..Okay, before I get started, maybe I should backtrack.
This year, the races on Pioneer Day got a new name, the Deseret News Classic. Last year, in 2012, they were called the Deseret News Marathon Race Series. A few years before that, they just called it the Deseret News Marathon, even though they offered a 10K and a 5k untimed run.
For simplicity sake, I've always just called it the Pioneer Day run.
What is Pioneer Day?
Pioneer Day is a legal holiday in Utah. Banks are closed and state government is closed, but it's not just a bank/government-only holiday; lots of people (including me) get the day off. There are fireworks shows at night and parades in many cities around the state. The largest parade is the Days of '47 Parade in Salt Lake City, and it happens to be the third largest parade in the country (it also plays a role in the race, as we'll discover in a few paragraphs).
Pioneer Day is celebrated on July 24 every year, and it commemorates the arrival of the Mormon pioneers in the Salt Lake Valley on July 24, 1847.
The 10K Route
For years, the only two timed races offered on July 24 were the marathon and a 10K. I must admit that I really love this 10K course. The route starts at Research Park, up by the University of Utah. It runs down to Foothill Blvd. and then westward past Rice-Eccles Stadium to 13th East. After that, it proceeds up to South Temple. The next section, almost two miles, is a on a downhill slope on South Temple, a pleasant tree-lined avenue lined with stately homes (including Utah's governor's mansion).
The final two miles of the 10K route are the best: it traces straight down the parade route, on 2nd East and then 9th South to Liberty Park. The street is lines with thousands of people, many of whom have camped out overnight, who cheer on the runners as they wend their way to the finish. It makes for a very enjoyable run, and I've made it part of my July 24 tradition since 2002.
The Marathon Route
First, is the long climb near the beginning of the course uphill to Little Mountain Summit, at the top of Emigration Canyon. Second, it's the fact that marathon runners, other than the elite runners who can complete the race in under three hours, do not get to run down the parade route. Nope, because the parade begins at 9:00, ordinary marathoners, like me, are forced to run one block to the east, on 3rd East. It spoils the magic of running on Pioneer Day!
So, I have always stuck with the 10K.
Finally, a Half!
This year, 2013, for the first time, the Deseret News added a new race to the program: a half marathon. When I looked at the course, it had all of the plusses of the 10K route and none of the drawbacks of the marathon. To wit: the half marathon began about a mile shy of Little Mountain Summit -- on the Salt Lake side -- so there was no uphill. The first six miles were downhill running in the canyon until emerging at the Hogle Zoo. The last six miles traced the 10K route, parade route and all.
The half marathon course also eliminates the additional leg that the marathon route has, turning south at Hogle Zoo and hugging the bench before joining Foothill Blvd near the mouth of Parleys Canyon, and then turning back toward downtown Salt Lake City. That jog in the route has the psychological impact of heading in the opposite direction from the finish line in those crucial, depressing mid-teen miles. Again, the route of the half spares runners from this.
After looking at the route, I knew immediately that I would sign up for the half!
Utah's Governor's Mansion is one of the sights along South Temple. All three races pass in front of here, at 6th East. |
Maps
This page contains maps of all the races
http://deseretnewsclassic.com/about/course-maps/
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