ROSEVILLE (11/13/05) - I pulled onto the expressway and hit the CD
player. Out blasted Martha and the Vandellas' "Nowhere to Run." Hey,
they're wrong! Didn't they know this was the second Sunday in
November? There was somewhere to run: the Big Bird! The next song on my CD was the Temptations' "Get Ready." I was!
The 27th annual Big Bird attracted 751 runners, solidifying its status as
one of southeast Michigan's most-popular races. "We had 518 pre-
registered, our best figure in a while," director Tony Lipinski said. "The
weather forecast about rain and high wind Sunday may have kept even
more late registrants away."
Rain was nowhere to be seen, but the wind showed up right on time -
and big time. The National Weather Service reported gusts reaching 45
mph. No runners blew off the pedestrian overpass that crosses I-696
twice, but it was a bit breezy there.
The morning was also dry, mostly sunny and unseasonably warm,
close to 60 degrees. Considering past Big Birds have been run in snow,
rain, sleet and even-stronger winds, veterans dismissed this year's
gales with jokes: "It's the Big Bird. What did you expect?"
The certified courses were familiar to returnees: flat except for the
overpasses in the 10K, with more than a few twists and turns and plenty
of marshals. All three races - the one-mile (118 participants), 4K (182)
and 10K - were chip-timed. Start times were staggered so that one-
milers could also run either the 4K or 10K; several did. All runners were
serenaded by the Roseville High School band and enjoyed city
facilities.
The wind slowed many runners by one to three minutes in the 10K.
Competition was heated nonetheless.
The open one-mile winner was Ryan Reiterman, whose 4:44 was 20
seconds faster than runner-up Andrew Baurhenn. Masters runner Todd
Kelly, 44, was third in 5:12.
The ages-14-and-under mile race was, well, a race. Tiffany Marchewka,
12, finished first (and the first female overall) in 6:30. Michael Sorrentino,
10, and Dillon Marble, 11, were just seconds slower in 6:34 and 6:35,
respectively. The youngsters were flying, especially with the long
finishing straightaway against the wind.
Nick Krus improved on his second place finish last year by winning the
4K in 12:49. Marcie Micheloni, 14, claimed the women's race (16:34).
Kelly returned to pace the masters in 13:59, fourth overall. Ben Fondren,
54, was sixth in 14:50 (a 5:58-mile pace).
Trent Briney captured the marquee 10K in 32:06. Paul Aufdemberge,
40, was the first master and runner-up overall, just nine ticks back. "The
wind was pretty bad," said Aufdemberge. "We had to run together out
there."
Tim Emmitt, 50, ran an impressive 37:49.
The women were led by Adrian Dent, whose 41:43 was almost a minute
faster than runner-up Courtney Kosmala. Cathy Dean (44:51) was the
masters queen. Ellen Nitz, 65, finished in 53:44.
Oldest finisher Joe Thornburg, 89, completed the 10K in 1:30:55.
The men's 60-64 age-group featured remarkable times, wind or not.
Doug Goodhue, 63, was the grand masters champ in 38:14, exactly
what he posted in 2004. He was chased by Gerard Malaczynski, 63,
who finished in 38:27. Jim Carlton, 62, ran 40:20 and Dan Campbell, 60,
40:45.
What would the Big Bird be without Darrell McKee, 71, who has run all
27 races? Afterward he said hoarsely, "I'm really sick. Any other race I
wouldn't have run." He noted that Russ LaBarge also finished. "He's run
'em all, too," McKee said.
McKee praised race director Lipinski. "Tony does a great job, especially
with age-groups." Three to five awards went to age-group winners up to
85-89. "It's great that the Big Bird recognizes older runners," said
McKee. "We still give it all we've got."
Runners were treated to the usual post-race amenities, including the
raffle of two dozen turkeys (big birds!), plus gloves and hats for every
runner, courtesy race sponsors Christian Financial Credit Union,
Longhorn Steakhouse, Hanson's Running, Panera Bread and Petitpren
Inc.
Complete results can be found at www.gaultracemanagement.com, and
highlights viewed online at http://michiganrunner.tv/2005bigbird/
Ron Marinucci can be reached by e-mail at
ron_marinucci@comcast.net. MR