Back to Baltimore Marathon Information & Reviews
E. G. from Maryland
(11/30/2009)
"Funky and fun, like the city itself" (about: 2009)
4-5 previous marathons
| 1 Baltimore Marathon
COURSE: 5 ORGANIZATION: 5 FANS: 5 The course introduced us out-of-towners to many very cool things about Baltimore. I'll return as a tourist and a marathoner. I liked that we ran through a very depressed neighborhood, to let the residents know that, for at least one day in the year, they had not been forgotten. HOWEVER, the age group award I got was so bad it was funny! Instead of giving out the age group awards at the race, they mailed the trophy weeks later, only after I emailed them to ask when it was coming. I'm giving it the Ugliest Trophy Award. It has no date. It is lopsided plastic covered in copper-colored spray paint, and on the back where a little plaque is supposed to be is a piece of tape on which somebody has typed, "2009 1st Place Female 60 - 64." I'm guessing it was a rejected sample that they found in the back of somebody's closet. Come on, guys; try to do better next year. | |
J. D. from Washington, DC
(11/14/2009)
"Hills" (about: 2009)
3 previous marathons
| 1 Baltimore Marathon
COURSE: 5 ORGANIZATION: 5 FANS: 5 This is a great marathon, but if you intend to run it in 2010, make sure you are running hills in training. Like people are saying, the second half of the marathon is just one gradual hill after another. You do get to run downhill for the last mile or so, but at that point you're too miserable to enjoy it. One thing that may distract you with the hills is the entertaining arguments between Baltimore Police and the blocked off car drivers at each intersection on the course. | |
j. d. from LINDENHURST NY
(11/3/2009)
"good" (about: 2009)
11-50 previous marathons
| 1 Baltimore Marathon
COURSE: 4 ORGANIZATION: 4 FANS: 5 I like to say thanks to the City of Baltimore. I've been running since 1985, and I've been running these big races since 1987. The Baltimore Marathon was great, and yes, I'll do it again. The fatality of the runner on the 25-mile-mark did put a damper people's spirits, though.... I've never run a course before with hills almost every single mile. Thanks again, and see you in Baltimore in the future. | |
S. L. from Richmond, California
(10/31/2009)
"This was an extremely well organized event" (about: 2009)
11-50 previous marathons
| 1 Baltimore Marathon
COURSE: 5 ORGANIZATION: 5 FANS: 4 I completed 16 marathons prior to this in Portland, Chicago, Los Angeles, DC, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Orlando, Olympia and other cities. Some were very well organized and others were pitiful. I rate this as one of the best organized of the marathons I've run; others should take lessons. The city was well informed and supportive. The volunteers and police were phenomenal. There was still food and water at the end for the slower runners, which is not always the case. Although I ran the full marathon, I thought that the relay exchange areas were well marked and managed. I also enjoyed talking with runners who were doing the relay and the half marathon along the same route. I will encourage others to run this marathon. I loved that endurance Gatorade was the energy drink as I think it is the absolute best for slower runners like me. :) Although the expo seemed small, I thought that it too was well run and had the essential items and information available for most runners. | |
P. C. from Media, PA
(10/22/2009)
"Great race, great city to visit." (about: 2009)
2 previous marathons
| 1 Baltimore Marathon
COURSE: 5 ORGANIZATION: 5 FANS: 5 The course was somewhat challenging, especially the long gradual hills into the wind during the latter part of the race. However, you did get it back with gradual downhills during the last couple of miles when you needed it most. At around a 3:20 pace, I met the half-marathon leaders at the merge, which I wasn't happy about at first, as I was getting passed by many of them. However, I started to feel like they were pulling me along and they even offered words of encouragement to those of us with "full" marathon signs on our back - much appreciated. Great police, fire department and volunteer support along the way too. Spent the weekend in Baltimore with the family and we really enjoyed our visit to what we found to be a very friendly city. We'll do this again next year. | |
Sid Busch from Goose Creek SC
(10/18/2009)
"Enjoyable Marathon" (about: 2009)
50+ previous marathons
| 2 Baltimore Marathons
COURSE: 5 ORGANIZATION: 5 FANS: 5 First of all, to the runner who said that that Fort McHenry was removed so the Under Armour headquarters could be added, read the course info book: the fort was removed because of construction on the sea wall. I am a slow runner, so I didn't get caught up in the full/half problems. This course is a tough one, so prepare for hills. The packet pick up and expo were well organized. I got my packet and shirt and goody bag with no problem, and having this at the Ravens Stadium made it convenient for us out-of-towners. (The race was within walking distance of the hotels.) I will be back. | |
S. P. from lSoutheastern, Connecticut
(10/18/2009)
"Small marathon advertised big!" (about: 2009)
11-50 previous marathons
