Farah Wins Gold, Oregon’s Rupp Historic Silver

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Rupp wins
historic silver; Jeter, Claye add to U.S. medal total


LONDON ‰ÛÓ
Not since Billy Mills’ storied sprint to win the 1964 Olympic Games has an
American man graced the podium of the men’s 10,000 meters. That changed
Saturday night at Olympic Stadium when Galen Rupp made his
own dash into history to take second in the 10km, highlighting a night that
also saw Carmelita Jeter win a silver medal, Will
Claye
a bronze and the host Great Britain three golds.

Placing second in 27:30.90, Rupp (Portland, Ore.) became just the third U.S.
man ever to win an Olympic medal in the event, after Mills’ gold and a silver
by Lewis Tewanina in 1912. It was also the fastest time ever by an American
at the Games. Rupp’s training partner, world champion Mo Farah of Great
Britain, won in 27:30.42 to give coach Alberto Salazar a 1-2 punch of his
own.

10,000m drama
It was 25 laps of pure drama – part NASCAR, part roller-derby as speed and
tactics melded. Six laps into the race, Zersenay Tadese of Eritrea stretched
out the pack, with the leaders including Moses Kiprop of Kenya and Tariku and
Kenenisa Bekele of Ethiopia. Rupp ranged from sixth to 10th place, running
near Farah as Americans Datahan Ritzenhein (Beaverton, Ore.)
and Matt Tegenkamp (Portland, Ore.) strode a few places
back.

Until just past the 6,000m mark, Tadese handled most of the leading duties,
coming through 5,000m in 14:05.79.  From that point, a series of surges
kept a pack that included Tadese, Teklemariam Medhin of Eritrea, Tariku
Bekele, Kiprop and others.

With 3,200m to go, the race was clearly one of both speed and strategy.
Masai, Muchiri, Bekele, Rupp and Kenenisa Bekele were most in the mix. Rupp
sat in fourth place with six laps to go, right ahead of Kenenisa Bekele and
Farah.

Farah took the lead with four laps left, and the pace ratcheted up as Gebre
Gebremariam of Ethiopia took his turn at the lead. hWen the sprint was on,
Rupp came from fourth to second as he closed on Farah. That left Tariku
Bekele in third in 27:31.43 and Kenenisa, one of the greatest runners in
history, fourth in 27:32.44. Ritzenhein finished 13th in 27:45.89 and
Tegenkamp was 19th in 28:18.26.

USA, Jamaica dominate women’s 100
With the U.S. and Jamaica taking up five lanes in the women’s 100m final, a
battle was in the works. The outcome was the best top-to-bottom race in
women’s 100m history that saw Jeter (Gardena, Calif.) edged for gold by the
defending Olympic champion, fast-starting Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce of Jamaica,
who won in 10.75. Jeter’s 10.78 was the fastest runner-up time ever in the
Olympics. Jamaica’s Veronica Campbell-Brown finished well to nab the bronze
at 10.81, the best-ever third-place time, and Tianna Madison‘s
(Sanford, Fla.) lifetime-best 10.85 was the best fourth-place time in any
competition, anywhere, in history. Allyson Felix (Santa
Clarita, Calif.) clocked a PR 10.89 to place fifth.

Earlier in the day Jeter won semifinal heat 1 in 10.83, the fastest-ever
legal-wind Olympic semifinal, while Felix was second in heat 2 in 10.94 and
Madison was second in heat 3 in a then personal-best of 10.92.

Claye claims bronze
Competition in the men’s long jump rivaled the 10,000 for shifts in place and
position. In the end, Claye came away with the bronze with a best mark of
8.12m/26-7.75.

After opening with a 7.98m/ 26-2.25 jump, Claye improved in the second round
to 8.07m/26-5.75, putting him in second place. He held that position until he
was knocked to fifth during a tumultuous fourth round of jumping that saw all
but first place traded. Undeterred, Clay responded in that fourth round with
his farthest leap of 8.12m/26-7.75 to retake second by 1cm over Sweden’s
Michael Torneus.

He was knocked to third by Mitchell Watt of Australia in the fifth round when
the Aussie jumped 8.13m/26-8.25, leaving Claye in third, 1cm back. At that
point, Only 3cm separated fifth and second as Greg Rutherford of Great
Britain was firmly in the lead with the eventual winning jump of
8.31m/27-3.23. Watt improved to 8.17m/26-9.75 in the final round and Claye
fouled, giving him the bronze.

Marquise Goodwin (Austin, Texas) fouled on his first
attempt, leaped a cautious 7.80m/25-7.25 in the second round, and his third
jump of 7.76/25-5.5 left him ninth – one spot short of the final eight cut-off
for earning three more attempts.

Rupp (5,000m), Jeter (200m, 4×100 relay) and Clay (triple jump) all have at
least one more event to contest at these Games.

Finals roundup
2008 Olympic champion Stephanie Brown-Trafton (Galt, Calif.)
opened the women’s discus with a throw of 63.01m/206-8 to sit in fifth place
after one round of throwing; that mark was to remain her best of the day and
she finished eighth. Sandra Perkovic of Croatia won with the farthest throw
in Olympic or World competition since 1996 at 69.11m/226-9 in round three.
Russia’s Darya Pischalnikova claimed silver with 67.56m/221-8 and Yanfeng Li
of China took the bronze with 67.22/220-6.

The youngest athlete on Team USA, Trevor Barron (Bethel
Park, Pa.) finished 26th in the men’s 20km race walk in 1:22:46 in a race in
which Ding Chen of China was first (1:18:46), Erick Barrondo of Guatemala was
second (1:18:57) and Zhen Wang of China was third (1:19:25). Barron was on
pace to set a personal best through the halfway mark, but after receiving two
red cards by the 12km mark he slowed his pace rather than risking
disqualification.

Sharon Day (Costa Mesa, Calif.) had the third-best
performance of her career in the heptathlon, scoring 6,232 points to place
16th. Great Britain’s Jessica Ennis smashed her national record to win by 306
points with 6,955, ahead of Lilli Schwarzkopf of Germany (6,649) and Tatyana
Chernova of Russia (6,628). Chantae McMillan (Rolla, Mo.)
ended up 29th with 5,688 points, while Hyleas Fountain
(Daytona Beach, Fla.) withdrew prior to the 800 meters with lower back
pain. 

Heating Up
American women will occupy three of eight lanes in Monday’s 400m final.
American record holder Sanya Richards-Ross (Austin, Texas)
won the first semifinal Saturday night in 50.07, American indoor record
holder Francena McCorory (Hampton, Va.)  won heat 2 in
50.19, and 2004 4x400m gold medalist DeeDee Trotter
(Orlando, Fla.) was second in the third semifinal in 49.87.

Three Americans will compete in Monday’s final of the men’s 400m hurdles.
Two-time Olympic gold medalist and defending champ Angelo Taylor
(Atlanta, Ga.) was second in heat 2 in 47.95, Michael Tinsley
(Round Rock, Texas) won heat 3 in 48.18, and defending silver medalist Kerron
Clement
(Los Angeles, Calif.) qualified on time by placing third in
heat 1 in 48.12.

Competition resumes Sunday morning with the women’s marathon.

Team USA Medal Count – 5 total
Silver (2)
Carmelita Jeter, W100, 10.78
Galen Rupp, M10,000m, 27:30.90

Bronze (3)
Will Claye (San Diego, Calif.), MLJ, 8.12m/26-7.75
Reese Hoffa (Athens, Ga.), MSP, 21.23m/69-8

Athlete Quotes

Galen Rupp, 10,000m: “I’m thrilled for Mo. It’s unreal. Two
training partners coming in first and second. I couldn’t be happier. I
wouldn’t be where I am today without him. I’m the lucky one – I get to train
with the best middle distance runner in the world.

“I knew if I could be close to Mo in the end good things would happen, so I
was just kind of keying off of him, and I saved a little bit for the last
200, last 150, last 100 and even last 50. At this level you are never going
to get in the top three if you can’t beat somebody in that last bit. That is
something we’ve been working on for years now and it is awesome to see it
come through.”

