EAST GRAND RAPIDS (6/26/04) - A Kenyan from Hemlock, new mom,
and Hansons Olympic hopefuls reigned over a parade of 2,000-plus
entrants in the money-injected, sunshine-rich Reeds Lake Run.
The 5K and 10K races, offered for 25 years by the City of East Grand
Rapids, picked up a major-league sponsor in May: Standard Federal
Bank. Result: a boost in amenities for the average Joe/Judy Jogger, and
in prize money for elites. Reeds Lake used to offer $250 to the top men's and women's 5K and
10K finishers, $125 for each runner-up, and $75 for third-place finishers.
More than chump change, but not enough to draw attention outside the
region.
Add Standard Federal and boom: This year's purse soared to $10,000,
including $700 for first, $500 for second, $400 for third, $300 for fourth,
$200 for fifth and for Masters (over age 40) champions.
Those figures, plus a $100 bonus for setting a new course record, drew
star-studded fields on this 60-degree, cloudless morning, ideal for
running.
"We got lucky," said EGR Parks & Recreation Director Fred Bunn,
himself an elite runner. Maybe. But luck - as anyone who labors to "do
things right" can attest - is the residue of design.
Jared Segera, a Kenyan who trains in Kentucky, ran a 4:29 first mile in
the 8 a.m. 5K race, then got swallowed by a lead pack including former-
Olympian Paul McMullen, two-time Brian Diemer Amerikam 5K
champion Matt Thull of Wisconsin, Kenyans Shadrack Kimeli and Mike
Korir.
Also among the challengers were Mark Menefee and Josh Eberly from
the Hansons-Brooks Olympic Development Project based in Rochester.
"Our athletes are running their last races before the 5,000- and 10,000-
meter U.S. Olympic Trials next month," said Project co-founder/coach
Keith Hanson.
"We don't expect them to make the American team - not this year,"
Hanson continued. "But we want them to be as sharp for the Trials as
they can be."
Menefee, 26, looked like a dwarf running next to McMullen, a 1500-
meter semifinalist in the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta. But most
distance runners do. The muscular McMullen, a Coast Guard member
stationed in Grand Haven, sailed into Reeds Lake on the heels of wins
at the Spectrum Health Irish Jig 5K March 20 in East Grand Rapids
(running a course-record 14:41 in a deluge) and Fifth Third River Bank
5K Run May 8 in Grand Rapids - the latter after qualifying for the
Olympic Trials 1500 12 hours earlier in Ann Arbor.
McMullen/Superman left his cape in the washer this time. Menefee, who
used to run for the University of Kansas, pulled away to prevail in 14:03,
breaking Kyle Baker's 2001 course-record 14:18. Thull, 29, stayed with
Menefee till the final 600 meters, then settled for second in 14:11.
McMullen fell to ninth, crossing in 14:58.
Betsy Frens, a seven-time All-American while running for Calvin
College, showed her win at the June 12 Diemer Run in Cutlerville - her
first race since giving birth in November - was not a fluke. Frens, 29, won
the women's 5K in 17:07. Second was ageless 1984 Irish Olympian
Monica Joyce, 45, of Pinckney, in 17:36.
Hemlock, known as Socrates' least-favorite beverage, may take on new
fame if the exploits of John Kariuki are any clue. Kariuki, a Kenyan who
has settled in that village of 1,600, west of Saginaw, proved poison to
competitors in the 10K.
The 34-year-old Kariuki, coming back from an Achilles tendon injury
seven months earlier, blitzed the field in the day's second race with a
29:16. He, like Menefee, tacked on a $100 course-record bonus to his
$700 first-place money. Ron Johnson's old standard, 29:57, had stood
15 years.
Team Hansons' Brian Sell, 26, kept the winner in sight, coming home in
29:32.
Yet another course record fell in the women's 10K. Melissa White, a
Division 3 college All-American wearing the colorful checkerboard
uniform of Team Hansons, steamed around Reeds Lake and through
Gaslight Village to triumph in 34:34. Laura Albers had set the old mark,
35:53, way back in 1986.
Frens completed the day's most-successful "double" (running in both
races), placing second in 36:38.
Most participants took considerably more time to enjoy the courses,
sunshine and post-race children's activities. Then came a concert,
awards and feast on Wege Plaza, overlooking the sparkling lake.
Among the later-arriving celebrants was Blitz, mascot of the Grand
Rapids Rampage Arena Football League team. If you haven't high-fived
a rhinoceros after running a great summer road race, you haven't lived.
Complete race results are available online at www.classicrace.com. MR