Volunteer of the Year – Brian Corbin
Presented by Gary Droze
Our organization is fortunate to possess a large pool of
experienced and reliable volunteers, compared to most running clubs. Each year,
easily a dozen or more GWTC members contribute enough to deserve nomination for
the Volunteer of the Year award.
What sets Brian Corbin apart for this year’s choice? Like many members, he is
quick to volunteer at a road race, track meet, or cross-country event that he is
not directly participating in. Like a moderate number of members, he has been a
mainstay of assistance at the annual Turkey Trot race – overseeing the U-Haul
collection of donated goods, with wife Judy Alexander. Like a handful of
members, he has served as a race director (again with Judy, taking on two of the
GWTC’s more significant events: the Springtime Tallahassee 10K and the 10-mile
challenge). Like just a few members, he has done a long stint as a membership
coordinator, serving in that “under the radar” post for most of the last decade.
But like just one other club member to date – Chris Sumner – he has taken on the
time-consuming, headache-inducing challenge of mastering automatic timing and
scoring systems.
For those who aren’t familiar with either the significance of these systems, or
the effort required to learn them, let me explain. Along with the impressive
recent increase of youth track and cross-country meets in the area came a
mandate from governing organizations to use automatic, computer-based systems to
time and score these meets. For Luddites like me, this mandate posed a serious
challenge. But this past year, Brian came to the rescue. He immersed himself in
learning the systems, essentially serving a summer-long internship at the GWTC
Grand Prix Track Series meets. He honed his chops in area meets, paying some
heavy dues. I specifically recall Brian going above and beyond the call of duty
at a high school championship meet last year, when the elements and the
equipment conspired against him. Rather than shutting down and going home at the
meet’s conclusion (like the rest of us), Brian manned his post until well after
midnight, staying until he was confident that all the results were perfectly
correct. It’s that kind of devoted, compulsive, anal-retentive attention to
detail that earns Brian Corbin the right to have his named mentioned in the same
sentence with Bill Lott.
Congratulations Brian…and thanks!