Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Into the sunrise
Thanks to Joe Ellman for sharing this photo on Facebook with me, jogging with two Middle Aged Machines running buddies -- on the left is John The Builder, and on the right is de la Hoya. Joe happened to be walking on the Walkway at the same time we were jogging into the heart of the sunrise last week. If the pace seems slow ... well, it was. Remember? I'm the weak-firing piston of the Machines, and Johnny and Grenceler were being nice to accompany me on the shuffle. Happy New Year.
41, by 43, a good read
In perhaps one of my oddest book recommendations ever, I would highly endorse the new book entitled "41" -- a poignant, personal biography of President George H.W. Bush, written by his son, George W. Bush. I'm not the most political person in the world, but it is safe to say my views didn't exactly align with either president -- especially W. However! This book is a wonderful read. Not surprisingly, the language and tone is simple and easy to read.
Through the book, which admittedly was not an objective work of history but rather a personal reflection, you get the sense of what a truly good and decent man the elder Bush was and still remains. He was a legitimate WWII hero, and his run of public service as an elected official was long and noble. He cared about people. Her cares about family. He wrote tons of personal letters to friends, family and strangers alike. He was a loyal friend. Truly, a good man. Through reading it, I grew to respect W a little bit as well, as he strikes me as a good and decent man himself, having been raised and nurtured by strong parents.
I will admit never to having voted for a Bush in any presidential election. After reading this book, I would say in hindsight I would have voted for Bush over Dukakis in 1988 if I were to do it over again, but I would not change my vote any other time. No matter. This isn't about politics. It's about people. This is a great book and I would highly recommend it, no matter which side of the aisle you reside politically.
Through the book, which admittedly was not an objective work of history but rather a personal reflection, you get the sense of what a truly good and decent man the elder Bush was and still remains. He was a legitimate WWII hero, and his run of public service as an elected official was long and noble. He cared about people. Her cares about family. He wrote tons of personal letters to friends, family and strangers alike. He was a loyal friend. Truly, a good man. Through reading it, I grew to respect W a little bit as well, as he strikes me as a good and decent man himself, having been raised and nurtured by strong parents.
I will admit never to having voted for a Bush in any presidential election. After reading this book, I would say in hindsight I would have voted for Bush over Dukakis in 1988 if I were to do it over again, but I would not change my vote any other time. No matter. This isn't about politics. It's about people. This is a great book and I would highly recommend it, no matter which side of the aisle you reside politically.
Armory, as a dad
During the course of the past two decades, I would estimate being in this building (the Armory) close to 100 times (if not more) as a coach. On Monday afternoon, I was there for the first time as a father, watching my son and his FDR track team compete at the Marine Corps Classic meet. He anchored the frosh/soph DMR and was thrilled to hop up on that banked track and spike up for the first time. He had tagged along with me once or twice as a youngster to meets and now he was there for real as an athlete. And I was there, for real, but not as a coach.
Friday, December 26, 2014
Merry Christmas
Here's hoping everyone had a blessed and wonderful Christmas. Here I am with two of my gifts -- a new winter hat and a new T-shirt. The winter hat is an obvious choice. The T-shirt is a nod to my all-time favorite sports radio personality Mike Francesa, with his caricature and the words "Numbah One" on the shirt. Those who know me well know how much I enjoy listening to Francesa on WFAN, the man who basically invented and revolutionized the sports talk radio format. He is, indeed, Numbah One.
In other news! While we are preparing for and celebrating the holiday, we were pleased to note that the number of page views on the fancy blog eclipsed the half-million mark. Wow! Pretty neat!
I will be taking a break from posting for a few days, as we continue with holiday celebrations and travel, but I'll be back at it next week.
Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, Happy New Year ... and Merry Fitness.
In other news! While we are preparing for and celebrating the holiday, we were pleased to note that the number of page views on the fancy blog eclipsed the half-million mark. Wow! Pretty neat!
I will be taking a break from posting for a few days, as we continue with holiday celebrations and travel, but I'll be back at it next week.
Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, Happy New Year ... and Merry Fitness.
