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Press Release - Napa Valley Marathon - 2/22/08

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

      COMPETITIVE WOMEN'S FIELD READY FOR NAPA VALLEY MARATHON

 Joan Benoit Samuelson Will Inspire Women's Olympic Trials Aspirants

NAPA, Calif. - February 22, 2008 - In 1984, when Joan Benoit Samuelson 
won the Olympic gold medal in the very first Olympic Games marathon for 
women, the Kaiser Permanente Napa Valley Marathon was already six years 
old. And, in Napa, women were already competing at the 26.2-mile marathon 
distance -- just as they had since Kathrine Switzer broke the female 
gender "barrier" at the Boston Marathon in 1967.

For the 30th Annual Kaiser Permanente Napa Valley Marathon on Sunday, 
March 2, Benoit Samuelson will, appropriately, be on hand as a group of 
focused women pursue their own "Olympic" dreams in an Olympic year.

Their individual goals?

To be on the starting line for the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team Trials-Women's 
Marathon, which will take place in Boston on April 20.

The Trials race will select the three women for the U.S. women's Olympic 
marathon squad that will compete at the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in 
Beijing, China in August. For these Napa Valley Marathon entrants, 
though, simply toeing the line at the Trials with women who will contend 
for a spot on the U.S. Olympic team is their ultimate athletic objective. 
The talented women will run the Napa Valley Marathon as a "last chance" 
qualifying attempt for the Trials.

"Qualifying for the Marathon Trials is a goal that women definitely put 
out there, and people, by nature, try to achieve their goals," said 
Benoit Samuelson, 50, who has qualified for each of the seven U.S. 
Women's Olympic Marathon Trials races since 1984. "For a woman who's 
competitive, the Marathon Trials is a logical goal. That's the reason 
these women are coming to Napa."

Relatively few long distance runners have the ability or dedication to 
make it to the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials. Approximately 125 of 
America's top female distance runners will participate in this year's 
women's Marathon Trials race. Specifically, at Napa, half a dozen women 
will aim for a finishing time that is 2 hours, 47 minutes-flat or faster, 
the "B" standard set by USA Track & Field to qualify for the Trials. The 
women's "A" standard is 2:39:00 (which awards travel and lodging expenses 
for the Trials to the women who achieve it).

The qualifying window for the Trials began on January 1, 2006. It will 
end on March 23, 2008, just three weeks after this year's Napa Valley 
Marathon. Women seeking a Trials qualifier, in a marathon with an 
excellent chance for fair weather, have two final opportunities in 
California: the Napa Valley Marathon and the City of Los Angeles Marathon 
(on the same day as Napa).

For the hopeful women who will run the fast Napa Valley Marathon course, 
just landing a spot at the Trials will validate their own, personal 
Olympian efforts. All of the aspirants have previously run marathon times 
within striking distance of the 2:47:00 standard. If they can achieve it, 
a personal "gold medal" will be theirs. They will gladly pay their way to 
the Trials.

Shaluinn Fullove, a former track and field and cross country competitor 
at Stanford University, is intimately familiar with trials and 
tribulations. In the early spring of 2005, the 30-year-old Palo Alto, 
Calif. resident was diagnosed with thyroid cancer. After receiving a 
thyroidectomy and radiation treatments, Fullove eventually resumed 
serious training and recorded a time of 2:51:06 at the 2006 LaSalle Bank 
Chicago Marathon. Now, Fullove will compete at the Napa Valley Marathon 
with a goal of qualifying for the Marathon Trials.

"It's been a longtime goal. It's taken two years to get here," said 
Fullove, who works as a marketing manager for Google Inc. "I was really 
shocked when I was diagnosed with cancer. For someone who's used to being 
really healthy, and takes pride in being fit, it really rocked my world. 
Now, I'm ready for this (Napa). Hopefully, it's just the beginning."

Ginger Reiner of Cambridge, Mass. will come to Napa with a goal of flying 
back home as an Olympic Trials qualifier.

