Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The Olympic Year Launches!

Hey everyone!

Well what began one cold painful February morning as a random idea, has now become reality. The first post has been made to the website www.theolympicyear.com. It is not even myself opining about runners or running, it is a straightforward interview with America's Deena Kastor, one of only two American women to win Olympic Marathon hardware. Come check it out and enjoy, and pass the word along!

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Just Like That

Sammy Wanjiru is dead.

Just like that. Suddenly, without warning. Kenya's first ever gold medal marathoner has passed away. There will be no more races, no more medals, no more victorious homecomings. He will not defend his podium in London in a little over a year.

Does everyone remember last October in Chicago? That incredibly hot day, where Wanjiru, outlasted, and finally uncorked an unforgiving kick in the last 600 m to win the Chicago Marathon, and his second consecutive World Marathon Major title? That grit, and that determination were awe inspiring. He seemed down after ever surge put in by Tsegaye Kebede in the final miles, but in the end he was victorious.

That same determination compelled him and drove him in the stifling heat of Beijing in 2008 to the fastest time ever recorded by an Olympic marathoner, and the first Golden hardware ever worn by someone from Kenya in the marathon. He was merciless and relentless in the pace he set, and he suffered no companions. He did it on his own, and left the field behind.

How can this great champion no longer be with us?

Obviously the last 6 months of his life are wrought with strange goings on and a seemingly day time drama plot line. From the alleged attempted murder of his wife, who ended up dropping all charges, the bizarre car wreck he was in, and now an apparent suicide, all seem to show that something in his life was not lining up.

We still await word for what truly happened to Sammy. It appears he fell off, or jumped off the balcony of his home in Kenya. How high up that balcony is, or why he did it, or what happened in the moments before, none of us know, but I can tell you one thing, I hope it is all a giant mistake, I want Sammy Wanjiru to still be with us.

Don't you?

He made history, and he did it with an unassuming smile when the races were over, but an assassin's glare in the heat of competition. People barely knew who he was in Beijing, other than another up and coming Kenyan star, but he vaulted far beyond that in the years following. He became the odds on favorite to break Haile Gebrselassie's world record in the marathon. He seemed invincible. Now, he is gone.

He was Kenya's Prefontaine.

He was young. He was charismatic. He knew how to win, and how to do it with flare.

He was not ill. He had not been suffering from a disease. Twelve hours ago he was a living, walking, and running human being. This day was not supposed to end with the death of a rising legend. Neither was the night that Steve Prefontaine left this earth.

As we digest this tragic news, and the news and events become clearer, no matter whether or not it paints Sammy in a positive or negative light, lets remember him for what he would do out on the roads. Let us be inspired by his uncompromising will to win. Those phenomenal paces he set. The day that he tore through the streets of Beijing while others suffered the toils of a Chinese summer. The morning he finished off a 26.2 mile marathon in the last .2 miles by pulling away. Remember his smile and his charisma. Remember that he, and runners like him are a gift to us all who aspire to ask our bodies to consistently go to their limit.

Remember Sammy Wanjiru, the champion.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

How Will You Celebrate?

So how will you commemorate Paul Revere's great heroics tomorrow? Will you dress in period costume, ride a horse, and go down the streets of your neighborhood declaring that the British are coming?(if anyone actually does plan on doing this, please send pictures). Will you put an American Flag on your mailbox?

Chances are, unless you actually live in the state of Massachusetts, you have no idea that tomorrow is Patriot's Day, or the day set aside to celebrate Paul Revere's ride.

There is only one way to truly celebrate Patriot's day, and tomorrow, 26,000 people in Hopkington, Mass will gather, scantly clad to celebrate this event together over 26.2 miles. There jubilation will reach a crescendo when they are arrive on Boylston Ave in downtown Boston as they cross the finish line, and can officially call themselves Boston Marathon finishers.

There is a special aura that surrounds Boston, as the only way into this storied event is to train and run a previous marathon in a certain time. No questions asked. No exceptions. Run your time, and you are in. Well that is of course if you are one of the first online to actually register. You have to earn this one. You cannot sign up race morning, or just decide to do it on a whim. To run Boston, is at minimum, for the average Joe-a year in the making.

First you have to train and run your first marathon. Assuming you have been running for sometime, and have some ability, you have the capacity to gear up for a fast one as your first. There are three months of focused training time there. So you run your marathon. Congrats, you hit your BQ (Boston Qualifier). Now you rest a month or so, enjoy some turkey, start building back up in December, and then in January, you are hard at it again, for that race at the end of April. Okay, so 10 months, you get my drift.

