Runners young and older can be seen on the roads, and the outdoor tracks
at UMass, Amherst College and Amherst Regional High School.
Some
of them train for real competition, either in races around Western
Massachusetts, or in college and high school meets. Others are just out
there for a good workout.
Then there are the really serious guys, like Philemon Terer and Benard Lengat.
No,
they’re aren’t from Amherst. Nor do they live there. They come from
Kenya, where running is a way of life, especially for those willing to
put in the miles that can lead to monetary winnings in support of
themselves and their families back in their villages.
For
dedicated athletes like Terer and Lengat, Amherst has become an
important stop on their journey toward establishing themselves as
world-class competitors. Over recent weeks, they trained together in
Amherst while staying with the family of Bob Rosen, a 61-year-old
distance-running guru who doubles as a Springfield lawyer.
The
law may be his livelihood, but the road is his passion. He has been
running since his teens, and he loves to help others with their
training. He’s been doing that for years as a volunteer assistant coach
of cross country and track at Amherst Regional. He also helps with
Amherst College teams.
As Rosen puts it, “I love to deal with
young, motivated people who want to learn. I try to help them get better
and faster, and I try to give them what can be a lifelong love for the
sport. It’s something they can do for years.”
It was no wonder,
then, that Rosen reveled in the success of the Amherst Regional boys
teams when they won a “Triple Crown” in 2011-12 – Western Massachusetts
titles in cross country, indoor track and outdoor track.
As for
the Kenyans, the training they have been doing with Rosen in Amherst has
produced impressive results. On Oct. 13 – a cold and crisp Saturday
morning – Terer and Lengat finished 1-2 in the Hartford Half-Marathon,
outlasting a field of 7,000 entries. If not for the cold, one or both
might have broken the course record of 1:05.24 for the 13.1-mile grind.
It seems that Amherst always has been known as “a running town.”
Runners
young and older can be seen on the roads, and the outdoor tracks at
UMass, Amherst College and Amherst Regional High School.
Some of
them train for real competition, either in races around Western
Massachusetts, or in college and high school meets. Others are just out
there for a good workout.
Then there are the really serious guys, like Philemon Terer and Benard Lengat.
No,
they’re aren’t from Amherst. Nor do they live there. They come from
Kenya, where running is a way of life, especially for those willing to
put in the miles that can lead to monetary winnings in support of
themselves and their families back in their villages.
For
dedicated athletes like Terer and Lengat, Amherst has become an
important stop on their journey toward establishing themselves as
world-class competitors. Over recent weeks, they trained together in
Amherst while staying with the family of Bob Rosen, a 61-year-old
distance-running guru who doubles as a Springfield lawyer.
The
law may be his livelihood, but the road is his passion. He has been
running since his teens, and he loves to help others with their
training. He’s been doing that for years as a volunteer assistant coach
of cross country and track at Amherst Regional. He also helps with
Amherst College teams.
As Rosen puts it, “I love to deal with
young, motivated people who want to learn. I try to help them get better
and faster, and I try to give them what can be a lifelong love for the
sport. It’s something they can do for years.”
It was no wonder,
then, that Rosen reveled in the success of the Amherst Regional boys
teams when they won a “Triple Crown” in 2011-12 – Western Massachusetts
titles in cross country, indoor track and outdoor track.
As for
the Kenyans, the training they have been doing with Rosen in Amherst has
produced impressive results. On Oct. 13 – a cold and crisp Saturday
morning – Terer and Lengat finished 1-2 in the Hartford Half-Marathon,
outlasting a field of 7,000 entries. If not for the cold, one or both
might have broken the course record of 1:05.24 for the 13.1-mile grind.
没有评论:
发表评论