Matt Tegenkamp, 10,000m: “To close the way they did, it was
brutal, and not unexpected. I just thought I would respond better. That was
not even a kick, that was a grind. That was a 5k race within a 10; a
championship 5.”

Dathan Ritzenhein, 10,000m: “When we started as slow as we
did, I knew it was going to pick up at some point, and I was ready for it and
covered it well, but there were a couple of guys in there I knew wouldn’t be
in the pace for long, and unfortunately I got stuck behind someone. I tried
to work my way up right until the end, but unfortunately I spent a good seven
laps just off the pace and it hurt me in the end.

Carmelita Jeter, 100m: “I am so blessed to be there. It was
a tough race. I gave it my all. I got a medal at the Olympics, and it feels
so good. The crowd was alive and my family are all here; it means a lot to
me. It was a power-filled final. I’m just glad I got to the finish. I hope I
represented the USA. It was my first Olympics and I ran a season best and got
silver.”

Allyson Felix, 100m: “The start was typical, it just needs work.
I’m happy I got a personal best, and I just feel really good going into the
200, and my speed is where it needs to be and I am motivated. I’m feeling
really good.”

Tianna Madison, 100m: “I got in the blocks and thought this
is the time for a perfect start. Anything less than first smarts a bit, but I
looked at the board and saw 10.84 and I thought ‰Û¢we did it.’ When it was time
to put up a time, I did it, and I am just so proud of myself and the team I
have behind me, my husband John and my coach Rana. I feel like I won, I
really do.

Will Claye, Long Jump: “It is awesome. Long jump is an event
where people have counted me out, people don’t know me as a long jumper. To
come here and medal has given me even more confidence in the triple jump, and
God-willing I can get the gold medal in triple jump. This is surreal. The
crowd is crazy for everyone. My family is here, and this feels like home to
me. I couldn’t ask for a better competition.”

Marquise Goodwin, Long Jump: “I started off, fouled my first
jump which was my farthest jump. It went down from there. I couldn’t get on
the board. Disappointing day. I let everybody down, but I’m glad to be here.
Will Claye is out there representing USA, most importantly we have somebody
in the final; he’s gonna get a medal. Lot of people here are Olympians, only
a few get a medal, and I’m not quite there. I can’t call myself one of those
guys.”

Stephanie Brown-Trafton, Discus: “I was in sixth going into
the last three rounds. My second throw was around 66 meters, but it was out
of sector, so that was disappointing, because I was feeling kind of
lackluster today. I didn’t have a lot of energy today, so you know having the
best throw be just out of sector, who knows? I don’t know if it would have put
me in medal position, but it may have given me some inspiration to throw a
little farther. I’m not necessarily happy with the results today, but as a
season overall, I can’t complain about being at the Olympic final, making it
to the top eight. I’d love to walk out with a medal, but it just didn’t
happen today.”

Trevor Barron, 20km race walk: “I felt good. I decided I was
going to go with the pack as long as I could. Once they picked it up a little
faster than I was willing to go, I started to get a few red cards, and at
that point I started to slow down. I had two cards by 12k, so I had to play
the last 8 safe. Overall it was great. This is once every four years that we
have a crowd like this and it is motivating. I had people cheering for me
that I’ve never seen before, and that was exciting.”

Sharon Day, Heptathlon: “I felt good about the 800. It was a
roller coaster ride; there were definitely some lows, definitely some highs,
but good overall. Sometimes you have expectations and you don’t always meet
those, but with every event you have to put them behind you and move on.”

Michael Tinsley, 400m Hurdles: “I was very pleased. It was a
good race today. Tomorrow I am going to do the same thing ‰ÛÓ execute and focus
on my lane.”

Kerron Clement, 400m Hurdles: (on what he will do
differently in the final)  “I’m just going to wait, stay focused, zone
in and run a little harder.”

Angelo Taylor, 400m Hurdles: “The first eight hurdles were
good. Nine and 10 not so good. I will just have to look at film and correct.”
(on if he is ready to defend his title): “Oh yeah, most definitely.”

Sanya Richards-Ross, 400m: “The race went really well. Coach
wanted me to execute to 350, I felt like I did to 300 and I’m happy. I was
very pleased with the execution. I’m so happy three Americans are in the
final and I’m happy to be leading the charge.”

Dee Trotter, women’s 400m: “I know you all want to know
about  my glitter face. Today it is like an explosion on my face. A
little more dramatic than yesterday. Tomorrow I will bring it bigger and
better.”
(On what she will do to prepare): “Rest. Pray. Recover. I will rely on the
fantastic team USA Track & Field has put together.

Francena McCorory, women’s 400m (on her plan for tomorrow):
“Just to execute and get out and do what my coach tells me to do. I will just
pray and just give it all I got.”

Alberto Salazar, coach of Galen Rupp and Mo Farah: “The race
plan for Mo and Galen was we felt they could outsprint anybody in the race,
and that we didn’t care if it was a fast pace or slow pace, they weren’t
going to try to win it until the last 400, maybe even 200m. I’ll be honest, I
thought we were going to medal, and I thought we were going to get 1-2. It’s
not something I was publicizing…but I was sure we would get two medals…It
was overwhelming, it is the greatest feeling perhaps that I’ve ever had, even
greater than anything I ever did in my own athletic career. Other than
getting married and my kids’ births, I would say this is the best feeling
I’ve ever had in my life.”

 

NER Pub Series Women’s Standings After 1st of 6 Races

Click:Manufacturing and OEM

Women’s
Standings After 1st of 6 Races ‰ÛÓ Doyle’s Emerald Necklace 5M

 

Open
(Top 50 Score)

 

1. Lindsay Willard                                       
50

2. Sara Donahue                                           
49

3. Gretchan Speed                        
                48

4. Jackie Jackman, RI                                   
47

5. Sarah Phillips                                            
46           

6. Holly Madden                                           
45           

7. Dana Delngenis                                          44           

8. Amanda Watters                                        
43           

9. Kristen Leontie                                          
42           

10. Ginger Reiner                                         
  41     

11. Rebecca Willson                                      
40

12. Emily Ganley                                           
39           

13. Bridget Bergan                                        
38

14. Tara Wommack                              
         37           

15. Jessica Mcgarty                                       
36           

16. Ashley Witt                                             
35           

17. Liane Pancoast                                        
34

18. Caitlin Remby                                          33     

19. Lisa Williams                                          
32           

20. Gina Newton                                           
31           

21. Nicole Riater                                         
  30     

22. Marge Bellisle                                         
29

23. Leslie Dickinson                                     
28           

24. Brenda Egizi                                           
27

25. Jennifer Flynn                           
              26           

26. Ally Maslowski                                      
25           

27. Cristina Winsor                                       
24           

28. Natalie Fremontsmith                             
23           

29. Lauren Nisbet                                         
22           

30. Erin Thorpe                                            
21           

31. Kristen Lafontaine                                  
20           

32. Kris-Anne Kane, CT                        
      19

33. Sara Saba                                                
18     

34. Elizabeth Scannell                                  
17

35. Kathleen Kirleis                                      
16           

36. Alice Saunders                       
                 15

37. Kristi Cabot                                             
14           

38. Jan Holmquist                                         
13           

39. Elizabeth Benestad, RI,                           
12                 

40. Kim Sprunckharrild                                 
11           

41. Katie Debler                                             
10

42. Merisa Titlow, NY,                                    
9           

43. Amy Hackett                                        
      8           

44. Nancy Robinson                                         
7           

45. Molly Lawless                                            
6           

46. Tessa Kramer                                             
5           

47. Michelle Downing                                     
4           

48. Casey Leonard                                           
3

49. Caitlin Buchanan                                       
2           

50. Nancy Sheey                                         
     1

 

Masters
(Top 10 Score)

 

1. Holly Madden                     
10

2. Lisa Williams                       
9

3. Nicole Riater                        
8

<p class="MsoNormal" style="mso-pagination:none;mso-layout-grid-align:

Conn. Sophomore Hannah DeBalsi 2nd at Foot Locker

Tessa Barrett & Grant Fisher Capture First Place
Titles at the 35th
Annual Foot Locker Cross Country Championships National Finals

 


San Diego,
Calif., December 14, 2013
‰ÛÓ Tessa Barrett
of Waverly, Pa., and Grant Fisher of
Grand Blanc, Mich., captured first place titles at the 35th
Annual Foot Locker
Cross Country Championships National
Finals (FLCCC)
at Morley Field, Balboa Park in San Diego, Calif., today. Race
conditions were
ideal, with sunny skies throughout and the temperature
reaching 65 degrees.

