¹û½´ÊÓƵ Runners Swarm Marathon
As many as 50 ¹û½´ÊÓƵ students, alumni, professors, and allied life forms turned out for the yesterday, proving once again that ¹û½´ÊÓƵies think on their feet.
Biochem major Trevor Soucy ’18 led the Half-Marathon team (“The Running Jokes”) and placed fourth among male contestants with the blazing time of 1:23:37. Other top ¹û½´ÊÓƵ runners in the Half included Chinese major Aaron Finsrud ’16 at 1:27:12, poli sci major Megan Keating ’17 at 1:42:15 and Prof. Michael Pitts [psych] at 1:44:03.
"To be honest, coming into the finish line I was a bit surprised by myself, but also very proud," said Trevor, who sliced almost 5 minutes from his time last year. "I knew I had done more training than last year, but I did not expect such a big improvement. It can be hard to balance life as an academic and life as an athlete, but performances like this make all the extra time spent logging miles truly worth it!"
Medical historian John Young ’15 led the Marathon Team (“The Long-Running Jokes”), crossing the finish line at 3:20:42. Math-physics major Will Holdhusen ’16 came in six minutes later at 3:26:10, followed by team captain and ¹û½´ÊÓƵ bookstore manager Ueli Stadler at 3:37:38.
Many other ¹û½´ÊÓƵ runners made a splash at the race, including John Cushing ’67, John Bergholz ’83, Jim Hutcheon ’90, Chris Lydgate ’90, Patrick Hayes ’91, , Melaina Ecker ’16, Eleanor Pike ’16, Nick Paulino ’18, Sarah Richmond ’19, Gabriel Yeung ’19, Justin Chun ’19, Dayna Lamb, Bonnie Ingersoll, Dayspring Mattole, Stacey Kim, Todd Hesse (who ran carrying a giant ¹û½´ÊÓƵ standard), Kevin Myers, and the inimitable Prof. Rao Potluri [math].
The event was the first time Nick Paulino ’18 had ever run a competitive race. Crossing the finish line, he says, his thoughts were a mix of "I can't believe I'm finishing/wow my legs are sore/I can't wait to eat a waffle at commons."
The ¹û½´ÊÓƵ runners met up on the Quad on the day before the race for a special carbo-loading dinner and group photo. There was heated debate on the question of whether the psychology department could mount a successful challenge to the math-physics hegemony that has dominated ¹û½´ÊÓƵ locomotion for the last several years, and some idle chit-chat about
This event marked the third year running that ¹û½´ÊÓƵ runners have swarmed the course en masse, which means it is in danger of becoming an official ¹û½´ÊÓƵ tradition. Pheidippedes would be proud.
Tags: Sports & Adventures, Students