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Digital Champions Blog: Accepting Injury

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September 26th, 2016 – By Ashley Dier

This is not the blog I planned on writing. I had a few ideas, tackling your first marathon, overcoming peak week or maybe a piece on staying confident on race day. Instead I’m staring down at an air cast with a bad case of the runners blues and a bit of denial over the fact that I won’t be running the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon at all.

Potential stress fracture, the words every runner dreads hearing. Looking back over the past four months, the signs were there, but I was in denial. “Maybe it’s the shoes” I thought, convincing myself that the growing pain in my foot was a normal running ache. Then came the long run of 24k, the run that became this training cycles breaking point. Months of running on an injury caused gait changes which lead to compensation injuries elsewhere. Everything surfaced during those 24k.  

The Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon was to be a stepping stone for me. In the spring of 2017 I am planning a fundraising run in memory of my Grandfather who lost his battle with cancer last year. In an effort to give back to those who made him more comfortable in his last weeks with us, I will run 80k in his memory and raise money for the cancer care centre where he stayed. It’s easy to see how this air cast has thrown a small hiccup in these plans.

Being told you cannot do something you love, in this case running, is difficult to hear both mentally and physically. We physically condition our lungs and our muscles to be able to run long distances, but we also condition ourselves mentally. That mental strength is what I find myself relying on lately. But it’s not all bad, focusing on the negatives doesn’t help anything or anyone so let’s discuss a few positives, shall we?

Nutrition: Lack of running allowed for me (forced me) to look at how I’m eating and how I can improve my diet. Eating more nutrient rich, bone healing foods and learning more about how certain foods help our bodies recover from injury has been very helpful.

Activity: Staying active has been super important for my mental health. This meant trying new things like swimming more and biking. I’ll confess, biking isn’t the easiest with a boot.

PMA:  Positive mental attitude! Perhaps the most important factor for me as been staying positive. From the beginning, I tried to not focus on the negatives, to accept the diagnosis, and to work on recovering.

I’ve never seen more runners on a daily basis than the past weeks of no running.This may not be the way I thought my first marathon would play out, but I’m okay with it. There are lessons in everything, I’m sure there’s one somewhere in my injury for me to discover. For now it’s support duty – cheering on fellow runners is something my crew takes very seriously. #crewlove

There will be other races, I will run a marathon one day and I will run 80k in the spring. For today and tomorrow and the day after that, it’s all about staying positive. I am grateful for the ability to run and move and for my health. I am grateful for my friends and family and for those I don’t know sending me healing vibes. This is all just a small chapter in my running story.

Keep an eye out for me cheering along the course October 16th!

About Ashley Dier: I’m a run leader with Parkdale Roadrunners and Academy Of Lions Run Crew. Running has become a way of life for me. I spend my days writing about running, health and fitness as a freelance writer. Through my writing I give back to the communities that have helped me, sharing the stories of others. I didn’t originally plan on running a marathon this year, but after losing my grandfather to cancer and seeing how hard he fought I was inspired to push myself. In the spring of 2017 I will run 80k as a fundraising memorial in memory of my grandfather. Follow Ashley on Twitter and Instagram

 

United We Run: 4 Runners on the Road to the Toronto Waterfront 10. By Amy Friel

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United We Run: 4 Runners’ on the Road to the Toronto Waterfront 10. 

If you want to hear the most hopeful sound in the world, go out and watch a big-city road race. You’ll hear it just a minute or two after the gun. In the bright, cool stillness of an early summer morning, before the rhythm of laboured breathing grows audible, it rises up from the throngs of runners: the sound of a thousand footsteps.

It’s the sound of elite athletes chasing the big win, of charity runners sweating for a cause, of newbies making strides toward self-improvement, and long-time runners rising to face new athletic challenges.

In Toronto, the diverse running community will make its footsteps heard once again this summer, when the city comes together for the inaugural running of the Toronto Waterfront 10 on June 25th. A lively course stretching from the heart of downtown to the city’s picturesque lakeside trail, the Waterfront 10 has become a summer goal race for thousands of runners of all abilities and walks of life.

