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Hello
Everyone,
February
4, 2010
In
this Issue:
- All About Sudbury Rocks!!! Race
- How Exercising Keeps Cells Young
- 8th Annual Run in Memory of Kurt
- Upcoming Local Events -
Ontario Masters Championships
- Running Room Update -
- Track North News -
TN Results from Montreal & New York-PB's for Tree and
Kaitlyn
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Jennifer MacKinnon and Vince Perdue |
January
28, 2010 by Rachel Punch at the Sudbury Star
Organizers of the largest
running event in Northern Ontario hope to propel
the Sudbury Rocks Race, Run or Walk for Diabetes
past the 2,000-participant mark this year.
"I really think it's
a realistic objective that we took on," said
race director Vince Perdue at a press conference
on Thursday at SRO on Durham Street.
This year's event takes place
on May 2 in downtown Sudbury.
The race grew out of the
Sudbury Fitness Challenge Sun Run six years ago
with about 400 participants. Organizers added a
full marathon and eventually brought the run downtown.
Last year, about 1,500 runners and walkers took
part.
"The reason that we
took it from Laurentian University and put it out
on the streets originally ... was to get in the
faces of everybody to show them we are actually
a fit city," Perdue said. The
exposure is also aimed at encouraging more people
to take part. "The
only way to maybe make a dent in Type 2 diabetes
is actually be a fitter community," Perdue
said.
The event teamed up with
the Canadian Diabetes Association five years ago.
"It's a very important event, both because
it raises money for the cause of diabetes ... and
also because it allows people with diabetes to get
active as well as people who are risk of getting
diabetes," said Jennifer MacKinnon, regional
director.
About 9 million Canadians
have either diabetes or pre-diabetes, which is a
condition people develop before getting Type 2 diabetes.
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Organizers are hoping to raise $75,000 at the Sudbury
Rocks event this year. "It goes into research
for diabetes. The Canadian Diabetes Association
funds research nationwide," MacKinnon said.
"The money also goes into local programs that
we do in the Sudbury area." For example, the
organization holds symposiums on topics related
to diabetes, helps with support groups, sends children
with Type 1 diabetes to camp and gives presentations
to the public to raise awareness.
The Sudbury Rocks Race, Run or Walk for Diabetes
offers a free one-kilometre run for children as
well as five-and 10-kilometre events. It also has
both a half and full marathon. "The half and
the marathon course are the same this year. The
5-K is very fast, we left it the same," Perdue
said. "We decided to give the 10-K people a
treat. We've added an extension through College
Boreal. It's a little hillier and absolutely more
scenic." Among the events is a marathon relay.
"If you want to be involved in a marathon but
don't have the legs for 42-K, we have a relay in that,"
Perdue said.
The Sudbury Rocks race isn't just for seasoned
runners. Organizers encourage new people to come
out.
"You don't have to run. It's open to everybody,
walkers, runners, people who are living with diabetes,"
MacKinnon said. "Everybody knows somebody who
is living with the disease, so just come on out."
The event also features a five kilometre "celebrity
challenge." "We ask as many celebrities
and business people as we can to help get our message
out and run," Perdue said. The Sudbury Star
will be entering four runners in this year's celebrity
challenge.
A pasta dinner to raise additional funds will be
held May 1 from 5 to 7 p.m. at Respect Is Burning.
Tickets are $25. The race takes place the following
day, beginning at 8 a.m.
Organizers also need to recruit about 300 volunteers.
"If you can't participate but you are around,
we need volunteers," Perdue said.
View the CTV
Launch Video here (Adobe Media Player
required)
View the news conference video here at
thesudburystar.com
To sign up
to participate or volunteer, visit the new event
website at www.sudburyrocksmarathon.com.
rpunch@thesudburystar.com
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How Exercising
Keeps Your Cells Young
By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS January
27, 2010,
Recently, scientists in Germany gathered several groups
of men and women to look at their cells’ life spans.
Some of them were young and sedentary, others middle-aged
and sedentary. Two other groups were, to put it mildly,
active. The first of these consisted of professional runners
in their 20s, most of them on the national track-and-field
team, training about 45 miles per week. The last were
serious, middle-aged longtime runners, with an average
age of 51 and a typical training regimen of 50 miles per
week, putting those young 45-mile-per-week sluggards to
shame.
