Quantcast The Daily Northwestern
College Media Network
  • Home

NU runners participate in marathon

Marathon runners get boosts from fans, spectators

Kirsten Salyer

Issue date: 10/13/08 Section: Campus
  • Print
  • Email
After finishing the 26.2-mile Chicago Marathon in four hours and five minutes Sunday morning, Music senior Lindsay Klecka said she felt like she was "on top of the world." That is, until her muscles caught up with the adrenaline.

"Right now, I feel like a big bruise," she said.

The Bank of America Chicago Marathon took Klecka, other Northwestern students and about 45,000 total runners on a loop around Chicago, starting at Grant Park and winding through 29 neighborhoods, including Wrigleyville, Little Italy and Greek Town, before finishing back where it started near the "bean" in Millennium Park, Klecka said.

Klecka, who ran the marathon for the first time in 2005, started training for her second race over the summer using a free online marathon training schedule. It takes months to prepare, and the training schedule will change your lifestyle, she said.

"There were all those Friday nights I knew I had to get up to run Saturday morning," she said. "After all the months I put into training, it was an incredible feeling to do it."

The last two years, Weinberg junior Brian Wasserman has stood on the sidelines and watched his mom run the marathon. This year was his turn to wake up at 3:30 a.m. over the summer to train with her for the race, he said.

"The experience is totally different from the other side," he said. "You can't imagine the experience of running it until you actually do it."

Wasserman said it was a challenge to finish the race but spectator support helped him "push through."

"When it's Mile 21 and it's hot and you don't know if you can do it, hearing the spectators cheer you on is incredible," he said.

Members of the Evanston Running Club, a group of families and individual runners who meet for weekly jogs around the Evanston area, volunteered at the 16th mile mark to pass out Gatorade and cheer on the 10 club members who were running in the race.

For the volunteers, the race felt like a huge festival, said Al White, one of the club leaders who ran in the race in 1998 and has volunteered for the past several years. The club is planning a party for the marathon runners at Prairie Moon on Wednesday.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

The DAILY encourages you to share your thoughts on this story. Please help us keep the discussion lively, but civil. Comments that are abusive to others, off-topic or vulgar, or comments that misrepresent someone's identity, will not be tolerated. We reserve the right to delete any comments in violation or to close comment threads on articles.

Please e-mail online@dailynorthwestern.com to flag a comment or for more information.

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

NU Football Insider



Cats Corner

Photobucket

Advertisement