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Interview with Adrian Martinez Classic Race Director Stephen Lane

Published by
DyeStatPRO.com   May 30th 2014, 2:00pm
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Making the Most of Your Mile: Adrian Martinez Classic

Published by Bring Back the Mile on May 29, 2014

Race Director Stephen Lane wants Track & Field to be more rock 'n' roll with events being a big community party. Now entering his sixth year hosting the Adrian Martinez Classic presented by HOKA ONE ONE, the Concord-Carlisle High School (MA) coach is well on his way to accomplishing his goals. In addition to expanding on the community experience, the 2014 edition has become a USA Milers Club High Perfomance Meet and will be attracting some of the nation's top male and female talent to Massachussets at 800m, 5000m and the meet's signature event, the Adro Mile. The Adro Mile will feature HOKA ONE ONE athlete and Olympic silver medalist Leo Manzano. More than $10,000 in guaranteed prize money is available at the Adrian Martinez Classic along with $1000 bonuses for men breaking 4:00 and women breaking 4:30 in the Adro Miles. 

Started in 2009, the Adrian Martinez Classic honors a 2002 graduate of Concord-Carlisle High School, a top runner and team captain for the Patriots. Martinez suffered sudden cardiac arrest while playing soccer in 2006, just two months after completing his bachelor's degree in Mathematics at Williams College. Proceeds of the event support the Adrian Martinez Scholarship Fund at Concord-Carlisle High School (which is administered by the CCHS Scholarship Fund), and for the Friends of CCHS Track & Field, which supports the Track & Field teams at CCHS.

BBTM: How did the Adrian Martinez Classic come together?

Steve: The Adrian Martinez Classic started back in 2009. I had been thinking about what would be the right way to honor Adrian and what would be the right way to do something different and interesting in the running community. I didn't want to do another road race, not that I don't like road races, but I was looking for something that would be a little bit separate from the traditional experience that runners have access too. Adrian was a great Miler and to be honest I have always loved the Mile too. I think having people surround a track talking and cheering is such a great environment to have that you sometimes don't get to experience as a fan of road races. On the roads everyone is spread out—you see people at the beginning and at the end, but typically not the whole race. With the track you get to participate as fans in the entire race.

You offer quite a bit of youth races and even a family 4 x 4 relay. While there is a High Performance portion of the Adrian Martinez Classic this is very much a community event first. Was this the intention from the beginning?

Thats exactly right. We wanted to try to reduce the fear or intimidation of coming down to the track. Parents, athletes and fellow coaches discussed what we thought it would take to get people on to the track, hoping that everyone would have a great time, but knew they just need to experience it. So, we included a "First Timers Mile", which is for people who have never tried anything on the track before. With the Youth races we wanted it be a family experience, bringing out as many generations as possible to the track on the same day; sometimes the parents run alongside the kids. The 'Family 4 x 4 Relay' was started last year at the suggestion of one of our high school's team captains. It was awesome with everyone getting into it; I was afraid a dad was going to pull a hamstring on that final leg! The first year was terrific and it quickly became an event favorite.

What is the Concord, MA running community like?

It's a great little running community. There is a really nice 4th of July road race, one of the nearby elementary schools organizes a 5K that attracts hundreds of little kids. At Concord-Carlisle High School we have upwards of 150 kids on the team, which is 15% of the school doing track. There is also a great group of older runners that meet on the weekends to run.

If you're a history buff you may think of the Revolutionary War. If you're a literature buff you might think Emerson and Thoreau. But, its a nice little running community too and the greater Boston elite running community is starting to boom. Boston already has so much running history, but its becoming an elite destination with Terrence Mahon's new group and various shoe companies in the region.

Read the full article at: bringbackthemile.com

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