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NER Teleconference Tidbits

June 9, 2020 | News | No Comments

 Boston Marathon hopeful Deena Kastor is the first to admit that not all of 2006 went swimmingly, despite a 2:19:36 US marathon record performance in winning last April’s London Marathon. At New York she placed sixth behind the two chief rivals she’ll face at Boston-defending champion Rita Jeptoo of Kenya and World Marathon Majors Series Leader Jelena Prokupcuka of Latvia.


In 2007, Kastor has been dominant and her training has been excellent. She won her ninth US Cross Country Championship and a week later ran a 31:09 10K leg as part of the US Ekiden Relay team in Japan. Most recently, she approached her own US 15K record at Florida’s Gate River Run while employing a strategy used in preparation for Boston 111.

NER caught up to Deena and her coach Terrance Mahon via teleconference from the US Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista, CA. (Deena’s mother grew up in Hull, MA on the South Shore, site of Nantasket Beach and the old Paragon Park. For her first 18 years, Deena summered at Nantasket Beach)

NER: Out of curiosity I’m wondering when you last ran on Nantasket Beach, but for our readers I’d ask about when you plan on tapering for Boston and what will that consist of?

DK: Good question. A week leading up to the race I would drop my mileage from around 100-110 miles to about 80 miles, but still keep some of the intensity up, still do some mile repeats and some faster sessions so my legs don’t get flat. But nothing that’s going to create too much lactic acid; so that last week is just a fine balance of getting in some speedier work and not allowing yourself to get too sluggish before the race, so keeping some pop in your step.
The last week it’s really all about getting in proper fuel so you’re storing the carbohydrates you’re going to need for the marathon distance, and staying off your feet in between runs so that your legs are resting-all these things combined in order to prepare for that one day.
The last time I ran on Nantasket Beach was in 2003.

NER: Have you and Terrance discussed any strategy for running Boston’s hills, specifically and especially in the downhill portions of the course?

DK: Is that for me or Terrance?

NER: Well, either one of you, Terrance will do.

TM: In terms of strategy for us, yah, that was part of the thing for using an event like the Gate River Run (15K). If you know anything about that race you’ve got a mile-long, steep uphill and a mile-long downhill. So we created a little challenge for ourselves in there to see how Deena could turnover off the hill coming on the downside. She actually ran a 4:49 mile coming down that hill.
Our biggest thing with looking at Boston, because she’s a great uphill runner, is can she then make the transition over the last 10K to run really fast off the downhills. So in training we’ve been trying to throw things like that at her where we’ll challenge her up a hill where the goal is just to try and get up it, and then how fast can we run coming off the hill. So we’ve done that in tempo runs and long runs, as well as pick certain races to go after that aspect.

NER: Well thank-you both and best of luck in Boston. We look forward to it.

How’s this for back-to-back Pub scenarios. Residence in the Oktoberfest Beer Garden at the Hartford Marathon on Saturday and then the sun splashed back deck of the Lasting Room Pub (or Icky’s Pub & Grill as RD Dave LaBrode likes to call it) on Sunday. Yee-ha!

Hats off to 50 year-old wunderkind Craig Fram on his win. He’s taken enough $ from us at Mt. Washington that it’s a relief he’s not on the Pub Series circuit. But hard working, blue collar, lunch pail CSU posterboy and MIT braniac Terry McNatt is, and to Lee Danforth’s dismay, he’s unstoppable.

Derek Dorval moved to within a point of third-placer Mike McGrane who, coincidentally, ran 1:15 at the BAA Half before heading to Haverhill.

We thought the eye faucets had dried up after Paul Hammond went on Injured Reserve this year, but now compatriot Chris Spinney is on crutches with a stress fracture to his femur. Both he and Hammond were on hand for the festivities, but hors de combat. Chris retires in 6th place among Open runners with 145 points and as 3rd Master with 21 points.

This effects the Masters standings as Jimmy Fallon ran “lame‰âÂVbCrLf and has now been tied for Masters supremacy (when the top 3 40+ move to Open for the $ awards) by CT’s John Tolbert. Whooee! And less than a week from Paddy’s. How hurtin’ was Fallon? Yours truly passed him on the 5th mile downhill like a cement mixer passing a sputtering Ferrari. Of course the cement mixer was then repassed because excess weight only works on the downhills.

