During the 1890s, Oscar Wilde wrote a frivolous comedic play about people putting on a fake persona to avoid social interactions. He titled it, The Importance of Being Earnest. The play is as important to the culture as anything Shakespeare wrote. Three Hollywood movies were titled The Importance of Being Earnest from 1952, 1992 and 2002. Why all the twos? Well, numbers are important, especially bib numbers in running.

The importance of being a bib wearer (this is serious bibness)

During any race, runners (and when we write runners, we mean runners and walkers) need to wear a race bib. In part, the purpose is so to identify the runner in photos or video, to record start and finish times and to record splits in between the start and finish (when in longer races).

For example, if you run a marathon, perhaps the timing company is taking split times at 10K, 21.1K and 32K.

Or a 10K is taking half splits at 5K. Sometimes there is a prim, like at the St. Patrick’s Day 5K in Vancouver. The first person who crosses the one-mile timing mat male or female, who also finishes the race top 10, wins money — a prim! The idea here is to avoid giving someone money who ran the final 3.4K in 20 minutes but ran 4:10 to the one-mile timing mat. 

Also, for security, safety, and dispute resolution reasons.

There is a lot of stuff about wearing a bib. So, as you can see, runners do not wear a bib just to show that they are racing. 

What about elite bibs?

There is yet another reason that runners need to wear a bib. Let’s say you are super fast. Let’s say that you are super fast and seeded in the top 10 males or top 10 females. Well, identifying who the runners are at the front is important for several reasons:

1. Breaking a record. For example, a provincial, national or world open or age-group or master or junior record. There is a ratification process that follows before a record is certified.

2. Qualifying for provincial, national, or international competition. Governing bodies need to make sure the athlete is the athlete, not an imposter. And just to simply identify them. 

3. To help identify who finished ahead in a dead heat. 

4. The announcer needs to be able to see the number so as to call out their names to the spectators, volunteers and media who are on site.

Where to wear your bib

Simple: Wear your bib so it is visible from the front. With three or four pins, affix the bib to the front of your shirt over your stomach, or chest.

Do not wear your bib on your back, side, hip, inside a jacket or in any way that it is not visible from the front. Also, if the chip is covered up, the runner will not get a time or could be disqualified.

Some races deem this so important, that they reserve the right to disqualify someone who does not wear the bib properly.

For the Vancouver Island Race Series season pass holders, do not throw your two bibs away. Also, do not wear both bibs at the same time. One bib should last the entire eight races; however, you are given a second one just in case you destroy the first one or something happens to it. For example, you are at a bonfire and marshmallow roast and you were still wearing your bib from the race earlier that day. So, you bend over the fire and were set alight by a rogue flame — don’t do that.

The benefit of having a season pass bib is that you no longer need to line up at each race to pick one up. This saves you time and saves you from arriving as early as you normally would. It saves the race from having to have as many volunteers as they had in the past. This is also good for the environment, with two bibs per person rather than 5 to 8.

If you are worried about being earnest at a race or not, you do not have to socialize. Furrow your brows, look down and angry and grit your teeth. No one will come near you.

Where does a bib come from?

2024 series ambassador Sander Nederveen getting the bib-wearing down exactly right.

Well, the race director or organizing committee member tasked with this job, seeks quotes from bib suppliers. There are many. Once the price, ETA, and quantities are agreed upon, the timing company needs to be informed. Also, marketing comes into play, here. Do we want colours? Sponsor branding for extra visibility? Size, seeded numbers and which type of fibre product? All these things come into play.

The timing company will take your list of runners and their:

Age
DOB
Gender
And name and correlate with bibs.

Will coordinate all the registrants with the series of numbers that you have worked out with the bib company. What if we want personalized bibs? “Susan” or how about a specific number like “420” or a special personal number?

There is shipping. Where to? How much? How fast?

Once all the hundreds or thousands or tens of thousands of bibs have arrived and the long lists of runners are included, we need to find a way for each person to get the right bib number associated with the right person. This takes time, then volunteer coordination and events to be publicized to get people to show up (not at the last minute).

So, for the first race of the 2023 and 2024 Vancouver Island Race Series, we had a Friday night social event with beverages, food, draw prizes, and speeches. We had separate volunteer crews for season pass pickup as well as Pioneer 8K pickup.