Though each runs for a unique reason, four of these runners are set to converge on the race course on June 25th, adding the sound of their footsteps to so many others. Their stories are below.

James KokaThe Lion: James Koka

Countless runners are gearing up to toe the start line on University Avenue this summer, gunning for that ever-elusive, always-satisfying obsession: the personal best. And while chasing down your PB can be a tall order, the experienced Pacer Team at the Waterfront 10 aims to make this challenge just a little bit easier.

For James Koka, helping others to reach their personal goals is a familiar and rewarding calling. Koka cut his teeth pacing for the Nike Women’s 15K in 2015. A seasoned veteran of the Toronto running scene, he can lock into his six-minute-per-kilometre pace, and hold on with metronomic precision. Come June, he’ll put this ability to work once again, heading up the 65-minute pace group for the Waterfront 10.

It’s a task that Koka does not undertake lightly. “You know that a lot of people are relying on you to meet their PB or time goal,” he explains. “So you know you need to be as close to your pace as possible. You want to be down to the second.”

Koka, who recently completed his first marathon this spring, trains with both the Parkdale Roadrunners and Academy of Lions run crews. A former cyclist, he began running as a form of cross-training, but found himself quickly drawn into the sport, fuelled by the supportive, community-oriented crew atmosphere.

“It’s a family,” Koka says of his Academy of Lions compatriots. “We spend so much time together, and we’re all on this journey together. While we all have very different backgrounds and careers, when we get together for running, we all share that together.”

The friendships with his fellow crew-mates may motivate his training, but Koka also holds a special affection for the would-be strangers he has found himself pacing. A crew runner at heart, he’s been known to crack jokes and call out encouragement to his pace pack – anything to get them through those tough miles on their way to a shiny new PB.

“It almost makes it better,” he says. “They’re all strangers to me, and we’re sharing that experience together.”

joyThe Master: Joy Kramarich

For Joy Kramarich, the Waterfront 10 is more than just another big-city road race. A seasoned masters runner and something of a legend in the Toronto running scene, Kramarich will be competing alongside a stacked masters field in the race, which is also serving as the 2016 Ontario Masters Athletics (OMA) 10K Road Race Championships.

Kramarich is a high-achiever, unaccustomed to shrinking from any task; a gifted student and competitive athlete in her youth, she later went on to pursue a PhD. So when she began running again later in life, she approached the unique challenge of high-level training as a master with characteristic tenacity.

“It’s about pace,” Kramarich says of the key to masters racing. “You’ve got to control your pace because you just can’t run that way anymore. It’s really humbling.”

Kramarich’s petite, blonde exterior belies a formidable disposition; she’s endlessly talkative, and remarkably easy to spot on a crowded start or finish line. Her dedication to the city’s next generation of athletes has made her something of a fixture in the local racing circuit, where she can often be found playing the role of mentor to younger or less-experienced runners.

Kramarich, who trains under the University of Toronto Track Club, is an old-school running purist; she eschews the GPS-and-iPod set in favour of a sort of minimalist, almost spiritual, distance-focused regimen. Yet despite the tireless dedication and competitive zeal evident in her training, she is clear about what draws her to run the OMA Championships: a sense of mentorship and community.

“I love running,” Kramarich explains. “But the bigger thing I love now is promoting young people. That’s my job now. My job is no longer about me; my job is about promoting and encouraging.”

mike thorntonThe Dark Horse: Mike Thornton

Only a few short years ago, Mike Thornton might have lined up for a 10K road race just hoping to make it to the finish.

If this sounds like an unlikely origin story for an emerging competitive athlete, that’s because it is. The Brantford, Ontario native, who began a treadmill regimen five years ago in a bid to get fit, recently clocked a blistering sub-three-hour marathon, hot on the heels of his first-ever win at the Brantford Rotary Classic 10K.

“I don’t think you really realize your potential until it’s already happening,” Thornton says, when asked about his recent breakthroughs. “You’re just putting a little bit of work in every day, then all of a sudden you’re at this point, and you’re like, how did that happen?”