 

In
the girls’ five-kilometer race, Barrett took control after a
swift opening mile
and never looked back. The boys’ race, however, was undecided
until the last
100 meters when Fisher unleashed his final in a series of
surges to take a heart-pumping
three-second victory, despite a valiant effort by Johnathan
Dressel of Colbert,
Wash.

 

Recapping
the girls’ race, Utah’s Lucy Biles (seventh in 17:43) set a
swift pace early
on, with the pack still bunched as it approached the first
trip through the
hilliest portion of the Balboa course. Just beyond the mile
mark, Barrett used
the downhill to gain her first advantage. 
The only runners to respond to Barrett’s decisive breakaway
move were
Iowa’s Stephanie Jenks (ninth in 17:43), who hugged her
shoulder for a few
moments, Virginia’s Caroline Alcorta (third in 17:31) and
Missouri’s Taylor
Werner (10th in 17:44). From there, however, it was
all Barrett, who
turned the final two miles into her own personal victory tour.
Barrett finished
with splits of 11:03 at the two-mile mark and 16:42 at the
three-mile mark en
route to her Foot Locker national title which she captured in
17:16.

(Ed. note: Well hold on here. This is the official Foot Locker release, but truth be told, CT & New England champion Hannah DeBalsi, a sophomore at Staples HS in CT, moved into second at the base of the course’s final hill and then caught Barrett on the downhill. The gambit was short-lived as Barrett found another gear. The Penn State bound ace had set course records at every meet heading into states (which she won by 36 seconds) and broke the tape in 17:16 with DeBalsi 10-seconds in arrears. In addition, Phillips-Andover junior Anoush Shehadeh also earned All American honors (top 15), placing 4th in 17:35. You want the real deal, get the next New England Runner, we just went to press today!)

 In
the boys’ race, Fisher won a dramatic back-and-forth duel in
the final half-mile
with Dressel. The race began with a large pack cruising
through modest splits
of 4:53 at the mile and 9:53 at the two-mile mark.  Dressel
made the first move on the uphill
opening up a sizeable gap. Fisher countered quickly on the
downhill portion
that followed. Dressel valiantly fought back, briefly
regaining the lead with
150 meters to go only to see his chances evaporate quickly as
Fisher unleashed
a vicious kick across the final 100 meters to break the tape
in 15:07 and earn
Foot Locker national championship honors.

 

The
Foot Locker Cross Country Championships is comprised of four
regional 5K races,
which took place across the country in the Midwest (Kenosha,
Wis.), Northeast
(Bronx, N.Y.), and South (Charlotte, N.C.) on Nov. 28, with
the West (Walnut,
Calif.) on Dec. 7, culminating in the National Finals here
today. The pre-race
and race footage can be viewed online at footlockercc.com.

 

Full
Results and Photos are
available online at
footlockercc.com

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NER Pub Series Final Men’s Standings

Men’s Standings after
race No. 6 of 6 ‰ÛÓ Paddy’s Shillelagh Shuffle 3M

 

 

MEN  OPEN (Top 50 Score)

 

1. TJ Unger                          
297

2. Gregory Picklesimer         286

3. Christopher Klucznik        269

4. Chris Lotsbom                  
253

5. Lee Danforth                    
241

6. Patrick Bugbee                 
237

7. Terry McNatt                    
226

8. Kevin Delaney                  
222

9. Paul Hammond                 
215

10. Macdara Nash                 
204

11. Jimmy Fallon             
     170

12. Michael McGrane           
155

13. Brian McCarthy              
124

14. Phil Reusswig                 
111

15. Charles Anderson           
99

16. Cory Hoffman                
84

17. Ken Warren                    
83

18. Paul Kelly            
          82

19. Theo Kindermans           
78

20. Mike Quinn                    
59

21. Steve Houde                   
46

22. George Braun                 
44

23. Dan Finkel                       39

24. Chris Spinney                 
34

25. Chris McEvoy                 31

26. Rich Sturges                   
26

27. Charlie Muse                  
22

28. Brian Meaney                 
19

28. Joe Ciavattone                
19

30. Brice Shepardson           
15

31. Jon Davey                       
12

32. Terry Wnek                     
2

 

MEN MASTERS (Top 10
Score)

 

1. Greg Picklesimer           
60

2. Terry McNatt                 
44

3. Kevin Delaney               
42

4. Macdara Nash                
34

5. Mike McGrane              
22

6. Paul Kelly            
           9

7. Rich Sturges                   
6

8. Steve Houde                   
5

9. Terry Wnek                     
3

10. Paul Corcoran               
1

 

MEN SENIORS (Top 10
Score)

 

1. Paul Hammond               
57

2. Jimmy Fallon                  
51

3. Theo Kindermans            
39

4. Ken Warren                     
32

5. Michael Quinn                
21

6. Chris Spinney                 
7

7. Charlie Muse                  
6

7. Jon Davey                       
6

9. Terry Wnek                     
3

10. Peter Noyes                   
1

11. Paul Corcoran               
1

 

MEN VETERANS (Top 8
Score)

 

1. George Braun                      42

2. John Winters                      
16

2. Lucky Gray                        
16

4. Woody Wilson                
    7

5. Tom Foltz (VT)                   
5

5. Charlie Farrington               
5

 

MEN 70-79 (Top 8
Score)

 

1. Rich Paulson                     
45

2. Dave Pember                     
42

3. Tom Abbott                       
33

4. Denny LeBlanc (NH)         31

5. Phil Pierce (ME)                
19

6. Ted Tyler                            
9

7. Stephen Milt                       
3

 

MEN 80+ (Top 3 Score)

 

1. Larry Cole                        
15

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kenya’s Wacera, Salel Win BAA Half

DANIEL SALEL, MARY WACERA WIN B.A.A. HALF MARATHON CROWNS

B.A.A. Half Marathon Champs Also Win 2015 Distance Medley

By Chris Lotsbom

BOSTON (11-Oct) — Kenyans Daniel Salel and Mary Wacera (see attached
image) made triumphant returns to Boston today, claiming wins here at
the 15th annual B.A.A. Half Marathon, presented by Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute and the Jimmy Fund. Making decisive moves
in the final mile, Salel and Wacera entered Franklin Park’s White
Stadium out front, securing their first B.A.A. Half Marathon titles with
times of 1:00:56 and 1:10:21, respectively. Under crystal clear skies
(and a comfortable temperature of 49-degrees F),
a field of 6,412 athletes started the race.

From the start in Franklin Park, Salel and fellow Kenyan Stephen Sambu
established their dominance on the competition. Prior to the race, the
pair discussed plans of attacking the event record of 1:00:34, set by
two-time Boston Marathon champion Lelisa Desisa
in 2013. After five miles, Salel and Sambu were all by their lonesome,
side by side racing along Boston and Brookline’s picturesque Emerald
Necklace park system.

“We have raced a long time together. I knew he was a very strong guy, so
we agreed we wanted to maybe push the pace so we can maybe break the
course record,” described Salel. Hitting 10 kilometers in 28:26, Salel
and Sambu soon passed Jamaica Pond and the Arnold
Arboretum. Returning to Franklin Park, it was anyone’s race.

Familiar with his compatriot’s strong finishing abilities, Salel chose
to make a bid for the win while in Franklin Park Zoo, knowing there was
roughly a mile left in the competition.