From the first, the scientists noted one aspect of their
older runners. It ‘‘was striking,’’
recalls Dr. Christian Werner, an internal-medicine resident
at Saarland University Clinic in Homburg, ‘‘to
see in our study that many of the middle-aged athletes
looked much younger than sedentary control subjects of
the same age.’’
Even more striking was what was going on beneath those
deceptively youthful surfaces. When the scientists examined
white blood cells from each of their subjects, they found
that the cells in both the active and slothful young adults
had similar-size telomeres. Telomeres are tiny caps on
the end of DNA strands — the discovery of their
function won several scientists the 2009 Nobel Prize in
medicine. When cells divide and replicate these long strands
of DNA, the telomere cap is snipped, a process that is
believed to protect the rest of the DNA but leaves an
increasingly abbreviated telomere. Eventually, if a cell’s
telomeres become too short, the cell ‘‘either
dies or enters a kind of suspended state,’’
says Stephen Roth, an associate professor of kinesiology
at the University of Maryland who is studying exercise
and telomeres. Most researchers now accept telomere length
as a reliable marker of cell age. In general, the shorter
the telomere, the functionally older and more tired the
cell.
It’s not surprising, then, that the young subjects’
telomeres were about the same length, whether they ran
exhaustively or sat around all day. None of them had been
on earth long enough for multiple cell divisions to have
snipped away at their telomeres. The young never appreciate
robust telomere length until they’ve lost it.
Related
More Phys Ed columns
Faster, Higher, Stronger
Fitness and Nutrition News
When the researchers measured telomeres in the middle-aged
subjects, however, the situation was quite different.
The sedentary older subjects had telomeres that were on
average 40 percent shorter than in the sedentary young
subjects, suggesting that the older subjects’ cells
were, like them, aging. The runners, on the other hand,
had remarkably youthful telomeres, a bit shorter than
those in the young runners, but only by about 10 percent.
In general, telomere loss was reduced by approximately
75 percent in the aging runners. Or, to put it more succinctly,
exercise, Dr. Werner says, ‘‘at the molecular
level has an anti-aging effect.’’
There are plenty of reasons to exercise — in this
column, I’ve pointed out more than a few —
but the effect that regular activity may have on cellular
aging could turn out to be the most profound. ‘‘It’s
pretty exciting stuff,’’ says Thomas LaRocca,
a Ph.D. candidate in the department of integrative physiology
at the University of Colorado in Boulder, who has just
completed a new study echoing Werner’s findings.
In Mr. LaRocca’s work, people were tested both for
their V02max — or maximum aerobic capacity, a widely
accepted measure of physical fitness — and their
white blood cells’ telomere length. In subjects
55 to 72, a higher V02max correlated closely with longer
telomeres. The fitter a person was in middle age or onward,
the younger their cells.
There are countless unanswered questions about how and
why activity affects the DNA. For instance, Dr. Werner
found that his older runners had more activity in their
telomerase, a cellular enzyme thought to aid in lengthening
and protecting telomeres. Exercise may be affecting telomerase
activity and not telomeres directly. In addition, Stephen
Roth has been measuring telomeres and telomerase activity
in a wide variety of tissues in mice and has found, he
says, the protective effects from exercise only in some
tissues.
Another question is whether we must run 50 miles a week
to benefit. The answer ‘‘can only be speculative
at the moment,’’ Dr. Werner says, although
since he jogs much less than that, he probably joins the
rest of us in hoping not. Given his and his colleagues’
data, ‘‘one could speculate,’’
he concludes, ‘‘that any form of intense exercise
that is regularly performed over a long period of time’’
will improve ‘‘telomere biology,’’
meaning that with enough activity, each of us could outpace
the passing years.
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| 8th
Annual Run in Memory of Kurt Gelbhaar |
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On Saturday, February 6,
the Sudbury Rocks!! Running Club will be hosting our eighth
annual Run in Memory of Kurt Gelbhaar.
Kurt died suddenly on Tuesday,
January 29, 2002. He was in his 79th year and still running
competitively. He was a mentor and inspiration to most
local runners and it is fitting his actions be remembered.
