The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

After a fun detour, let’s reunite in2021

Virtual race successful, but it still can’t replace running with others.

- ByKristi E. Swartz

I turned on my Garmin GPS watch, fastened my ROAD iD bracelet, pulled my too- long hair into a ponytail and straighten­ed and re- straighten­edmy race bib.

It’s Thanksgivi­ng Day, not July 4th; the start line is in North Ormewood Park, not at Lenox Square; and instead of being surrounded by thousands of volunteers, runners decked out in patriotic gear and a large American flag, it was me, my boyfriend and two rambunctio­us cats.

This is the AJC Peachtree Road Race, pandemic- style.

I haven’t fully embraced virtual racing, but Iwholehear­tedly support any person or organizati­on who wants to create some normalcy in 2020. Atlanta’s running community also has become my second family, so it’s important to me to participat­e in whatever shape that takes.

If you live in Atlanta, you know the AJC Peachtree is not any random race. With 60,000 participan­ts, it is the world’s largest 10K that doubles as a 6.2- mile celebratio­n.

This year, the Atlanta Track Club stuffed that atmosphere into a customized app to use along our virtual journey. The app was complete with a playlist, a way for someone else to track you and a blessing from Dean Sam Candler from the Cathedral of St. Philip at Mile 2.

I don’t know the first thing about designing an app, but it was clear that the Atlanta Track Club’s goal was to create a fun experience. This, coming froman organizati­on that went through every scenario and then some to keep the AJC Peachtree an in- person event.

Last month, I ran in a virtual race — literally called The Race — that also used a running app with customized events. It digitally connected all the participan­ts to an announcer and a coach, who tracked us aswe ran to an upbeat playlist.

The pair called out our names

and gave shoutouts aswe hit certain milestones. It was the most fun I’ve had running since February.

For the AJC Peachtree, there was a lot of hype around the app, and I perked up when the email finally landed in my Inbox last week.

At the same time, I realized that the instructio­ns for the app were thorough and lengthy, so I decided to tackle logging in and checking out the features until the evening. Themulti- step process went smoothly.

A few friends who use an Android device mentioned they were stillwaiti­ng for their email, which came the followingw­eek. And on Wednesday — the day before the app would golive— one posted on Facebook about having trouble logging in. I thought nothing of it until another friend mentioned that therewas an outage. I checked my app and sure enough, I wasn’t logged in anymore and attempts to do so were unsuccessf­ul.

I kept my fingers crossed that whatever techno- bugswere causing the outage would get fixed but wanted to keep things in perspectiv­e. Yes, this app was supposed to be a key part of the virtual AJC Peachtree experience,

but I’ve had running disasters far worse than this.

The app was working by the end of the day, and I sent the link to track me to my mom and said, “for old times’ sake.”

I got a latest art on Thanksgivi­ng morning, but stalling allowed me to run through the features again, synch upmy Garmin watch and keep my expectatio­ns in check. Why? Forgive me for stating the obvious, but nothing is normal this year.

For me, my “sole sister,” who paced me to an AJC Peachtree personal best now lives in Florida; an injury from overuse sidelined me for two months this summer; and for the first time there would be no “Good luck” texts from my father. He died unexpected­ly a month ago.

Phone in hand, I tapped “Race Day Experience” and tapped through the options, which included choosing the Spotify playlist. A few more taps led to a familiar voice — Ken Berger, veteran AJC Peachtree Road Race announcer, followed by the national anthem and then a welcome message from Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms.

Wewent outside for the national anthem and the mayor’ s message, which ended with “runners set

… go!” Oh! I guesswe’re running now. But I wasn’t sure whether the app had actually started tracking us, and sure enough, thatwas a separate action.

I also startedthe playlist, andwe trekked down Glenwood Avenue being serenaded byMCHammer.

One key thing to remember is the app follows the same realtime clock if you’re running in an in- person race. Thismeans, if you stop to adjust your shoes, talk to a friend or refill your water bottle, that clock keeps on rolling.

Right foot, left foot to themusic — BeeGees, Michael Jackson, CalvinHarr­is, EarthWind and Fire — but about a mile in, I realizedwe weren’t hearing those recorded messages that were supposed to play every mile. Twice, while we were stopped at red lights, I checked to make sure the app was tracking us — it was — and figured I had stumbled upon a glitch. A little disappoint­ed, but I shrugged it off.

The app also said we had run about a half- mile more than we had, whichwas a bit confusing. I continued to followthe distance on my Garmin watch, and we headed down the Beltline, turning around 3.1 miles in.

We caught the red light by the Krog Street Tunnel, which happened to be Mile 5 on our journey. I pulled out my phone and could hear someone talking. I admit to being somewhat giddy realizing that this function was indeed working, and that the voicewas coming from 2017 AJC Peachtree champion Aliphine Tuliamuk, who also won first place in the U. S. Olympic Marathon trials here in February. She’s quite the superstar and motivator, regardless of your ability.

I wondered if the music was drowning out those recordedme­ssages, so I turnedofft­he playlist as we finished up the last 1.2 miles. At the finish mark, the recorded voice of Meb Keflezighi, a longtimeAt­lantaTrack Clubsuppor­ter, Olympian and champion of the New York and Boston marathon, congratula­ted us for our feat.

I perked up again and wonderedwh­o else Imissed. So, Friday morning, I put my shoes on again and headed out for some miles. I used the app again without the playlist to testmy theory.

Yep, one mile in, I heard greetings from emcee Ronnel Blackmon; a blessing from Dean Candler at Mile 2, and amotivatio­nal message from Daniel Romanchuk, who crushed the record on the men’s wheelchair division last year.

OK, because Ihadn’tplanned to set any records formyself or anyone else, Iwas satisfied. But Iwonderedi­f others hadthesame­experience and briefly scanned social media for comments, which can be its own adventure, of course.

Some noted having trouble uploading their finish time, and at that point, I realized that I had yet to submit my results. A few click throughs on the app, and allmy recorded runs since early November showed up. I selected the oneforThur­sdayandrec­eived a message that the results had been submitted.

Were therebugs? Sure. Butwhat isn’t buggy about 2020? This is coming fromsomeon­ewho takes the AJC Peachtree way too seriously and looked forward to running in my hard- earned Wave B this year.

Ihavenodou­bt that the glitches will be fixed for next time, but I thinkwe all hope that there is no next time andwe can all share the pavement again together in 2021.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Despite some bugs, former AJC staffer Kristi Swartz says shewas basically satisfied with the AJC Peachtree Road Race’s app, saying it helped “create a fun experience” for the runners.
COURTESY Despite some bugs, former AJC staffer Kristi Swartz says shewas basically satisfied with the AJC Peachtree Road Race’s app, saying it helped “create a fun experience” for the runners.

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