Monday, December 22, 2014
Laundry at my house
For those of you who are not on Facebook and did not see Heidi's post about this there (she "tagged" me on it, so if you are a FB "friend" you did see this), here is a glimpse of what laundry is like at our house. Yes. Those are all mine, all size XL (of course). And yes. That's not all of them.
Also! Thanks to Schab for pointing out to me that we are closing in on a half-million page views on this fancy blog -- 500,000 page views, for those keeping score at home. So! Keep checking and clicking. Pretty cool.
Also! Thanks to Schab for pointing out to me that we are closing in on a half-million page views on this fancy blog -- 500,000 page views, for those keeping score at home. So! Keep checking and clicking. Pretty cool.
Saturday, December 20, 2014
The shape I'm in ...
With apologies to Jeff Foxworthy ... "You know you are getting old and slow when ... "
Today, I met up with a running group of friends that we have dubbed the Middle Aged Machines. Clearly, I'm the weak firing piston in this Machine. Upon arrival, one of the MAMs told me: "Oh Pete, glad you are here! I wasn't really feeling a fast run today, and it was great to see you because I knew it would be a much easier pace with you here." Nice. Very nice. Wow. Geez! How much clearer a message is THAT? No offense taken, men! I guess it's the Shape I'm In.
Today, I met up with a running group of friends that we have dubbed the Middle Aged Machines. Clearly, I'm the weak firing piston in this Machine. Upon arrival, one of the MAMs told me: "Oh Pete, glad you are here! I wasn't really feeling a fast run today, and it was great to see you because I knew it would be a much easier pace with you here." Nice. Very nice. Wow. Geez! How much clearer a message is THAT? No offense taken, men! I guess it's the Shape I'm In.
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Yet another video about our team!
Here is the link to yet another video about our program. This one was done by a student (Stephen Bowering) in a Sports Reporting journalism class at Marist. He dubs the video "Track Days." This video is staged like a news story or report, and it focuses on the amount of travel our athletes have to endure due to a lack of facilities. It is extremely well-done and succinct; it gets to the point, and does not try to "crusade" for us to have a facility. Check it out here, I think you will enjoy it.
Sunday, December 14, 2014
"Fast Feet": A documentary on Justin Harris
This is the third link to a video in the past few days, sorry about that. I share them because I believe them all to be worthwhile. This one is definitely worth 10 minutes of your time. It is an excellent documentary on Marist Running Alum Justin Harris, now assistant track coach across town at Vassar College. This documentary details his training philosophies and what drives him as a coach. He is early in his coaching career, but clearly Jut has had a strong and positive impact on a wide variety of athletes that he has coached, using an analytical and passionate approach to the craft. Very proud of him. Check it out, you'll be glad you did.
Prinz runs strong in Mass.
Marist Running Alum Sean Prinz strides toward the finish line in his MART singlet at Sunday's Somerville (MA) Jingle Bell Run 5K. Prinz placed seventh overall in 17:11 (5:32 pace). Check out the race results here.
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Club nationals: Group shot and results
Here is a wonderful (but incomplete) shot of the Marist Running Family at USATF Club Nationals at Lehigh on Saturday. From left: Pat Deedy, Tommy Lipari, Ryan Fitzsimons, Billy Hild, Adam Vess, Conor Shelley, Nick Webster, Matt Walsh, Laura Furlong. Missing: Katie Messina, Will Griffin. Here are the results from today's races.
Men's 10km
79. Adam Vess (Team Run Flagstaff) 30:57.05
158. Conor Shelley (New York AC) 31:51.98
190. Will Griffin (Garden State Track Club) 32:13.86
326. Nick Webster (Albany Running Exchange) 33:43.89
339. Ryan Fitzsimons (Central Park Track Club) 33:53.05
525. Matt Walsh (Sneaker Factory) 38:07.41
572 finishers, 72 scoring teams
Women's 6km
114. Katie Messina (New Balance Boston) 22:05.39
343 finishers, 43 scoring teams
For complete results and a list of the team standings, go to the USATF page here.