The fact that Veteran dynamo Gordon McFarland was running 1:22:03 for a new 60+ age group record at the BAA Half brought the always dangerous Iron Joe Drugan within a point of Gord. “I think I can get him at Paddy’s,‰âÂVbCrLf offered Joe. “It’ll take him more than a week to recover from a hard half, right? Right?‰âÂVbCrLf Well, we’ll see during the Grand Finale at windy and cold Paddy’s (drop by NER’s tent, we’ll be selling gloves, redeemable in beer money after the race).

Also, congrats to little mentioned Ben Nosek and Mit Gnivri (aka Tim Irving) on a great late season surge to move up the points standings after Bobby Bell. Also, to Waltham’s Jack Murphy (Emer O’Donaghue’s plumber) who cracked the standings for the first time this year with 5 big ones.

NER Pub Series 2008 Men’s Standings After 5 of 6 Races

Open Men (Top 50 Score)

1. Terry McNatt‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_.236
2. Lee Danforth‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..226
3. Michael McGrane‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..211
4. Derek Dorval‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_…..200
5. Chris Smith‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_…191
6. John Noland‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..181
7. Jim Sullivan‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..157
8. John Tolbert‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_148
9. Dave Wessman‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_…140
10. Jimmy Fallon‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_111
11. Gordon McFarland‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..103
12. Paul Corcoran‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..77
13. Nikhil Jain‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_67
14. Frank Hope‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_…61
15. Chris Crema‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_.59
16. Iron Joe Drugan‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_31
17. Ben Nosek ‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_25
18. John Winters‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_.23
19. Mit Gnivri‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..20
20. Duke Hutchinson‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..14
20. Jim McLaughlin‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_.10
21. Jack Murphy ‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..5
22. Dave Pember ‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_2

Masters (Top 10 Score)

1. Terry McNatt‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_48
2. John Noland‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_.32
3. Chris Smith‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..28
4. Jimmy Fallon‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_…16
4. John Tolbert‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_.16
5. Jim Sullivan‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..13

Seniors (Top 8 Score)

1. Dave Wessman‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_.34
2. Paul Corcoran‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_…18
3. John Winters‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..8
4. Jim McLaughlin‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_4
5. Tom Foltz‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..2

Veterans (Top 6 Score)

1. Gordon MacFarland‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..23
2. Iron Joe Drugan‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_.22
3. Duke Hutchinson‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_..14
4. Dave Pember‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_.13
5. Charlie Farrington‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_3
5. Joe Brown‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_.3

Super Vets 70+ (Top 4 Score)

1. Bob Hillman‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_…6
2. Tom Wright‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_‰âÂå_4



For Immediate Release: Wednesday, March 25, 2009

26.2 Days Until The 113th Boston Marathonå¨
For first time, top marathoners to have their names on bibs.
B.A.A. 5K and B.A.A. Invitational Mile set for Sunday.


Boston, Mass. —
The
113th Boston Marathon will take place April 20, just 26.2 days from
today. Athletes have entered their final month of training, and both
participants and fans are gearing up for an exciting race weekend.
While continuing to honor the title of being the world’s oldest annual
marathon, the Boston Marathon is introducing several innovations this
year to provide spectators and athletes with more excitement while
introducing new traditions to race weekend.

For
spectators, one key difference in this year’s marathon will be names on
the front bibs of the professional runners. Sponsored by adidas, the
exclusive supplier of officially licensed footwear and apparel for the
Boston Marathon since 1989, the bibs with names will add a personalized
touch to the uniforms of the professional athletes, including
first-time Boston Marathon runners Kara Goucher and Ryan Hall, as well
as returning champions Robert K. Cheruiyot and Dire Tune.

“Names
on bibs will be a great addition to this year’s race, helping with our
effort to better identify the international field of athletes recruited
by our principal sponsor, John Hancock Financial” said Guy Morse,
B.A.A. Executive Director.  “The bibs will further highlight the elite
participants, making them more recognizable along the course for the
fans.”

With
the addition of the Boston Marathon, each of the five World Marathon
Majors events will feature names of the professional athletes on the
race bib.  The other four World Marathon Majors events are in London,
Berlin, Chicago and New York.

On
Sunday, April 19, two new events will take place near Copley Square
Park. Beginning at 8 a.m., the B.A.A. 5K, a new road race, will take
the place of the traditional Freedom Run and offer participants a timed
competitive race. With a capacity of 4,000 runners, the 5K already has
more than 3,000 entrants.  The new event includes part of the route
used by the B.A.A. last year when the organization played host to the
U.S. Olympic Team Trials – Women’s Marathon.  The home stretch and
finish line of the B.A.A. 5K are the same as the Boston Marathon,
giving participants the thrill of experiencing one of the most
spectacular finishes in road running.  Fewer than 750 entries remain
for this inaugural event.

Immediately
following the B.A.A. 5K will be the B.A.A. Invitational Mile. Male and
female professional athletes, as well as top local scholastic milers,
will compete in the mile in a series of four races. Each section of the
B.A.A. Invitational Mile also will end at the Boston Marathon finish
line.

The
professional races will be headlined by Marblehead, MA, native Shalane
Flanagan, a 2008 Olympic bronze medalist, while the scholastic races
will feature athletes representing the eight host cities and towns
along the Boston Marathon course: Hopkinton, Ashland, Framingham,
Natick, Wellesley, Newton, Brookline and Boston.

In
addition to sponsoring the bibs, adidas is the official supplier of
licensed Boston Marathon apparel.  The recently released line,
available at www.shopadidas.com, features the official 2009 race jacket
and a limited-edition BAA Supernova Sequence, in addition to
performance wear, t-shirts and much more.  The line also will be
available at select specialty retailers and at the John Hancock Sports
and Fitness Expo April 17-19 at the Hynes Convention Center.

More information about the weekend’s events, the Boston Marathon and the B.A.A. can be found online at http://www.baa.org/

Boston Athletic Association:
Established
in 1887, the Boston Athletic Association is a non-profit organization
with a mission of managing athletic events and 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, including the B.A.A. Half Marathon
presented by Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Jimmy Fund, and
supports comprehensive charity, youth, and year-round running programs.
Since 1986, the principal sponsor of the Boston Marathon has been John
Hancock Financial.

Courtesy of Running USA Wire

At the 2009 Bank of America Chicago Marathon on Sunday, October 11, Beijing Olympic Marathon gold medalist Sammy Wanjiru
of Kenya made a triumphant U.S. debut with the victory in 2 hours, 5
minutes, 41 seconds. His time was not only a course record, but also a
U.S. All-Comers record, besting Khalid Khannouchi‘s 2:05:42 from 1999 at this race. For the women, Liliya Shobukhova of Russia also had a solid win in 2:25:56.

At the 32nd edition, under cool, windy conditions
and nearly 35,000 following, Wanjiru, 22, who had pacesetters, pulled
away from any challengers in the latter stages to win his second major
marathon this year (also Flora London). He earned $175,000 ($75,000 for
first place and a $100,000 bonus for the course record – one second
slower and the time bonus would have been $75,000).

Abderrahim Goumri of Morocco was runner-up in 2:06:04 and Vincent Kipruto of Kenya was third (2:06:08). Top American was Sergio Reyes of Palmdale, Calif. in 8th place (2:15:30, a personal record).

In her second marathon, Shobukhova, 21, beat Irina Mikitenko of Germany and countrywoman and defending race champion Lidiya Grigoryeva who ran 2:26:31 and 2:26:47 respectively. With her earlier wins at London and Berlin, Mikitenko did wrap-up another World Marathon Majors title.

2004 Olympic Marathon bronze medalist and 2005 race champion Deena Kastor of Mammoth Lakes, Calif. finished sixth in 2:28:50.

32nd Bank of America Chicago Marathon
Chicago, IL, Sunday, October 11, 2009

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MEN
1) Sammy Wanjiru (KEN), 2:05:41*, $175,000
2) Abderrahim Goumri (MAR), 2:06:04, $90,000
3) Vincent Kipruto (KEN), 2:06:08, $65,000
4) Charles Munyeki (KEN), 2:07:06, $30,000
5) Richard Limo (KEN), 2:08:43, $10,000
6) Wesley Korir (KEN), 2:10:38
7) Isaac Macharia (KEN), 2:11:09
8) Sergio Reyes (USA / CA), 2:15:30, $12,500
9) Tedese Tola (ETH), 2:15:48
10) Pat Rizzo (USA / MI), 2:15:48, $10,500
11) Ben Maiyo (KEN), 2:16:38
12) Mike McKeeman (USA / CA), 2:17:42, $9000
13) Drew Shackleton (USA / CA), 2:17:56, $7500
14) Kyle Shackleton (USA / CA), 2:18:00, $5500
15) Jeff Jonaitis (USA / IL), 2:18:02, $4000
16) John Lucas (USA / OR), 2:18:53, $2500
17) Aleksandar Tomas (SRB), 2:18:58
18) Morten Bostrom (FIN), 2:19:12
19) Bret Schoolmeester (USA / CO), 2:19:16, $2500
20) Matt Bartlebaugh (USA / MI), 2:19:22, $2500
*U.S. All-Comers record and course record (previous record, 2:05:42, Khalid Khannouchi (MAR), Chicago 1999)

WOMEN
1) Liliya Shobukhova (RUS), 2:25:56, $75,000
2) Irina Mikitenko (GER), 2:26:31, $50,000
3) Lidiya Grigoryeva (RUS), 2:26:47, $25,000
4) Teyba Erkesso (ETH), 2:26:56, $15,000
5) Berhane Adere (ETH), 2:28:38, $10,000
6) Deena Kastor (USA / CA), 2:28:50, $12,500
7) Mizuho Nasukawa (JPN), 2:29:22
8) Melissa White (USA / MI), 2:32:55, $10,500
9) Tera Moody (USA / CO), 2:32:59, $9000
10) Adriana Pirtea (ROU), 2:34:07
Other U.S.
12) Carol Jefferson (USA / MI), 2:41:15, $5000
13) Amanda Trotter (USA / VA), 2:42:44, $3000
14) Katy Trotter (USA / CA), 2:43:05

Results and more at: www.chicagomarathon.com

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Teen Phenom Cain Added to Star Studded Boston NBal GP – January 10, 2014

“Uptight” – ‘My Word’ column by Tom Derderian – January 6, 2014

Tolling the Bell for Sandy Hook, by Beth Shluger – January 6, 2014

USAIN BOLT WITHDRAWS FROM ADIDAS GRAND PRIX


Bolt‰Ûªs management team cites recent injury


NEW YORK (May 31, 2010) ‰ÛÓ Double Olympic and World champion Usain Bolt has withdrawn from the adidas Grand Prix due to injury, organizers announced Monday.
 
Organizers were notified on Monday afternoon by Bolt‰Ûªs management team
that Bolt is suffering from an inflammation of his tendon. He provided
the following statement:
 
‰ÛÏI developed a stiffness in my Achilles tendon last week and sought
medical attention. After careful consultation with Dr. Hans
Müller-Wohlfahrt at his clinic in Munich, I have been advised to take a
2-3 week break as a precautionary measure to avoid risking further
damage. Regrettably I will have to miss the IAAF Diamond League meeting
in New York on Saturday, June 12. I am well aware of the disappointment
for the fans in New York and around the world, but I hope to return to
New York as soon as possible.‰Û

The sixth edition of the adidas
Grand Prix on Saturday, June 12, will still be the deepest in history
as 26 Olympic and World champions and five IAAF Diamond League
ambassadors have been announced for the meet. The event, held at Icahn
Stadium on Randall‰Ûªs Island, will be the fifth stop on the inaugural
14-meet, international Diamond League circuit.
 
‰ÛÏI know I echo the wishes of all New York area track fans when I say
that we wish Usain a speedy recovery and look forward to welcoming him
back next year,‰Û meet director Mark Wetmore said. ‰ÛÏThe new Diamond
League format has helped us put together world-class fields in all of
the disciplines, so track and field fans will still experience the best
the sport has ever seen in New York City.‰Û

###

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Teen Phenom Cain Added to Star Studded Boston NBal GP – January 10, 2014

“Uptight” – ‘My Word’ column by Tom Derderian – January 6, 2014

Tolling the Bell for Sandy Hook, by Beth Shluger – January 6, 2014

Form Follows Fitness by Tom Derderian

June 9, 2020 | News | No Comments

Should you change form? Stay the course? NER “My Word” columnist and Greater Boston Track Club coach Tom Derderian gives his take. Click on “Download Now” below.

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Teen Phenom Cain Added to Star Studded Boston NBal GP – January 10, 2014

“Uptight” – ‘My Word’ column by Tom Derderian – January 6, 2014

Tolling the Bell for Sandy Hook, by Beth Shluger – January 6, 2014

Running USA’s Road Race Trends

June 9, 2020 | News | No Comments

Running USA’s 2011 State of the Sport – Part III: U.S. Road Race Trends  

Road race participation – with more female and male finishers, more races – has more record growth

 

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – (July 21, 2011) – The Second Running Boom,
despite the slow U.S. economy, continued in 2010 with an estimated 13
million finishers nationwide, an all-time high, and the largest percent
increase (10%) in road race finishers that Running USA
has ever reported to-date. Fueling this growth is the increase in
half-marathon, 5K and marathon finishers, female finishers, the
increase in charity running and a growing interest in the sport from
the general population.

 

Put simply, more and
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more Americans are finding that running is an inexpensive, convenient,
social sport to help them stay healthy and to tackle a new challenge or
goal. As Running USA’s National Runner Survey
reported, today’s runners are motivated to stay in shape, stay healthy,
have fun and relieve stress. As new and returning runners enter the
sport and road races, we will continue to see a tremendous amount of
growth in overall finisher totals, as experienced in the last two years.

2010 U.S. Road Running Snapshot:

* 2010 had the
highest percent increase in overall finisher totals (10%) in nearly
three decades. Growth such as this hasn’t been seen since the
pre-Second Running Boom in 1992 (9.2%) and recently, 2009 (9.0%), and
based on preliminary totals, 2011 should also show above average growth
as well in this country.

* Females now account
for nearly 6.9 million finishers nationwide (a record number) and
represent 53% of event fields, compared to only 25% in 1990 which had
4.15 million overall finishers, while males in 2010 also set a new high
with more than 6.1 million finishers in U.S. road races.

* Total U.S. running events exceeded 22,800, an all-time record high.

* 2010 produced a record
annual increase (tie with 2009) in total finishers for the
Half-Marathon (24%) and nearly a 9% increase in Marathon finishers,
which is the second largest percent increase for the classic distance
in the past 25 years.
* For the first time ever, the Half-Marathon
now claims more finishers than the 10K, ranking #2 next to the 5K in
finishers. Females continue to dominate the Half-Marathon race field
with 59% representation.

* The 5K is still
handily the road race “King of the Hill” with nearly 4.7 million
finishers (yes, another record) and had 36% of all finishers in 2010;
the universal 3.1 mile distance has been #1 in the U.S. since 1994 when
it surpassed the 10K.

 

For the rest of Part III on U.S. Road Race Trends, CLICK here.

 

 

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Teen Phenom Cain Added to Star Studded Boston NBal GP – January 10, 2014

“Uptight” – ‘My Word’ column by Tom Derderian – January 6, 2014

Tolling the Bell for Sandy Hook, by Beth Shluger – January 6, 2014

Running Community Caregiver – Frank Nealon

June 9, 2020 | News | No Comments

 

by Gary Atlas
 
(Megaphone
in hand, Frank rallies the troops/Photo by Ted Tyler)

 

“New England running,” steeped in history, tradition and
heroes. The threads of this sport that we love have been woven together by
thousands of races, millions of runners and countless hours of effort by
volunteers to make it all happen.

 

If you ask (as I did) Tri-Valley Front Runner, Frank Nealon,
to share his 32-year experience race directing TVFR’s Boston Tune-Up 15K, there
will be three things that he will show you: 1) his TVFR filing cabinet; 2) the
crawl space in his home loaded with everything you need to put on a race; and
3) his backyard shed containing a home-constructed PVC pipe race finish gate,
along with the TVFR banner. But what you will see and realize before anything,
is Frank’s heart and passion for his running club and the running community. In
a sport that has single name recognition for its runners named Joanie, Bill,
Johnny, Uta, Dick & Rick‰ÛÓthe Metro West town of Milford, MA has its “Frank”
when it comes to race directing and volunteering.

 

Frank is originally from Carbondale, PA and spent his
pre-retirement years as a Sergeant in the US Air Force. He traveled quite
extensively and finally settled in Milford with his wife of 56 years, Rita, and
their seven children after serving his country in Viet Nam. He then worked as a
guidance counselor for the Milford School district until retirement in 2000.

 

Frank is one of the founding members of the Tri-Valley Front
Runners, a club that was formed from the merging of three clubs that originated
in the 1970’s (Upton Road Runners, Franklin Bolts, Tri-Valley Front Runners). He
has been the race director of TVFR’s Boston Tune-Up for all of its 32 years. This
race, like all races that Frank directs, is simple, not flashy, lots of fun,
yet challenging.

 

The Boston Tune-Up was born in 1981 during a “let’s have a
race” discussion over a few beers with club member Dr. John Hoell at the “Pond
House Restaurant” that is now the “Marathon Restaurant” in Hopkinton. His first
effort in what was to eventually become the Boston Tune-Up 15K was actually a
half marathon. Simply put, “we didn’t know any better.” The race had a $3
registration that included a t-shirt and a half a keg of beer at the finish.
There were no water stops. Yet the race attracted 187 runners in 1981.

 

The following three years, the race distance changed to a
25K and then finally settled on the 15K distance. Under Frank’s direction, the
race remains TVFR volunteer supported, timed and catered.  There are no sponsors’ names on the race
shirts, and leftover money is primarily donated to the Jimmy Fund or Pan Mass
Challenge. There was prize money at one time, but Frank acknowledges that Bill
Rodgers was probably the last to receive a winner’s check. Rodgers also still
holds the fastest finishing time (46:08 in 1986) for the 15K distance.

 

One of Frank’s TVFR co-veterans is John Parker. John is a
senior member of TVFR and former president of the Upton Road Runners. He
recounts one of his many ‰Û¢Frank memories’ as a rarity on how the best
intentions can end up blowing up in your face: “It was a race in the 90’s at
the Whitin Community Center. A second cluster of runners made a wrong turn,
ignoring a road guard, and ended up crossing the finish line from the opposite
direction from the rest of the field!” Most race directors have a one-time
story like this that would make your stomach twitch and your head spin. Thank
goodness there aren’t any more stories like this in Frank’s archive.

(Frank
Nealon and long-time TVFR organizer Gary Atlas at this year’s 32nd Boston
Tune-Up 15K where Frank has been the RD since day one.

Photo by Ted Tyler)

 

Another of Frank’s signature races is TVFR’s 5-Mile Woodland
Trail Series that is held on the last Thursday of June, July & August. These
races start at the pavilion of the West Hill Dam in Uxbridge, MA and run thru
the woods and eventually back to the pavilion. Again, by design these races are
challenging, no frills, no tee shirt, no overhead and cost conservative for
all. The low overhead at Frank’s events are fed directly back to the low cost
for runners registrations. At last year’s August Trail race, Frank presented
winners with precious “10,000 year old antiquities”‰Û¢well, they were really just
rocks that he collected with his grandkids while hiking in Maine. The rocks
were meticulously cleaned and hand-painted with the race’s name and date. A
prize worth keeping!

 

Frank has also helped support the starts of other community
races in the Milford area. He typically helps design the course and work with
first-time race directors that prove to him they aren’t involved in “one and
done” events. He impresses on all, that each event is a learning experience to improve
upon. Years ago, he would drive and measure the course distance with his car,
laying down cones to mark turn-around points. Now, course design efforts are
usually made in partnership with John Parker and they use both bicycle and
wheel measurements to insure accuracy.

   

Frank’s level of organization for races is impeccable. Notes,
checklists and time-date schedules prevail.  Former TVFR president Sherry Brown recognized Frank in 2008
at TVFR’s annual banquet by presenting him with the inaugural “Frank Nealon
Volunteer Award.” The tongue-in-cheek award was a reminder of one morning preceding
a race in Milford. Frank was late in arriving to the pre-race setup. There was
big concern if he was “OK?” Sherry drove to his house and burst in only to find
Frank standing in the kitchen in his TVFR running gear, eating cereal and just
back from a training run. The start date was incorrectly listed on his bulletin
board!

 

At the banquet, she recognized him for his unwavering ethics
and willingness to help and often lead club activities. She acknowledged that
Frank is always ‰Û¢the guy’ marking the course early in the morning before a race
with arrows, lime and signs. There was a big relief knowing that all was A-OK
that morning and the race went off without a hitch!

 

Frank just celebrated his 83rd birthday last September and
continues to run a few races a year. His most recent race was as
lead runner of a relay team (including Paul Chamberlin (72), Ray Lussier (83),
and anchor runner/’rabbit’ John Parker (72)) at Stu’s 30K in Clinton, MA. Their
team, aptly named the “Gorgeous Grey Geezers,” completed the race in
3:48:49. Frank continues to be TVFR’s club ambassador, board advisor,
archivist and amongst its most active members. There are very few club
meetings that he ever misses and he is the first guy that you call when there
is a race to organize or a course to design.

 

As runners in the New England running community, we should
be well aware how fortunate we are because of those legends that ran &
organized races before us. Most continue to be accessible, helpful,
friendly and encouraging. Amongst those ‰Û¢legends’ that is still
passionate of fostering the running community is Frank Nealon. Thank-you
Frank!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Common Fence Point proved yet again to be a gem in the
rough, from the pre-race prizes (thanks New Balance and WIN) to the extensive
raffle, the top shelf Founders IPA and some fine weather served up for a second
straight year.

 

We met the women from the Finish For A Guinness race that
takes place in nearby Warren, RI (Marge Bellisle’s township) on Labor Day this
year, so if anyone wants to check out the 6th edition, it’s sounding pretty
good.

 

Next Pub Series race is Tavern to Tavern and RD Paul Vincent Clark was on hand.
There’ll be a raffle there for those with perfect attendance in the Pub Series
with City Sport gift certificates handed out.

 

Even though 2-months have passed since the previous Pub stop
at Evan’s Run, both men and women’s races played out the same ‰ÛÓ HFC’s TJ Unger stuck with SRR’s Jacob Barnett for a few miles before
young Jacob jetted ahead‰Û¢and no one was close to GBTC’s Sara Donahue as the 2008 US Olympic Marathon trialist placed 12th
out of 317 finishers at a 5:49 pace.

 

Unfortunately, RI’s Jackie
Jackman
couldn’t defend her runner-up position on home turf due to a blood
clot in her lung. Jackie’s back running but not racing, so much travelled Sarah Phillips holds the second rung by
a scant point over the B.A.A.’s Ginger
Reiner
.

 

Holly Madden, who
placed as 2nd woman, is top Master, as is Greg
Picklesimer
, keeping to a diet of 15-20 miles per week during the summer
heat waves but seemingly unaffected. Greg’s 27:04 showing also places him 3rd
overall in the standings.

 

William Pine of
FitzWilliam, NH, took advantage of CSUer Gordon
MacFarland’s
absence to claim the top 60+ spot while Greater Lowell’s Mark Reeder ain’t giving up nuthin’ at
50+ (considering he placed 5th overall here). The see-saw battle between femme
fatale Seniors Marge Bellisle and Liane Pancoast swung Marge’s way to put
her 2-points ahead of Liane in the Overall scoring and two points behind in the
50+ div.

 

Cape Ironman Bill
Riley
won the 70+ div. once again but has missed a race and with Dave Pember always steady the math
doesn’t look so good. Bill is now 3-points back with 2-races left and needs a
70+ runner to come between him and Dave‰Û¢but who’s that going to be?
 


 

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Kudos to Jan
Holmquist
, 69, who ran 7:43 pace with a cast on her broken wrist (that’s
All-Hurley stuff).

 

Cool air is on the way ‰ÛÓ See you in Cambridge on Sept. 22 – Men’s Standings   Women’s Standings