“After 11 miles I started pushing there. I pulled away and I go [in the
zoo]. I was very confident that everything can happen and I knew I could
win,” said Salel, winner of this year’s B.A.A. 10K. The move worked to
perfection, as Salel quickly gaped the two-time
defending B.A.A. Distance Medley champion. By the time he entered
Franklin Park’s White Stadium for the sprint to the finish, Salel’s gap
was 22 seconds.

Breaking the tape in 1:00:56, Salel was all smiles. His victory not only
earned him the $10,000 first-place prize, but also a $20,000 bonus for
winning two of the three B.A.A. Distance Medley events.

“It is very special to me because I have been trying. This is the third
time I’ve come here. In 2013 and 2014, I came in second,” Salel said,
following a ceremonial victory lap in front of fans. “Today I am very
happy to win.”

Salel credited his energy and win to the people of Boston who cheered
him on from start to finish. Those on the course waved and shouted words
of encouragement to the 24-year-old.

“When you turn to come back you see people waving to you, which was so
nice. The crowd was so happy and they kept you confident,” he said. “I
like running here. I hope to come back and run the Boston Marathon.”

Placing second was Sambu in 1:01:18, followed by Kenya’s Eliud Ngetich
in third (1:02:40). The B.A.A.’s own Eric Ashe was the top American,
fourth in 1:05:48. Ethiopia’s Raji Assefa rounded out the top five in
1:05:53.

For Mary Wacera, today’s race served as a bit of redemption. Last year,
Wacera was forced to drop out mid-race due to a knee injury. In 2015,
she was determined to prevail stronger than ever and take home the
title.

Through 5 kilometers in 16:38 and 10 kilometers in 33:31, a group of
four women had congregated out front. Included among the pack were
Wacera, 2015 Boston Marathon champion Caroline Rotich, last year’s
B.A.A. Half Marathon runner-up Cynthia Limo, as well as
Ethiopian Belaynesh Oljira.

Similar to the men’s race, the women’s contest would be decided in the
final miles. Approaching the Franklin Park Zoo, Limo established a gap
of roughly ten yards on Wacera, with Rotich and Oljira an additional ten
yards back. At that point, Wacera was unsure
she’d be able to catch up.

“I didn’t think I could close the gap. It just happened, I don’t know
how,” said Wacera. Minutes later, she’d have a second wind of energy.
Despite the building fatigue in her muscles, the mother of one daughter
pushed on, thinking about the bonus incentives
she’d earn if she finished first.

“I had a surge to close the gap because in the back of my mind I was
thinking about the bonus. In the front of my mind was Cynthia; in the
back of my mind was the bonus,” she said with a laugh. Wacera quickly
caught up and passed Limo.

With the crowd on their feet, Wacera came down the finishing straight in
full sprint mode, a step up on Limo. The title was hers in 1:10:21, one
second ahead of Limo. Oljira placed third in 1:10:41, followed by
Boston Marathon champion Rotich (1:10:45).

“It feels good. I have to forget how painful it is and I have to be
happy! It was a tough race,” said Wacera, taking home a total of
$30,000. Like men’s winner Salel, she won $10,000 for finishing first,
plus $20,000 for winning two B.A.A. Distance Medley races
(she won the B.A.A. 10K in June). With the money, Wacera plans to build
a home back in her native Nyahururu, Kenya. She’ll also take home a
shiny gold medal, which she plans to give to daughter Ann, who turns
5-years old this coming week.

“She loves to run and she’s always saying ‘Go Mommy, you have to win!” said Wacera. “She’ll be very happy.”

Rotich, who triumphantly won the Boston Marathon in April, was happy
with her fourth place performance. She enjoys racing in Boston, and is
now gearing up for the New York City Marathon on November 1.

“It was a good race and I am OK with what happened, but at the same time
I wanted to win,” said Rotich. “It’s good to be back in Boston.”

The top American woman was Clara Santucci of Dilliner, Penn., seventh place in 1:14:23.  

In the push rim wheelchair division, New Jersey’s Tony Nogueira won for
the tenth time since 2003, finishing in 54:16. Nogueira has now won five
consecutive B.A.A. Half Marathon titles. Danvers. Mass.-native Carla
Trodella was the women’s wheelchair champion
in 2:54:44.

Also in the field were over 500 runners representing Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute, raising funds to improve patient care and cancer research at
Dana-Farber. The B.A.A. Half Marathon has been presented annually by
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Jimmy Fund
since 2003. Dana-Farber runners have raised more than $5 million USD
through this event over the past 12 years.

ABOUT THE BOSTON ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION (B.A.A.)

 

Established in 1887, the Boston Athletic
Association is a non-profit organization with a mission of promoting a
healthy lifestyle through sports, especially running. The B.A.A.’s
Boston Marathon is the world’s oldest annual marathon, and
the organization manages other local events and supports comprehensive
charity, youth, and year-round running programs, including high
performance athletes and running club. Since 1986, the principal sponsor
of the Boston Marathon has been John Hancock Financial.
The Boston Marathon is part of the Abbott World Marathon Majors, along
with international marathons in Tokyo, London, Berlin, Chicago, and New
York City. More than 60,000 runners will participate in B.A.A. events in
2015. The 120th Boston Marathon will be
held on Monday, April 18, 2016. For more information on the B.A.A.,
please visit
www.baa.org. 

Buzunesh Deba Named 2014 Boston Marathon Champion

Buzunesh Deba Named 2014 Boston Marathon Champion

 

Ethiopian athlete also becomes the current course record holder.

 

BOSTON
‰ÛÓ Buzunesh Deba of Ethiopia has been named the winner of the 2014
Boston Marathon, following the disqualification of Rita Jeptoo from the
event. Deba finished in a time of 2:19:59. As a result, she becomes the
course record holder. Her performance bested that of Margaret Okayo, who
ran 2:20:43 in 2002.

 

On
April 21, 2014, the 26-year-old Deba and a lead pack of women set a
blistering pace from the line in Hopkinton, remaining at least 45
seconds faster than the checkpoint times of Okayo in 2002. After 25
kilometers, Deba ran even faster and put the remaining competitors in
her wake. In what stands as the fastest women’s race in Boston Marathon
history, the top three women beat Okayo’s mark, and Deba’s performance
is the only women’s sub-2:20 performance in race history. In sixth place
was Shalane Flanagan, who ran the fastest time ever by an American
woman in Boston in 2:22:02, good for ninth fastest all-time.

 

“I
feel great and really happy being named the 2014 Boston Marathon
champion, the most prestigious marathon in the world, and I encourage
all concerned stakeholders to work on a clean sport,” said Deba, who
lives in the Bronx with her husband and coach, Worku Beyi.

 

Deba,
a constant member of the John Hancock Elite Athlete Team in the Boston
Marathon, finished third in the 2015 with a time of 2:25:09 and seventh
in the 2016 race with a time of 2:33:56. She has finished second in the
TCS New York City Marathon twice. Her 2014 victory set her personal
record by more than three minutes.

 

“Buzunesh
Deba’s sub-2:20 performance in 2014 was a magnificent achievement,”
recalled B.A.A. Chief Executive Officer Tom Grilk. “To emerge victorious
in the fastest women’s race ever run in Boston was remarkable. We look
forward to awarding her the praise she rightfully deserves in 2017.”

 

Originally
from Asella, Ethiopia, Deba moved to New York City in 2006. It has not
yet been announced if she will compete in the 2017 Boston Marathon.

 

ABOUT THE BOSTON ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION

Established in 1887,
the Boston Athletic Association is a non-profit organization with a
mission of promoting a healthy lifestyle through sports, especially
running. The B.A.A.’s Boston Marathon is the world’s oldest annual
marathon, and the organization manages other local events and supports
comprehensive charity, youth, and year-round running programs. Since
1986, the principal sponsor of the Boston Marathon has been John Hancock
Financial. The Boston Marathon is part of the Abbott World Marathon Majors,
along with international marathons in Tokyo, London, Berlin, Chicago,
and New York City. More than 60,000 runners will participate in B.A.A.
events in 2017. The 121st Boston Marathon will be held on Monday, April 17, 2017. For more information on the B.A.A., please visit www.baa.org.

