The time is 0: dark hundred. The birds are still asleep. Shortly
after 4:00 AM, all over the region, alarm clocks are going off.
Loved ones groan as their running counterparts slide unsteadily
out from the covers. Coffee is brewing. Oranges are being
squeezed. Runners are getting ready to rumble. The Rumble is
now a summer race; so light, wicking garments are the order of
the day. Perhaps even a yellow singlet in honor of Lance. After
being mugged by most of July, runners were wary of the
weatherman's promise of low humidity. Hadn't we been tormented
by skies so humid that they burst into rain, steam rising from
the still scorching streets?The Rumble was not always run in the summer though it has always
been weather challenged. In the late 1980s, the course was run
on the towpath from Riley's Lock. It was in a much cooler
September. Still, that was not much comfort in 1988 when the
skies opened up and rained just as soon as runners had passed
the 5K-point of no return. On the way back, the canal had
flooded onto the towpath making it impossible to see your shoes.
The sucking sound of the mud was your assurance they had not
been lost.
The distance was still set at 20 kilometers when the course was
moved to December. Can you say snow? Actually in 1990, snow
would have been better. Instead, we were treated to thirty-three
degrees of precipitation; just enough to make the "bridge
freezes before the road" crossings a skating delight. The course
was now heading away from the river it was supposed to be
rumbling with. Meandering up and down the countryside was a real
challenge. Coming down River's Road to Hunter's Lane made the
lead runners wish for an orange jersey so the deer hunters would
be firing in another direction.
Crossing River Road can be a challenge; running on the shoulder
can be deadly. After a few years of roving "slow down cars"
blocking the speeders from a reckless pace, the course moved to
an out and back with just a simple crossing of River. In 1995,
the present distance begins with a March date. Racing just a
week after the Shamrock Marathon made it imperative the return
trip was downhill. So then the name changed to Riley's Rumble
and somebody got the idea that it would be fun to run in the
summer sun.
In 1999, the race moved to the first week of August. For some
reason the race just took off. After never having more than a
couple hundred runners, this low-key race was overflowing the
large parking area. With this in mind, the race moved to nearby
Poolesville. The new course ran towards the river and covered
much of the old course albeit from the other side. It never made
it to the river, turning around and returning the Poolesville.
This course was ever so slightly less hilly. We cannot have
that! After three years, it was back to Riley's Lock and never
mind the smaller parking area.
Moving the starting date to 7:00 AM was designed to avoid the
heat but it never seemed to avoid the humidity. This year we got
a huge break when the humidity was lower. That is low for the
metro area, not for racing comfort. Still, when the G-O word was
yelled very few of the men and none of the women went topless.
There was very little fanfare and the race started on time.
There were plenty of well-managed aid stations with water and
Gatorade. The volunteers made sure you knew what you were
getting and got it to you pronto. Even with the rolling variety
of the hills, most of the runners acknowledged that the mile
markers may have dropped off the truck at the wrong spot.
Top flight master runner and former winner of the race Mark
Hoon was spotted in fifth place just past the halfway mark. The
other four runners were close together and the finish had to be
exciting. One of area top over sixty runners, Warren Prunella,
took off early. He clearly did not like going up the opening
hills but he was soon pulling away from his pack. Lou Shapiro,
often his competition, was in full concentration mode, scaling
the opening hill in pursuit. At the finish, Warren and Jay Wind
(55) had a duel for crossing the finish and dibs on the first
bottle of Drinkmore water.
From the south, long time MCRRC member Bill Stahr continues to
make his comeback, though he cannot seem to stay with fellow
Virginian Karsten Brown. Brown more than a decade younger has
been starting to take his racing more seriously. With nearly
ninety races and five hundred racing miles, he is on the verge
of moving his times to a new level.
Ron and Beverly Black of Frederick, MD are everywhere. Both seem
to be getting faster at a demonic rate. Last week they were
blazing a 200-meter race. Ron at age fifty ran 28 seconds. Bev
just turned forty-five and Ron could not be more proud of her
continued improvement. In today's race, Ron backed off after the
first ten miles of a tough racing day, that is until Bev caught
up. Then he used his sprinter's speed to make sure she did not
pass him at the finish.
Liza Recto drove all the way from the western shore of the
Chesapeake Bay to defend her title from last year. Even with the
improved weather, she had a blah day and settled in for a
comfortable run back to the river. Alice Franks modestly noted
that she did okay, finishing in around 1:46:00. An eight minute
pace is not so bad for a young women of fifty-seven on a triple
H day (hot, hilly & humid).
At mile eight, Brian Lesko of Frederick was hanging tough with
Ted Poulos a top master runner from McLean. Lesko at thirty-
five, is still at the glorious hope-to-improve stage of running.
He would dearly have loved to stay with Ted. Ted has more than
3000 races in his portfolio and more than 1000 are overall wins.
Not quite ready to let Brian by, Ted finished first.
At the finish, former club president Janet Newburgh looked as if
she had just gone for walk. She has run a marathon in every
state of the United States. A half marathon must not be that
much to get excited about. Not so with Billy Lese. After running
more than 100 marathons between 2001-2003, including 50 in 2003,
he is enraptured by the idea for setting a record for half
marathons in a year. As a member of the Fifty Plus Club, a race
where members try for fifty races a year, he appears to have set
his sights of the half marathon. "It's only July, I can run
fifty half marathons this year."
At the finish, there were large quantities of life giving
watermelon. Cookies, bananas, and oranges, vied for the runners'
attention. There was a band playing at the finish. They did a
decent rendition of the old rocker classic Frankenstein.