COURSE: 3 ORGANIZATION: 4 FANS: 3 This was my 17th marathon run. Baltimore compared its course to Boston but I thought it was tougher. There was no Heartbreak Hill, but the hills never ended. The merge with the half at mile 16 was tough - dodging runners to stay on your pace was difficult. The young kids cheering on the course were great, as were the gummy bears and Under Armour music. Crowds are sparse - people were just waking up and sitting on their stoops. The Inner Harbor was fun for my family and the festival after was fun for them. I was fighting off nausea and the carnival smells didn't help, but that's just me. I couldn't help the rain, but it made for slick roads and I saw eight people crash with road rash. Why wear a "Full" or "Relay" sign on your back when thousands of half-marathoners merge with you at mile 16? It was a quiet course most of the way. And boy oh boy, after mile 25, it was the longest finish ever! If I lived locally, I'd probably do it again.... | |
D. G. from Cornwall England
(10/17/2009)
"It's what you make it!" (about: 2009)
6-10 previous marathons
| 1 Baltimore Marathon
COURSE: 4 ORGANIZATION: 3 FANS: 3 The Expo: There was nowhere to get a drink - just a massive sales pitch for vendors and little else going on. A and T Stadium should have been the best Expo venue ever. The Course: What hills? Every city has hills and these ones were fine; short and you get to go downhill on the way back, so I'm fine with the mostly flat course. The temperature was about right for marathon-running. They should have included Fort McHenry, as it is beautiful down there and adds a historical element to the town. Spectators: They were awesome when downtown, but invisible and silent in the outback. A shared meeting area after the finish is fine but it needed to be bigger and the lines for the free Bud Light and Phillips soup were just far too long for somebody suffering from total exhaustion! All that said, I got a new PB by over seven minutes (4:36), so I reckon that I might be back one day. | |
Matthew Parry from Baltimore, Maryland
(10/14/2009)
"Will Run Again in 2010" (about: 2009)
3 previous marathons
COURSE: 3 ORGANIZATION: 4 FANS: 4 This was my first Baltimore Marathon and I was generally pleased with its execution. The course was challenging (topographically speaking, of course) and although we ran through some low-income parts of town, there were no jeers - only cheers that I think I appreciated more than any others. I did pity, however, the scores of vehicles that I saw stuck in massive jams perpendicular to the course - apparently caught unaware of road closures. Thank you to the Baltimore Police for holding them back!! Water stations were fine - more than fine, really - but I would have liked more timing pieces on the course. Under Armour was a great sponsor - awesome shirt. The relay exchange areas offered an unexpected motivational lift. Luckily I got past the half-marathon starting line before they began, so I was spared a lot of the merge issues that I feared. Separate finish lanes and lines (last 1.2 miles??) for marathoners and half-marathoners would have been nice. These are small details - I'll be back in 2010! | |
D. W. from Locust Grove, VA
(10/13/2009)
"Juice is not worth the squeeze!" (about: 2009)
3 previous marathons
| 1 Baltimore Marathon
COURSE: 3 ORGANIZATION: 3 FANS: 3 Hotel(s): Plentiful, convenient, priced right. Transportation: Choose a hotel in walking distance, but the parking at the expo was extremely cheap/convenient. Expo: Small for a race of this size, with the standard fare. Nothing special! New recycled t-shirt material was nice, but it sticks to the body when sweating. I won't use it to work out. Start: Easy and convenient due to the small size of the event. Course: It features an easy opening 16 miles despite first three miles climbing. There were picturesque areas, and I always had other runners with me. At the 16-mile point, the half marathoners converged on the same course. That's a HUGE mistake for the organizers! It REALLY messes up goal-oriented runners (not the elites though), and it slows the pace considerably weaving through traffic at that point of a race. For example, a four-hour marathoner would be converging with two-and-a-half-hour half-marathoners, and spend the next 10 miles passing those folks wasting energy moving laterally while climbing for 6 of those miles. Hills on that portion are surprisingly tough, even for someone trained on hills. I was surprised, as the climbs are not rewarded with downhills - there were only flats before the next climb. I managed a PR despite the course, but because of training. Aid Stations: Well stocked with Gatorade Endurance and H2O. I never take on-course food, but there were chips, bananas, Power Gels (2), etc. The drink was not in a consistent order, which could be confusing. Finish Area: It was fun to come through Camden Yards. Fan Support: Average. Richmond/MCM blow it away though for this. Celebration Village: Chaos! The family reunion zone was very poorly marked and hard to link up as the spectators could not get close to the finish line. The food was the same food as they had on the course, which is not what you want to see at the finish line. We need pizza or something more substantial. Signage: Poor! Need higher/more visible signage for ALL things. Mile markers, H2O points, relay zone, bathroom locations, family link up, etc. and there need to be warning signs for each a short distance in front so runners can prepare what side of road to be on. Recommendation: Having only run this race, MCM, and Baltimore, I'd rank this one last. Richmond would be first for size, crowds, logistics, and course. This is last because of the course and logistics. |
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