Race Director of the Year - Gordon Cherr
Presented by Jeff Bryan
I want to thank Jeanne O’Kon and the rest of the Grand Prix
Awards Committee for asking me to present the 2008 Race Director of the Year
Award to Gordon Cherr. Whoa! Wait a minute! Did he just say the winner’s name in
the first sentence? He can’t do that! We have traditions to uphold! Well, the
last time I checked, we had a tradition of holding the Pine Run in South
Georgia.
Unfortunately, Gordon is in California and cannot be present this evening. He
did want me to tell everyone that it is very comfortable where he is and that he
had the air conditioner turned on. It is probably good that he is not here so he
doesn’t have to walk up and collect his hardware. As our mutual friend Scott
Ludwig once remarked: "Gordon can pull a hamstring by just walking out to get
the mail." So, it really is a good thing he now has race directing to fall back
on.
In the first place, I truly don’t know why the committee wished for me to
present this award. Maybe they thought my prior race director experience would
allow me to provide witty comments and insight about events that happen behind
the scenes. (By the way, the Palace Saloon 5K will be held on April 11, 2009.)
Or maybe they wanted to quickly fill the slot before the Governor of Illinois
appointed someone else to do it. Most likely, they wanted me to talk about a
subject that is dear to Gordon’s heart and that is "CHANGE". Unless you are
oxygen deprived from too much speedwork, you probably know the last year and a
half saw the ideas of CHANGE and HOPE being talked about all across the country.
Everybody wanted to change something.
But what does Gordon know about change? I assume he was raised like any other
typical American child. His father probably had to tell him many times that he
needed to change his attitude and I’m likewise sure his mother had to tell him
to change his underwear. Let me tell you what I know about change. It doesn’t
always come easy and it may be hard to accept.
Two years ago, we ran our last Pine Run in the International Paper Company’s
experimental forest up in South Georgia. GWTC was later informed that
International Paper would be selling the property. The Pine Run would either die
or need to be relocated. I won’t go into all of the details but GWTC got
permission to hold the race on the gently rolling hills of the Tall Timbers
Research Station. However, a race director was needed. And guess who ended up
with the job? It was our own man of change himself, Mr. Gordon Cherr.
Gordon never had any prior experience of being a race director. Apparently in
today’s society experience is not always a requirement. What is required is the
desire and the tenacity to do the right thing and to do it well. It also
requires the humility to admit you don’t know everything and the willingness to
seek out answers to questions. Most importantly, you must surround yourself with
the right people to get the job done.
So, CHANGE & HOPE came to the Pine Run. Firstly as I have already mentioned,
came the change of location for the race course. And as the runners quickly
found out, it was not very flat and fast. That is where the concept of HOPE came
in. After going up the first few hills, many of the brave harriers, who ventured
out on that fine autumn day, started to HOPE there were not going to be many
more. But there were and they got even bigger and longer. Now that is when HOPE
ultimately succumbed to the desperate prayer: "Please God, just let me finish
this thing." To make a long race short, the race director was allowed to live.
Everybody survived and were the stronger for it. The overall verdict has now
been rendered and to paraphrase the character Gordon Gekko from the movie Wall
Street: "Change is Good."
With that thought in mind, I am honored to present, on behalf of the GWTC and
its wonderful membership, the winner of the 2008 Race Director of Year Award,
Mr. Gordon Cherr.