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Mature Runner: New Over 70 WR Quietly Set A Few Years Ago & Other Musings…

June 27, 2022/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

By David Summerfield

I’m at it again…and another marathon WR goes to Jeannie Rice at the Chicago Marathon, which keeps allowing (facilitating) world records to be set. Yes, this is 4-years old news, but I keep digging up new records. This is the race Brigid Kosgei (see article 2 months ago) ran in a 2:18:35 (getting ready to break Paula Radcliff’s WR of 2:15 in 2019. And, as you might remember, she took another shot at Paula’s record, and ran a 2:14:04 the next year, again in Chicago).

(picture/article by Sarah Lorge Butler – Runners World – Oct 12, 2018)

Back to Jeannie Rice, of Mentor, OH, 25 miles east of Cleveland. She was a 70-year old, and is having the time of her life (pun) right now. I always wonder how on Earth these records keep getting smashed. Jeannie is a realtor (now part-time), going around selling properties, and at 70 – is faster than any other 70-year old. What? My 1st question is why is Jeannie still a realtor….maybe once a realtor, always a realtor? 2 days after her WR, she was back at work (in her realtor heels) wrote Sarah Butler of Runners World. She came to the USA from

Korea as a 19 year-old, and didn’t start running until feeling “chubby” after a trip to see relatives in Korea. She was 34 then. She wanted to lose weight (ever heard that before?…I can relate 🙂 That’s when she found out she could run pretty fast, and started winning local races. From the article, it is VERY clear she is competitive, and got used to winning her age division…and that was 36 years ago. She admits to escaping the brutal Ohio winters by going to Florida for 5 months (all right, she’s probably not selling too many houses in Florida). She started out with a 3:45 marathon after starting running for only a year. That was followed by a 3:16 marathon – I guess she found out she really really loved to run. And I thought I was obsessed: by 2018, she had run 116 marathons, and wanted to win her division in all the world’s major races (Great Wall of China, New Zealand, Prague, Paris, London, Madrid, Dublin, and Iceland). From the Runners World article by Sarah Butler: “Rice makes no concessions to her age. ‘I don’t feel 70 at all,’ she said. ‘It’s too bad the number is there. I’d rather be 50. I’m sure the time will come. I’m probably not going to be able to run like this when I’m 80.’” (Poor Jeannie – is it okay for me to say that?)

(I love the fact that one of my marathon heroes, Joan Benoit Samuelson, was the only female who beat her in Chicago – as a 61-year old – and she ran a 3:12:13. Here’s a picture of Joanie doing “speedwork” at a 5km as a prep for Chicago:

Joanie as a 60-year old “pinterest.com”

Most of you won’t remember my article maybe 20 years ago about my running along a little road on an early Sunday morning near Falmouth, Maine. I was visiting my sister, doing my regular weekend Long Run of the week. I caught up to 2 runners, and they were having a great conversation. They were cool with me running with them. It turns out it was Joan running with her father. (I felt like I had been graced by the gods!)

Back again to Jeannie. After her 3:27:50 in 2018, she entered the BMW Berlin Marathon the next year (I guess Berlin wants to sell more BMWs, or give them to the winners so they don’t have to run anymore?), and she ran a 3:24:38. I believe that’s still the record. While trying to better that, in 2021, she did come in 2nd behind her fiercest competitor Yuko Gordon (70-74 age group!) in a race I had never heard of before. Amby Burfoot (longtime Runners World editor-in-chief and Boston Marathon winner – 1966 – in 2:22) wrote in Outside Magazine about the Abbott World Marathon Majors Wanda Age Group World Championships held in conjunction with the London Marathon. Whoa, whoa, whoa. This begs another digression:

Really? They’re sponsoring a world age-group running championship? What are they peddling? I looked them up, of course. And their yearly income is a cool $36 billion, employing a cooler 113,000 employees, and they make Ensure**, Pedialyte, Similac, and untold other medical products. Founded in 1888, they’ve kept up with the times, it seems. So, it looks like this business of running world records in your age group has hit the big time. The 70-74 marathon title was won in 3:25:30 by Yuko Gordon, who finished 34th in the 1984 Olympic Marathon. (More recently, Gordon ran 3:19:37 two years ago in Berlin when she was 68.) Gordon turned 70 last February. I guess digressions is the theme of this article. Did you happen to notice that Yuko Gordon ran the 1984 Olympic Marathon? Hmmm, and who WON that “jog in the park” … of course, none other than Joan Benoit Samuelson (2:24:52).

page3image42647760

Again, “back to Jeannie”…again! With a natural talent and a competitive streak Jeannie averages 50 miles a week all-year round and increases that to 70 miles when she has a marathon in her schedule. I have to keep asking myself, “David, do you realize this is a 73 year old talking?” I ask that because I am a 74 year old, and I’m certainly NOT out there just doing the basic “maintenance” 50 mile weeks, and upping them to 70 the weeks before I go for records at the Boston Marathon. Sheesh.

(Photo: courtesy Jeannie Rice )

**Did anyone notice this little asterisk in the text? It is another digression, a digression inside a digression, and that is probably going too far! So here’s a “footnote” (does that make it feel any better?): While on the subject of Abbott Laboratory’s Ensure, here’s the comment. While in WalMart yesterday, I had the distinct pleasure of buying my yearly supply of Ensure, which is used on my once-a-year marathon walk which is soon to happen. This all started because of Franklin Coles. If you don’t know him, you should.

page4image42490368

(Photo: courtesy Jeannie Rice)

He was a past president and super-active member of the BSWD. He valiantly trained for many 100-mile races (notably the BigHorn 100). I emulated his abilities, and casually asked him how on earth he could do those races…what did you eat and drink? His answer has stayed with me, and I still use what he said. Those little bottles of Ensure can be found in the pharmacy section of every grocery store and are packed with the basic ingredients for those who can’t stomach regular food. Yes, I had to get over the feeling that I was buying them for my aging parents who had to be bottle fed in their old age. I down one bottle every 6 miles or so. And his other suggestion was a 16.9 ounce bottle of Coke. Frankly (pun), I reserve that for after the finish line. I hope everyone reading this has a wonderful July full of summertime running 🙂

The Mature Runner: And A New World Record For…Cyborgs?!

