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Darrell General
More Than a Marathoner
Randy Mayes November 1999 For the Washington Running Report
Darrell General, of Mitchellville, MD, is principally known as a
winner of the Marine Corps Marathon, after winning the event in
1995 and 1997. In the 1980s and early 1990s he was a prolific
road racer at distances from the 5K to the marathon. Originally
an All-County 800m, mile, and two-mile runner for Potomac High
School in Oxon Hill, MD, he wanted to eventually run longer
distances. As a junior in high school, track and cross-country
coach Dan Becker's unorthodox training methods had a profound
effect on General's future training. At seventeen, just months
after graduating from high school and being encouraged by a high
school coach, Jim Zeman, he ran in Marine Corps Marathon and
finished in 2:58. After one year at Prince George's Community College, he began
working full-time at Sears in 1984. That same year he ran Marine
Corps again, in 2:42, and in 1985 he improved to 2:26. In 1986,
he ran the New York Marathon, finishing in 2:31. In 1987, as the
youngest Olympic Trials qualifier, he ran 2:19:08 at the Marine
Corps Marathon. At the Trials he placed nineteenth in 2:20:30.
In 1989, he set his PR (2:14:42) and placed second at the Jersey
Waterfront Marathon, which also served as the TAC National
Marathon Championships. In 1990 he was the First American at
Boston with 2:15:28. From 1984-1991, he worked up to fifty hours
per week at the Sears loading dock lifting heavy boxes,
sometimes the day before a major race. His demanding work
schedule did not stop him from developing his talent, as he
continued to log ninety miles per week. In 1991, he was promoted to supervisor and began coaching part-
time in the afternoons. He also represented the U.S. in the
marathon at the World Cup Championships in London. He set a PR
at the Army Ten Miler, as he and rival Jim Hage dueled
throughout the race. Both were training for the 1992 Olympic
Marathon Trials, and General pulled away at the end to win by
ten seconds in 48:48. In a disappointing showing of 2:25:01 in
Columbus, he placed 30th at the Trials. In 1993, he set a PR for
the half marathon at Parkersburg in 1:04:48 and ran 29:53 at the
Vietnam Veteran's 10K in Washington, DC. General continued to
post fast marathon times over the next few years: Pittsburgh
(2:19:53) and Twin Cities in 1993 (2:16:08), the 1994 National
Championships (2:15:56), 1995 Charlotte National Championships
(2:19:06), and his win at Marine Corps in 1995 (2:16:34). He
placed twelfth at the 1996 Olympic Trials in 2:16:30. In 1996 he
left Sears and became a physical education teacher and assistant
track coach at Potomac High School. For the 1997 Marine Corps Marathon, he set a goal to break the
course record. After putting everything into specific training,
he felt he was in shape for the task. Rain that year prevented a
record time, but not a win. He was disappointed with his
2:18:20. That same year he won the MS Half-Marathon (1:05:45),
finished second at the GW Parkway 15K (46:46), and placed eighth
at the Parkersburg Half-Marathon in 1:06, making the National
Team. The World Championships were held in Slovakia, where he
ran 1:05:10. In 1998, he was the ninth place finisher at Parkersburg
(1:06:46), and ran 1:07:48 in Switzerland at the World
Championships. He ran four marathons: Motorola-Austin (2:16:52),
Pittsburgh (2:17:58), Twin Cities (2:18:59), and Ocean State
(2:25:42), qualifying three times for the 2000 Olympic Trials.
He also finished first at the GW Parkway 15K in 45:55 and was
chosen as the Washington Running Report Runner of the Year. This year he ran 2:25:50 at Pittsburgh and represented the U.S.
at the Pan-Am Games, placing fifth in 2:23:58. At the
Parkersburg Half-Marathon National Championships, he finished in
1:08:23 and placed second at the GW Parkway 15K (46:19). The
Volvo-Midland Run in Far Hills, NJ was the 1999 USA Men's Ten-
Mile Championship. The night before the race, General told his
roommate Weldon Johnson he was going out for a half-hour easy
run. Two hours later, General returned and Weldon jokingly asked
if he had gotten lost. General replied, embarrassed and
disgusted, "Yes, I did." His race performance was affected and
he finished in 53:54. After making the decision not to follow through on track
scholarships to several colleges, and sacrificing track
experience, the roads provided his development. Being very
independent and motivated, he chose to be self-coached and train
alone. Still using the training methods his high school coaches
taught him for strength, speed, and kick, he manages to train
twice daily with a full-time job and three children. Strength
training usually involves hills. Quarter to three-quarter mile
repeats or tempo runs each morning prepare him for Parkersburg's
hilly course. Each afternoon he alternates distances from 100m to 1000m in
interval training for speed and kick. His turnover training also
enables him to pace himself without a watch, which he finds
essential, and allows him to push the pace in the last half of
races. His racing tactic is usually to come from behind and
sprint to the finish. He has learned that, through varying his
training daily, he is less likely to get injured, as he normally
logs eighty miles per week and builds to one hundred miles per
week before a marathon. To help with recovery from the numerous
workouts, he takes super blue-green algae and vitamins. For the
1997 Marine Corps Marathon, he added upper body weight training
to his regimen. General is also entering fewer races to allocate more time for
training and to stay in national class shape. In the past he has
gone to races unprepared, not giving himself enough time to
train properly. At 33, he has completed thirty marathons,
fifteen of which were under 2:20. He ran PRs in the 1500m (3:47)
and 5000m (14:20) on the same day at a Potomac Valley Track
Meet. He has also run 23:32 for an 8K in San Diego and 29:29 at
the 1994 Sallie Mae 10K. When he is not coaching himself or his high school athletes, he
works with his racing team that includes Antonio DeBarros,
Lorenzo Nelson, and Wendall Brown. Each says they have
benefitted from his coaching advice. Currently a PUMA athlete,
General is training for the Olympic Marathon Trials in May. With
a more flexible schedule that allows him to stay more focused
and confident, he says "I have one good marathon PR left in me.
The Marine Corps Marathon course record is something I think
about frequently."
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