A commercial pilot and First Officer with WestJet, Thornton runs the bulk of his mileage alongside his teammates at Grand River Endurance, whose ranks include breakout elites like Josh Bolton, Tanis Smith, and Rob Brouillette.

“I consider myself the slowest out here,” Thornton says, a distinction he’s come to take pride in. “You surround yourself with the people that you want to be like, and feed off of that. It really helps.”

But fast friends and rigorous training aside, Thornton shrugs off any notion of himself as an elite distance runner. “I still don’t think I’m anywhere near that,” he says. For him, the Waterfront 10 represents his first post-marathon goal race – an important step in a long and protracted process of training that will, with any luck, ultimately allow him to compete at the level he wants.

“I kind of believe in the fact that, if you really want something you’ll make it work, you’ll make time for it,” he explains. “There’s not much you can do except roll with it and do your best. You just have to adjust your goals a little bit, and if it takes me a little longer to get where I need to be, then that’s what it is. I just work with it and do what I can.”

olyaThe Warrior: Olya Ovtchinnikova

For many runners, the daily task of getting in a mileage run can sometimes become a chore, taking a great deal of mental fortitude and self-discipline. But for Olympic fencer Olya Ovtchinnikova, who represented Canada at the 2008 Beijing Games, running has always felt like something of a pleasant diversion.

“I always ran, even when I was training,” she recalls of her days as an internationally-ranked fencer. “When you run, you clear your head and you don’t think. For me, it was physical exercise, but it was a mental break, so I ran a lot.”

Ovtchinnikova is no stranger to competition; she was named to her first national team at the age of 15, an overwhelmingly positive experience that further fuelled her already strong desire to train and compete.

“You realize that it is a little bit bigger than just having fun,” she says. “Those little steps – starting to deal with losses, losing a hundred times before you win once, dealing with pressure, either your own or external – those things, you just kind of take them one at a time. And you don’t realize what it does to you as a person until you step back and look at it.”

Over the course of her career, Ovtchinnikova won bronze medals for Canada at both the World Championships and the Pan American Games. In 2008, she competed at the very highest level, representing Canada in the Olympic Games in Beijing.

Since then, Ovtchinnikova has dedicated herself to working on behalf of the next generation of Canadian athletes in pursuit of their Olympic dreams. Now retired from fencing, she has begun competing in road races as a charity runner in support of the Canadian Olympic Foundation (COF), a organization which fosters high-performance athletes across the country.

After completing her first half-marathon last year, she now has her sights set on the Toronto Waterfront 10 this summer, once again running in support of COF. And although she came to the sport primarily as a fundraiser, Ovtchinnikova found herself pleasantly surprised by her experience, relishing everything from training, to pre-race jitters, to the satisfaction of a race well run.

“It was a nice feeling,” she says. “Even if it was just a fraction of the feeling I had when I competed, it was a nice throwback.”

Join James, Mike, Joy and Olya at the start line of the Toronto Waterfront 10 on Saturday June 25! Register and connect with them on social media using hashtag #Waterfront10. 

Amy Friel (@AmyFrii) is a Toronto-based freelance writer, two-time marathoner, and unabashed running geek. As a Digital Champion for the 2015 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon, Amy had a taste of the city’s vibrant running community – and hasn’t been able to stop writing about it since. Her work has been featured in iRun magazine, the Globe and Mail, as well as on her blog thelongslowdistance.com

“Bridge The Gap” Urban running Crew Movement comes to Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon

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TORONTO October 8th 2015. The Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon is excited to welcome the “Bridge The Gap” urban running crew movement to this year’s event, and have them as an important part of our 26th edition. A total of 29 crews from 13 cities in 7 countries, representing more than 300 runners, will descend on “The 6” for the October 15th-18th weekend. Bridge The Gap Toronto is being hosted by the city’s largest crew, Parkdale Roadrunners (pictured above), with the marathon and half-marathon as a focal part of the experience.

Now a decade old since its beginning with Bridge Runners in New York City and Run Dem Crew in London, England, the movement is dominated by millennials in big cities from Berlin to Amsterdam, Paris to LA, and is a powerful force in driving the current running boom and re-shaping it. BTG members bring both new energy and new values.

