Palace Breaks the Thousand mark
David Yon, April 2009
I knew something special was happening when the lot around the
Palace Saloon was filled with cars at 7:00 a.m., more than an hour before the
start of the race. Race directors Herb Wills and Reid Vannoy have found the
right formula for this race - a good course, a shot gun start, nonstop
advertising, an appeal to FSU students and free beer. The result for the 35th
Palace Saloon was 1022 mostly happy finishers. The race begins on Dupree Street,
runs a big square around Messer Field and finishes in front of the Palace Saloon
after almost 2 miles of running straight down Jackson Bluff road. There is one
hill, but if you can make it to the top without giving in, there is a great
downhill reward on the other side.
Herb and Reid’s nonstop marketing efforts have resulted in this race growing
from approximately 250 in 2003 to the third biggest race in town. It has a
unique fun atmosphere that blends the traditional local road racer with the FSU
students crowd. It is not only one of the oldest races in town, but it is also
by far the race run on the same course for the most consecutive years. And while
the ownership of the Palace Saloon has changed, its support for the race has
remained strong throughout the years.
On Saturday John Robida ended David Altmaier’s winning streak with a seven
second victory. John’s time of 16:21 was a 25 second improvement from last year
and good enough to earn the win. David had a close battle with third place
finisher Stephen Cox, but he prevailed 16:28 to 16:30. Tripp Southerland and
Charlie Johnson rounded out the sub 17:00 minute finishers. John and David are
one-two in the GWTC grand prix series as well. Michael Martinez won a good
battle with Tim Unger and Carl Nordheilm for the masters title. Mike, at 43, the
youngster of the group crossed the line in 17:22. Tim (closing in on the
grandmaster category) was next in 17:47 and Carl finished in 17:50. Those of us
who have reached the grandmasters competition already are having Tim's birth
certificate pulled in hopes he really has a couple more years to go.
On the women’s side Lisa Johnson won her second straight Palace with a personal
best of 18:11, 45 seconds faster than last year. Right behind Lisa was Amy Paine
who finished in 18:15. Alison Eagen just missed breaking the 19:00 minute marked
when she took third in 19:03. The masters champion was Mary Anne Grayson who ran
20:22. Jane Johnson was just behind in 20:29, good enough to grab the grand
master title.
Scoring a race that big is a challenge. Last year’s smaller crowd got backed up
in the finish chute and made accurate results difficult. This year Reid teamed
up with Peg Griffin and Bill Lott to design a two chute finish line. There were
able to test it at the Cookie Run and it performed near flawlessly last
Saturday. With the number of finisher closely split between men and women, one
chute was for men and one for women. Both chutes kept runners flowing and mostly
in order. Just like the beer!