November 30, 2021/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

By David Summerfield

While speaking with a fully documented “senior” BSWD runner (Greg Young, now in his 60’s) I was interested to hear his take on last month’s article. Sorry to get personal Greg … but you read it, and I listen. Greg and I (and others I’m sure) are seriously looking for ways to keep running well, and more than “well,” like being faster than all the other 60-year olds (or whatever age-category you’re in). And Greg divulged that even running well into his 100’s. He’d have a heck of a time breaking any records. In fact, it came out that his streak of strong marathons is perhaps coming to an end…I remember hearing something like “I think the Half Marathon is better for me now.” This explains his interest in any and all methods of running strong (…meaning fast and most probably stronger than he is now). I had mentioned that as the coming technological singularity occurs, the smarter-than-human computers will have figured out how to completely reverse the aging process. And this will include the taking of a wild cocktail of newly invented anti-aging chemicals/pills, as well as having one’s personal DNA sequenced – with the end result being sent a daily “read-out” which is received via smartphone, all thanks to having a monitoring chip in the brain sending constant signals to a lab somewhere. You’ll know what supplements you need to take when you get up the next day by just viewing the app. (How tedious! Isn’t there some software somewhere that can trigger the insertion of pills you need automatically while you sleep, for heaven’s sake!) This simple process will easily correct (or change/modify/eliminate) offending nucleotides or cells, which allow the body to age! An arresting thought! And this is not to just make bodies not age but to eliminate all disease, so the thought of running sub-three hour marathons would be common among us more mature athletes? Isn’t that what all Mature Runners desire? Hmmmm, wouldn’t rules have to be established to keep the playing field fair, or would world records become meaningless at this point?

On the news this week was a story of a 105-year old woman (Julia Hawkins) who broke the world record for the 100-meter dash in 62 seconds (105-110 year category). A retired schoolteacher from Baton Rouge, LA, she was quite upset that she didn’t break one minute.

So, I tried picturing myself running a 100-meter dash. Up here in the Beartooth Mountains, I can jog a 14-minute mile pace for a while (when I’m warmed up, “feeling good,” and on a paved road down in the valley) and that would be a 52.5 second 100-yard dash. Oh, and 105 years is only 30 years away…so keep it up David 🙂 And Greg, you have to not slow down to a 8:25:17 marathon when you’re 100 (Fauja Singh’s record) and at 90 years, you have to beat his 5:40:01. Just how strong is this desire to run faster times for all distances? Suddenly, the ‘ole brain is telling me would it really be THAT bad to have a “smarter-than-human” computer (and don’t call it a robot/AI, that’s too scary!) come up with what we all need? What if the best solution will be to interface one’s physical body with computer technology? I’m referring to having a computer hooked up to my body somehow … besides “just” having chips inserted here and there…so when something in the body triggers a signal at some Medical Terminal Lab which in turn arranges for various serums/chemicals to flow into the bloodstream while I’m sleeping… Wow – if the goal of running strong and well to break records is that important to us humans (and something tells me the human is absolutely capable of allowing this to happen) will we really go that far? Cyborg-land, here we come? Now, that IS scary!

Let me tell you about “scary”! While writing this I remembered a kind of nightmare I’ve had from years ago. It happened while watching Star Trek: First Contact movie 25 years ago. I had forgotten how deeply the character Borg had bored into my psyche. Most of you have watched this movie, but as a memory refresher, Borg uttered the following:

“We are the Borg. Lower your shields and surrender your ships. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. Your culture will adapt to service us. Resistance is futile.” (quotes-gram.com/borg-quotes).

I can still hear the Borg’s voice. Chilling. Digging a little deeper, I found some very disturbing facts. Most of us are already cyborgs, by definition. Don’t believe me? This is NOT science fiction. A cyborg is a cybernetic organism, which is a being having both organic and biomechatronic body parts. Or, a person whose physiological functioning is aided by or dependent upon a mechanical or electronic device (Collins English Dictionary). Now that’s getting pretty close to exactly what’s happening more and more these days! I won’t name my friends who have already had artificial body parts put in! Furthermore – a cyborg is a human linked to a mechanical device for life support (Lexic.us). Yes, this happens every day – it happened to my brother! The Oxford Dictionary simply says “a fictional or hypothetical person whose physical abilities are extended beyond normal human limitations by mechanical elements built into the body”. That makes some articles seem not so far out. My constant use of an iPhone can make me a cyborg. Ingesting ibuprofen to thin my blood which reduces the pain during my physical exertions makes me….a cyborg? I don’t have any artificial limbs or body parts yet, but that’s perfectly normal these days. Wait – I got rid of cataracts by having new lenses put in my eyes. There you go – I’m definitely a cyborg. My physical ability to see was “enhanced” by inserting 2 little non-organic pieces of plastic into my body. Of course, the list goes on, and I doubt there are many (any?) people reading this who are not cyborgs in one way or another. So, we better get used to it, and we just need to refrain from ever saying “Resistance is futile, Earthling”. I really didn’t think this article would go this far when I started. That’s what I get from using a laptop and googling everything I want to know. And, after all, I haven’t agreed to have some high-tech company (see Elon Musk’s TechLink for example) install a port somewhere…like behind my head…so people don’t notice it too much…and once plugged in, it would simplify writing this article, right? Good grief ….

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