Two successfully complete Philadelphia Marathon

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During the Thanksgiving holiday weekend, two Creek Road Runners competed in and finished the Philadelphia Marathon. Held on Nov. 24, the marathon was the feature event of the Philadelphia Marathon Weekend of races, which boasted more than 35,000 participants.

photo of Andrew Weber

First and foremost, 44-year-old CRR Andrew Weber, who had run this race and other local marathons in previous years, broke the three-hour mark for the first time and, in doing so, set a new personal best by more than seven minutes, finishing in 2:54:41. His previous best was a 3:02:13 at Philly in 2014. Weber placed 407th overall.

photo of Tripp Shenton

A veteran of many marathons over the years, 63-year-old CRR Tripp Shenton came in well under four hours with a finishing time of 3:44:53. He placed 3,442nd overall.

Interestingly enough, both Weber and Shenton placed 29th in their respective five-year age group. Congratulations to you both!

24th annual trail run draws 5 CRRs plus 6 others

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The 24th annual Wring Out the Old, Ring In The New trail event included a combination of 11 runners and walkers who came together to bid farewell to 2023 and help usher in the new year at the Fair Hill Natural Resources Management Area in nearby Maryland.

photo of group of four Creek Road Runners
Four Creek Road Runners showed to salute the year 2024. From left are Bob Opila (the two), Bill Rose (the zero), David James (the other two), and Bruce Hubbard (the four).

> See full write-up

Two Creek Road Runners honored

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photo of Mike Shay

CRR Mike Shay was recently named a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union (AGU), a prestigious honor from the largest Earth and space sciences association in the world. A University of Delaware (UD) physics professor, Shay is an expert in plasma physics in space and was cited “for major breakthroughs and sustained impact in understanding magnetic reconnection in space.”

Shay was formally recognized in San Francisco during the AGU’s annual meeting last week, which drew thousands of participants from 100 countries.

“I am honored and frankly somewhat overwhelmed to receive this recognition,” Shay said. “I feel very lucky to have so many great scientists as both colleagues and friends. They have been and continue to be an inspiration to me.”

> full UD article

photo of Shannon Lennon

Honored by the UD Women’s Caucus, CRR Shannon Lennon, professor of kinesiology and applied physiology, was named the 2023 recipient of the Torch Award for advancing women’s equality on campus.

She has always felt strongly about supporting and promoting women at UD and puts her beliefs into practice as chair of the Institutional Review Board and director of the Cardiovascular Nutrition Lab at UD. 

“I’m committed to diversity, equity and inclusion issues,” she said. “Within our research, we must work harder to recruit diverse research subjects and ensure our research opportunities are open to all people, and that means we have to appeal to them and get them interested in our work. 

“Within the Department of Kinesiology and Applied Physiology, I reach out to junior female faculty members and serve as a resource to them. I’m also vocal at department meetings about advocating for issues that are important to women.”

> full UD article

Congratulations to both of you!

Farquhar places in Rehoboth Seashore Marathon

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Rehoboth Beach Marathon logo
photo of Bill Farquhar finishing Seashore Marathon

There were 861 finishers in this year’s Rehoboth Seashore Marathon, held in Rehoboth Beach, Del., on December 2. CRR Bill Farquhar was among the awardees, as he finished 3rd out of 43 men in the 55-59 age group and 97th overall.

Farquhar’s finishing time was 3:22:40 (3:22:11 chip), which is a 7:43/mile pace. He was extremely consistent in and around this pace from start to finish and was the 87th man to hit the finish line.

Congrats, Bill.

Tague competes in two fall triathlons

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photo of Steve Tague

Local triathlete and CRR Steve Tague ventured to the D.C. area and The Big Apple to compete in triathlon events this fall.

Reston Triathlon logo

In the Reston Triathlon on September 10, Tague bested 22 other competitors in his 60-64 age group in this olympic-distances event (1.5km swim, 40km bike, 10km run). He came in 14th overall out of 282 finishers.

Tague’s swim time was 28:06 (2nd among the 60-64s), his 1:11:00 bike (at 21 mph) was best among his age-group peers, and his 10km run time was 53:00 (3rd among the 60-64s). Adding 2:49 for the two transitions, his total time for the event was 2:34:54.

New York City Triathlon logo

The New York City Triathlon event on October 1 was changed to a run–bike–run event due to massive flooding in the city. The swim was ditched for an opening mile run, which was followed by the 40km bike and 10km run. Tague finished an impressive 132nd out of 1,048 competitors and 2nd out of 41 finishers in the 60-64 age group.

photo of Steve Tague in 2023 NYC Triathlon

A good swimmer, Tague reported that he would have won his age group in a traditional triathlon. “The guy that beat me I have [beaten] before, as I take a big chunk out of him in the swim (and a little in the bike) that he can’t quite make up in the run.”

Tague’s opened with a 7:50 mile, biked an age-group best 1:12:38 (20.5 mph), and finished with a 50:26 10km run (8:07/mile). Adding transition times totaling 4:01, his overall time was 2:14:53.

Not too shabby for a 64 year old!