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2012-10-07 09:00:00 GMT+01:00

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Thursday 2 August 2012

RunningDutch Review: Amsterdam Marathon

This autumn will see the 37th edition of the Amsterdam Marathon.

The Location
Amsterdam is the capital of the Netherlands and abroad probably the most well known Dutch city. Probably for its canals, coffeshops  and red light district but also the 'Rijksmuseum' with paintings from Rembrandt and the Anne Frank House.
Important for you as reader of this blog: It is also the venue of a very popular marathon.

If you consider visiting Amsterdam to take part in the marathon you can consider to take a canal tour or a coffeeshop tour. The latter maybe after the race?

Hotels? No problem in Amsterdam as you can tell from booking.com or Expedia.

The course: Fast, scenic, historic and a brilliant finish 
Tower in front of stadium
The course is flat and therefore fast. The wind however can be tricky but later more on that topic.
The start of the marathon is in the Olympic Stadium. Originally built for the Olympic Games of 1928 but beautifully renovated in 2000 with a very good 400m track.

After 200m on this track you leave the stadium passing the tower which held the Olympic fire and, with eye for detail, measures 42 meters and 19,5 centimers. Recognise the numbers?

Find your pace on the wide road leading away from the stadium towards the 'Vondelpark' on a average Sunday crowded with people enjoying the sun, jogging around etc. Remember the scenic part of the course as you will run it again in opposite direction on your way back. You run past the Rijksmuseum and loop back to the stadium.

 The cours:
> Flat
> Fast
> Historic
> Start & Finish in Olympic Stadium
Only 7k en route you leave the stadium behind you for a second time and head for the river Amstel to run on the historic route of the Olympic marathon of 1928. You join the rive around km 12 heading south east. Around km 15 you make a small loop leaving the river clearly added to make up the distance of the 42k.

You run on along the scenic Amstel joined by boats with music and people cheering you on. You cross the river at 19 and run back on the opposite site. At my pace (5min.km) I have the opportunity to see the elite running this homeward stretch while I myself still have the outbound leg ahead of me.

It is along this river that the wind can be tricky as the route is in the open.

As for most people the true marathon starts around the 25k. It is no fun to be running for some 5k in a more industrial area with little people along the route before you come into residential area's again.

I myself find the 37k mark the difficult spot. First you head into a short tunnel in order to cross underneath a major road. Climbing out of the tunnel you continue the climb to cross the Amstel once more. Only little elevation it is enough for me. If you experience no problems enjoy the view to your right while crossing the Amstel.

After running trough the Vondelpark the second and last time you head for the stadium to finish on the very comfortable running track. Feel like the elite runners cheered on from the stands by the people in the stadium.
clikc course map for lager image


The organisation: Professional
The event is very well organised, the infrastructure around the start en finish area is ok. The drop off point for  your bag with clothes can be crowded and the dressing area is in a sport hall a couple of 100 meters from the start and finish. Nice for warming up and cooling down. On a colder October day this can mean you can get a little bit cold before you can change you wet running apparel. You'll get a thermo blanket after the finish line to stay warm.
The route (see above for more details) is free of cars and spectators, refreshing posts are with water and sports drinks at every 5k. No complaints on this front.

The entourage: OK
Coming from abroad the route can be found scenic both in and outside the city. Don't expect to run in the old city centre but do enjoy the windmill around the 15k mark.
Except for the spectators in the stadium most people along the route are either cheering on a friend or semi interested locals not really making it an effort to be to enthusiastic.

For the spectators
As you might know cycling is very popular in the Netherlands so consider renting a bike and you can cheer on you friend, husband, wife, father, mother, etc a couple of times along the route. Using the metro you can do the same. Start for example in the stadium, than wait outside for the runners to come by after the 7K loop. take the metro to f.e. the 30K mark which is very close to a metro stop. This will give you plenty of time to go back to the stadium to see the finish of your .......(fill in the appropriate reference to your runner).

The verdict
OK, Amsterdam is not one of the biggest marathons but is very popular for tourist so why not consider to combine your running exploits with a visit to Amsterdam? And maybe take home a Personal Best on the flat course.

Wanna read more on Amsterdam? Hit the Amsterdam label and see my other 3 postings on Amsterdam.

Below a Youtube slideshow which offers an impression of the 2011 edition:

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