Community Corner

Run of Luck: Close to 2,000 Expected for Kirkland's Shamrock 5K

Organizers say the city is capping the St. Paddy's Day Weekend run at 2,000 participants, and with 1,300 already registered, the event might reach that in just its second year.

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Kirklandโ€™s second-ever 5-kilometer Shamrock Run on St. Patrickโ€™s Day Weekend will likely be even larger than its successful first year, with close to 2,000 runners expected, say organizers.

Ben Wobker, the owner of Kirklandโ€™s Lake Washington Physical Therapy, who helped found the run last year, said Friday that some 1,300 runners had registered for the March 16 event, with an average of about 60 signing up a day. Last year, some 1,600 runners registered.

โ€œWe should eclipse that easily,โ€ he said. โ€œWeโ€™re capped by the city at 2,000. My fear is that there will be some unhappy peopleโ€ if the cap is reached and some canโ€™t participate.

Twenty-five local businesses are sponsoring the run this year, and it will feature more booths in the start/finish area than last year. Wobker said many downtown restaurants will open earlier this year, to accommodate post-run celebrants.

The first of five waves beginning and ending at Marina Park -- competitive, fun, dog and runner, stroller and runner and walker -- will start at 9 a.m. March 16, the day before St. Patrickโ€™s Day.

Last year the run was on a Sunday, the same as the much larger St. Paddyโ€™s Day Dash in Seattle. This year the Shamrock is on Saturday and the Dash on a Sunday -- and some runners are planning on doing both.

โ€œEveryday Athlete (the running store in Juanita) is organizing a group and calling them the Double Clovers. Itโ€™s really fun,โ€ said Wobker.

The start/finish is at the same lace, but the course is slightly different this year and a bit longer. Last yearโ€™s route was just under five full kilometers. This yearโ€™s will be a full, USA Track & Field-certified 5k.

Wobker said thereโ€™s quite a bit of buzz about town this year. โ€œItโ€™s fun when Iโ€™m out hearing people talk about the run, saying things like โ€˜Oh I have to sign up,โ€ or seeing last yearโ€™s shirts around.

Like last year, the first 1,500 registered get a long-sleeved synthetic running shirt, or โ€œtechnical shirt,โ€ while those signing up later will get a cotton shirt.

To sign up or find out more, see the run website here or its Facebook page here.

By the way, organizers still desperately need non-running volunteers. You can sign up for that at www.VolunteerKirkland.com.

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