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In this Edition of the Running USA Wire

  1. McDowell, Heaslett Win USA 50 Mile Trail Titles
  2. Meet Valerie McLean, 2004 Olympic Team Trials - Men's Marathon Race Director

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McDowell, Heaslett Win USA 50 Mile Trail Championships

Contact Information: Scott McCoubrey, Race Director, (206) 329-1466 / Brian Metzler, USATF Mountain/Ultra/Trail Running Council, (303) 546-6613

CRYSTAL MOUNTAIN, Wash. - (July 27, 2002) - Running with spectacular Mt. Rainier as a backdrop, Nate McDowell ran away from a deep field at the White River 50 Mile Trail Run on Saturday to capture the 2002 USA Track & Field 50 Mile Trail Championship. McDowell, 30, of Corvallis, Ore., ran in the strong lead pack for the first half of the race and then took the lead at about the 30 mile mark and cruised to a course record time of 6:50:39.

Anne Heaslett, 38, of Madison, Wis., overcame a four-minute deficit midway through the race to capture the women's title. Heaslett caught Petra Pirc, 30, of Salt Lake City, Utah, with less than two miles to go and finished in 8:13:17 (21st overall). Piric followed less than two minutes behind in 8:15:11.

Dennis Poolheco, 41, of Glendale, Ariz., ran a strong second half of the race to claim the men's Masters title with a sixth-place overall finish in 7:21:49. Luanne Park, 41, of Redding, California, easily won the women's Masters title in 9:03:11. She was the fifth woman and 36th overall finisher.

The White River 50-Miler is run on the rugged terrain of the Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest 75 miles east of Seattle. The up-and-down course varied in elevation from 2,000 feet to nearly 6,000 feet.

"Nate ran a great race against a very strong field," said race director Scott McCoubrey. "He was smart to hold back and wait until the second half to make a move. He knows how tough the course is. And the women's race was phenomenal with the way Ann chased down Petra. She ran strongly the whole race."

McDowell, a former track and cross country runner at the University of Michigan, earned his first U.S. title by outrunning one of the strongest ultrarunning fields of the season. He beat a cast of champions in Hal Koerner, 26, of Parker, Colo. (2nd, 7:01:11), William Emerson, 38, of Redmond, Wash. (3rd, 7:07:27), Karl Meltzer, 34, of Savoy, Utah (4th, 7:12:47), and Scott Jurek, 28, of Seattle, Wash. (5th, 7:16:20). Emerson was the defending national champion on the same course, while Jurek is the four-time defending champion at the Western States 100 in Auburn, Calif.

"It was like a peloton of runners for the first half of the race," McDowell said. "When we started to move in the second half, I just felt good. I felt strong. I said to myself 'I feel like running hard so let's see what happens.' After that I just kept pushing and pushing and pushing."

Heaslett was coming off a strong showing in the World Challenge 100K in Belgium last June, where she finished as the third U.S. woman. She was among the top three women throughout the White River 50 but was well behind Petra Pirc at the midway point. Pirc held a five-minute lead through 35 miles, but Heaslett made up enormous ground on the steep climb up and steep descent down Sun Top Mountain.

Heaslett caught Pirc with about seven miles from the finish line. The two traded off the lead three times before Heaslett took over for good with about a mile and a half to go on the winding Skookum Flats section adjacent to the White River. Krissy Moehl of Seattle, Wash. (8:22:44), Georgia Daniels of Tacoma, Wash. (8:51:35) and Luanne Park of Redding Calif. (9:03:11) rounded out the top five women's finishers. Heaslett finished third in the race last year (31st overall) in 8:37:56.

"I got pretty dehydrated last year in this race, so my biggest goal was to make sure I drank a lot of fluid and saved a bit of energy," Heaslett said. "The last part of the race through Skookum Flats is pretty technical, so you need to save some energy. I felt tired, but I knew we were near the end so I pushed with whatever I had left. I thanked Petra for a great race because I ran about 30 minutes faster than I did last year."

More than $10,000 in prize money was given to the top five men and women and top five Masters runners in each gender. McDowell and Heaslett each won $1,400 for their victories, while Masters champs Poolheco and Park each took home $750.

Sponsors of the event included Foot Zone Capitol Hill/Seattle Running Company, Montrail, Patagonia and Clif Bar. The 2002 USA 50K Trail Championships will be held August 24 at the Golden Gate Headlands 50K Race near Sausalito, Calif.

