Notes
A few winners find themselves surprised by speed
Blind athletes hit the road; music selection is key; clothes make the runner
On Sept. 11,
He wasn't sure how he'd do or how he'd feel. It had been only a monthlong break, after all. Didn't matter. Whitlow finished in 1?hour, 13 minutes, 29 seconds — first in the half-marathon field — and with something close to astonishment.
“I didn't really know what to expect,” said Whitlow, who came within about two minutes of his personal-best time. “I'm going to go out and run hard, see how I feel, and I actually kind of surprised myself today.”
It was a race of defied expectations. Hodge had worried she wouldn't be able to keep pace early, then had closed the race late with what she said was her fastest mile of the morning.
“The guy in the biker, when I got into the last mile, he was telling everyone, ‘This is the women's [half-]marathon champ!'?” she said. “And they were getting psyched, and I got psyched. … The whole experience was just great.”
The Baltimore native crossed the finish line in 1:10:00 alongside
Saturday's race was the fourth for Jackson and Daley and third for Moyer. All wore shirts representing Blind Industries and Services of Maryland, a Baltimore-based organization that works to create opportunities for blind and visually impaired people through innovative rehabilitation and training programs.
Jackson began the race with some BISM students, some of whom were running it for the first time blind, but the group splintered over the 3-plus miles. Except for Jackson's and Moyer's walking cane and Daley's four-legged partner, it was an inconspicuous trio.
“People are always like, ‘Oh, how do blind people do that?'?” Moyer said. “We do it just like everybody else. We follow the sounds. We follow where everybody else goes. If we're not sure, we ask a question, just like anybody else would.”
Added Jackson: “It becomes a lot easier every time you do it. And this time, they switched up the route a little bit, so it was like a straight shot each way instead of zipping and turning.”
Orna couldn't complain, either.
“This is her second year,” Daley said, “so she's pretty good.”
And yet Saturday, it was hard to tell what there were more of: runners crossing the finish line with nothing in their ear, or runners crossing the finish line with something in their ear.
As for what they were listening to?
Two aptly named songs helped in particular: “Truckin'?” and “Going Down the Road Feelin' Bad.”
“I think Mile 4 to 6 was pretty hard because it was insanely uphill, but I didn't know if I could stay up with my son, who's about half my age,” he said as he stood next to his son,
A self-described “super nerd,”
He chose “only music that I could really run to” — which meant video game music. Near the end of his race, he switched to “Hopes and Dreams,” a 3-minute instrumental song from the 2015 role-playing single-player game Undertale.
“When I was finishing, I had to turn to a certain song that I had so I could just go,” he said, nearly out of breath.
Among the runners spotted in various events Saturday: a young man in a