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Monica Robbers
Kiwi Takes Flight in Nation's Capital
Jim Hage July 1999 For the Washington Running Report
Twelve years ago, a speeding car shattered the knee and dreams
of Monica Robbers, then one of New Zealand's top young tennis
and basketball players. Throughout a slow and painful recovery,
Robbers never guessed that another athletic life awaited her
half a world away. "The accident gave my Mum and Dad quite a
fright," Robbers says. "I thought I was through with sports. But
I started to run during rehab, and it kind of grew on me." By
channeling her natural athleticism into running, Robbers
recorded track performances impressive enough to merit
scholarship offers from several U.S. colleges.Robbers left her Mum, Dad, sister, and brother behind in 1992 to
pursue academia and a track career at East Tennessee State
University in Johnson City. "We don't have much of an
intercollegiate track program at home," she explains. "Also, I
thought I would be close to my friends in Washington, DC, but I
didn't realize this was such a big country." Still, Robbers made
the best of her stint at ETSU. She made all-southern conference
eight times, and recorded PRs of 4:31 for 1,500 and 16:58 and
5,000 meters. Despite regularly "commuting" between Johnson City
and Washington, Robbers earned her undergraduate degree summa
cum laude, and then her master's degree with honors in forensic
science and criminology. She is currently enrolled in the
doctoral program for applied sociology and justice at American
University. Since moving to Alexandria last fall, Robbers has quickly become
a fixture at area road races. She joined the Northern Virginia
Running Club, and trains regularly with the Tuesday night
workout group at T.C. Williams High School. "My mates at the
track keep me going," she claims. Robbers regularly logs 80
miles per week, via an ambitious training regimen of long and
short intervals, tempo runs, and long runs. Robbers credits the
University of Maryland's Dan Rincon for providing her with
valuable coaching advice, and Rincon's wife, Win, with steering
her through the mine field that is the D.C. social scene. The New Zealander has even become something of an expert on
local cuisine, including Generous George's in Alexandria. "Good
pizza, " she claims, "but no vegemite sandwiches." After
recovering from a series of injuries that sidelined her for most
of the past two years, Robbers has been running regularly again
only since last fall. "I've still got a long way to go," she
says. Nonetheless, she has won numerous area races at distances
between 5K and 10K. At the Ferndale-Linthicum 5K in May, Robbers
ran 17:43, and recorded her best recent 10K time at Sallie Mae
in April, running 37:13. Off the roads, and even after her stint in Appalachia, culture
shock for the 5'10" Kiwi runs mostly in reverse. "I liked the
people in Tennessee, but I'm glad to be in Washington now," she
says. "I'm used to living in a small country, but Tennessee was
like living in a fish bowl. Washingtonians are really quite
lovely," she continues. "But I can't give Americans high marks
on geography. Most think I can run from New Zealand to Australia
at low tide." So, what about living in the nation's capital has been most
impressive to Robbers--the museums, the cherry blossoms, or the
daily exercise of raw political power? "Plenty of races, at any
distance, every weekend," she says unhesitatingly. The
downside? "I miss my family," she says, "even though they tell
me I'm starting to sound like a bloody Yank. I still get blank
stares when I talk. I don't know why; I'm the one speaking the
Queen's English."
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