IRAQ WAR TODAY
Keep Your Helmet On!




Be A Part of a Tribute to Fallen Heroes - Help Build the Fallen Soldiers' Bike
Help support the families of our deployed Heroes - Visit Soldiers' Angels' Operation Outreach
Help Our Heroes Help Others - Click Here to visit SOS: KIDS
Nominate your Hero for IWT's "Hero of the Month" - click here for details!
Search Iraq War Today only

Saturday, December 11, 2004

FOXSports.com - More Sports - Marathon will have satellite run in Afghanistan

Marathon will have satellite run in Afghanistan

Ron Staton / Associated Press
Granted, the trees will be wooden and "Diamond Head" is a small hill renamed, but the soldiers will still be doing 26.2 miles on the same day as more than 26,000 runners in Hawaii.

Nine hours before the race's 5 a.m. local start — Afghanistan is 13.5 hours ahead of Hawaii — the servicemen and women will make nearly six laps around a dusty airstrip at Firebase Ripley just outside Tarin Kowt in the central province of Uruzgan, a former Taliban stronghold and a possible hiding place of Osama bin Laden. The aid stations are guard towers doing double duty.

Going in circles is the upshot of putting on a road race in a war zone. Runners need a foxhole here and there for cover in case of a rocket or mortar attack. Fellow soldiers in full gear will be standing by with armored Humvees.

Much of organizing the run fell to Capt. Ivan Hurlburt, who has run the Honolulu Marathon four times. He set about the task after a soldier in the 2nd Battalion, 5th Infantry Regiment, expressed the wish of going back to Honolulu for the race. The regiment is based at Schofield Barracks near Honolulu, and 16 members of the battalion, including Hurlburt, are Honolulu Marathon veterans.

The runners have been motivated and inspired by Patti Dillon, a four-time Honolulu Marathon winner who now coaches young runners in New London, Conn., where she lives.

Dillon sent to Hurlburt a banner featuring her quote from a media interview: "If they're going to beat you, make 'em spit blood."

"The soldiers here have been inspired by her and we have seemed to inspire the young runners she teaches," Hurlburt said in an e-mail to The Associated Press. Hurlburt has posted Dillon's e-mails, which include marathon training tips.

"It has been a great inspiration for us to have an American distance runner world record holder have a genuine interest in a marathon that is being held for and ran by soldiers," he said.





HONOLULU - About 300 American soldiers in Afghanistan on Sunday will run past palm trees and up Diamond Head in their very own Honolulu Marathon.


FOXSports.com - More Sports - Marathon will have satellite run in Afghanistan
|

nocashfortrash.org