Bids for 2003 USATF ultrarunning and trail running championships are due August 15. For more information, race directors should contact Lorraine
Gersitz at (714) 526-5340.

White River 50 Mile Trail Run: USA Championship
Crystal Mountain, WA, Saturday, July 27, 2002

MEN
1) Nate McDowell, 30, Corvallis, OR 6:50:39* $1400
2) Hal Koerner, 26, Parker, CO 7:01:11 $800
3) William Emerson, 38, Redmond, WA 7:07:27 $600
4) Karl Meltzer, 34, Savoy, UT 7:12:47 $400
5) Scott Jurek, 28, Seattle, WA 7:16:20 $200
*course record

MASTERS MEN (40+)
1) Dennis Poolheco, 41, Glendale, AZ 7:21:49 $750

WOMEN
1) Anne Heaslett, 38, Madison, WI 8:13:17 $1400
2) Petra Pirc, 30, Salt Lake City, UT 8:15:11 $800
3) Krissy Moehl, 24, Seattle, WA 8:22:44 $600
4) Georgia Daniels, 34, Tacoma, WA 8:51:35 $400
5) Luanne Park, 41, Redding, CA 9:03:11, $200

MASTERS WOMEN (40+)
1) Luanne Park, 41, Redding, CA 9:03:11 $750

Race website: http://www.whiteriver50.org



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Valerie McLean Interview

Running USA reporter Patrice Malloy recently spoke with Valerie McLean, president of Birmingham Marathon, Inc. and race director of the Mercedes Marathon which debuted in Birmingham, Alabama on February 10, 2002. McLean was also instrumental in preparing Birmingham's winning bid which secured the rights to host the 2003 USA Men's Marathon Championship and 2004 U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Men's Marathon.

Running USA: Birmingham competed with heavyweight cities including New York City, Washington D.C. and St. Louis for the rights to host the 2003 USA Men's Marathon Championship and 2004 Olympic Team Trials - Men's Marathon. Tell us about your winning bid.

Valerie McLean: When I started working with Gene Hallman at the Alabama Sports Foundation, we both had the same goal of winning the bid for at least one of the Trials events. However, I was more focused on what the athletes wanted and Gene was more focused on what USATF and USOC were looking for. It turned out to be a wonderful partnership when it came to orchestrating our bid. We both knew it would be impossible to compete with the reputations of the New York, D.C. and St. Louis unless we focused on an athlete and spectator-friendly bid. Birmingham is a small big city with a big heart and lots of southern hospitality. Because of this, we felt our bid and our city would provide better exposure for the athletes and less stress for the spectators.

Gene's company has had experience with the USOC in the past when Birmingham played host the U.S. Olympic Soccer preliminary rounds to the Atlanta Olympic Games. He knew all of the obstacles and limitations associated with USOC sponsorships, so that gave us some insight on how to pull our bid together. Having put on many races over the years and after talking with numerous elite athletes, I was more concerned with taking care of our American athletes. Many of the long-distance runners that I spoke with felt they were overshadowed by the foreign runners when their championship races were held in conjunction with another race. So we thought we'd give them their own race(s) where they could be in the spotlight where they belong, but combine the race(s) with the Mercedes Marathon weekend to make it more exciting. Gene and I both felt that development funds ($100,000) were needed to assist our LDR athletes with their training to achieve the IAAF standards, so we included that in our bid along with the opportunity for athletes to come to Birmingham and train for the 2003 USA Championships and the 2004 Olympic Trials.

RUSA: As recently as 2000, Birmingham was without a marathon and now the city is hosting the 2004 Trials. Did the successful launch of the Mercedes Marathon give Birmingham its jump-start into the marathon business?

VM: Actually, Birmingham hosted the Vulcan Marathon for 25 years. But like lots of older, smaller races, this one had seen better days and needed to end. A couple of years ago, we asked the event organizers to dissolve the Vulcan Marathon so that a new event could come to town. We approached Mercedes-Benz to be title sponsor of a new marathon in Birmingham and they quickly jumped on board. (Most folks around the country don't realize that Mercedes-Benz has a plant just outside of Birmingham where their M-Class SUV's are produced.) The overwhelming local, regional and national response to the Mercedes Marathon definitely has given Birmingham a jump-start in the marathon business.

RUSA: What are the interrelationships between the elite and the people's races, if any.

