+10 Well put.
Can't We All Just Run Along wrote:
This. I do think it's important for everyone to run, even hobby joggers, but that's the whole point of having corrals - it doesn't hurt anyone for slower runners to be behind faster runners, but it does hurt the faster runners' experience to have to dodge the slower ones.
I don't understand how it would somehow insult the heroism of our first responders to start in the corral with their own pace, or even start an hour earlier like the kids the NYRR invited. They knew that it would be an unfair, dangerous cluster to have faster runners dodging kids, and the kids got all the more attention because they weren't competing with adult runners. I feel like this would have been a better solution.
This is the reason so many faster runners are so hateful toward hobby joggers - hobby joggers want to have fun at a race, but faster runners do too, and they way they have fun is to challenge themselves and see what they can do. It ruins what they find fun about a race if they are in danger of running smack into someone who stops suddenly to take a selfie, or ruins their rhythm if people are running slowly five abreast in front of them and they can't get around. If there were complaints about this at like, some 5K Glo Run or Color Run, yeah, I'd say cry a river, you knew what it was when you married it, but this is one of the marathon majors. You don't hear pro footballers bitching about backyard Thanksgiving players, and it's because no one thinks it's an awesome idea to let those people go play on the field at the superbowl.
I've heard slower runners say "I paid just as much as they did to be here, I should get to be up front," and it's this horrible feedback loop of spite, where faster runners get upset and say shitty things about hobby joggers ruining their experience, and then hobby joggers get up front out of spite and ruin the experience for the faster runners on purpose.