That was Friday….

Saturday, we had race and season pass pick up at Frontrunners Shelbourne. We had the social at Frontrunners downtown.

So, the numbers, pins, and lists needed to safely go from back east, to the interior of BC, then to the Island and then to Frontrunners downtown. Then the packages needed to get to Frontrunners Shelbourne for the next morning. More volunteers, more sorting and wading through lists.

Then Sunday, all the numbers that are remaining, for Pioneer and season passes go to North Saanich Middle School for final race package pick up. After Pioneer, the remaining season pass bibs go to the next race, to join the next race’s volunteer crew for disbursement. When 541 finishers at Pioneer and then 596 finishers at Cobble Hill all crossed the line as planned — all but a small handful had issues.

Almost all issues were runner-caused.

But all is forgiven. The (Startline) timing company hits the ball out of the park solving the issues related to lost times, incorrect bibs, lost bibs, and incorrect numbers.

So, next time that you pick up a race bib, take care of it (them), do not trade it with a fellow runner, and do not throw it away in case you were not informed that the bib is for the whole season. (sometimes we err and you forgive, thank you).

Have at least three pins, if not four.

And do not panic. We are here to help. But the more results that are correct and without issue, the better off the universe will be.

Happy racing.

To vandalize a famous Wilde quote from the aforementioned play, “I have never met any really wicked person before. I feel rather frightened. I am so afraid he will look just like everyone else not wearing the right race bib.”

Twenty-three-year-old Andrew Davies, a law student at the University of British Columbia, clocked a 29:32 performance for the win at the BC 10K Championships. Meanwhile, Glynis Sim with the Vancouver Thunderbirds recorded a 33:23 time to take the women’s race. Both are personal best and new course and event record performances.

The men’s race

The men’s race finish order sorted itself out very quickly. Davies ran to the front and kept and grew the lead throughout.

“My previous best was from Ottawa in May at 29:37. I know I am in good shape gearing up for the World Cross Country Championships in March and I felt it was a good effort today,” shared Davies. “It was a good course.”

Andrew Davies winning the Cobble Hill 10K and BC 10K Championships in a new course record and personal best time of 29:32. Photo credit: Joseph Camilleri.

Finishing in second place in the men’s race was Ocean Athletics Track and Field Club’s Yemane Mulugeta from Surrey. He also won the junior U20 title clocking a 30:54 finish time. Taking third was Aidan Anderson of Courtenay in the time of 31:09.

The first 35-plus master was the Cowichan Valley’s Dusty Spiller who finished in 31:30.

Women’s race

The same race tactic could be said for Sim, however, she did have a chance to work with some male runners in a pack, but soon dropped them and finished the final few kilometres running alone.

For Sim, she improved her own personal best by over a minute having run 34:19 in Sept. As a post-grad athlete, she is still undecided if she will focus on the 1500m or 5000m event. She will be competing in the World Cross Country Championships on March 30 in Belgrade, Serbia.

“I am happy with the performance. I was hoping to run around the time that I did,” shared Sim. “Coming up I will be race an indoor meet in Boston, then the World Cross Country Championships in March.”

Taking second was Anja Krueger, who was coming off a win during the Harriers Pioneer 8K two weeks prior. Both the Pioneer 8K and Cobble Hill 10K are part of the Vancouver Island Race Series. Krueger finished in 35:16. Katie Newlove took third in 35:30.

Vancouver Thunderbird Glynis Sim winning in a new course and personal best record time of 33:23. Photo credit: Joseph Camilleri

Victoria’s Care Nelson with the Prairie Inn Harriers Running Club won the women’s master 35-plus race. She finished in the time of 36:25. Comox Valley Road Runner member, Roslyn Smith, who broke the 75-79 age group record at the Pioneer 8K, did it again. At the Pioneer 8K she recorded a 39:02 finish time, at Cobble Hill she finished the 10K in 49:04. She is two-for-two with world records in 2024. Smith will have the opportunity to break more world records at the Cedar 12K in Nanaimo on Feb. 11 as well as the Comox Valley RV Half Marathon in March.

There was a total of 596 finishers, the most in the event’s history.

The next race in the series is the Cedar 12K on Superbowl Sunday, Feb. 11. Start time is 11:00 AM, which leaves plenty of time to race, then prepare for kickoff.