Club nationals: Action shots
Thanks to Deedy and Hild for providing me some action shots from today's USATF Club Nationals at Lehigh. Here is a sampling of what they sent: Katie Messina, running well in the 6km for New Balance Boston; Ryan Fitzsimons, tearing it up for Central Park Track Club; Will Griffin, racing hard and strong for Garden State Track Club.
December practices, in video form
Here is another video link for you to check out, this one far shorter and for pure entertainment value. You remember our "Decemberists on the hills" post from earlier in the week? The product of some of those still shots, along with other work at the next afternoon's women's practice, formed the material for this video posted by sophomore Janelle Solviletti for a class project of her own. Her friend and teammate Mark Valentino helped her with some of the footage from the men's practice. It is a fun video!
The Track Question, video project
In the previous post about the Track Question at Marist, I mentioned about how there was an unusual amount of interest on campus in our lack of facilities. If you have a spare 15 or so minutes, check out this video dubbed "Marist College Track Campaign," which was the capping project for a group of students who worked on this for the balance of the semester. We appreciate the effort and concern they put into this project and into this video. We hope the interest garnered by this and other classroom projects -- notably, all done by non-team members! -- will continue past this semester. There are many positive aspects to the video, but it is clearly flawed in the following ways:
1. Only one current Marist track athlete was interviewed. Katie Mac did a good job representing her point of view and highlighting the plight of our team in an honest and accurate manner. But she is just one person. Other voices were sorely needed. I mean, they interviewed our MASCOT before another track athlete. Really?
2. The opinion of some of our loyal alums would have greatly enhanced the effort of this video; they lived and breathed the no-track life for 4-5 years, and we are proud of them all.
3. The "person on the street" interviews, asking general Marist students of their awareness of a lack of a track, seemed contrived at best and unnecessary at worst.
4. A vital member of our track family -- assistant coach Terry Horton -- was dubbed "Terry Gordon" in the video. An honest error, but an error nonetheless. Sounds more like a NASCAR driver than a track coach!
Having said all that ... there were some compelling moments.
1. Their juxtaposition of the before/after at FDR High School in Hyde Park was fantastic and made their point about what a new facility can do very salient.
2. The interview with Dr. Brackett, Marist EVP, was refreshingly honest and informative.
3. Athletic administrators interviewed also expressed their opinions clearly and strongly.
4. The videography was very well done and clearly a lot of work was put into this.
Again, we hope that the thought process continues in all corners of our campus.
1. Only one current Marist track athlete was interviewed. Katie Mac did a good job representing her point of view and highlighting the plight of our team in an honest and accurate manner. But she is just one person. Other voices were sorely needed. I mean, they interviewed our MASCOT before another track athlete. Really?
2. The opinion of some of our loyal alums would have greatly enhanced the effort of this video; they lived and breathed the no-track life for 4-5 years, and we are proud of them all.
3. The "person on the street" interviews, asking general Marist students of their awareness of a lack of a track, seemed contrived at best and unnecessary at worst.
4. A vital member of our track family -- assistant coach Terry Horton -- was dubbed "Terry Gordon" in the video. An honest error, but an error nonetheless. Sounds more like a NASCAR driver than a track coach!
Having said all that ... there were some compelling moments.
1. Their juxtaposition of the before/after at FDR High School in Hyde Park was fantastic and made their point about what a new facility can do very salient.
2. The interview with Dr. Brackett, Marist EVP, was refreshingly honest and informative.
3. Athletic administrators interviewed also expressed their opinions clearly and strongly.
4. The videography was very well done and clearly a lot of work was put into this.
Again, we hope that the thought process continues in all corners of our campus.
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
The Track Question
Do we need a track at Marist? Uh. Duh! Of course we need track facilities at
Marist! This question seems to be bandied about more these days on campus, and
not just from our team members. There have been class assignments, capping
projects and more chatter on the topic around Marist than ever before. Non-team
members, working on these assignments, have struck an indignant chord: “How DARE we have a track team and no track
for them to train on! What are the administrators thinking? It’s not fair. It’s
just not fair!”
