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Tag: long distance running

  • New Feaster Five challenge: Beat Chara, Pizzi and help scholarship fund

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    Thousands of runners and walkers celebrate as they finish the 36th Annual Feaster Five Thanksgiving Day Road Race in Andover.




    ANDOVER – The Feaster Five Road Race, a Thanksgiving Day tradition featuring family, fun, fitness and apple pie, takes over downtown Andover next week expecting more than 7,000 runners and walkers of all ages to join this special event.

    When runners line up at the starting line this year, they will be chasing two well known targets: Bruins legend and Hall of Famer Zdeno Chara and World Marathon Champion Becca Pizzi for the brand new Can You Catch Them Challenge.







    Chara & Co. at Feaster Five

    There is a new challenge in the 2025 Feaster Five Road Race. Beat former Bruins great Zdeno Chara, on right, or long-distance running star Becca Pizzi, on left, and you will help the MVS Scholarship Fund presented by Schneider Electric. Long-time Feaster Five race director Dave McGillivray, who is close to both Chara and Pizzi, is in center.



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    Sidney's run

    Sidney Olson is shown here in 2021 before her Kids K race. She had run two years, including 2022, and now the event is named in her honor, the “Sidney Mae Olson Rainbow Run.”



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    Mary Beth Ellis, who lost her daughter Sidney Olson to a traffic accident in 2023, leads a 1K cross country race during Sidney’s Rainbow kids fun run before last year’s Feaster Five road race.


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    bburt@eagletribune.com (Bill Burt)

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  • Man who ran down every single DC street shares his favorite things about the city – WTOP News

    Man who ran down every single DC street shares his favorite things about the city – WTOP News

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    Dion Thompson-Davoli has seen every sidewalk, row house and neighborhood in D.C., after he finished running down each of the 1,838 streets in the city Friday.

    Dion Thompson-Davoli ran all of D.C.’s 1,838 streets.(Courtesy Dion Thompson-Davoli)

    One runner has seen every sidewalk, row house and neighborhood in D.C., after he finished running down each of the 1,838 streets in the city Friday.

    Dion Thompson-Davoli finished his final street in the early morning hours when the heat and humidity were brutal.

    “By the time I was done with my last one, it must have been almost 90 degrees,” Thompson-Davoli told WTOP. “I was soaked through my shoes, which is just the worst when you’re jogging and your feet are squelching against the ground.”

    He started the challenge two years ago after downloading an app called CityStrides, which tracks your running paths in your city, and quickly ran every street in Takoma Park, Maryland, the city where he lived.

    He then crossed into D.C.

    “It was a lot of fun. It was a great way to see the city,” Thompson-Davoli said.

    In a typical week, he would log 10 to 12 miles of new road. The only roads he did not complete were interstates and the street where former President Barack Obama resides, which was blocked off by Secret Service.

    Over his 2-year-long challenge, he had a few takeaways of the District.

    “D.C. is a beautiful city. It’s just a city of neighborhoods, really more than anywhere else I’ve ever lived. There is nothing to Washington more than downtown, and then a succession of really gorgeous neighborhoods,” said Thompson-Davoli, suggesting that he may be one of the only people to have ever gone down every street on foot.

    He also said the city had more hills than he was expecting, which were not a pleasant feature for someone planning to run the nearly 2,000 miles of road.

    But he admitted it does provide some beautiful scenic overlooks, such as Pennsylvania Avenue Southeast, where “you can look down the hill and see the monuments from a distance,” or upper Connecticut Avenue in Northwest.

    “(It’s) just a city full of friendly people. People are sitting out on their porches, they’ll wave at you as you go by, kids will say ‘hi’ to you, or want to jog with you for a little bit, which was always fun,” he said.

    Some of his favorite neighborhoods to run were Northwest D.C.’s Palisades and Spring Valley.

    “There’s some gorgeous historic home architecture on the far west side of the city that is really worth your time,” he said.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Luke Lukert

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  • Lake Half-Marathon kicks off 2024 competitive running

    Lake Half-Marathon kicks off 2024 competitive running

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    CHICAGO — Outside Soldier Field Saturday, the race was on in the 15th-annual F3 Lake Half-Marathon and 5K.

    “[It’s] Chicago’s original winter half-marathon,” said Zach Edmondson of F3 Events.

    Former WGN digital sports host Larry Hawley was one of the 2,500-plus runners taking to the winter course this year, even though temperatures were giving more early spring vibes.

    “I think two years ago it was 14 degrees and last year was 22 and snow [so], today was perfect,” Hawley said. “It was a good day for me and a good day for other people … A good way to kick off the 2024 Chicago outdoor run season.”

    The F3 Lake Half-Marathon is the inaugural competitive run of the year, with runners turning out to compete from 31 different states and four countries.

    “We have people who are getting ready for Boston … Boston qualifiers,” Edmondson said. “Competitive marathoners and then we also have resolution runners, people who came off the holidays and decided we’re going to do it this year.”

    For more information on F3 events and other races taking place in the Chicago area, visit their website.

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    Sean Lewis

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