Showing posts with label NYC marathon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYC marathon. Show all posts

Monday, January 2, 2012

Resolutions already broken!

So it's only the second day of the new year and I've already had to break a resolution: signing up for the NYC marathon lottery. I'm still torn and a little on the fence but when I found out this years steep entry fee {$266} I began to re-think the idea. It is an AWESOME race and I love it so, so much but the last time I ran it, in 2006 it was $160, last year it was $200 which was hard to swallow but I was willing and then for it to have gone up $66 more a year later without garanteed entry and harder qualification times I'm thinking a rebellion is in order! But have no fear, I'm in search of another fall marathon...Maybe Hartford (most practical), Philly... Besides the steep entry fee I don't know how well my first marathon post-babies is going to go and I don't want to run a bad NY if I'm not able to get into the shape I would like to be in for a marathon. So we'll have to see what comes of my training and which marathon makes the most sense for me to run this year (if any).

While we're on breaking resolutions; I didn't make it into bed by 1am last night either...better luck tonight! Although there is a bag I want to get finished so I may be a little late again, since I don't have the will power to leave a few finishing touches until the next day. After lil sis went on my Etsy site to check what I had going on and reported back she thought there'd be more bags it got me thinking I DO need to get sewing more bags. That really was the whole thought/idea behind starting an Etsy site. So I'm challenging myself to make a bag a week - 52 bags this year!! Off the top of my head, I started sewing bags about two years ago and I think I have made 15 bags. 52 - lofty goal, we shall see.... Hopefully tomorrow I'll have pics of bag #1!

And for my 366 pic project; picture D365:


Emma-lou's 3rd birthday celebration!
Incredible how much a little girl can grow in 1 year! It's so awesome to watch from the sidelines and it makes me so excited for what our future has in store for us with V & H.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

A Class Act

This past Sunday, Meb Keflezighi, made history. Not only did he run a personal best AND win his first marathon ever, he became the first American to win the NYC marathon in 27 years. 27 YEARS!!! I can go on and on but really I just wanted to share this article that a friend of mine shared with me.



Keflezighi posts an historic NYC Marathon win for a fallen friend
Author: David Epstein
Source: SI.com

If you're 34-year-old Meb Keflezighi, what tribute could you possibly come up with that would be a fitting honor for your friend and training partner Ryan Shay, who collapsed and died in November 2007 during the U.S. Olympic marathon trials in New York City?

In a news conference before the 2009 New York City Marathon, you could ask for a moment of silence in his honor. Check.

Or, just as you turn into Central Park between miles 23 and 24, you could break away from Robert Cheruiyot, the four-time Boston Marathon champion from Kenya, en route to becoming the first American to win in New York since Ronald Reagan was settling into his first term 27 years ago. Check.

And then, less than a mile later at the bottom of Cat Hill, now that you are solidly in the lead with the television cameras -- and the eyes of the world -- on only you, you can make the symbol of the cross on your chest as you fly by the spot where Shay, a Notre Dame grad, fell. Even though Shay's father, Joe Shay, isn't watching the race -- there are too many faces he painfully recognizes -- he might say afterward that you are "one of the class acts in all of sports" and that your gesture is "just so significant." Check.

And just to make it all more meaningful, perhaps it can come after a year-and-a-half of rehab following that terrible November day two years ago, when Shay died and when your body fall apart. When you got sick days before the race, cramped up because of dehydration during it, and ended up crawling around your hotel room on all fours because of the pain in your legs. When, for days "you practically couldn't get up and walk to the bathroom," according to your wife, Yordanos. And when, months later, a doctor would find the stress fracture in your hip that had you thinking about hanging up your racing flats for good.

You could go through all that and then return to New York in 2009 to run a personal best and win a marathon for the first time, well after people were beginning to "write you off" because of age and injuries, as Ryan Hall, the most-hyped U.S. marathoner who finished three places behind you on Sunday, put it. Check.

That would be even more perfect because, instead of retiring, you would have struggled back to health and all the way back to the starting line in New York, where you could force yourself to forget that nearly all the two million spectators lining the New York City course expect an athlete running for Ethiopia, Kenya, Brazil or Morocco to pass first. Check.

That last part shouldn't be too terribly difficult, given that you already banished the naysayers when you took silver at the Olympic marathon in Athens, the first medal for a U.S. man since Frank Shorter took silver in 1976. And even before that, you joined a generation of American distance runners, like Shay, who knew that Americans could run with Africans, and who were resolved never to let there be another time like 2000, when the U.S. qualified only one runner for the Olympic marathon.

And maybe you can make sure, on race day, to be the only runner out there wearing a USA singlet, so that it will be that much more unique when you enter the last quarter-mile slapping the letters on your chest and remembering how Shay took personal offense when people said you weren't a "real American" even though you've been here since you were 12. And so that it will be that much more special when, in post-race interviews, you recite the exact day you came to America -- October 21, 1987 -- from Italy after your family left Eritrea as refugees; and when you mention how much you loved going to school at UCLA, and how grateful you are for the opportunities, in school and in sport, that America gave you, and how proud you were to become a citizen in 1998. Check.

And then, when you cross the line in first, you can let the tears of sorrow and the tears of joy mix as they flow down your cheeks. Check.