NER Pub Series Final Men’s Standings After Six of Six Races

Final Men’s Standings following the 16th Annual Paddy’s Shillelagh Shuffle 3M in West Newton, MA on Sunday, October 15

 

 
First Name
Last Name
Points

1
Shawn
Wallace
296

2
Christopher
Kluczniak
277

3
TJ
Unger
267

4
Patrick
Bugbee
264

5
Lee
Danforth
263

6
Gregory
Picklesimer
249

7
Kevin
Delaney
215

8
Michael
McGrane
203

9
Justin
Renz
200

10
Jason
Cakouros
187

11
Terry
McNatt
180

12
Macdara
Nash
146

13
John
Barbour
136

14
Charles
Anderson
125

15
Paul
Hammond
89

16
Paul
Vella
85

17
Dave
Wessman
48

18
Ken
Warren
41

19
Chris
Diehl
29

20
Paul
Corcoran
27

21
Pat
Sweeney
25

22
Samuel
Singer
19

23
William
Pine
18

24
Joe
Warren
17

25
Joe
Ciavattone
16

26
David
Killian
12

27
Steve
Houde
11

28
Brian
Quirk
9

29
Dan
Finkel
8

30
Kevin
Leahy
4

30
Kevin
Jones
4

32
Jimmy
Fallon
2

33
Chris
Spinney
1

Masters (Top 10 Score)

1
Kevin
Delaney
50

1
Michael
McGrane
50

3
Justin
Renz
42

4
Paul
Vella
15

5
Pat
Sweeney
6

6
Dan
Finkel
1

 
Seniors (Top 10 Score)

1
Greg
Picklesimer
60

2
Jason
Cakouros
44
 
 
 

3
Terry
McNatt
42

4
Macdara
Nash
35

5
Paul
Hammond
24

6
Ken
Warren
14

7
Chris
Diehl
8

8
Joe
Ciavattone
6

9
Paul
Corcoran
3

10
David
Killian
1

10
Kevin
Jones
1

10
Steve
Houde
1

 
 
 

 
Veterans
(Top 10 Score)

1
John
Barbour
50
 

2
David
Wessman
49
 

3
William
Pine
39

4
John
Wescott
7

 
70-79 (Top 8 Score)

1
David
Pember
45

2
Richard
Paulson
39

3
Denny
LeBlanc
37
 

4
Larry
Morris
18

 

5
Philip
Pierce
15

6
Charlie
Farrington
10

 
80+ (Top 3 Score)

1
Larry
Cole
15

 

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Kipchoge. Berlin. 2:01:39. Splits & Top 40 M&W

2018 Berlin Marathon
Berlin, Germany September 16, 2018
Photo: Victah [email protected]
Victah1111@aol.com
631-291-3409
www.photorun.NET
#run.photo

Used with permission – Copyright 2018 Race Results Weekly(tm), all rights reserved. May not be reprinted or retransmitted without permission.
BMW Berlin Marathon (45th)
(An Abbott World Marathon Majors event/IAAF Gold Label Road Race)
Berlin, GER; Sunday, September 16
Distance: 42.195 km, AIMS-certified loop course
Finishers: 28,443 men + 12,332 women = 40,775 total (up from 39,101 last year)
Course Records: New for both men and women (see details below)
Prize Money: Indicated in euros; equal for men and women; see details below
Race History: http://www.arrs.net/HP_BerMa.htm
Weather: Sunny and a little warm 14C/57F with 79% humidity
Race Director: Mark Milde
NOTE: A staggering world record here by Eliud Kipchoge.  Winning his third BMW Berlin Marathon, he crushed the previous world record set by Dennis Kimetto on the same course here by 78 seconds and became the first man ever to run sub-2:02.  His half splits were 61:06 and 60:33.  His accomplishment was all the more remarkable because two of his three pacemakers dropped out before 16 km, and the third only made it to 25 km.  The women’s race was also excellent.  For the first time ever, three women broke 2:19 in the same race led by Gladys Cherono, who got her third win here in a course record 2:18:11 –Ed.
NOTE II: We did our best to annotate all of the data here, but we are still missing some of the pacemaker data because the timing company suppressed those timing tags –Ed.

MEN (gun times) –
1. Eliud Kipchoge, KEN            2:01:39 CR/WR* € 40,000 + 50,000* + 30,000i
[1:01:06 / 1:00:33]
2. Amos Kipruto, KEN              2:06:23          20,000
3. Wilson Kipsang, KEN            2:06:48          15,000
4. Shogo Nakamura, JPN            2:08:16 PB       12,000
5. Zersenay Tadese, ERI           2:08:46 PB       10,000
6. Yuki Sato, JPN                 2:09:18           7,500
7. Okubay Tsegay, ERI             2:09:56 PB        5,000
8. Daisuke Uekado, JPN            2:11:07           4,000
9. Wily Canchanya, PER            2:12:57 PB        3,000
10. Bart van Nunen, NED            2:13:09 DB        2,000
11. Wellington Da Silva, BRA       2:13:43 PB
12. Wagner Da Silva Noronha, BRA   2:14:57
13. Fernando Cabada, USA           2:15:00
14. Nick van Peborgh, BEL          2:15:04 DB
15. Thomas De Bock, BEL            2:15:19 PB
16. Kenta Murayama, JPN            2:15:37
17. Brendan Martin, USA            2:16:26
18. Malcolm Hicks, NZL             2:16:28 DB
19. Julian Spence, AUS             2:16:39 PB
20. Paul Martelletti, NZL          2:17:29
21. Luis Alberto Orta, VEN         2:17:48
22. Gary O’Hanlon (40+), IRL       2:19:06
23. Gerd Devos, BEL                2:19:14 PB
24. Berihun Wuve, ISR              2:19:45
25. Brady Threlfall, AUS           2:19:53
26. Valentin Harwardt, GER         2:19:54
27. Antonio Cardona Rodriguez, PUR 2:20:27
28. Jeffrey Seelaus, USA           2:20:56
29. Ruben Sanca, CPV               2:21:01
30. Jonathan Poole, GBR            2:21:14
31. Corneschi Ilie Alexandru, ROU  2:21:59
32. Steffen Uliczka, GER           2:22:18
33. Jakub Szymankiewicz, POL       2:22:31
34. Dane Verwey, AUS               2:22:45
35. Raphael Magalhaes Moura, BRA   2:23:00
36. Guillermo Enrique Wirth, ARG   2:23:05
37. Jonathan Thewlis, GBR          2:23:09

42. Moath Al-Khawaldeh, JOR        2:23:57 PB

44. Matt Hensley, USA              2:24:03
Sammy Kitwara, KEN             DNF (pace/about 14 km)
Bernard Kipkemoi, KEN          DNF (pace/about 15.5 km)
Josphat Boit, KEN              DNF (pace/about 25.5 km)
Scott Overall, GBR             DNF
Eliud Kiptanui, KEN            DNF
Chalachew Tiruneh, ETH         DNF
Getaye Fisseha Gelaw, ETH      DNF
Abera Kuma, ETH                DNF
Amaury Paquet, BEL             DNF
Daichi Kamino, JPN             DNF (1:32:38 at 30-K)
*Course and world record/€50,000 bonus; previous 2:02:57, Dennis Kimetto (KEN), 2014
i = Earned time incentive for sub-2:04:00

5-K Splits for Kipchoge:
5 km       14:24   (14:24)
10 km       29:01   (14:37)
15 km       43:38   (14:37)
20 km       57:56   (14:18)
25 km     1:12:24   (14:29)
30 km     1:26:45   (14:21)
35 km     1:41:12   (14:27)
40 km     1:55:32   (14:20)
42.195 km 2:01:39   (06:07)
Halves: 1:01:06 / 1:00:33
NOTE: Individual kilometer splits are here: http://berlin.mikatiming.de/2018/?pid=leader_public –Ed.

