Recap | 2026 Shamrock’n Half Marathon 

A couple of weeks ago, I ran the Shamrock‘n Half Marathon here in Sacramento. It’s been a while since I did a half marathon (the last one was the Urban Cow Half Marathon in 2023), and I am so glad I decided – on a whim – earlier this year to sign up. 

The race start and finish line were at Sutter Health Park,  home of our minor league baseball team (Sacramento River Cats) and the temporary home of the (former) Oakland Athletics (who will be moving to Las Vegas). 

Having a race start and end at a ballpark has the perks of real restrooms and plenty of parking. I got a good night’s sleep the night before and was up at 5:30 am to get ready. Race start was at 7:45 am, but I wanted to be there early so as not to feel rushed.

I hadn’t run a race in a while, and I was a little nervous beforehand (I always am, even though I know that there is nothing to be nervous about. You show up and give your best. That’s it! That’s all we can do.) Still, it’s hard not to have expectations. 

Runners tend to set A, B, and C goals for their races (The A goal is the “shoot-for-the-moon” goal that is possible on a perfect day, the B goal is the realistic accomplishment based on your relevant fitness and what you believe you should be able to accomplish, and the C goal would leave you satisfied, knowing you gave your best effort.)

My goals were:

  • A – hang on to the pacer and finish in 1:50
  • B – beat my PR of 1:53:09
  • C – run a sub-2

and as always 

  • D – just finish and have fun

The race was organized in three waves based on estimated finish time: 

  • Wave 1 (7:45 am start): Under 2:00 finish time
  • Wave 2 (7:55 am start): 2:00 – 2:29 finish time
  • Wave 3 (8:05 am start): 2:30+ finish time

I signed up for Wave 1 and had plans to stick with the 1:50 pacer. I wasn’t sure if that was reasonable based on my half marathon training pace, but I thought I’d try. 

After warming up and using the restrooms (not once, but twice), I went to the start line and found the pace group. We got off to a relatively good start and there was a decent group of people gathering around. I felt pretty good but could tell that the pacer started out a little hot, about 10-20 seconds faster than pace target in the first few miles. I am not sure if the person was inexperienced or if they had some sort of strategy (positive splits?) that they didn’t share with the group but after a few miles I decided to hang back and run my own pace. I didn’t want to be pulled into a race that I couldn’t sustain. 

I was running this race by myself, but I used the Adidas Running (formerly Runtastic) app again during the race, so that my family and Tanja could track me. The cool thing about the Adidas Running App is that people who follow you can send “cheers” (like “applause”, “Go, go, go”, or acoustic “La Ola waves”) and even short personal “voice messages” during live events. My dad, mom, sister and Tanja also have the app and were able to follow my race from afar, sending cheers at regular intervals throughout my run. It was so motivating to have them “in my pocket” and I think I had a huge smile on my face every time a cheer came through!

I finished slightly behind the pace group and missed the 1:50 finish, but I did beat my previous PR! I finished in 1:51:04, and I was absolutely stoked. I felt good, the weather was perfect (mid-60s), and my training once again delivered me to the finish line with time to spare!  

I prepared for the race with a training plan from Team Wilpers, and my predicted half marathon pace was 8:34 min/mi, and I exceeded that. I also barely missed an award in my brand-new age group by 9 (!) seconds. I placed 4th out of 115 female runners in my age group. Not too shabby. 

And isn’t this a beautiful medal?

My Garmin splits:

Here are some overall thoughts on the race organization:

Registration and Packet Pick Up

I was able to register online and they offered multiple-days for race packet pickup at Fleet Feet, or early morning race day pick-up.

Race-course

The course is nice and mostly flat and very similar to the Urban Cow race course, the difference being that the Shamrock’n Half starts and ends at the Baseball Stadium in West Sacramento (not in Land Park)). However, the actual course is pretty much the same. We ran over the Tower Bridge with a small loop through Old Town, then headed south towards the Land Park neighborhood, a loop through landpark and then back towards Downtown on the Sacramento River Bike trail. There were enough aid/water stations (every two miles) and they were adequately staffed with volunteers who offered both Tailwind electrolytes and water.