Do we need a track at Marist? For emphasis, as I often do to
the mild annoyance of those to whom I send text messages, I will answer this in
ALL CAPS so that my stance on this subject is clear: OF COURSE WE NEED TRACK
FACILITIES AT MARIST!
Now. Alert readers will note the very Clintonesque nature of
this answer (“there is no improper relationship…”) with the use of "track facilities" instead of simply "a track." A track? Certainly! But, what KIND of track? A-ha! We’ll get into that
in a moment … But first, back to this question of whether we NEED a track (there I go with the ALL CAPS again …).
Do we NEED a track? Don’t worry. I’m not going to repeat my answer in BOLD CAPS this time. However, consider
this Fun Fact: There are 11 schools in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
(MAAC), all of whom have cross country and/or track teams. Venture to guess how
many of those 11 MAAC schools have on-campus track facilities? The answer may
surprise you, and it is three (3!). So! We are in the majority in the MAAC, in
terms of track facilities, or lack thereof, at 72.7 percent of the conference.
Now. Imagine you are a Fancy Administrator at Marist. You
hear the clamoring for track facilities. You see the need for track facilities.
However, the majority of your MAAC brethren seem to be getting by just fine
without track facilities, thank you very much. There are national caliber
programs and athletes in the MAAC, many of whom manage just fine and dandy without
on-campus track facilities. Your very own student-athletes on the Marist cross
country and track teams are doing quite well. They are excellent students, and
they have achieved greatness in their sport – All-MAAC, All-East, All-Academic,
All-District, school records are set regularly. You see where this is going. We
have success. Our athletes are doing their jobs, quite well, indeed. And we do
it without track facilities. It’s the ultimate Catch-22: Succeeding without
track facilities lessens the urgency to address the need created by a lack of
track facilities. If it ain’t broke …
OK. Why do I insist on writing “track facilities” instead of
simply “track” here? First, again for the record, we would be thrilled with any
upgrade to what we currently have, which is essentially nothing. However! Given
the choice, we would much prefer – and would get far more usage out of – a new
indoor track facility. You remember the post from earlier this week, when we
were all uncomfortably numb out at the Vassar track? Add a stiff north breeze
off the Hudson River – the likely location of a new outdoor track would be
North Field, along the river – and it would be downright brutal. Again! Build
us an outdoor track on North Field, and we will strike up the band and have a
parade from the McCann Center down there in celebration. WE’LL TAKE IT and
we’ll be thrilled with it. But given the choice, an indoor track would get far
more bang for its buck in terms of usage, and even hosting of meets, than an
outdoor track.
If we got a brand new outdoor track, it would be difficult
to host meets on it because we do not have adequate grounds on the Marist campus
for the “long throws’’ – javelin, discus, hammer. If we got a brand new indoor
track, it would not be difficult to outfit it with all the indoor field
facilities to host meets of all kinds (Another Fun Fact: The first-ever girls winter track New York state championships was held in the McCann Center, in the late 1970s; if McCann could host a meet, certainly a new, state-of-the-art building could host one as well). Our team – sprinters and field events in
particular – would utilize an indoor facility for the better part of four
months, from November through March. In addition, an indoor facility with turf or
other synthetic surface on the infield could benefit almost every athletic
program at Marist for that same timeframe. An outdoor track would have great
benefit to the Marist community as well, don’t get me wrong. But from a
strictly track season centric point of view, an indoor facility makes more
sense for all of us; we can get through the relatively brief outdoor track
season by utilizing off-campus track facilities – getting by with a little help from our friends, as we have done for decades.
So, to all those in the Marist community that are beating
the drum loudly on our behalf for a track – THANK YOU! But please. If you
happen to read this, keep beating the drum for sure, but consider switching
your rhythm to an indoor track facility. We’ll take whatever we get, and we
appreciate the support. But if you really think about it, an indoor track makes
a lot of sense on a lot of levels. Again, we are thankful for all the chatter;
if means folks care about our plight. We’ll see what happens over the coming
months and years.