The Run will
be very informal. There will be no set distances
and it is not a race. We pick this day annually to remember
someone who made a difference in the running community as
we go about our normal runs. We will meet in the lobby at
Laurentian University's Ben Avery Athletic Building at 9:00
am . The run will start at approximately 9:00 am and will
proceed at a leisurely pace down Loach's Trail (some runners
will run inside on the new 200m track). Most runners will
continue around a 10k loop back to the University via Ramsey
Lake Rd. and South Bay Rd. Runners are free to go whatever
distance appeals to them or fits their schedule. All runners
are encouraged to stick together for the first few kms.
See you on Saturday.
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Upcoming Local Events
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February 6 & 7

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February
21, 2010

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May 2, 2010

We also
host our 8 person Marathon Relay
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Visit our Events
Section for all the Details
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Run
Club Update |
STARTING TUESDAY!
Our new marathon and 1/2 marathon clinics led by
Steve start on Tuesday at 6:00pm. Our goal race is
Ottawa Race Weekend but we will help you if your race
is a few weeks before or after that date (such as
the Sudbury Rocks!).
If your “to-do list” includes completing
a marathon or a 1/2, join us this week and we will
help you achieve that goal!
COACHES WANTED!
Next round of clinics begins in February and March.
We are in need of clinic coaches for Learn To Run,
5k, and the 10k. Let us know if you are interested.
Be sure
to check out the great new interactive Sudbury
Rocks Marathon website here.
Running Motivation
“You cannot propel yourself forward by patting
yourself on the back.” Steve Prefontaine
“A man can fail many times, but he isn't a
failure until he begins to blame somebody else.”
Steve Prefontaine
"In running, it doesn't matter whether you come
in first, in the middle of the pack, or last. You
can say 'I have finished.' There is a lot of satisfaction
in that." Fred Lebow
"Running is a big question mark that's there
each and every day. It asks you, 'Are you going to
be a wimp or are you going to be strong today?'"
Peter Maher
Happy Trails!
Your Sudbury Running Room Team
Gina, Neil, Adam, Steve, Jessica, Frank, Olivia,
Serena, and Denise
Join us for FREE Practice
Club
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Track
North News - by Dick
Moss |
TN: Indoor Legion
Results - Gold for Jeremy! Bronze for Seb!
2010 Ontario Legion Indoor Track
and Field Results
Sat. January 30th, 2010
York University
Three Track North athletes competed today at the 2010
Ontario Legion Indoor Track and Field Championships at
York University in Toronto. Results (all times still unofficial)
included the following:
Boys 17 and under 3000m
Gold!!! Jeremy Cooper - 9:17.0
Boys 17 and under 800m
Bronze!! Sebastian Diebel - 2:03.3
Zack Caverson - 2:20.0
Boys 17 and under 400m
5th - Sebastian Diebel - 54.34
Special thanks to Seb for the post-race reporting!! We'll
foward a link to the official results once they are posted.
Darren
TN
Results from Montreal & New York-PB's for Tree and
Kaitlyn
Saturday, January 30th, 2010
A busy weekend for Track North athletes with the McGill
Team Challenge in Montreal and the New York Armory Dual
Meet in New York City.
Some quick results:
Montreal
Men's 60m Heat
Eric Roque (Snax!) - U of Waterloo - 7.24 (did not advance
unfortunately)
Men's 4 X 800m
Chantry Cargill (Tree!) - U of Ottawa - 1:58 split!! PB!
- Team 7th
1500m
Chantry Cargill - 4:15.93 (47th)
full results: http://www.mcgilltrack.com/meetResults/2010TeamChallenge/index.htm
New York
Women's 3000m
Kaitlyn Tallman - Villanova - 9:31.37 8th - PB!!!!!!!!
full results: http://ny.milesplit.us/meets/60286/results/111822
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For
information call me.
Vincent Perdue
341 Fourth Ave, Sudbury On. P3B-3R9
705-560-0424
vtperdue@cyberbeach.net
Proud
sponsor of the SudburyRocks!!! Race, Run or Walk for Diabetes
http://www.sudburyrocksmarathon.com/
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