
From the Organizer
5:00 pm onsite packet pick up and registration
6:20 pm 10K Run and 10K Ruck starts
6:30 pm 5K starts
7:30 pm 5K awards ceremony followed by 10K awards
Events
Race Location
Your Next Start Line
Every finish line starts with a single decision. Claim your spot at LAKESIDE LOOPS 5K AND 10K, put it on the calendar, and turn “someday” into a start date.
30
Days to train
Coming Up
Flushing Evening Road Race
The Chocolate Milk Mile 2026 (WORLD RECORD EVENT)
EUP Relay For Life 5K
Ludington Lakestride Half Marathon 10K and 5k
From Endurance Grid
Endurance Grid is here to help you understand the sport, decide if it's the right fit, and learn how to prepare. For course distances, logistics, and race-day specifics, always defer to the race organizer's event page.
The 10K is the distance where running stops feeling like a starting point and starts feeling like a sport. Long enough to require a real training block. Short enough that race day is fully manageable for a first-timer who's put in the work.
Race day energy at a 10K is community at its best — strangers cheering you by name, people moving toward the same goal, an atmosphere that solo training can't replicate. It's fast enough that you'll spend the whole race pushing rather than managing your effort.
This is also the distance that builds the base for everything else. Most athletes who go on to run half marathons, do triathlons, or compete in HYROX started here. What you need: running shoes fitted to your stride, a training plan, and the race on your calendar. The registration is what makes the deadline real.
How long to train: 4–8 weeks for most fitness levels.
From 5K to marathon, running races are the most accessible entry point into endurance sport. There's a distance for every fitness level and a community at every start line.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
LAKESIDE LOOPS 5K AND 10K
Jul 8, 2026