St. Patrick's Day 2001 was cool, misty, and raw in downtown
Washington, a perfect imitation of weather on the Emerald Isle
itself, and a good omen for Irishman Edmund Burke, St. Patrick's
Day 10K race champion in 1997 and '98.But Philippe Rolly, a native of France and himself the race
winner in 1999, enjoyed the fine racing conditions as well and
broke away from Burke in the final mile to win in 30 minutes 48
seconds.
Alisa Harvey took the lead early in the women's race and won
easily in 36:29. Hilary Cairns finished strongly and earned a
personal best to finish second in 36:56.
But the real story was the huge turnout, a record for what has
long been one of the most popular 10K races in the city. Nearly
5,000 registered, and 4,146 finished in the running community's
celebration of the Green Holiday. And green it was on the
course, with hats, shamrocks, and even green hair adorning many
of the throng.
The race started at Freedom Plaza on Pennsylvania Avenue near
the Old Post Office Pavilion. For the first time, the race took
place on Saturday as part of a compromise with the Downtown
Cluster of Congregations, which has complained about road
closures. Next year, the race will be held on Sunday--St.
Patrick's Day again, oddly enough.
"We're really pleased," said Capital Running Company president
Rick Freedman. "We were concerned about the Saturday race date,
but the word got out. Moreover, the weather held and we've got a
great turnout. The luck o' the Irish!"
In the racing department, Rolly and Burke ran with a pack of
twelve runners through the first two miles, which they covered
in a comfortable 10:10. But some fifty meters ahead, apparently
running to a beat no one else could hear, was Jason Van Horn
from Dumfries.
"I was surprised to be all alone at two miles," Van Horn
said. "But I wanted to run five-minute pace."
And he did, to the unconcern of the pack. "I wasn't too worried
about him," Rolly said. "I had my eyes on the guys in my group,
mostly Edmund and [Ray] Pugsley."
By halfway, the pack caught Van Horn, who ultimately finished
ninth. Then Rolly, Burke, Pugsley, and former Princeton distance
runner Erik Kean pulled away. At four miles, Rolly dropped the
pace to 4:45 and dropped all but Burke, who finally faded in the
last mile and finished second in 31:03.
"I felt really easy the last two miles," Rolly said. "I'm
pleased to win, since it's so early in the year and I'm coming
off an injury so I haven't been training very long."
Kean finished third in 31:14, and Pugsley, the Enclave's most
prolific roadracer, finished a disappointing fifth in 31:40.
Harvey, long a stalwart on the area roads, said she had no real
problems in adding another win to her running resume: "I felt
pretty bad the last mile, so that means I was pushing it. And
that's good."
Harvey (35) has been volunteering as an assistant track coach at
George Mason. But after nearly 20 years of track racing for
herself, including national rankings at 800 and 1,500 meters,
she said she has no further track plans. "I'm retired from that
stuff," she said.
Cairns was pleased with her second-place personal-best effort,
even though she sprinted past her training partner, Sharon
Servidio, in the home stretch.
"I wanted to say, 'Sorry,' when I went by," Cairns said. But
Cairns waited until they were both in the chute to offer
apologies. Servidio finished third, eight seconds behind Cairns,
in 37:06.
"It was okay," Servidio said. "She [Cairns] ran a good race."
After the race, runners gathered in the Old Post Office Pavilion
for some eats, cold beer, and Irish dancing while awaiting the
start of the awards ceremony.
Notes: Donna Moore (40) was fourth overall and first among the
masters in 37:20. She also finished fourth in 2000, but was 50
seconds faster this year. Beth McCann (41) from Falls Church was
the second master, ninth overall, in 40:03 and Linda Wack (45)
from Germantown, was right behind in 40:12.
Among the men's masters, I won (I so enjoy writing that) in an
old-man's time of 32:18. Joe Abernethy, 41, from Berwyn, was the
second old guy in 33:23. Chuck Moeser, from Sterling, at 49 a
really old guy, ran 33:36 for third, and seventeenth overall.
Other notable performances included Paul Ryan (50) who finished
31st in 35:44, Pat Griffith (56) from Alexandria, 78th in 37:59,
and Sandra Adams (51) from Winchester, 21st in 42:15.
Montgomery County Road Runners cover boy Marty Horan (41) took
29th in 35:41. Anthony Arena (16) was the youngest finisher
among the top fifty (47th in 36:26). Hayley Wynn (17) from
Silver Spring, was the youngest woman in the top fifty; she was
46th in 44:15.
Sister Maria was the last official finisher, 1,985th among the
women and 4,146th overall, in 1:48:18 (1:50:34 gun time). Thirty-
six runners started but didn't finish. Keep an eye out for
them . . . .