New Multisport Team to Launch in Seattle
Date: Tuesday, January 9, 2007
Time: 6:30 pm
Location: Greenwood Library (8016 Greenwood Ave. N. Seattle, WA 98103) Parking is in the parking garage.
Invite your Multisport friends to attend.
Come meet the new triathlon / duathlon team in town, Emerald City Multisport. Learn about all that it has to offer to the community from monthly clinics to weekly workouts. Join us for a healthy appetizer and discuss the launch of the new team.
Emerald City Multisport's Mission:
Based in Seattle, Washington, Emerald City Multisport Team’s provides enjoyment and fitness through consistent group training and coaching with the goal of improvement in performance. Emerald City Multisport offers an enduring focus on the "Multisport Lifestyle,” with emphasis of offering quality coaching, innovative workouts, fun team events and opportunities to build a community for our partners and sponsors. To meet the growing demand for multisport activities, Emerald City Multisport Team provides: events, camps, and clinics for the multisport community at large.
Emerald City Multisport offers ONE team for members to participate in triathlons and duathlons of all distances, off-road triathlons, winter triathlons, cycling events, mountain bike races, swimming , open water swim races, swim meets, running races, skate skiing, etc.
More info: www.emeraldcitymultisport.com
Husband and Wife Win Seattle Marathon
34-year-old Steidl won the University of Washington Medical Center Seattle Marathon in 2:27:51, but was being chased by Bend, Oregon's Andy Martin, 31, a professional triathlete who finished a little more than a minute later clocking 2:29:08 for the 26.2-mile distance. Nick Merrill, who was seventh in 2005 with a 2:44:22, took third in 2:37:49.
On the women's side, Uli's wife Trisha Steidl made it a perfect day for the family, winning in 3:01:36. Christine Rehwald, 27, took second in 3:05:15 and Ann Armstrong rounded out the top three in 3:05:39.
Complete for the marathon and all other related events can be found at www.seattlemarathon.org
Washington Runner Wins 24-Hour Run Championship
The top 10 men and women also included one "household name" celebrity of each sex. With best-selling books, numerous national TV appearances, and major print media feature stories on their resumes, Pam Reed and Dean Karnazes each found time in their busy promotional schedules to drop in for a weekend of round-the-clock running. Unfortunately, Reed, one of
Grapevine,
MEN
1) Alex Swenson, 42,
2) Roy Pirrung, 58,
3) Philip McCarthy, 38,
4) Dean Karnazes, 44,
5) Scott Eppelman, 40,
6) Chuck Goetschel, 40,
7) Akos Konya (HUN - guest), 32,
8) John Geesler, 47,
9) Bill Lockton, 58,
10) Rudy Afanador, 48,
1) Carolyn Smith, 41,
2) Rebecca Johnson, 37,
3) Connie Gardner, 43,
4) Laura Nelson, 41,
5) Debra Horn, 47,
6) Stephanie Ehret, 43,
7) Bonnie Busch, 48,
8) Pam Reed, 45,
9) Carilyn Johnson, 39,
10) Dorit Attias, 44,
*Pending selection to 2007 U.S. National 24-Hour Run team and participation in 2007 World 24-Hour (July 28-29,
Celebrated Distance Runner Kelly Holmes to Speak in Eugene
2006 TRI NorthWest Rankings Now Posted
Seattle's Jurek Wins Spartathlon Ultra in Greece
This past weekend in Greece, Scott Jurek, 33, of Seattle, Washington, 7-time winner of the Western States 100 Mile Mountain Race and two-time winner of the Badwater 136 mile race from Death Valley to the base of Mount Whitney, has become the first American man ever to win the Spartathlon.
The Spartathlon is run annually from Athens to Sparta in Greece. It was founded in 1983 by a group of London-based Englishmen (hence the name: SPART - for Sparta, ATH - for Athens, and LON - for London) to commemorate the historic run of the Greek messenger Pheidippides in 490 B.C. The Greek general Miltiades, anticipating an attack by the Persians north of Athens, sent Pheidippides to run the 245 kilometers (a bit over 150 miles) from Athens to Sparta to request military assistance from King Leonidas of Sparta in fending off the Persians. The Spartans declined, and Pheidippides then had to return by foot with the bad news. The Athenians prevailed anyway.
The 245K commemorative race has attracted many of the world's top long-range ultradistance runners. The inaugural race in 1983 marked the debut of an unknown local Greek runner named Yiannis Kouros, who won by over three hours. In the subsequent quarter-century, Kouros has proven himself to be the greatest long-range ultradistance runner in history, setting and re-setting world records from 24 hours thru 6 days and from 200K thru 1,000 miles. The race is usually run in hot daytime conditions and includes some gravel and trail sections in what is otherwise mostly a road race. It climbs some 3,000 feet over the Sangas Mountains more than halfway thru the course.
Until this year, only 6 men had broken 24 hours in the race, and only one, Kouros (whose course record is 20:25) had broken 23 hours. This year, Jurek dueled with two-time World 24 Hour Run champion (and former Spartathlon winner) Ryoichi Sekiya of Japan before pulling clear just past 100 miles. He then held on, alone, for one of the strongest finishing stretches in race history to win in 22 hours, 52 minutes, 18 seconds, becoming #2 behind only Kouros on the all-time course performance list. Previously, the best finish by a U.S. man had been Roy Pirrung's third place 27:56 in 1992. At that time, Pirrung was the U.S. 24 Hour Run record holder.
Mary Hanudel-Larsson, then of Toledo, Ohio, was the first American to win the women's division of the race, taking top distaff honors in 1984, then three more times, culminating in a women's course record of 28:46:58 in 1998. Remarkably, Hanudel-Larsson, who now lives in Sweden, finished third among women this year in 31:41:56, twenty-two years after her first victory, as reigning World 24 Hour Run champion Sumie Inagaki won in 28:37:20.
24th Spartathlon 245.3K
Athens-to-Sparta, Greece, Fri-Sat, Sept 29-30, 2006
MEN
1) Scott Jurek, USA/WA, 22:52:18
2) Ryoichi Sekiya, JPN, 24:14:11
3) Masayuki Ohtaki, JPN, 25:19:12
WOMEN
1) Sumie Inagaki, JPN, 28:37:20
2) Takako Furuyama, JPN, 31:40:31
3) Mary Hanudel-Larsson, USA, 31:41:56
Regional Runners Dominate 35th Anniversary Edition of the Portland Marathon
At the age of 23, Heidt captured the 2006 Portland Marathon title covering the 26.2-mile distance in 2:21:54, which is the best finishing time since 2002.
Danita Erickson of Tacoma, WA nabbed the women's overall title with a time of 2:53:18 taking the lead early and flying solo to the finish in the Park Blocks of Downtown Portland.
Additionally, a new wheelchair division record was set by Jerry Martin of Liberty Lake, WA. Martin covered the distance in 1:44:48.
Complete results and division winners can be found at www.portlandmarathon.org.