Most important, the movement is about “community”. It is about sharing and caring, and actively engaging to shape the kind of cities millennials want to live in. Participants eschew the traditional name and format of “running club” in favour of “crew”, who welcome all, most-often with no membership fees to be paid – “everyone welcome; no-one left behind.” According to Charlie Dark, the charismatic founder of Run Dem Crew, “‘crew’ is about family first and foremost and the running is actually secondary. Crew is about supporting and elevating everyone in your crew, particularly newcomers, beginners, and making everyone the best that they can be.”  It is also about using running and social media – especially Instagram – as a vehicle for creative expression, and for discovering your city, connecting with it, often at night. It’s about #crewlove, and members are “bonded together by similar values and perspectives on physical activity, community and culture,” says the Parkdale credo. Charlie Dark, who recently gave a TEDx presentation at Canary Wharf, will be speaking about the movement and its values at the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon [Free] Expo, on the Main Stage at 1:30pm on Saturday, October 17th.  “You have to have style and learn to be original,” says Charlie. Some of this original style is nicely captured in RDC member, Steve Lennon’s series of VLOGs he’s produced on the road to Toronto Waterfront: http://ow.ly/STTde

Alan's Journal - Run Dem Crew

Run Dem Crew

“We’re thrilled to play a part in hosting #BTGYYZ and the Bridge The Gap weekend in Toronto,” said Race Director Alan Brookes. “Our mission at Canada Running Series is ‘building community through running,’ so this is a perfect fit. We also share BTGs values of inclusion and innovation and ‘style’. Several of our CRS event medals this year have featured bridges, as bridges connect and unite us.” The STWM 2015 Finisher’s medals feature the Humber Bay Bridge near the 12km turnaround on the course.  “We are also pleased to have an Official Race Cap #STWM from Montreal company Ciele, who are a part of crew scene in Canada,” added Brookes.

“Hosting the first Canadian Bridge The Gap is an honour and privilege,’ said Steven Artemiw, co-founder of Parkdale Roadrunners. “ We are so excited to host a few hundred members of our international running family here in Toronto. We are flattered so many of them are making the trip from Europe as well as across the USA. This is an opportunity for us to showcase what a great multi-cultural hub Toronto is, with a thriving running scene to boot. We have numerous events planned through the weekend, but the highlights will certainly be Sunday’s race and our post-race party. Look out for that on-course Cheer Squad too!”

The on-course Cheer Squad is a key feature of the movement and BTG gatherings. As Charlie Dark says, “If you can’t run you MUST cheer.” Cheer Squads are famous for their music, inspirational signs and confetti that are all part of ‘community’ and supporting fellow runners!

Marathon weekend in The 6 will begin on Thursday evening 15th at 7pm, with a Marathon Flame Torch Relay from Alexander the Great Parkette on the Danforth, led by Parkdale Roadrunners, and including several of Toronto’s other key crews:

Everyone is encouraged to join in the Bridge The Gap Toronto experience by using the hashtags #BTGYYZ and #STWM.

For further information on Bridge the Gap Toronto, see bridgethegaptoronto.com and
parkdaleroadrunners.com

For entry, spectator information and information on Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront marathon see http://www.STWM.ca

No One Left Behind: Running with an Urban Crew

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Digital Champion Cheryl Kozoriz has always been active and health-conscious, but never athletic. As a shy, introverted kid, track and field day gave her anxiety attacks in grade school, so it wasn’t until 2013 that she took up running! After only three short runs, she was in love and last year she completed the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Half-Marathon. This was a major accomplishment for Cheryl, both in running and in life. When she’s not running, Cheryl is the marketing and communications manager for GlucksteinHome. She also enjoys cooking, eating, and travelling. Connect with Cheryl on Twitter and Instagram.