WOMEN (gun times) –
1. Gladys Cherono, KEN            2:18:11 PB/CR* € 40,000 + 30,000i
[1:09:10 / 1:09:01]
2. Ruti Aga, ETH                  2:18:34 PB       20,000 + 15,000ii
3. Tirunesh Dibaba, ETH           2:18:55          15,000
4. Edna Kiplagat, KEN)            2:21:18          12,000
5. Mizuki Matsuda, JPN            2:22:23 PB       10,000
6. Helen Tola, ETH                2:22:48 PB        7,500
7. Honami Maeda, JPN              2:25:23           5,000
8. Carla Salome Rocha, POR        2:25:27 PB        4,000
9. Miyuki Uehara, JPN             2:25:46 PB        3,000
10. Rei Ohara, JPN                 2:27:29           2,000
11. Rachel Cliff, CAN              2:28:53 DB
12. Lyndsay Tessier, CAN           2:30:47 PB
13. Ines Melchor, PER              2:32:09
14. Andrea Deelstra, NED           2:32:41
15. Dawn Grunnagle (40+), USA      2:34:56 PB
16. Emma Spencer, USA              2:37:05 PB
17. Cristina Jordan, ESP           2:37:14 PB
18. Teresa Montrone, ITA           2:37:35 PB
19. Caitlin Phillips, USA          2:37:48 PB
20. Matea Parlov, CRO              2:38:05 DB
21. Arianne Raby, CAN              2:39:37 PB
22. Catherine Watkins (40+), CAN   2:40:11 PB
23. Alexandra Cadicamo, USA        2:40:37 PB
24. Tomomi Sawahata, JPN           2:40:50
25. Stephanie Davis, GBR           2:41:33 PB
26. Séverine Hamel, FRA            2:41:39
27. Amanda Nurse, USA              2:42:15
28. Rachel Hannah, CAN             2:42:57
29. Sarah Klein, AUS               2:43:34
30. Marie Zanderson, USA           2:44:38
31. Stefania Leondiadou, GRE       2:44:43
32. Jillian Pollack, USA           2:44:44
33. Karina Helmane-Sorocenkova LAT 2:45:02
34. Hannah Oldroyd, GBR            2:46:55
35. Angela Moll, USA               2:47:05
36. Hilde Aders, NOR)              2:47:50
37. Arelys Rodriguez, VEN          2:48:53
38. Anke Esser, GER                2:48:53
39. Whitney Macon, USA             2:49:10
40. Camilla Elofsson, SWE          2:49:28
41. Sarah Loerch, GER              2:49:33
42. Mayada Al Sayad, PLE           2:49:36
43. Jessica Gunnarsson, NOR        2:49:46
44. Annika Uckel, GER              2:50:08
45. Kirsten De Baey, GER           2:50:28
Aselefech Mergia, ETH          DNF (1:13:01 at half)
Ines Monteiro, ESP             DNF (1:13:46 at half)
Catarina Ribeiro, POR          DNF (1:13:42 at half)
Sasha Gollish, CAN             DNF (1:13:43 at half)
*Course record; previous 2:19:12, Mizuki Noguchi (JPN), 2005
i = Earned time incentive for sub-2:19:00
ii = Earned time incentive for sub-2:20:30 (limited to top-2 finishers)

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RIMAConn Relay Title Sponsor Webster Bank to Support East Coast Greenway

Webster Bank Named Presenting Sponsor of Hartford Marathon Foundation’s Inaugural RiMaConn Relay 

Webster to make additional donation to East Coast Greenway GLASTONBURY, Conn., August 12, 2019 – The Hartford Marathon Foundation (HMF) is proud to announce Webster Bank as the Presenting Sponsor of the RiMaConn Relay, its first-ever team relay on the East Coast Greenway.

The sold-out event will engage over 700 participants in a day-long race spanning 21 communities in Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut on Saturday, August 24, 2019.

Photo: A section of the Airline Rail Trail in eastern Connecticut that connects with the Trunkline Trail in southern Mass. and follows the bed of the abandoned New Haven, Middletown and Willimantic Railroad.

HMF will employ wide-ranging sustainability measures—one of the most proactive efforts among the HMF calendar of events—including: Race shirts made of recycled plastic water bottles (more than 5,700 water bottles will be recycled in the process) · Reusable water bottles—replacing 10,000 disposable plastic bottles and cups ·      Compost-friendly food, plates and napkins at the post-race party · Locally sourced food and drinks

“Webster’s deep ties to the community throughout Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island make them a natural partner in the RiMaConn Relay, a new endeavor that utilizes our region’s trail system in an exciting way,” said Beth Shluger, HMF CEO and founder. “Their generous support helps us deliver the top-notch race experience participants have come to expect at our events while positively impacting the communities involved.”

Eighty-five percent of the RiMaConn course utilizes the scenic trails of the East Coast Greenway. In addition to being the Presenting Sponsor, Webster Bank will donate $5,000 to help protect and preserve the race trails.

“Webster has a long-standing commitment to supporting the communities where we live and work,” said Brian Runkle, executive vice president, Operations, Webster Bank. “This regional race is another example of our leadership on sustainability and being a good corporate citizen.”

Runkle is the captain for Webster’s relay team and has participated in multiple long-distance relay races across the country for almost ten years.

The RiMaConn sponsorship is the latest example of Webster’s commitment to sustainability. In 2018 alone, Webster entered into approximately $47 million in loans for renewable energy and energy-efficient components. Webster also invests in energy-efficient solutions at its facilities, including curbing paper and fossil fuel usage, and remains active in financing commercial loans for renewable and clean energy and LEED construction.

In addition to its sponsorship, Webster Bank will engage its RiMaConn relay team and employee volunteers in HMF’s “plogging” event on Wednesday, August 14, 2019, in East Hartford, Conn. “Plogging” is a Swedish term referring to picking up litter while jogging. The group run and cleanup is free and open to the community.

For more information about the RiMaConn Relay, visit www.runthegreenway.com. For partnership opportunities, contact shan@hartfordmarathon.com.

About the Hartford Marathon Foundation The Hartford Marathon Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit organization founded in 1994 to create and manage fitness events that inspire people to be healthy and fit. Located in Glastonbury, Connecticut, the Hartford Marathon Foundation organizes 32 annual athletic events, including the Eversource Hartford Marathon. For more information, visit www.HartfordMarathon.com and on Facebook at HMF Events.

About Webster Bank Webster Financial Corporation is the holding company for Webster Bank, National Association and its HSA Bank division. With $28.9 billion in assets, Webster provides business and consumer banking, mortgage, financial planning, trust, and investment services through 157 banking centers and 308 ATMs. Webster also provides mobile and online banking. Webster Bank owns the asset-based lending firm Webster Business Credit Corporation; the equipment finance firm Webster Capital Finance Corporation; and HSA Bank, a division of Webster Bank, which provides health savings account trustee and administrative services. Webster Bank is a member of the FDIC and an equal housing lender. For more information about Webster, including past press releases and the latest annual report, visit the Webster website at www.websterbank.com.

About The East Coast Greenway The East Coast Greenway is a walking and biking route stretching 3,000 miles from Maine to Florida, connecting the nation’s most populated corridor. The East Coast Greenway is designed to transform the 15 states and 450 communities it connects through active and healthy lifestyles, sustainable transportation, community engagement, climate resilience, tourism, and more. The Greenway offers a safe place for bicyclists, walkers, runners, and more — of all ages and abilities — to commute, exercise, and visit new destinations. Learn more: www.greenway.org.

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The Ice

A journey to the bottom of the world in search of the purest thing

Gates makes his way down the Ice Runway on the Antarctic Plateau. Photo by Haley Buffman.

 

A dozen or so of us were packed into the beluga-shaped DC-3, snorting oxygen through plastic medical tubes to make up for the thin, 20,000-foot air in the unpressurized cabin. The Antarctic plateau slid beneath us 10,000 feet below, though without the visual reference of trees, mountains, buildings or roads, it appeared to be close enough for a sharp tip of the wing to scratch the surface of the snow. Far off in the distance the horizon hinted at the curvature of the earth.

