I am running a pikermi (major props to anyone who knows what that is without the use of Google) in August and am training my little butt off to do well. I ran my first one last year and didn't do quite as well as I would have liked even though I did better during training than in the actual race. Then I got some sort of serious lung infection which knocked me out of running for a couple of months and by that time, winter had arrived so I ended up taking most of the winter off. But now I am back at it and it feels like starting over from scratch. Now that daylight savings time is here, it is MUCH easier to get out and train. August, here I come. And 2 hour mark? You're going down
TOS paragraph 171.94, subsection C, parts v, vii, and xi say you can't post words I don't know. :police:
And I haven't googled it yet! Hugs, Devlyn
The name Marathon comes from the legend of Pheidippides, a Greek messenger. The legend states that he was sent from the battlefield of Marathon to Athens to announce that the Persians had been defeated in the Battle of Marathon (in which he had just fought)It is said that he ran the entire distance without stopping and burst into the assembly, exclaiming "νενικηκαμεν' (nenikekamen)", ("We wοn"), before collapsing and dying. The distance from Marathon to Athens was 26.2 miles. Therefore, races that are 26.2 miles are named Marathons. However, on that famous run there was passed a small town at about the halfway point named Pikermi. This distance is 13.1 Miles and what previously had been referred to as *half *marathons can be referred to as a Pikermi.
13.1 Miles Should Not Be Considered "Only Half" Of Anything! After all, they don't have a 10k and a half 10k.... No they have a 5k