We had numerous parents chosen, a couple of grandparents, an uncle, and a best friend. These people were chosen for various reasons and a few of the kids made me cry as they explained the why behind the decision. We'll be getting shirts and putting the names of our person/people on the back instead of our own names.
Yesterday's I was a mean coach and had them blindly choose option A or option B for the practice. Majority went with B - the track workout. The kids were pretty good sports about it. I think a few of the kids were feeling kind of fast. When you run a shorter distance, you can run it faster than you would run it as part of a longer distance. For example: a runner who runs an 8 minute mile averages 2 minutes for each 400. When you only have to run a 400, you can give it a little more and run it in 1:45. For one part, I teamed the 4 girls up so each of them were running 100m. I teamed up 2 of my guys so each was running a 200 and my top 2 runners had to run the full 400. I started 4 kids at the starting line and the girl was able to run all out for that 100 meters and get to her teammate very close to the same time that the other 3 boys were hitting the 100 mark. When she got back to the starting line, she grinned and told me she felt pretty fast for a short moment in time. I like that optimism mixed in with reality. She knows she's not likely to be the fastest 100 meter runner but she ran hard and was able to enjoy the reward of keeping up with the guys. I want to be the kind of coach who understands not all runners are created equal. But ALL runners deserve to have equal moments of joy in races and workouts. My favorite part of Saturday's Hokum Karem was being the person who got to tell one of my girls that she had just run her fastest mile time - possibly ever! She told me that on Tuesday when we did mile repeats, the 8:50something was her fastest and quite possibly the hardest mile she'd ever done. Then Thursday at the Goshen Invite, she ran an 8:49 and it was only slightly easier than on Tuesday. But Saturday's mile seemed kind of easy to her! I love the satisfaction that comes when hard work pays off. I'm eager to see how the kids do today at Bonneyville Mill in Bristol. There is a beast of a hill at the end and at Bethany, we only have mole hills to practice on. I've told the kids they will get a Dilly Bar for each Northridge runner they pass on the hill. I hope I owe each of them a treat by 7pm tonight!
Happy trails!
~K-Love
~K-Love