Forums >Racing>10K Race Question
Are we there, yet?
I am a fan of Mizuno Wave Riders, I feel like they are better on pavement than on the track. The 1st two 1 mile TT I did were about 2 weeks apart. I was faster on pavement vs the track.
The problem with road miles is the difficulty in finding a certified mile course. Based on Garmin readings, a road mile is often 6-8 seconds faster than a track mile because it's been measured short.
2023 Races:
04/15 - Alexander County 12-Hour
05/13 - Dawn to Dusk to Dawn 50K 06/16 - Six Days in the Dome 12-Hour
There is actually a certified course around Ft McHenry. Unfortunately, that racec hasas gone virtual for the year.
You're better off trusting the measured course. GPS readings typically have a bias because of positional error. This is why most watches read 13.3 miles at the end of a half marathon.
Thanks all for the dialog and thoughts. I decided it made more sense to run on the road because since I needed to send a screen shot of the run being 6.20 miles, I figured if I was "off" on the track with my watch (Meaning I know I had run a true 10K but my watch is telling me I'm .15 miles short and so I have to keep running) it wouldn't qualify for their records despite me being certain it was indeed that distance (if that makes sense).
Either way, I ran decently overall, but my last mile was crap which has not happened to me yet in racing. I went out too fast for the first time (a 6:27 first mile) and paid for it with a 6:50 last mile. I finished at 41:00 on the nose, good for a 6:35 pace. Not awful considering it was 81 with 90% humidity and a 14 mph wind though. I think the virtual race/not racing against others certainly cost me a few seconds. I tried to push myself about as hard as I could go but if it was a true race I think I'd have found a few more seconds for sure.
You could always include a screen shot of the map showing it was run on a track. And to be more precise, rounding up to the next 1/100th of a mile, 10K would be 6.22 miles.