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DuPont Race Will Decide
US Title
National championship off-road marathon will be held at area state
forest
December 20, 2003
Joel Burgess
Hendersonville Times-News Staff Writer
The best off-road
marathoners in the United States will have to get past 26 miles of
rocky, tumbling Western North Carolina trails before they can claim the
national podium next year.
DuPont State Forest, which hosted its first trail marathon in October,
will become the site for the 2004 National Championship. The Times-News
and the Henderson County Family YMCA are title sponsors for the event
scheduled for Oct. 17.
Greg Walker, an organizer of this year's event, said The Mountain, Ultra
and Trail Running Council selected the DuPont Forest race based on the
success of the inaugural event.
"MUT Council was impressed with our organization of the event, volunteer
and community support and the beautiful course," Walker said.
Organizers tried unsuccessfully to get the inaugural DuPont event
designated as a national championship. Still the N.C. Chapter of of the
USA Track and Field Association tapped the race as its state
championship.
About 150 individual runners and 100 relay-team members hit the
laurel-lined paths of DuPont Oct. 19. The day went off, by all accounts,
without a hitch, the only disappointment being 50 no-shows out of 200
registered runners.
A course designed by veteran marathoner Ray McCaslin of Hendersonville
offered tribulations such as water crossing, grinding hills and
plummeting descents.
Loic Laforet, a French-born Hendersonville runner took first place among
men with a time of 2:56. Ultra-distance runner Anne Riddle of Asheville
out-distanced the second place woman runner by 20 minutes with a time of
3:14.
The men's and women's winners of next year's event will receive the
title of national champions. That racheting up of the stakes promises to
raise the profile of the DuPont event and generate even more interest
locally, Walker said.
"It'll be great for the marathon event and also just for the community
to host a national championship race," he said.
Past national championships have been held in places such as Aspen,
Colo., and northwest California.
Walker said the designation should draw a top-quality field of runners,
especially among the men.
Birmingham, Ala., will host the men's Olympic trials on Feb. 7. Out of
100 competitors, three will be selected for the Olympic team. That, said
Walker, will leave 97 runners who might be looking for a title to cap
off their season.
Park Ridge Hospital will sponsor the relay race, and Pardee Hospital
will sponsor a new children's run.
McCaslin and Bruce McDonald of the N.C. Forest Service will develop the
2004 course. Registration will run March 1 to Oct.1.
For more information, contact Walker at the YMCA at (828) 692-5774, Ext.
11.
2004
MUT Championship Calendar:
MUT:
http://www.cerritos.edu/lgersitz/MUT/2004_MUT_Nationals.html
USATF:
http://www.usatf.org/calendars/
MUT Home
Last updated:
09/14/05
Web Author: Lorraine Gersitz
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