Consistency through the decades
Our good friend and loyal blog/program follower Bob Sweeney
of Colorado had a strong marathon run on Sunday at the California International
Marathon (CIM). Bob ran a slight negative-split effort of 2:42:21 – his first
13.1 miles in 1:21:14 and his second 13.1 miles in 1:21:07 – pretty impressive.
Here are some more incredible numbers, for those keeping
score at home:
--This was Bob’s third 2:42 marathon, and they are spread
out over three decades. He ran 2:42 at the Dutchess County Classic in 1998 and
2:42 at the 2003 Yonkers Marathon. That’s consistency over a long stretch of
time.
--This was his fastest marathon in seven years, since a 2:38
clocking at Yonkers. Not bad for a 47-year-old.
--He placed 3rd out of 551 in the 45-49 division.
--He placed 9th out of 2,030 in the masters division.
--Given his even-paced race, it’s not surprising his mile
splits were consistently fast. Save for a portopotty stop during Mile 15 that
led to a 6:39 mile, the rest of his mile splits varied between 5:55 and 6:18.
That’s certainly a nice neighborhood to be residing in when racing for 26.2
miles.
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Marist Gear for sale
A few alumni, friends and even current team members asked me if we were going to be doing a "Team Store" this year. I said "probably not" because in the past, the team store needed a minimum amount of purchases and I wasn't certain we would reach that threshold. Well! That problem is solved now, because there is a new Marist Gear team store called, cleverly, MaristGear.com. On that page, you can CUSTOMIZE most items with your favorite team logo -- track and field and cross country included! So go ahead and start shopping. Order by the end of the week to guarantee delivery by the holidays (geez, I sound like a commercial, huh?). Also! Right now, there is a $15 off deal for any purchases over $75 (use coupon code SAVE15). Unlike the previous "Team Store," it is my understanding the MaristGear.com never has an expiration date on it. Happy shopping and Merry Fitness.
Decemberists on the hills
If you live anywhere in the Northeast, you know what a truly miserable day today was. Here in the mid-Hudson Valley, we awoke to a sheet of ice. If you live in this area and tried to venture outside before, say, 9 a.m., it's a safe bet you either fell on your ass or came pretty close to doing so. Once the warmer air filtered in, it simply became a downpour.
However, for our 11 a.m. men's distance practice, there was still ice lurking on the fringes of the roads and most certainly on the sidewalks. So, I made the command decision that anyone who wanted to venture outside to run would be staying on campus so we could keep an eye on them. A few smart men opted for the treadmill. But! Most men are like their coach, and they despise the Dread Mill, so they layered up for a soaking wet run. Being a Tuesday, it was a workout day, so we ventured to North Field for some miserable Hoop Lot Hills. Tino tagged along to take some photos for a friend's class project.
The result are these goofy "GoPro" shots -- above, the men charging up the final hill with Stefan holding the GoPro. (Alert readers will note Posch in the photo; Bill was not playing hooky from work. Because of the ice, it was a snow day in the Hyde Park Schools).To the left, a Tino/Coach Pete GoPro Selfie, and Tino inexplicably standing out in the rain for yet another GoPro Selfie.
In December, as winter forces itself upon us after what was a lovely fall, we must adapt to the conditions as safely as possible.
Cuesta's blog
Those of us in the Marist Track world who are around Cuesta know that the dude is rarely lacking for words. Apparently, this goes for the Internet as well, where Cuesta has a sports opinion blog. You can link to it here. I'm all for this sort of stuff, but our assistant coach is way too Jets' centric. I mean ... who CARES? They are beyond irrelevant right now. Understand that I am not a Jets' hater. It's just difficult to garner any passion for the Green and White right now. However! Cuesta did have a pretty good post last year about the toughest events in track. Check it out. And if you are a Jets' fan, you might enjoy the rest of the blog too!
