On a cold and blustery late winter morning, in a race that
started at the Old Post Office Pavilion on Pennsylvania Avenue
and ran around the Capitol building, long-time area racing
stalwarts Darrell General and Naoko Ishibe won their respective
divisions of the 12th St. Patrick's Day 10K. Just another race
in the nation's capital? Well, yes and no.The date and venue may have been familiar to the record 4,265
entrants. But because of friction between the racing community
and Downtown Cluster of Congregations, which represents area
churches, the 2000 St. Patrick's Day 10K could well be the last.
"The police have already said we can't have the race on Sunday
next year [due to complaints from the churches]," said Capital
Running Company spokeswoman Kathy Freedman. "They're trying to
force the issue. I don't know what's going to happen."
That unhappy issue temporarily aside, and far from the minds of
most participants in what is now the most popular 10K in the
metropolitan area, the race was a huge success. Clouds
threatened to break, winds gusted, and a spritz of rain fell at
the start. And while few runners notched personal bests under
the less-than-ideal conditions, the mid-March weather was, for
the most part, reasonable.
Darrell General, prepping for his fourth Olympic Trials marathon
on May 7, broke quickly from the pack at the start. Only Andrew
Carnahan (28) and Jeff Leuenberger (27) stayed very long with
the Bowie, MD veteran. "I've been training a lot [in preparation
for the Olympic trials]," General said. "It was a struggle the
whole way--I never really felt that good."
Nonetheless, General managed to surge just beyond the four-mile
mark, and pull away from Carnahan, by that point his only
remaining competition. General won in 31 minutes 48 seconds.
"That was a good move," Carnahan conceded. "I felt nice and
relaxed until he picked it up. I just couldn't hang on."
Carnahan finished second in 32:04, and Leuenberger ended up
third in 32:12.
Carnahan's performance may portend well for him and his Ki-Sky
Racing & Men's Club, a group of University of Virginia alumni
who now live and train in Northern Virginia. Carnahan moved to
Arlington from Boulder, CO, where he had been training at
altitude, just four days before the race. He graduated from U-VA
in 1996, and is currently taking a year off from graduate school
to train in an effort to qualify for the Olympic trials at
10,000 meters.
"We've got a pretty competitive group," said Ki-Sky member John
Carson, who finished sixth in 32:53 and helped the Men's Club
secure the team title. "Some of the guys, myself included, are
training for Boston. But Andrew [Carnahan] is a track guy."
Naoko Ishibe (31) a research scientist at the National
Institutes of Health, won the women's race for the second
consecutive year. And although she led the entire way and won
going away in 36:44, the race wasn't easy.
"That's the slowest I've run in a while," Ishibe said. "I really
think I'm in 34:30 shape." She ran 36:05 last year.
Like General and Carnahan, Ishibe has her sights set on an even
grander agenda: she is hoping to qualify for the Olympic Trials
at 5,000 and 10,000 meters.
Desiree Ficker (23) from Potomac, ran in second place for a
while, but eventually succumbed to the experience of savvy
masters runner Patti Shull, who came from far back to finish
second in 37:49. Ficker ended up third in 37:58, and 1999 Marine
Corps Marathon winner Donna Moore (39) was fourth in 38:12.
Among the male masters, Brian Daugherty from Annapolis won his
first race as a 40-year-old, in 33:48, beating Chuck Moeser (47)
from Herndon. But Daugherty wasn't happy with his
performance: "I felt like an old man out there today," he
said. "I hope it gets better than this."
Moeser, however, was impressed with Daugherty's debut: "From
what I could see, he looked pretty good. As for my time, I
stopped my watch at 33:00." The ChampionChip, however, kept on
ticking, and caught Moeser at the finish in 33:53.
Of course, with more than 4,000 registrants, somebody has to
hold the bags. So it was for Staci Gatica (26) from Alexandria,
who was burdened like a pack mule while nine of her friends made
the downtown rounds. "I dropped them off and parked the car,
which worked out well for them," Gatica said. "But that's okay
for today. I'm saving my feet for the Cherry Blossom 10 Mile
run."
As for the dilemma regarding a date, time and place for any 13th
running of the green on St. Patrick's Day weekend 2001, race
directors Rick and Kathy Freedman urge concerned runners to make
their voices heard. "Runners aren't asking for much," Kathy
Freedman said. "Just a chance to run on the streets of one of
the most beautiful cities in the world. Send a note to D.C.
Mayor Anthony Williams at mayor@dcgov.org.
Make your voice
heard."