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Wednesday, December 17, 2025 at 2:42 AM
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What goes into putting on races: It’s more than you think

What goes into putting on races: It’s more than you think

The Kiwanis Pumpkin Dash 5K is getting organized for the race on Oct. 22 at Country Estates in San Marcos starting at 9 a.m. Athletes Guild is handling pre-registration. For runners that enter weekend races, many do not realize how much planning goes on several weeks before the race. I get involved with many races here in San Marcos as a consultant. This is especially true if the organization is trying to put on a run for the first time. Fortunately, the Kiwanis Club Pumpkin Dash 5K is hosting its ninth annual race. The best part is that members of the organizing committee have been involved in most of the races Kiwanis puts on. Where this is important is that the “little things” that make a race successful are covered. Having been part of organizing races for 35-plus years it is the “little things” that can cause a race to be a disaster. Whether it’s a direction person pointing runners in the wrong direction —  I remember one race had a direction person in a chair fall asleep during the race and some runners thought he was unconscious, while another had the direction person arrive late and missed the lead runners, and runners crossed the finish line from both directions — a person not knowing how to mix a Gatorade cooler for after-race refreshments, confusion for determining the awards for fast runners and not ordering the correct sizes of t-shirts for runners can make a race one runners will not come back to. 

The organizing committee has met and has listed all the equipment needed and volunteer duties assigned so the race will be well-run. The race starts at 9 a.m. and volunteers need to show up before 7  a.m. to get ready for the runners that start to show up at 8 a.m. Determining who will bring the traffic cones for direction signs, mile markers, turnaround points and critical turns are important. The cones with direction arrows are necessary for a race but it is always better to have an actual person there to direct runners at turns and intersections. Setting up a course for a short 5K race takes about 45 to 60 minutes. If it is an early start the sun might not be up for the volunteers putting out the mile markers who find the paint mark on the side of the road unless they are familiar with the course. I remember being the lead bike for a race and the turnaround point was not marked. The runners just kept running until someone shouted that they were going too far. That was one of those ‘little things’ that can mess up a race.

Who will bring the coolers for water and refreshment drinks out on the course and at the finish line? Another ‘little thing’ is who will bring the cups for the runners to drink from? What will you have for post-race refreshments? Bananas and oranges need a knife to cut them and a tray to put them on. Somebody needs to bring those ‘little things’ items. Do you want donuts, cookies or muffins for refreshments after the race for hungry runners? Tacos? And how many of each? Who buys them?

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