Monday, December 8, 2014
Forever Foxes set for Lehigh reunion
When they were members of the Marist XC teams, they ran at Lehigh's Paul Short Run (correction: Walsh noted that during the years he ran XC we did not attend PS). Now that they are post-collegiate runners, they will return to Lehigh's famous cross country course on Saturday for the USATF Cross Country Club Nationals. We are proud of our Marist Running Alums who will be wearing various singlets on Saturday down in Pennsylvania:
Ryan Fitzsimons:
Central Park Track Club
Will Griffin:
Garden State Track Club
Katie Messina:
New Balance Boston
Conor Shelley:
New York AC
Adam Vess: Team
Flagstaff Elite
Matt Walsh:
Sneaker Factory
Nick Webster:
Albany Running Exchange
Perhaps there are others, which would be great, and please notify me of any such omissions. Good luck to our Forever Foxes at Club Nationals.
Uncomfortably numb
Welcome to our sprint team practice at the Vassar Track today. Layers required. The air temperature was 24. There was no sun. There was little wind. It was just COLD. Not a great day for sprinting (above). Not a great day for standing out in the cold (left). There was no lollygagging today. Warmup. Drills. Workout (there is no pain/you are receding ...). Cool down. Ahem. Cool down? There was plenty of COOL and not much down. On this day, the "cool down" was a hasty retreat to the relative warmth of the vans. Cue up the Pink Floyd, but let's alter the lyrics. "I .... have become ... (un)comfortably numb."
Light the night
Members of the team pose in front of the newly lit tree in front of the chapel after Mass on Sunday night, in the annual tree-lighting ceremony. There's no more beautiful sight than that tree being lit up during the long evenings of December.
Updated Van Cortlandt Park all-time list
As one final addendum to what was a great XC season, here is the updated Van Cortlandt Park All-Time list for men. The cutoff time is 26:30. Last year (2013), we did not have anyone go sub-26:30, but fortunately this year we did. It also should be noted that the "newer version" of the Vanny course is a bit more challenging as the distance interval between the Back Hills and the Cowpath/Cemetery Hill part of the course is much shorter than the original course. Another longtime coach surmises the difference in difficulty may be as much as 20 seconds. Those things are difficult to quantify, but it is definitely more difficult. Anyway! Here is the updated all-time list:
Van Cortlandt Park sub-26:30 list, all-time (through 2014)
Name Time Month/Year
- Girma Segni 25:01.4 09/2008
- Will Griffin 25:03.4 10/2011
- Matt Flint 25:04.0 10/2011
- Mike Melfi 25:11 10/1998
- David Raucci 25:13 11/2008
- Arquimedes DelaCruz 25:17 11/2011
- Jerry Scholder 25:25 11/1976
- Conor Shelley 25:33.8 09/2008
- Kirk Dornton 25:38.1 11/2002
- Ken Walshak 25:47.8 11/2010
- Tim Keegan 25:49 11/2008
- Don Reardon 25:51 10/1987
- Mike Nehr 25:52.2 11/2001
- Pete Pazik 25:54 09/1984
- Ben Hefferon 25:58.6 11/1998
- Jason Grady 26:02.8 09/2000
- Matt Cole 26:02.9 10/1978
- Jamal Padgett 26:03.5 11/2001
- Greg Salamone 26:03.9 10/1999
- Mike Rolek 26:04.0 09/2007
- Ron Gadziala 26:05.2 10/1978
- David Swift 26:07 09/1994
- Ryan Colabella 26:08.2 11/2012
- Justin Harris 26:10.9 11/2006
- Johnny Lee 26:12.4 11/2014
- Geoff Decker 26:12.5 10/2003
- Curtis Jensen 26:12.6 11/2009
- Bob Coufal 26:14 11/1977
- Adam Vess 26:14.2 10/2009
- Fred Kolthay 26:15 11/1976
- Glen Middleton 26:15 10/1984
- Steve Hicks 26:18 10/2004
- John Keenan 26:18.4 10/2006
- Pat Driscoll 26:18.6 11/2001
- Tom Lipari 26:19.1 10/2011
- Marty Feeney 26:23 10/1992
- Brian Townsend 26:27.5 10/2011
- Tom Williams 26:27.8 11/2006
- Spencer Johnson 26:28.4 11/2014
- Pat Rynkowski 26:28.7 11/2014