"It would be an honor to toe the line with some of the best women runners 
in the U.S. and race the Trials right in my hometown," said Reiner, 30, a 
Boston high school math teacher who regularly trains on the Trials 
course. "I'm glad that there are several women at Napa who will be going 
for the same time."

Reiner places high in road races and triathlons. She placed third in her 
age group, and 39th overall, at the 2004 Ironman Triathlon World 
Championships in Hawaii. Her best time to date in a solo marathon is 
2:49:18.

Dr. Kari Bertrand of Gilroy, Calif. will contend for the women's title at 
Napa while attempting to qualify for her second consecutive U.S. Women's 
Olympic Marathon Trials. Bertrand competed in the 2004 Trials while she 
was ten weeks pregnant. She received permission from a physician 
(herself) to do that. The 2:46:47 marathoner specializes in 
Obstetrics-Gynecology.

Caroline Annis has already qualified for her second consecutive Marathon 
Trials. Annis, 27, of San Francisco, will run Napa as a training run. 
Annis' personal marathon best of 2:43:46, recorded at the 2005 Boston 
Marathon, is the fastest time among the female entrants at Napa. Annis 
will run "right on qualifying pace" to encourage the other women, 
according to her coach, Tom McGlynn. McGlynn also coaches Fullove, and 
Claudia Becque (Chicago, Ill.) who is another Trials aspirant entered in 
the Napa Valley Marathon.
 
"Napa is the perfect course to qualify on," said McGlynn about the 
point-to-point 26.2-mile race route that runs the length of the famed 
Napa Valley wine-growing region. "You don't have sharp turns on the 
course. There aren't a lot of long. straight stretches where you can see 
miles ahead. Rather, the road meanders, so it's psychologically 
stimulating."

McGlynn, a resident of Burlingame, Calif., has intimate knowledge of 
Napa's course.

At last year's Napa Valley Marathon, men's winner Steve Sundell of 
Redwood City, Calif. qualified for last November's U.S. Men's Olympic 
Marathon Trials with a finishing time of 2:21:03 the fastest men's mark 
at Napa since 1988. Sundell's training partner -- McGlynn -- placed 
second and also qualified for the Men's Trials.

The 2008 Kaiser Permanente Napa Valley Marathon, however, will feature 
women, spotlighting their personal quests for excellence.

Among the 2,300 runners entered in this year's marathon, 45 percent are 
women. According to the Running USA Road Running Information Center, 
females compose 40 percent of the estimated 410,000 finishers in all U.S. 
marathons annually. That's a fair progression from Benoit Samuelson's 
heyday in the 1980s when only about 10 percent of marathon participants 
were women.

"Given an opportunity, women are going to knock at the door and open it 
and run through," said Benoit Samuelson. "Running is a very accessible 
sport for women, especially for working mothers who want to participate 
in recreational sports, or be fit."

Benoit Samuelson plans to accompany Napa Valley Marathon participants 
--at least partway through the race -- as a training run in preparation 
for the Women's Marathon Trials. She will also deliver the event's 
keynote address on Saturday, March 1 at 1:00 p.m. at the Napa Valley 
Marriott Hotel & Spa (race headquarters).

Benoit Samuelson has already announced that the 2008 Trials will be her 
last one, ending a superlative Olympic career. 

Time to pass the baton to up-and-coming women aiming for their first 
Olympic Trials.

The Kaiser Permanente Napa Valley Marathon starts on Sunday, March 2 at 
7:00 a.m. sharp in Calistoga on the Silverado Trail near the intersection 
of Rosedale Road. The race finishes at Vintage High School in Napa. Top 
runners are expected to reach the finish between 9:15 a.m. and 9:30 a.m. 
Runners will receive official times up until 1:00 p.m. when the course 
closes.

MORE INFORMATION: Please visit our web site at www.napavalleymarathon.org.

                            ###

 

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