Making Great Strives - Strivers Running Club
Transcription
Making Great Strives - Strivers Running Club
Making Great Strives Natick’s ‘Coach Colleen’ surrounds life with running by Tim Dumas Colleen Phelps Phelps is is making making aa career career out out of of running. running. Without Without prize prize money. money. Colleen There are are rewards, rewards, however…when however…when she she watches watches aa fourth-grader fourth-grader finfinThere ish her her first first 5K…when 5K…when her her charges charges raise raise thousands thousands for for charity…when charity…when ish Uta Pippig Pippig shows shows up up to to one one of of her her events. events. Uta Even without without the the running running club club for for young young girls girls she she founded, founded, Phelps, Phelps, Even 46, still still has has an an impressive impressive resume. resume. 46, She recently recently completed completed her fifth Boston Marathon (in 3:37) and was She first master master at at the the B.A.A. B.A.A. Half Half Marathon Marathon in in 2009. 2009. The The mother mother of of two two midmidfirst dle-school-age children children has has also also completed completed 17 17 Falmouth Falmouth Road Road Races. Races. dle-school-age But around around Natick, Natick, Mass., Mass., she’s she’s known known simply simply as as Coach Coach Colleen. Colleen. But Strivers Running Club For Girls Founder and Coach, Colleen Phelps. Photo courtesy of Strivers Running Club Clubbing it at a local road race. Photo courtesy of Strivers Running Club 52 New England Runner, July/August 2014 Feature In the five years since creating Strivers Running Club for Girls (nee Natick Fit Girls), Phelps has helped hundreds of youngsters not only to complete their first 5K, but to give back to the community. The combination of Strivers and her own running has allowed Phelps to immerse herself in the sport. Phelps, who earned an MBA at Bentley University and worked in the financial industry prior to founding the club, trains in the morning, then joins the Strivers on their own runs in the afternoon. Phelps is also a member of Suburban Striders in Weston, where she is mentored by former Boston College coach and Olympic Trials 1500 runner Kathy Fleming. “I live a blessed life,” said Phelps, who grew up in Sutton, Mass. Strivers, for girls in grades 4-6, recently hosted the inaugural Mother’s Day 5K at Natick High School—a race that drew a field of 600, many of whom sported the purple Strivers T-shirts that have become common at local races. Phelps organized the Mother’s Day race as well as the Jingle Bell Run, which has become a popular holiday tradition. The club debuted modestly with 20 girls in 2009 and now includes two sessions (35-40 girls attend each session, which sell out “in hours,” according to Phelps’ co-coach Kathy Landry) in both fall and spring. More than 300 girls have completed one session and more than half of that total have come back for another. The popularity, which led one of Natick’s middle school cross country teams to double its size in the fall of 2011, has not happened by accident. “Colleen is always looking for ways to improve the program,” said Landry, who has been with Strivers/Fit Girls since its inception. “We meet at the end of every session to review what worked and what needs to change—then Colleen spends most of the winter planning the next season.” Perhaps the most impressive statistic of all is that every Striver in program history has crossed the finish line at a 5K race, which concludes each session. A pasta party precedes the race, which serves a dual purpose: teambuilding and carbo-loading. The club experience, Phelps believes, provides an opportunity that other sports, some that include cuts, do not. “Some of these girls are not ready to go into a tryout and put themselves on the line, but they still want to be part of a team,” Phelps, a USATF Level 1 certified coach, said. “I thought this offered them another athletic venue to be part of a team—there isn’t a tryout, and it’s all about self-improvement in a supportive team environment.” Each session includes an introduction to jargon such as splits, pace and fartleks. There is also instruction for stretching, speed work, cross training, yoga and nutrition. Running, however, is not the dominating theme. There are book discussions and community outreach projects, which many of the- Three-time Boston Marathon winner Uta Pippig was part of the 600-strong field at the Strivers Mother’s Day 5K