Kurt Vonnegut’s The Sirens of Titan was sitting on my lap. It was opened to a dog-eared page that had caught my attention days earlier when I had just arrived on the continent. “We can offer you an opportunity to think about your native planet,” Vonnegut wrote, “from a fresh and beautifully detached view point.” The offer was for a low-ranking position in the Martian Army rather than a low-ranking position on Earth’s last continent, and no less applicable.

I had an ex-girlfriend’s ex-boyfriend to thank for getting me into that airplane seat. Our mutual ex-girlfriend’s lack of creativity in choosing her mates ensured that we were more similar than different and all the more likely to get along. He talked in sentences made up of soft, shapeless mumbles and punctuated them with an abrupt laugh. Like me, he was svelte and quiet with a socially awkward tendency that was either masked or nourished by entire months of solo wanderings. He was an eight-time finisher of the Boston Marathon, and I accepted his assurance that running at the South Pole was, at the very least, possible. Curtis Moore had introduced me to Chef Brown and led me through the mountain of paperwork and bureaucratic hoop jumping one might expect with a four-month contract at a government station at the furthest of man’s terrestrial reach.

And it was Curtis who had told me about Race Around the World.

 

I had been stalled out on Ross Island, 2500 miles south of New Zealand, the week prior. Locked into the Antarctic mainland with a permanent shelf of sea ice, the island was home to seals, penguins, a 12,000-foot active volcano, Mount Erebus, and McMurdo—a station five times larger than any other station on the continent. As a stop-over gateway for Antarctica, McMurdo maintained that shifty and volatile feel I would have expected from an old-west town or a Lucas-inspired deep-space station. It was best described to me as a sheriff-less coal-mining town run by a frat house.

Tractors, snowcats and countless other rumbling machines drove about the dusty roads that separated the sterile buildings from one another. Thieving and violent seagull-like skua birds patrolled the skies while the ever-present wind whistled. I idled my time away with Vonnegut, and when I tired of him, I found reprieve running the many trails surrounding the station.

From the Ross Island trails, I watched ash and smoke rise from Mount Erebus above me. In the opposite direction, across the frozen Ross Sea, the Royal Society Mountain Range stood proud and out of reach. The volcanic cinder that crunched beneath my feet would be the last dirt I’d see, hear, smell or touch for several months.

 

Passengers and snowcat enroute to Antarctica. Photo by Haley Buffman

I sucked at the tube for more oxygen. Beyond the frosted window, the scene was a two-toned blue-and-white painting—the blue stealing wisps of white from the ground and the white reflecting the cerulean sky back into the atmosphere. Rothko, I remember thinking. This is a Rothko painting on the magnitude of a Midwestern state. Beneath us the shadow of the plane floated about the masterpiece like a speck of dust.

Following a smooth ski landing and brief taxi the door opened from the outside. After descending a short ladder I stepped onto the styrofoam snow and watched my breath hit the ground before me, bursting outwardly like an inverted mushroom cloud.

At 67 degrees below zero, breath becomes a sharp thing, with both mass and volume. The first inhale is taken in quickly, haphazardly. Your nose hairs freeze. Then your tongue lurches and your lungs reject the needle-y air. You cough it out like poison and take in the next one measuredly. They’re all measured after that. Once you learn to breathe again, you note the smell of the Antarctic Plateau: the virgin fragrance of nothing at all.

Before me stood the Elevated Station. It was propped up on I-beams 15 feet high to prevent the slow buildup of dense snow that had buried the two previous stations. At that moment it looked to me like one of those tall, walking war machines from Star Wars, but elongated, frozen and static. Within the football field of a building rested my raison d’être—dirty dishes waiting to be cleaned. With over 15 years of restaurant service behind me, “Dining Room Attendant” stood alone as the one job I qualified for at a research station that was synonymous with specificity.

As the weeks went by the sun climbed to a height in the sky that would be considered “late-afternoon” to most civilized latitudes. It circled around like the hand of a 24-hour clock. Exactly like a 24-hour clock, actually. The ebb and flow buzz of tractors, airplanes and snowmobiles, however, ensured that the station was a human creation and 4 a.m. felt like 4 a.m., lunchtime felt like lunchtime and Christmas felt like Christmas. The zombie-like winter-overs had vacated the station and taken with them their excess of malaise. They were replaced with fresh firefighters, carpenters, electricians and plumbers. Reaganites and anarchists; loose women, prudish men, jocks and queers; Nobel smarts and perfect idiots. Job titles had been politically replaced with the disambiguating titles of “specialist” and “technician.” Still, the modern rolls of society were represented just the same.

 

Neil Young and Crazy Horse blasted at a deafening volume from the speaker behind me while I traded out the green plastic scrubby for a metal spatula and commenced scraping away the charred remains of what I believed to be pork loin from the bottom of the roasting pan. I was convinced that the pan and the blackened meat had coalesced on a molecular level but I continued scraping since I was enjoying my music and needed to fill the last 40 minutes of my shift.

Chef Brown governed over his kitchen with a modus operandi of accountability, which meant that if one of his cooks burned a dish they were expected to clean it themselves. I could have asked Quenton to clean the roasting pan, as he was surely the culprit but it was mid-December, I had been washing dishes 10 hours a day, six days a week for two months, and was admittedly a little bored. I had learned to seize upon these occasions to break up the monotony of my simple but tedious job. I embraced the burn victims with fervor and invited the challenge of making them new again.

Just past the sinks, a large open window connected the dish pit to a hallway that led to the galley and the rest of the station. A pair of standard-issue heavy leather mittens appeared on the stainless steel ledge of the window before me. Coded letters and numbers were written in marker on the back of the gloves. The hands inside belonged to Jeremy Collins, an Air-Force-trained meteorologist with a pale face that was mostly hidden behind a sunset-red beard. His job at the South Pole included interpreting numbers that predict the weather. Several times a day, from the rooftop, Jeremy would measure line-of-sight visibility to flags around the station that corresponded to distances written on his mittens.

“What did that use to be?”

“It was pork,” I replied, “and will be dinner.”

Jeremy moved as fast as his job required, which provided him with no less than 10 excursions to the galley throughout the course of the day. He took great interest in my job and my music and pretty much anything that would stall him for a few more minutes before going back to work.

“You been running?” he asked.

“I’ve been gettin’ out.”

Scuffed grey steel was beginning to appear beneath the black char. I rinsed the crud from the pan and continued scrapping furiously.

“Why’d you come here, anyway?” he asked with an abruptness that could have only been learned in the armed forces.

I stopped scrubbing for a moment. I pulled my hands out of the heavy rubber gloves. They wafted a gangrene stench and I quickly sheathed them again. In a land where the relative humidity doesn’t even reach a single percent, hand maintenance is a constant struggle. When they weren’t shriveled and rotting, as they were then, they were like dry-cracked mud.

“I guess I’ve always wanted to wash dishes.”

He laughed.

“What about you?” I asked.

“Well,” he said without hesitation, “I wanted to see what was beneath the brass plate.”

“The brass plate?”

“In school, you remember? The globe in geography class spun around and around.” He dialed his glove about, first toward the ground and then toward the ceiling. “And hiding the axle and converging lines on the bottom was always that brass plate.” He looked at me and shrugged his shoulders. “I wanted to know what was under it.” He folded his wrist, glanced at his watch and walked away.

It seemed to be the single common thread among the eclectic gathering at the South Pole—a magnetic draw to slip beneath the brass plate on the bottom of the globe.

 

A sun halo caused by ice crystals in the atmosphere. Photo by Haley Buffman.

I walked a quarter mile from the station to an insulated, canvas Quonset hut, called a Jamesway, which contained my 35-square-foot address—J13, Room 3.

