SPORTS

No Medals Required: Inside the Run Collective

Star Elamparo

On Sunday mornings, entire villages come alive.

The streets, briefly reclaimed from traffic, fill with walkers, cyclists, and the occasional runner moving at an unhurried pace. It is on mornings like these that running looks most honest — not competitive, not dramatic, just fun.

Yet for all its visibility, running remains strangely exclusionary.

Scroll through social media later in the day and the tone shifts. Quiet streets give way to finish lines. Medals glint in carefully framed photos. Running becomes a spectacle — measured in distance, pace, and proof. For those already inside the culture, these images affirm belonging. For many others, they quietly reinforce the idea that running is a club they never joined, and perhaps never can.

I think of Gabi.

She is in her late 50s, thoughtful and sharp, and has listened patiently for years as I tried to convince her to start running.

Like many Filipinas her age, she has absorbed familiar warnings: running ruins your knees; running accelerates aging; running makes the skin sag. She watches friends gravitate toward yoga, pilates, and brisk walking — activities deemed safer, more appropriate. Every time I suggest starting small, she smiles politely and changes the subject.

It took me a while to realize it wasn’t running she was resisting. It was the culture around it.

Modern fitness culture, amplified by social media, often frames exercise as performance — something to be documented and optimized. Running, once the most democratic of sports, has been swept into that current. We say it is “for everyone,” but often present it otherwise. We celebrate discipline but rarely discuss confusion. We admire endurance but overlook the uncertainty that keeps people from even starting.

That uncertainty isn’t limited to beginners.

Ed, for instance, has numbers many runners would envy — 20-minute 5Ks, 44-minute 10Ks. Yet much of his training guidance comes from AI-generated plans and online tools. While they’ve worked, he admits wanting something more grounded. When I told him the Run Collective was meant for runners who needed structure, he surprised me by saying, “That’s exactly where I am.”

For Ed, joining wasn’t about speed. It was about resetting fundamentals and training with intention.

Danica’s situation is different but just as familiar. She wants to run a marathon by year’s end but hesitates to invest immediately in one-on-one coaching. The Run Collective gave her a way to build a foundation — training structure, strength, recovery — so that when she does commit to focused coaching, she won’t be starting from zero.

Stories like theirs are common, yet rarely acknowledged. They point to an uncomfortable truth: while running is physically accessible, guidance often is not.

This is where the Run Collective positions itself — not as a race team or elite coaching service, but as a bridge.

As co-founder Migs Bustos explains, “The Run Collective’s goal is to bridge the gap between casual runners and performance running. We know starting out can be intimidating — coaching, costs, and information overload can hold people back. At TRC, we help runners build the right foundation first, so they don’t just follow trends but actually understand what works for them.”

That foundation is shaped by running coach Ken Mendola, who focuses on fundamentals — proper load, pacing, and consistency — so runners learn how to train, not just accumulate mileage. Equally important is Dr. Nonon Cuadro, the program’s physical rehabilitation doctor, whose role emphasizes longevity by helping runners recognize early warning signs and manage recovery as part of training.

Members follow weekly plans, attend check-ins, join educational Zoom sessions, and participate in low-pressure community runs. Beyond its members, the Collective also allocates part of its proceeds to support charity youth runners, funding training and providing race exposure — opportunities that have already led many to podium finishes.

For people like Gabi, Ed, and Danica, running isn’t about medals or personal bests. It’s about permission — to start slowly, without comparison, without feeling late.

You may DM the Collective through @trc.runcollective.