Running – Eugene Marathon, minus 1

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It’s Saturday afternoon and I’m watching the rain come down. And stop. And start again.

But the weather forecast for tomorrow only calls for “showers” (today it was “rain”) and I’m hoping they’re later rather than earlier. Please, Mother Nature, get (most) of it out of your system today.

I did a slow, half-hour run this morning just to stay limber and saw many other runners out and about. This is clearly a runner's town as it most certainly should be considering its storied history.

I drove the portion of the course (the first 9 miles) that is drivable. The remainder is mostly on trails and bikepaths along the Willamette River that ought to be pretty flat. What I learned is that there are a few hills along the way, including an incline right at the start along East 15th Avenue.

The race starts at Agate and East 15th on the University of Oregon campus, next to historic Hayward Field.


   RACE START - QUIET TODAY BUT NOT TOMORROW
IMG_3342.JPGTomorrow morning at 7:00 a.m. this is where the marathon and half-marathon get underway. The finish line is in almost the same location.

I took a short side-trip to view Pre’s Rock. Steve Prefontaine, a distance running phenomenon, is an iconic figure among American runners. He died on 30 May 1975 in single-car accident in Eugene, the site of which is marked with this monument.

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Pre's Rock is a kind of shrine decorated with old race bibs and other running detritus. (One person left a note asking for him to watch over runner number such-and-such hoping for a sub-4 hour finish in tomorrow's race.)

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It’s a quiet, attractive residential area on a wooded hill close to the University of Oregon. It’s difficult to imagine that this pleasant spot is where one of America’s legendary runners met his end.

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For some reason I tend to associate Steve Prefontaine and Kurt Cobain with each other even though Cobain was 8 years old when Prefontaine died. Maybe it’s because they share being from the Pacific Northwest, came from hardscrabble, coastal, working class towns (Prefontaine from Coos Bay, Ore.; Cobain from Aberdeen, Wash.), both had a charismatic edginess, and both died young.

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Greg Fischer

About Me: Greg Fischer has 30 years experience in the travel industry with airlines, travel agencies, AAA and Amtrak. He provides a hotel booking service for small companies and individual business travelers who want to save money and time. Contact him at hotelsandtrains -at- live.com.

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This page contains a single entry by Greg Fischer published on May 2, 2009 2:00 PM.

Destinations - Austin, Texas, aka "Berkeley-by-the-sage" was the previous entry in this blog.

Running - Eugene Marathon: done! is the next entry in this blog.

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