffy 10 mile Also seeing the way the K Club 10k is bouncing around the calendar (moved from clashing with Dunboyne 4 mile to clashing with Clontarf 10 mile. Is this killing competitive racing in this country through the proliferation of fields?
dublin runner wrote: » 10 Milers just happen to be in vogue at the moment - so 2018!
Testosterscone wrote: » kinda of ironic when what was once regarded as one of the best road races in Europe went by the wayside only last year.
dublin runner wrote: » Interestingly I think that reignited the 10 mile road race scene. It probably was the catalyst behind some of the recently new 10 mile races announced. 2019: The 8km race is going to be so 'on point' next year.....it's sooooo due a comeback!! So 2019.....
average_runner wrote: » Really sad to see dunboyne 4 miler and 10k club clashing. Never heard of kilcock 10 miler, any good?
average_runner wrote: » Never heard of kilcock 10 miler, any good?
Bananaleaf wrote: » I don't know about all the new emerging road races being a bad thing though. I think it's a good thing. None of the heavy-hitters would ever really clash I'd imagine and I guess that new locations and new routes can be nice for those of us who might get a bit bored returning to the same routes year on year. I would think that in terms of it killing competition, maybe it won't. Maybe what it might do is spread it out a bit more, thus increasing some people's chances (not me. Never me :P) of placing higher.
Testosterscone wrote: » In terms of competition also this is the point. Say for example in you have 50 sub 70 min 10 mile runners. Spread them over 4 or five races and suddenly your chances of isolation and effectively time trialing increase, gives alot more time to focus on the negatives and doubts creeping in as opposed to simply racing. .
Coffee Fulled Runner wrote: » I tend to avoid races where I know I'll be isolated for long periods. Nothing worse then been at the 5 mile mark knowing you're not going to catch the sub 60 runners I'd be around 64 and no one around you to race against.
OOnegative wrote: » Running solo in races can be great for mental strength to, if you can push yourself solo it should stand to you even more when racing in larger groups.
RayCun wrote: » I think the better races will continue to attract the crowd, and particularly to attract the better runners, who are likely to be more experienced and less interested in gimmicks. I can't think of any high quality races that have been driven out by poor quality competition.
Testosterscone wrote: » Could you argue the lack of help and support from volunteers contributed to Ballycotton's demise? Its not just competition from participants but also the limited competent volunteer pool
Slow_Runner wrote: » I'm one of the organizers for the Kilcock 10 mile and we started last November trying to pick a date that didn't clash with other races in Leinster which was surprisingly difficult. Ironically we picked the 10 mile distance as we thought there was a gap for this distance and there was plenty of 1/2 marathons scheduled. Also looking at the numbers the likes of Trim and Ballycotton (rip) get in the run up to spring marathons there is definitely a demand. I think the reason for the clustering of all these races is they are scheduled and marketed as tune up races to Autumn marathons - our own race's selling point is 10 miles, 10 weeks out from DCM (hence the "10 from 10") so you have a small window in which to pitch your race, very fwe people would have a 10 mile as a target race unlike 5/10ks and HMs The races listed by the OP I think, geographically speaking, are not really clashing - Roscommon and Monaghan are accessible to the West and North so will get the numbers. Only real clash is ourselves and Frank Duffy :angel:, while FD is a fantastic race we thought there was room for an alternative away from the park(this was before it moved to Fingal which means there is even more of a gap!). [font=Open Sans, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]One thing about a lot of races is it will force competition and innovation for the race organizers which can only be a good thing for the runners.[/font] First year for this one. We're aiming to have the same small club race feel for a bigger event, friendly, accessible and big spread afterwards. Oh and its going to be flat - very flat :).
Testosterscone wrote: » Could you argue the lack of help and support from volunteers contributed to Ballycotton's demise? Its not just competition from participants but also the limited competent volunteer pool that gets stretched.
TFBubendorfer wrote: » That exactly was the reason that was given for the end of that race. It was held in a very small community and keeping sufficient numbers of volunteers was always going to be more challenging than for a race held in a bigger town.
Testosterscone wrote: » Looking at the race calendar this year is it becoming untenable? Few examples; 7th July - Roscommon 10 14th July - Irish Road Runner 10 mile August 12th - Monaghan 10 August 19th - Kilcock 10 mile August 26th - Frank Duffy 10 mile Also seeing the way the K Club 10k is bouncing around the calendar (moved from clashing with Dunboyne 4 mile to clashing with Clontarf 10 mile. Is this killing competitive racing in this country through the proliferation of fields? Edit: Mullingar 10 now been moved to 28th of July as well :rolleyes:
RayCun wrote: » But Ballycotton wasn't losing volunteers to other races afaik, it wasn't a victim of race saturation. It was unusual in the first place, because not put on by a club or other continuing organisation
The Davestator wrote: » On a related note - what is the best resource for run events? Is there one that lists them all, or is it a case of looking at run Ireland etc