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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 |
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Grand
Prix Series
The
Webmaster's best of
YOU KNOW YOU HAVE A RUNNING ADDICTION IF...
"The
Best of the Best" "The
Best of the Rest"
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Wednesday,
May 14 Saturday,
May 24 Monday,
May 26 Thursday,
June 5 Saturday,
June 7 *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.
The
Soviet Union was making its first appearance in the Olympics. The
Cold War was raging. So headline writers just couldn't resist. 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. "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.
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