Over a dozen Jamesways subdivided into rooms not much bigger than utility closets made up Summer Camp, where half the station’s population of 250 lived during the crowded summer months. Think M*A*S*H on ice. The two plywood walls and two canvas walls that separated me from my nine hut-mates served as a barrier for little more than the hallway light. Snores, farts and squeaking beds permeated past the canvas barrier on a nightly basis.

I settled into my room, shedding layers of clothes that had gotten me to my Jamesway without frostbite and prepared for some miles out on the plateau.

Getting dressed to run in that temperature was, at minimum, a 15-minute process. There were tights on top of tights, three layers of shirts, followed by a thick Gore-Tex shell. There was the neck gaiter, balaclava, hat, goggles and earmuffs. Ski gloves stuffed with hand warmers, wool socks and running shoes with screws inserted into the bottom for traction. And, finally, a mouthful of Jameson slugged straight from the bottle, which warmed me from the inside in a way that no layer of clothing could. The method kept me warm for an hour of running.

I stepped out of J13 and set off at an easy clip through Summer Camp while several “red parkas” hurried about their tasks. The standard-issue jackets that had initially provided a level of anonymity faded as the season carried on, and the subtleties of one’s posture, form and gait became their identifying features. The head-down, slow shuffle was Rachel. The Manhattan business march was Jason. The pep-step, swagger was Ron. Like a marshlands birdwatcher, by my second month at the South Pole, I could properly identify the forward motion of nearly 80 Big Reds.

I ran out past the half-mile-long berms that stored everything from 10-year-old lobster (as frozen as the day it arrived) to spare tractor parts and after 10 minutes of running I arrived at the Edge of the World, where several decades of plowed and packed snow stepped down to the ever-changing surface of the Antarctic Plateau. Two giant golf balls containing within them the satellites that were our four-hour-a-day thread to the real world stood there like sentries, as though to protect us from the vast expanse of nothingness just beyond.

I paused there with the station at my back. A wave of anxiety—claustrophobia’s opposite—passed through me. I let it pass and stepped out into the Rothko painting where things didn’t get bigger or smaller, where one step didn’t seem to bring me any closer to the horizon than did a thousand.

When English explorer Robert F. Scott arrived at the South Pole 99 years earlier, after having already traversed several hundred miles upon the same scene, he paused and scribbled only a single sentence in his meticulously kept journal, “Great God, this in an awful place!” Within a month Scott and his four companions would be dead from a combination of starvation, hypothermia and scurvy.

I ran until I could no longer hear the hum of the station. I ran until the individual Big Reds recessed back into anonymity. I ran past tracks of the two others on station that also sought solace in the vastness that surrounded me. I ran to the point where three dimensions dissolved into two and the pure and brutal immensity of the Antarctic Plateau consumed me. Then I stopped.

 

Traditional Christmas Day attire for RATW spectators. Photo by Haley Buffman.

On Christmas morning the thermometer had climbed to minus 12, allowing me to shed my balaclava and wear three layers on my torso rather than four.

Forty of us gathered at the South Pole marker in front of the Elevated Station waiting for 10 o’clock to arrive. Rudimentary race numbers were printed on office paper and pinned to our jackets. Behind us, several generations of diesel engines of snowmobiles, PistonBullys and tractors rumbled in anticipation.

I chatted with Curtis who, thanks to the various jobs that had brought him down there, was toeing the starting line for a fifth time in as many years. Behind the wind shield that came down over his nose and chin, a thick, brown beard covered the left side of his face, while the right side was cleanly shaven. Beneath his hat a gathering of curly hair started from his forehead as a mohawk and finished in the back with a mullet. Nobody thought twice about Curtis’ outlandish appearance or quiet mumblings as though the oddity of living and working at the South Pole trumped all others. Back home, when asked the question of why somebody would return to such a harsh continent year after year the catchphrase response fit him most appropriately: “I came down the first year for the experience, the next year for the money and a third year because I didn’t fit in anywhere else.” Curtis was at home at the South Pole.

With a ready, set, go, the fire captain turned race marshall set us in motion. I wasted little time and moved quickly to the front of the pack.

I was perhaps the only competitor on that squeaky starting line whose pre-Antarctica occupation had been “semi-professional mountain runner.” For several years prior I had piecemealed together a humble income with prize money, sponsorship earnings, restaurant work and the occasional yard sale of running gear given to me from one source or another. With my airfare usually paid for and without the burden of health insurance and cell-phone bills on my budget, I was able to embrace the simple, nomadic lifestyle of a Herman Hesse character, calling my home in the Rockies, the Appalachians, the Sierra Nevadas, the Julian Alps, the Bavarian Alps, the Dolomites and beyond.

Out of the same boredom that propels a child to put dissimilar insects in a jar together, Chef Brown had tried to pit Curtis and me against each other over the weeks leading up to the race. The effort was in vain as there was little doubt in my mind that I was going to win the race and Curtis simply didn’t care. But the Race Around the World, I learned, wasn’t so much about competition as it was a celebration of a truly unique community and place.

In December of 1979, a baker, a cosmic-ray scientist and a few others set out from the South Pole marker covering a distance of just over two miles. The race quickly became a Christmas Day celebration and 31 years later, the tradition continued. Given its remote location and the fact that it is open strictly to people working at the South Pole, the Race Around the World is arguably one of the most selective races on the planet.

Circling an area no larger than Vatican City the course embraced most of the station. The clockwise loop took us past the towers of large empty spools stacked in a long row with a child-like hand 20 feet high called Spoolhenge.

After passing through a collection of excess-tin arches left over from the station’s construction, we made our way along the runway where a couple airplanes sat idle. I glanced over my shoulder and saw Curtis in a distant second place. A snowmobile zoomed up next to me for the final quarter mile pulling behind it a couch on a sled with several excited spectators. The energy, exertion, rumble of the machines and costumes all lent themselves a Mad Max quality to the event and I half expected a spectator to run over and tackle me.

After having passed through the time zones of Botswana, the Persian Gulf and India, past the storage berms of food, plywood, toilet paper, past Papua New Guinea, Siberia and Polynesia I crossed the finish line and won the race in 13 minutes 32 seconds. After Curtis had crossed the finish line and the coughing brought on by the sharp, cold air had stopped he and I looked out into the distance.

“There’s a little more to it once you’re here for a little while. Huh.”

 

Gates at the Geographic South Pole after winning the Race Around the World. Photo by Haley Buffman.

Looking out the galley window onto the vast and barren expanse of snow before me I wondered, as one must wonder on the deck of a ship far out at sea, just how far I was peering into the distance.

Nowhere on earth, I thought, do three dimensions so closely resemble two. I sipped my coffee and paused to dislodge a sinewy piece of bacon from my teeth. Or maybe, I thought, if dimensions had intentions this landscape was two dimensions trying to be three …

In recent weeks my mind had started taking on the characteristics of an amorphous cloud. Thoughts would come and go like a dream. I’d stop mid-sentence, forgetting what I was saying. Mid-thought, forgetting what I had been thinking. This one, I held onto.

Or three dimensions trying to be two.

I had been warned of the slow deterioration of the mind and body. I had been warned that my joints would begin to ache, which they did, and that I would be consumed by a fatigue that couldn’t singularly be explained by the frigid temperatures, high altitude or long working hours. In a place where even the needle of a compass gets confused I had to consider that thing called “energy” by some, “juju” by others.

“You came here to run that race.”

Jeremy startled me. Everything startled me. Maybe it was because I hadn’t seen the sun set in 121 days. Maybe my compass was off.

He tried again: “You did, didn’t you?”

“I hadn’t considered that,” I said.

Why I didn’t want to admit that the race was the reason I came down here was perhaps because it was an admission that I was no different than the landscape outside the window. My life, up until that point had been a quest for simplicity. I found that I loved washing dishes. The work was as basic and simple as running, which was as basic and simple as the landscape before me. I had happened upon a Mecca where the year is a day and I was only there for six hours and it scared me to admit that I didn’t want to leave.

Rickey Gates is a contributing editor for Trail Runner. This article originally appeared in our December 2012 issue.

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