115 years old tomorrow, it is the longest standing human foot race in America. Elites covet the crown in Boston. It is most definitely not because it is a course suited to fast times, the first time a runner went under 2:07 was just last year. It is not because it is in anyway an easy course. Fifteen miles of quad obliterating downhills followed by a very rolly remaining 11 miles is far from an easy day at the office. It is the prestige. It is the girls of Wellessly College. It is literally the race that has the actual Heartbreak Hill. The Red Sox fans cheering on the runners before an early afternoon game. It is a World Marathon Major. Elites come to win, and wear laurel wreaths at the end of the day. Next to an Olympic Medal, this is sometimes considered the pinnacle of running. It is a must on every elite marathon runners checklist.

Tomorrow will be a great day. Most of us will watch from home as the elites battle it out for the crown. Perhaps we will see Americans return to Boston glory, as a phenomenal field has been assembled there. As much as we enjoy watching them battle it out, there will be thousands more behind them making their dream come true. Pushing themselves, and reminding themselves during the pain, of all that it took to get to this point. The year, or years of trying. The long, dark, and cold months of training for a marathon in the winter will give them strength to handle the fabled Newton Hills that so eagerly look to squash the will of all who ascend. It will not be easy, but they will persevere and wear with pride the finisher's medal they so richly deserve.

Most importantly though, these runners have to run as fast as they can. After all, they want to come back next year.

Monday, April 11, 2011

High Hopes

I would agree, and so would most, that I have been fairly realistic with my expectations for being able to run again. I felt July 1, almost 7 months since the accident, was a very conservative and realistic goal to be back logging the “miles of trials”. That has remained fairly consistent until recently. Now I think my eyes are getting bigger than my ability to heal quickly.

Over the past few weeks I have become very brave with my attempts at walking without my crutch, and I must say, things are going very well. I had a surgery two weeks ago to remove a screw from right below the knee, and I can make running motions with practically no pain. The unfortunate thing is that I can tell my lower right leg is very weak.

Tomorrow I will go back to the doctor, mainly for a follow up after surgery, but I am really hoping that he will at least give me the go ahead to give up the crutch officially. However, lets be honest, I want him to say, "Looks great, you can start running as long as you can handle the pain and do not over do it." I will say if that is not what he says, I may get a little upset for the first time in this whole process.

The weather is turning, spring marathons are being run, I should be out there pounding the pavement. To say the least, the fire has not died. When I watch Boston next Monday, my cup may runneth over, and I may just go for a run. Do not try and stop me. I mean if almost 50 year old Joan Benoit can be out there gunning for another trials appearance, surely I can run half a mile on my bum leg sometime this week, right?

Crazy hopes and dreams aside, The Olympic Year, is going very well. Do not forget to bookmark the page, www.theolympicyear.com. I have press credentials for the Country Music Marathon. I should be hearing back from Amby Burfoot very soon about an interview, which is the most exciting thing to date. Still having issues contacting most athletes and their agents, but these things take time, and as I show up at events, my name will be out there and connections will be made much easier.

All of this to say, I am healing, and about to go out of my mind if I cannot run in the near future.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Thankful and Hungry

This past Sunday was yet another new experience for me. It seems the last four months or so has been full of those. Its not that new things and new experiences are bad, though I must say an easier road would have been welcomed.

Sunday morning was the running of the Germantown Half Marathon and Mayor's Cup 5k. This half served as one of my training races as I prepped for my first marathon in 2008. I struggled to stumble across the line in 1:29:38, and hurt for several days after. My dad did, however, point out to me, I had only been seriously running again for about 4 months at that point, so it was nothing to shrug at. That is a great memory, and now thanks to this race, I will have many more.

It was a perfect storm of a morning. My in laws had volunteered to watch the boys on Saturday night, which freed me up to serve water at an aide station along the route, I had to be there at 6:45, which ment a 5:30 wake up call. Monica was able to get a well deserved morning ignoring the alarm, and I was able to give a little back. What exactly was I giving back to though...?

We must go back to about a month after the wreck when Jonathan Justley approached me and the pastor of my church about raising money for our family by taking donations for running the Germantown Half. I said it sounded great, but was humbled beyond belief. What do you say to people who are willing to ask money of others so that you might benefit? Not only that, but they are willing to punish themselves over 13.1 miles in order to do so.It still blows my mind to even consider their thoughtfulness.

When I learned of the amounts of money that were being raised, I was even more shocked. I have done nothing to deserve this. Seriously, nothing. I was just on a sidewalk, just going for a run,and yet God chose to bless my family and I through tragedy, and gave others a chance to serve. The Sunday before the race, I was scurrying trying to think of a way to thank everyone. Obviously, thank you notes were in order, but I wanted to do something more. To save all the long story of how I failed miserably at that, I found a new route. It turns out Fleet Feet, one of our local running stores, needed help at their aide station, positioned at roughly mile 1, and then 11 on the way back. I was in! I wanted to help, and I wanted to serve those that were doing so much for me.

One of those people was my father. This would be his second half marathon, and truthfully something he feared going into it. My dad is in his upper 50's, and for most people in general, the endurance events stop being run way before that. He is trying to get in to the New York City Marathon to do something similar, but this race was a sure thing. He committed to upping his effort in order to be ready to go come race day. It meant so much to me to see him working his tail off to get ready for this, and it still does as he continues to try and get ready for New York in November.

The morning was great. The temperature, for those of us not running, was perfect. At the Fleet Feet tent, coffee, mimosas, and bloody mary's were what we were NOT giving the runners, but they were still present. It was a great time with other runners and enthusiasts of the sport. Not to mention, these are the people, who every time I walk through the door to their store want to make sure I am doing okay, and always ask how recovery is going. Incredible people. Go buy shoes today from them!

I watched the faces of many nameless runners go by, and high fived and whooped and hollered for my friends as they passed (granted they were in the middle of about a mile long climb, so they needed all the encouragement they could get). As everyone went by at mile 11, I waited for my dad, and then hauled my tail across the street to get into my car, fight race traffic, and scurry, with my boot and one crutch, about a quarter of a mile to catch my dad finish. He crossed in right around 2:25:00 or so, right where he wanted to be. I was so proud, he had worked hard, and he had done it for me, what else could a son want?


At the end of the day, my emotions are still a little scattered. I am so thankful to the willingness of everyone who literally taxed themselves physically on my behalf. These were not age group award winners. Not one of them will ever go under 3 hours for the marathon. Most did not even run in High School, yet there they were, out there, pounding it for me. I am going to carry this with me as I continue to move forward. If people who came out and hurt for me, and ran 13.1, and it was not even something they do regularly, then there is not reason why I cannot obliterate my training when I get back, and be an inspiration for others as they have been for me. I am not going to make any bold or crazy statements, but I have things circling in my mind. I will not deny that I have been inspired by each and every one of them, and I will carry their efforts with me at each race I run, on every hard tempo, and along with me as I chase my many goals that I still plan on achieving.

Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

The Olympic Year

This is one of my more exciting posts, and it has nothing to do with my recovery. Yesterday afternoon I purchased www.theolympicyear.com .

This is a brain child that is going to be a lot of work, but has the potential to be fantastic. I am seeking to get the word out about American and International distance running in the coming Olympic year. There will be exclusive interviews and insightful commentary from running's current and past giants.

This blog will still house my personal running stories and the documentation of my recovery, but there will no longer be commentary about the running world at large. Perhaps the random musing that has nothing to do with the Olympics, but for the most part, my energies will focus on Olympic preparation.

Thank you for following me here, and I hope you continue to do so. I also hope you move on to www.theolympicyear.com and become a subscriber (free) to its great content. Thanks again, and enjoy.

Friday, March 11, 2011

An Announcement!

So...got this email today. It read like this-

Congratulations AUSTIN SELBY!

You're eligible for guaranteed entry to the race everyone wants to run—the ING New York City Marathon on November 6, 2011. You must claim your guaranteed entry by 11:59 p.m. on April 19.

Let's not kid ourselves. I knew full well that I qualified automatically for this year's race the moment I crossed the line last November. I had already agreed with my wife, who so patiently endures all of my training, that I would not tax our budget by going to NYC or somewhere else crazy to run a race this next year. You see, that was all well and good, and then I went for a run on December 9th.

Getting hit by the car has managed to change numerous things in my life, and it would appear that this is going to be one of them. As soon as I received the email, I called my wife and told her what a bummer it was. There is no way that I will be marathon ready come this November, and really, who would want to go run 4:30 or slower, when you just a year before ran almost two hours faster? I should not even be walking yet, much less planning a fall marathon for this year (though, I am walking now:) God Be Praised! I mentioned that I would love a deferment, and my wife, to my surprise said, "Of course, you have to. Yes. Yes. Yes."

Well I then proceeded to read the email that I was sent, prepared to fire back an impassioned response, and more or less beg to be let into the 2012 race. However, the New York Road Runners Club, brilliant people that they are, had an option for such people like me. You can register, pay, cancel, and defer to the next year. Ah Ha! Brilliant to quote the Guiness guys.

So, without further ado. My next marathon, my return to marathoning, will once again be in the great 5 borough race. The ING New York City Marathon.

Working on my racing and training schedule as soon as I get off here. Will post it in the coming days.