The Course:
The race started out on a Moto GP racetrack and had us running for the first few minutes on the race pavement. The first obstacle that came up was a Tyre (tires) hurdles that were fun, but not too difficult to cause long delays with the larger group of runners on the course. The next obstacle was “Gravel Rush canyon” which was very heavy on my feet and used far more energy than expected with both the gravel and climb an obstacle made of tires. Up next was an “inclined walls” obstacle that had three versions, and opted for the most challenging one. I then came to a “Cargo Net Crawl” obstacle.
The course consisted of several obstacle types being encountered more than once; another “Tyre (tires) hurdles” obstacle appeared that had racers climb up and over an obstacle built out of tires. This was followed by “Commando Crawl” which was no different than the typical mud crawls we do in America. Then came another “Commando Crawl” obstacle. Next up was the “balance beam” obstacle which was a challenge because the beams where wet, muddy, and starting to have ice form on them.
The second half of the 5K included a lot of fun and challenging obstacles that with colder weather made for more of a challenge. One obstacle I cannot go without mentioning was the “wall traverse”, which also had three versions and the hardest was a good challenge.
Near the end of the first lap, I came to a “Water Slide” obstacle that had me climb up a large structure and then slide down a water/ice slide. I only had two obstacles left for the first lap and now in even more pain, limped my way to complete lap one. I finished lap #1 by completing the obstacle “Avalanche”, which had us slide down a big tube that was a mix of both running water and ice. My main objective for running this race the day before Tough Guy was to test out my gear in similar weather and I knew I would enter water at least one time on the course.
Overall Feelings:
The only suggestion I would make, is regarding running the 10K version of the event, it’s a loop of the 5K course which was fun and a challenge, but those of use that opted to run the 10K received the exact same medal as those that ran the 5K. I personally feel a different medal should be awarded to those that ran the 10K to distinguish our accomplishments.
The Schwag:
The schwag was sweet; I received a nice finisher medal, an athletic t-shirt, a silicon wrist band, a string bag, a bottle of water, and a re-usable hand warmer (which came in handy on a very cold day). They also provided every finisher with a disposable heat retaining foil blanket.
I really enjoyed the course and amount of obstacles that covered the 5K. Xrunner used the same or similar obstacles more than once, but that is not always a bad thing and worked well with the terrain and cold weather. The volunteers were all very polite and helped whenever called upon. I am going to rate the event a 4.7 out of 5 stars. Chances are I won’t ever get another opportunity to do another Xrunner race, but I would love to run one of their summer events.
Rating
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