Sunday, March 31, 2013

Wrapping up Richmond: Run your mouth; run your feet

What was I thinking? What the HELL was I thinking? As I type this, we are on a long bus ride home from beautiful Richmond, where we spent the last two days at the Fred Hardy Invitational. Great meet, great campus, great Southern hospitality. We really enjoy our stay down here, and – with apologies to our friend Joe Compagni down at Monmouth, who also puts on a great, early-season meet -- it appears it will find a regular spot on our outdoor schedule. What, pray tell, could bust up the feel-good vibe of a post-spring break, three-day, early-spring track trip to Richmond? Three days of verbal barrage, a steady stream of run-on sentences and rambling thoughts, from the one and only Will Schanz.

Ah, Schanz. You know him. The guy after whom we named our excellent fartlek workout; the guy who is never at a loss for words. The guy who never, ever, ever, stops talking. Rumor has it, he even talks in his sleep. A lot. Three days of non-stop words. What was I thinking? Schanz talks about everything: Politics. Sports. Track. His student-teaching placements. His future career aspirations. Track. Shaker. Section 2 track. Shaker. Track. His running. His training. His racing. His teammates’ running. His teammates’ racing. What’s your XC schedule like next year? (Even though he is graduating and will be gone from our ranks!) Track. Shaker. WAMC Northeast Public Radio. Shaker. Track. Some lame-brained, “distance 4x400 relay” at the end of Saturday’s meet. You name it, Schanz is never at a loss for words. Wait! That last one. The relay. It dominated the conversation at the meet last night; at dinner; at breakfast; at the meet today. Enough! I’m trying to coach a team already.

Ah. But we got the last laugh. Check out his “split” from that lame-brained 4x400 relay of his. Yeah. Pretty slow. Looked even worse in person. One of his classmates, housemates and teammates (I will not divulge his complete identity here, but his first name rhymes with “Patt” and his last name is spelled “Panebianco”) described it this way: “I’ve never seen anyone so slow on a relay.” Oh, it was slow, baby. And it was fun. His teammates lined every inch of the track down there, cheering him on and most likely poking a little fun at him.

However, in fairness to Schanz (and really, he does not deserve fairness, but I’m that kind of guy), you should know what preceded his stellar 60.5-second anchor leg (And please. Take the word “anchor” literally here). For starters, our boy was part of the Marist mob scene in the men’s 5,000-meter run on Friday night (you may have noticed that we had 11 finishers in that distance race!). Schanz pointed out to me that it was his first outdoor track race in nearly two years. There was a break in the noise last spring as he studied abroad. Clearly, there was a lot of rust to shake off, but Schanz raced hard and raced well. He has been student teaching and his training has suffered as a result. I will be serious now and point out that, all things considered, Schanz gets everything out of himself in these races and promises a huge improvement the next time out, in a few weeks.

Then, today, as instructed by his coach, he went out for the usual 15-mile long run. From what I hear from his loyal teammates who pounded the pavement with him for more than an hour and a half, Schanz was spewing out a blue streak of complaints every step of the way. Vintage Schanz. Afterwards, like any good distance runner, he needed some replenishing. So he and his teammates ventured to the University of Richmond Cafeteria, which apparently is the Best Cafeteria in the World. Everybody raved about it. Most notably, Schanz did NOT complain about it, which surely speaks volumes of its qualities. So yeah: A hard race, a long run, a big lunch. Pretty difficult prelude to a hard anchor leg (remember: take “anchor” literally!). More words than you can imagine (I think it’s fitting that this post is ridiculously long, and interjected with several parenthetical side notes … like this … it’s a little snapshot of a three-day weekend with Schanz). It was all in good fun, and we all got our work in, for the first meet of the outdoor season.

Schanz pointed out that there are 57 days till he graduates. Some teammates may be counting the hours along with the days, and there are times when we would like him to just, you know, tone it down – and quiet down -- a little. But there is no doubting his loyalty to our program. And who knows? There may be a quiet moment at a meet in the future where maybe, just maybe, we will miss Schanz. It’s possible. But not likely!

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