Finish line and Post Race Amenities

The finish line was INSIDE the baseball stadium, which was really a cool way to end the race. Right behind the finish line, you were able to pick up your medal and water. They also offered a free post-race beer, a sandwich and a snack bag (with chips, a protein bar, and nuts). 

Results

The results were up instantly and there was a little tent with iPads set up, where you could check your official finish time. 

Photography

The race photographers did a great job getting pictures at multiple locations. The photos were available to look at online within 48 hours and they were available for FREE! Big bonus points! 

Here are a couple from the race.

About 50% done
During the last mile
Shortly before crossing the finish line

The race is small-ish (4000+ runners this year) but it’s well-organized and I’d run again in a heartbeat. I really don’t know why I haven’t participated before. It was really fun and since it’s local, it’s nice to just roll out of bed and get to the start line in 15 minutes

The registration fee was appropriate ($116 — I registered late) for all the perks (microfiber race shirt, post-race beer + sandwich, awesome finisher medal, age group awards, time tracking  and free race photos and a free ticket to a Rivercats Baseball Game, and a couple of other discount offers!). The course was really fun to run – flat and (somewhat) scenic, and there were plenty of spectators along the way.

This was my 10th official half marathon. I started my running “career“ kind of late, in my late thirties, and I wish I had found my love for running sooner, but I am still thrilled with what I have been able to accomplish in the last 10+ years. They always say that you’ll lose speed as you age, but I must not have hit my peak yet because I’ve been able to consistently improve my race times and have run both my half marathon and marathon PRs in the last 1.5 years. 

Not ready to give up yet! 

14 Comments

  1. I’m so proud of you. You look so relaxed in all these running pics!
    Congratulations on running your 10th half marathon – you are amazing!

  2. Congratulations San!!! I’m really impressed with your descriptions of how well-organized it was, plus the medals are awesome. I love the photos – you look right at home. How nice to have the app so your family could cheer for you.

  3. Congrats on a PR and on looking excellent and happy in the race photos. I would 100% appear as though I’m about to die if someone snapped a photo of me while running.

    This is a great recap. I’ve never run a race – assuming chasing escaped toddlers for decades doesn’t count, but it makes sense that a ball field with good bathrooms and plenty of parking would score high marks. I love love love your race medal. Maybe I need to try my first half marathon in CA next year? Would it be socially acceptable to wear the medal as an accessory with my day to day clothing? It’s good to have goals, and a cute Irish race medal might be just the thing to motivate me. Plus, I’ve never been to CA.

  4. Yay! Congrats on the new PR!!!!! Great photos!

    I wonder what was up with that pacer! Who would that method work for? lol

  5. You’re a rockstar! Way to go! Such an accomplishment.

  6. What a fun race! Sometimes I wonder about all the swag. Like…are there people who really want those race tshirts?! Maybe there are.

    The photos are great, though. I don’t know if I have ever seen photos that well done in a race before.

  7. This is amazing, friend. And what a way to head into your time away with family! Love the pics and you ran such a great race.

  8. Way to go on setting a new PR! That’s amazing. You look great in your racing pics!

  9. Congratulations!!! You did GREAT. The good thing about starting running later in life is that now you’re still improving, rather than slowing down. It looks like it was a beautiful day, and I LOVE that medal!

  10. Congrats on beating your PR! That app sounds so cool; I love how your people’s cheers can reach you and help keep you going. Oof on the pacer starting off so fast, though. I’m sure they had a strategy in their head, but it’s hard if it isn’t communicated. Still, what a great race!

  11. Oh, I’m glad the comments are on now, I was here a couple of days ago and didn’t see it. Maybe a me problem. Anyway, this looks like a great race, lots of fun, and I love the medal and the pictures are wonderful, how great to have professional photographers there!

  12. What a great result, San, congratulations!

  13. Yay, you! Wonderful to read this recap and learn of your amazing accomplishments (although I’d seen the ‘preview’ on IG). You really are a (Shamrockn) rock star. ;)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *