.The Nashville
Striders
Running Club


Middle Tennessee's Largest

   

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"After running regularly for about 25 years, I have only one tip: Force yourself to step out the door. Once you're outside, you're golden." - Jeannie McGrew, runner

 

Saturday, May 24
Nashville Civic Design Center U-10K Run
7:00 AM, Nashville Public Square. Info: Stacy Battles (615) 248-4280. ChampionChip Timing.
Nashville Striders Grand Prix Series Race
Volunteer!




Wild Thang Trail Run
9 miles

results


Gupton Dodge Tom King results

Photo by Elly Foster
5k
Half Marathon
5k corporate
Half Marathon corporate



A Nashville Race is featured
in this month's issue of

It has been just three short years since an anonymous poster suggested on the Nashville Striders' message board that we put a marathon in Percy Warner Park. Now after just two runnings, The Harpeth Hills Flying Monkey Marathon has become a cult favorite and has been featured in both Runners World (March, 2008) and Marathon and Beyond (Jan/Feb, 2008). The Harpeth Hills Flying Monkey Marathon is among the toughest road marathons in the country, and remains one of the most intimate. And it takes place right here in Middle Tennessee. The Marathon's success is, of course, due to the tireless effort and support from the Nashville Striders, the local running community, sponsors and the great volunteers. Monkey III will take place on November 23, 2008 with registration opening on August 1, 2008 at 8am.

Here is the link for the Marathon and Beyond article: click here

-Trent Rosenbloom


Race Judicata 5K/10K

5k results
10k results
5k team



27th Annual Rudolph’s Red Nose
Run 5K Run


results
photos




The Habitrot 5K Run

results
photos






photo by Elly Foster
results



Shelby Bottoms Boogie for Recovery 15K Run & 5K Run

photo by Elly Foster
15k results
5k results
photos



Bob Lunsford Christie Cookie 5K Run

5k results

corporate 5k results
photos


Online Membership

Runners wanting to become new Strider members, or members wanting to renew their memberships, may do so via the web.  Simply click here: "Sign Up Online" and follow the instructions.  We are using ACTIVE.COM because it is a secure connection (no one can access your credit card number or other information).

 

Membership Info
click here!



Flash
From
the Past


"FBI Man Runs Down Russian."
1952, Helskini, Finland
Olympic 3,000 meter steeplechase

(see left column)

 

Grand Prix Series
Standings are updated as of 4-5-08
Grand Prix page





The Striders will receive a percentage of your order
- Thank you


New maps
of Warner Parks


see Course Maps



Congratulations


2007 Boston Marathon
Nashville area finishers


1. Taylor, Stephen C. Nashville 2:47:23
2. Lovell, John C. Brentwood 2:58:26
3. Suppinger, Jeffrey A. Franklin 3:00:58
4. Murphy, Douglas Nashville 3:04:30
5. Callahan, Robby Murfreesboro 3:09:24
6. Kowalski, Kurtis L. Clarksville 3:10:55
7. Dunne, John C. Nashville 3:14:02
8. Rogers, Steve Franklin 3:15:39
9. Ryan, Sean P. Nashville 3:16:15
10. Genet, Jim Murfreesboro 3:16:27
11. Pierret, Mark C. Franklin 3:18:15
12. Boatwright, James C Chapel Hill 3:18:51
13. Zahn, James A. McMinnville 3:19:11
14. Caruso, Keith A. Brentwood 3:19:29
15. Williamson, Eleanor Nashville 3:21:35
16. Myers, Anne McMinnville 3:22:01
17. Harwell, Trey Nashville 3:23:10
18. Hoover, Fred L. McMinnville 3:24:44
19. McCammon, Kelly D. Nashville 3:24:59
20. Samenow, Charles P. Nashville 3:26:47
21. Dedman, Marc O. Nashville 3:28:15
22. Huh, Jeannie Nashville 3:29:25
23. Warren, Mitchum E. Nashville 3:30:02
24. Caldwell, Wood S. Nashville 3:31:36
25. Brocato, Laurie K. Nashville 3:31:55
26. Ashmead, Daniel Nashville 3:33:20
26.5. Burnett, Lynn Livingston 3:36:31
27. Arrant, Kellie Smyrna 3:36:32
28. Biber, Rachel A. Nashville 3:36:40
29. Murphy, Bob P. Brentwood 3:37:00
30. Van Auken, Linda C. Nashville 3:37:18
31. Sloane, Danielle M. Nashville 3:37:43
32. Catalano, Michael W. Nashville 3:37:57
33. Ryan, Emily B. Brentwood 3:37:58
34. Thompson, Matthew Nashville 3:39:23
35. White, Michael L. Nashville 3:41:01
36. Browne, James M. Brentwood 3:41:28
37. Edwards, Marshall A. Goodlettsville 3:43:15
38. Schnaus, Nicole D. Nashville 3:45:04
39. Sheffield, Shelby L. Nashville 3:46:37
40. Honea, Lindsay Nashville 3:46:52
41. Wallace, Billy Nashville 3:49:18
42. Jones, Lesley D. Nashville 3:50:01
43. Milam, Justin T. Nashville 3:50:06
44. Gammon, Lawrence D. Mt Juliet 3:57:16
45. Fisher, Sarah M. Brentwood 3:58:14
46. Tanaka, Kinji Nashville 3:59:36
47. Recker, Tony Hermitage 3:59:41
48. Eby, Elizabeth Nashville 4:00:34
49. Miller, Ginny H. Old Hickory 4:01:17
50. Miller, Larry Old Hickory 4:01:17
51. Rhode, Cyrus G. Spencer 4:01:36
52. Pfotenhauer, Malcolm V. Nashville 4:03:35
53. Burka, David A. Mt. Juliet 4:06:45
54. Wittman, Donna L. Nashville 4:07:34
55. Renfro, Jeannine A. Goodlettsville 4:07:35
56. Magill, Jenny Nashville 4:08:34
57. Johnson, Kenny W. Old Hickory 4:09:56
58. Bibeau, Diana Hermitage 4:13:06
59. Zani, Donna Franklin 4:19:34
60. Zani, Paul Franklin 4:19:35
61. Johnson, Journey Brentwood 4:25:23
62. Adamson, Roger Nashville 4:28:02


 



The Webmaster's best of
YOU KNOW YOU HAVE A RUNNING ADDICTION IF...


Suzy

"The Best of the Best"

1. You have more pairs of shoes than your wife. -Addicted

2. You manage to work your marathon PR into conversations. -Nini

3. You look forward to birthdays, especially ones divisible by 5. -gradyc

4. When your friends know more than one "Lisa" and they refer to you as "the running Lisa". -Lisa

5. You know that a "fuel belt" is not a shot of whiskey. -Amy Barrow

"The Best of the Rest"

6. You go backpacking for two weeks in the mountains and get out of shape. -jacobc

7. When it is your morning to watch your kids, so you drag them to a race to help volunteer. -Trent

8. You plan your knee surgery for the hottest time of the year so that you can be running again in time for the great
fall running weather. -Vicki

9. You can bring your "running" into any conversation, with anyone, at any time. -DennisC

10. If you plan to have your marathon medal, race bib and toenail framed in a shadow box together. -Nails 11

11. Your friend is trying to set you up on a blind date and the first question you ask is -- does she run?
-zodiac man

12. You are the only person with a 32 inch waist in a house full of fat people. -He Who Run with Livestock

13. You think Paula Radcliffe is hotter than Angelina Jolie. -zodiac man

14. You only drive around with a single key in the ignition. -angela

15. You hated Regina Jacobs because she kept beating Suzy Hamilton. -Suzy fan

16. You interupt your friend telling his story of how his heart stopped, and he had to have CPR, right after finishing his last Half Marathon, to ask what his time was. -MGB

17. You like looking at the Weather Channel again and again and don't seem to get annoyed by the music.
-Horshack

18. Everyone quits calling you by your name and refers to you as "that running guy". -Nick

19. When people are shocked that you actually can drive a car instead of running. -Donni

20. The sound of a gun no longer scares you. -jacobc


Quotes taken from the Nashville Striders Message board

 

   

Comments or suggestions?
Email: webmaster @nashvillestriders.com



Strider Recommended
Races & Runs

Wednesday, May 14
6th Annual Striders & Stripers 5K Run
5:00 PM, Charles Bass Correctional Complex, Nashville, TN. Field limited to Striders members. For entry information and invitation, please call Peter Pressman (615) 794-7171, or email pasta4run@aol.com.
Volunteer!

Saturday, May 24
*Nashville Civic Design Center U-10K Run
7:00 AM, Nashville Public Square. Info: Stacy Battles (615) 248-4280. ChampionChip Timing.
Volunteer!

Monday, May 26
Memorial Day Dash 5K Run/Walk
8:00 AM, Greer Stadium, Nashville, TN. Info: David Currey (615)275-7630 or Nashville Striders (615) 870-3330. ChampionChip Timing.
Volunteer!

Thursday, June 5
Nashville Striders All Comers Track Series
Vanderbilt Track
Volunteer!

Saturday, June 7
Doughboy Challenge 5K run
wheelchair and 1 mile fun walk, 8 am, Alvin C. York VA campus, Murfreesboro, TN, ChampionChip timing, Info: George Spence- 615 225 1375 or george.spence@genmills.com, register
Volunteer!

*Nashville Striders Grand Prix Series Race


NASHVILLE STRIDERS GRAND PRIX 2007-2008

So what exactly is a grand prix series? Take all of the Nashville Strider Members, a bunch of races, and a variety of distances over the course of twelve months and add them all up. And don't worry, you're not competing against everyone at a given race for points, this is just among the Striders. So if you place 5th in your age group, but are the first Strider member in your age group, you get the first place points for that particular race. Sound like fun? We think so. It all starts on July 28th at the picnic.
See Grand Prix Series page for more details.



Flash From the Past

"FBI Man Runs Down Russian."
1952, Helskini, Finland
Olympic 3,000 meter steeplechase

  1 Horace Ashenfelter USA 8:45.4 WR
  2 Vladimir Kazantsev SOV 8:51.6
  3 John Disley GBR 8:51.8


BY ELLIOTT DENMAN
Reprinted courtesy of The Star-Ledger...
(from 2002)

The Soviet Union was making its first appearance in the Olympics. The Cold War was raging. So headline writers just couldn't resist.

And Horace Ashenfelter just blushed. Never one to seek publicity, and certainly not someone who considered himself a celebrity, Ashenfelter became one of the country's biggest unsung heroes when he won Olympic gold in the 1952 Helsinki Games.

He chased down heavily favored Vladimir Kazantsev of the Soviet Union to become America's first -- and still only -- gold-medal winner in the 3,000-meter steeplechase, finishing the 7 1/2-lap race over 28 unyielding 3-foot wooden barriers and seven water jumps in a world-record time of 8:45.4.

The official U.S. Olympic Committee report that year called Ashenfelter's "the least expected of all USA victories."

This week marked the 50th anniversary of his memorable day on the world stage. Time to dig out the press clippings? Sip a little champagne? Take a 7 1/2-lap jog down memory lane?

Not quite. Things were same-old, same-old at a certain home in Glen Ridge.

To Ashenfelter -- who had to be reminded of the anniversary -- it is just another week. Another week to work on his 22-handicap on the golf course or play with his grandchildren or run his two miles or just sit and talk with his high school sweetheart -- his wife, Lillian.

"I'll be 80 next January (23)," he said last week. "I still run (a few days a week). I'm in good health. I have a great wife. Lillian's bright and talented and capable. We have a great family (four married sons and 12 grandchildren.) So I count my blessings."

He was a 29-year-old agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation when he went to Helsinki as a long shot with a personal-best 9:06.4; Kazantsev was the world-record holder (8:48.6).

But statistics did not mean much with 200 meters left in the race. Kazantsev, in front, stumbled slightly over the final water jump and Ashenfelter sprinted on to win by a 25-meter margin.

"I was very fortunate," he said. "Just think of all the other American runners, guys like Glenn Cunningham and Jim Ryun, who were the best in the world in their time, who never won gold medals. Or somebody like Henry Marsh (whose 8:09.17 performance has been the American steeplechase record since 1985), who never won an Olympic medal of any kind.

"Everything just broke perfectly for me. Everything worked out. I was in the best shape of my life at the best possible time."

The packed crowd at Olympic Stadium roared when Ashenfelter leaped over a railing, raced up 30 rows of steps, and planted a kiss on Lillian's lips. Her own memory of that Olympic kiss endures: "It was very salty."

At Collegeville (Pa.) High School, Ashenfelter played football, basketball and baseball, and found time to run a few races -- some in baseball spikes -- for the track team. His fastest high school mile time was an unpromising 5:09.

After a year at Penn State, he did three years of Air Corps duty before returning to State College, rejoining Coach "Chic" Werner's track team, and winning the NCAA two-mile title in 1949.

Many of his best performances, though, came after he moved to New Jersey and ran for the New York Athletic Club. They included eight National AAU titles, over three different distances, in indoor and outdoor track and cross country.

He won the James E. Sullivan Award in 1952, as the nation's finest amateur athlete. He made a second Olympic team in 1956, but barely missed making the steeplechase final at Melbourne, with his brother, Bill, there as a teammate. He was voted into the National Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1975 and the Sports Hall of Fame of New Jersey in 1998. Penn State's state-of-the-art indoor track facility now carries his name. And Glen Ridge hosts the Horace Ashenfelter 5K road run each Thanksgiving Day.

His Olympic triumph has encouraged legions of younger runners.
The first (Olympic) gold medal I ever saw was his," said Tom Fleming, the two-time NYC Marathon champion from Bloomfield. "When I was a high school kid, I had the nerve to call him and ask if I could come over to his house. I knew the worst he could say was 'no,' but he said 'sure' and I rode my bike over to his place.
"It's amazing that he's such a humble guy," Fleming said



 


The 2006-2007
Nashville Striders Grand Prix
Age Group Winners
See Grand Prix page
for full results

Female 20-24
Paige Rondeau
Female 25-29

Emily Ryan
Male 25-29
Jacob Carrigan
Female 30-34
Allison Larue
Male 30-34
Brian Taylor
Female 35-39
Tracy McGraw
Male 35-39
Greg Eubanks
Female 40-44
Jeannine Renfro (tie)
Pamela Hobson (tie)
Male 40-44
Keith Woodall
Female 45-49
Suzanne Thunder
Male 45-49
John Lovell
Female 50-54
Mary Orcutt (tie)
Jennifer Kimball (tie)
Male 50-54
Lynn Burnett
Female 55-59
Peggy Stanfield
Male 55-59
Marshall Edwards
Male 60-64
Richard Kalmanek
Female 65-69
Margie Stoll
Male 65-69
Zane Cantrell
Female 70-74
Valera Jones
Male 70-74
Charles Sharp
Male 75-79
Fred Lovelace