in Natick on May 11. Here she poses with Maggie Carr of Natick (L) and Jenna Brandaleone of Wayland. Photo by Renee Bender-Cohn girls enjoy as much as the running. The club has raised money for, among others, the Doug Flutie Jr. Autism Foundation; the Travis Roy Foundation; and Lovelane, a therapeutic horseback riding program for children with special needs. The club doesn’t simply hand over a check, however. For Lovelane, located in Lincoln, Mass., the girls teamed up with a “patient partner,” who then became a Strivers club member and joined the girls in a half-mile walk prior to that session’s 5K, the Susan McDaniel Run for Lovelane. The club has also collected books for a local hospital’s pediatric unit, filled backpacks to benefit a food pantry and donated time to the Natick Service Council, which provides services for those less fortunate. Strivers also raised nearly $8,000 for the One Fund, which benefits victims of the Boston Marathon bombing. “You get a bunch of runners together, and they have a powerful impact on a community,” Phelps said. “The Boston Marathon—how many people out there are charity runners? It’s amazing what people can do and I think that’s part of the message to the girls: Here’s a sport that not only can you achieve personal satisfaction with, you can then take it that much further and positively impact outside of yourself.” Cara McDonald, 12, is one of three McDonald siblings to participate in the program, along with twin sister, Brenna, and Alanna, who is now 14 and was among the first group of Strivers/Fit Girls five years ago. “The community service has really opened up all our eyes to see that there are people struggling in not only large cities like Boston, but in our very own town,” Cara said. “Giving back to the community has made me feel like I’m making a difference.” Maeve Sheehy, 13, is one of many converts to the sport who later served as a junior coach for the club. Before joining, she rode horses and played basketball and soccer. Sprinting short distances was all she knew. But she saw her mother occasionally run, which sparked Maeve’s interest. She wanted to impress mom, yet became exhausted giving an allout effort. Within the first week, Phelps and Landry taught Maeve how to pace herself and to employ proper form using the acronym LEAF (lean, eyes, arms, feet). Her times soon dropped. She was hooked. “By the end of my first session I was running 3-5 times a week,” Maeve said, “continuing on the days we didn’t have practice.” Like Maeve, Alanna McDonald also served as a junior coach, and is grateful for the overall experience. “Not only was I able to become a runner but I learned how to lead and teach,” Alanna said. The McDonald sisters aren’t the only ones to take up the sport. Their parents, even their brother, became runners. Another highlight of the program is the guest speakers. Joan Benoit Samuelson and Thomas Madut—who placed top 50 at the Boston Marathon in 2012 and is one of the Lost Boys of Sudan—as well as Travis Roy have made appearances. Pippig, a three-time winner at Boston in the 1990s, not only spoke to the club the day after this year’s Boston Marathon, she called Phelps two days before the Mother’s Day 5K to ask if she could don purple and run with the girls. “It was wonderful,” Phelps said. “It made me a nervous wreck.” Pippig, who ran the B.A.A. 5K two days before Boston, ran with the Strivers during the Mother’s Day race, pinballing along the course to encourage runners. “I hope it makes them feel that they are part of a real athletic team: ‘You are athletes. An elite athlete has chosen to run with you,”’ Phelps said of Pippig’s race appearance. As for her own running, Phelps has done well to remain a top-of-the-line performer. Her best time at Boston is a 3:31 in 2010 and her 3:37 this year was well below the qualifying standard (3:55) for next year. She constantly finishes within the top 3 to 5 percent in her age group and has also run the Vermont City and Providence marathons. “I have to stay on top of my game,” she says. “I make sure in addition to going to seminars for the coaching aspect, I get coached too.” Immersing herself in running has led to a joyful life for Phelps. It’s a career she passes on with each Strivers session. “I believe you create your own happiness,” she said. “Hopefully my happiness helps others achieve the fulfillment they deNR sire.” For more information: striversrunningclub.com; facebook.com/striversrunningclub New England Runner, July/August 2014 53