VM: There will be many interrelationships between the races. In 2003, we will host the USA Men's Marathon Championships on Saturday morning, February 8, while the Mercedes Marathon will be run on Sunday morning, February 9. We want to take this weekend and make it a "trial of the Trials", so to speak. The courses will be different, in that the Championships will be run on a criterium course, mostly through downtown Birmingham, and the Mercedes Marathon will run its regular course throughout the city. In doing it this way, the Mercedes Marathon participants will be able to actually watch the elite men race before they participate in their own race on the following day. It should make for an exciting weekend for everyone. As for 2004, we'll just take what we learn from the 2003 weekend to make both races better and make any necessary adjustments to the Trials course (based on what the athletes tell us) and to the spectator viewing opportunities. 2003 will no doubt be a learning experience!

RUSA: Will Mercedes-Benz play a role in the 2003 national championship race or the 2004 Olympic Trials?

VM: Although Mercedes-Benz is title sponsor to the Mercedes Marathon, we will have to wait and see what limitations and restrictions of the USATF and the USOC will be for sponsorships of the two events.

RUSA: What has been the community's reaction to the Trials coming to Birmingham?

VM: Unbelievable! This town went nuts when Gene brought Olympic Soccer here a few years back, and is already getting excited about the Trials. Lots of "runners" are coming out of the closets with their old running shoes and getting in shape to be a part of the big weekend. The city, county and state governments are all getting behind us to help Birmingham, Alabama shine when everyone comes to town. Scott Strand, our local elite runner, qualified for the Trials at the 2001 New York Marathon and he's quickly becoming the local hero or hometown favorite. Scott's been working with me for several years at my local running shop, The Trak Shak, and is now a partner at our new second location. People come in just to meet him so they can say they know someone running the Trials. It's been great!

RUSA: Will there be any other festivities or activities surrounding the marathons?

VM: Yes. Plans are still in the works on what all will be happening throughout the weekend, but there will be plenty for the marathon participants to do and hopefully lots of opportunity for them to meet the elite Americans. The Mercedes Kids Marathon will take place on the Saturday morning with the Championships and the Trials. Just imagine how pumped up those kids will be knowing they ran at the same time the Olympic Trials were occurring.

RUSA: Hills, heat and humidity dramatically hampered times in the men's 2000 Olympic Marathon Trials resulting in only the top male qualifying for the Olympics team Let's talk about the Birmingham course. How many hills and turns will the runners encounter?

VM: Actually, we're keeping it as flat as we possibly can for Birmingham. The first seven miles will actually be a slight downhill before jumping onto a mostly flat criterium loop through downtown. Scott Strand, our local qualifier, and Clint Verran, who was second American in New York, ran through many possible versions of the course before settling on this one. They both feel strongly that we can get three Olympic qualifiers on this course.

RUSA: During the past four years, Birmingham temperatures has risen over 70 degrees a total of ten times during the first two weeks of February. The daily low temperature has dipped below freezing 17 times during the same time period. How do you predict the weather will play out on the day of the Olympic Trials, February 7, 2004?

VM: Of course I'm predicting perfect conditions! For the past six years we have hosted a half-marathon and now the Mercedes Marathon and Half-Marathon on this same weekend. We've been very fortunate with the weather in the past and expect no less in 2003 and 2004.

RUSA: Tell us about your professional and running background.

VM: This event stuff is a volunteer thing for me, as crazy as that sounds. I started putting on races because it benefited my business so much. I own the local running store in town - The Trak Shak. I can't tell you how many other race directors have told me how crazy I am not to take a fee, but I have fun doing it, and like I said, my business benefits. My shop has become running headquarters in town and everyone loves to hang out there.

I ran cross-country and track in high school - even made All-American my sophomore year. I helped with the track team while at Auburn University, and have always run to stay in shape. I ran my first of five marathons at age 29, opened my store while training for it, and have not looked back since then. Running to me is an incredible sport. It's a sport where people from all walks of life join together to train and hang out with the common bond of being one of those "crazy people that love to run for some reason." It's very rewarding to come to work, enjoy the people I work with (all of my employees are runners), enjoy my customers, and to basically enjoy every minute of what I do. I'm a 37-year-old mother of a beautiful two-year-old son, Breck. But after the Trials, I think I'll focus on being the PTA mom!

For more information on the event, go to the race website: http://www.mercedesmarathon.com


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Ryan Lamppa, Running USA Media Services
USATF Road Running Information Center
5522 Camino Cerralvo
Santa Barbara, CA 93111
(805) 696-6232, fax (805) 696-6252

http://www.runningusa.org
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