No One Left Behind: Running with an Urban Crew. By Cheryl Kozoriz

Blog Cheryl Kozoriz 2Running initially appealed to me partly because it’s a solo pursuit. A dedicated introvert, I’ve always avoided team sports and group undertakings in general. When I first started running, I quickly fell in love with long, slow, thought-clearing runs and intense speed sessions where I ran against myself. After a year of running and training alone, something shifted: I actually started to crave the company of other runners. After creeping a few local crews on Instagram, I worked up the nerve to join Night Terrors Run Crew on New Year’s Day for their Thursday night run. After a warm welcome, I found myself in the middle of a single pack pushing the pace through icy city streets as darkness fell over us. My earphones were out, my energy was up. It was exhilarating and I was hooked on that crew life.

Urban run crews have been popping up in cities around the world for a few years now and while they’re as varied as the runners who join them, crews generally differ from traditional running groups in a few ways: crews mainly run at night, they’re drop-in and free to join, they welcome both new and seasoned runners, they’re not affiliated with a particular store or brand, and they operate under a “no one left behind” mandate.

Here are some reasons why you may want to seek out a run crew:

Get Social: Obviously running with a group is more social than running alone, but you can also look forward to post-run beers or tacos as well as pre-race carb-load potlucks when you run with a crew.

Rut Relief: Running solo, I tend to stick to the same old routes either out of habit or convenience. Run crews keep things fresh with different routes week after week.

Blog Cheryl Kozoriz 3Get a Push: As a city runner, I’m intimidated by trails and hills but my crew has pushed me to embrace them. New routes, new terrain, faster paces, longer distances – there are so many ways a crew can help you grow as a runner.

Stay Accountable: If you’re a runner who has trouble staying on track, the rain-or-shine regularity of running crews will appeal to you.

Travel Perks: One of the best things about travelling is the opportunity to run in a new city. Your hometown crew can hook you up with a local one, guaranteeing you not only a solid route in a potentially unfamiliar city but immediate access to a new community.

#CrewLove: On the pavement, on race day, and through injuries, crew support is like no other support out there. They’ll help you chase your goals, cross the finish line and find your next start line. They get it and they’ve got you.

If you’re interested in running with a crew, there are many to choose from. Here are just a few options in Toronto:

The Food Runners [http://thefoodrunners.co/]: The Food Runners is a group of rockstar restaurant industry pros whose unique schedule led them meet up at the Nike Loft on Richmond Street every Wednesday morning. I can only imagine the delicious intel that gets passed around on these runs but thankfully, they do share some recipes through their refuel project [http://thefoodrunners.co/refuel/].

Parkdale Roadrunners [http://www.parkdaleroadrunners.com/]: PDRR started four years ago and they’ve grown steadily since. So much so that they’ve just moved to the Gladstone Hotel for their Tuesday night meet-up point. On Saturdays they focus on women’s running with a ladies-only morning run. If you’ve ever raced in Toronto, you’ve experienced their epic confetti-infused cheer station.

East York Runners [https://twitter.com/eytrunners]: If you’re in the east end, check out this group of social athletes who train and race together three times a week. With runs that range from beginner to long distance, most East York members are experienced runners but they welcome newer runners who are working their way up to a continuous 5K.

Night Terrors Run Crew [https://instagram.com/nightterrorsrun]: This is my crew, so I’m totally biased, but they’re awesome. With chapters in Toronto and Los Angeles, NTRC Toronto runs from Trinity Bellwoods Park three times a week, exploring the entire city with innovative routes that incorporate urban landmarks, art installations or festival spots – and badass photo opps. We’re in it for the run, but I know the Instagram shots are a pretty big draw too.

Running communities are growing and thriving across cities around the world and urban run crews are driving the momentum. Bridge the Gap is an international gathering of run crews that occurs at a major marathon every year and this year, it will be hosted in Toronto at the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon. I’m looking forward to connecting with crews from all over! In the meantime, this video produced by Berlin Braves might inspire you to find your own crew.

Photo Credits: ckozoriz_header.jpg: William Chaupiz / Night Terrors Run Crew / ckozoriz1.jpg: Richard Kuchinsky / Night Terrors Run Crew / ckozoriz2.jpg: William Chaupiz / Night Terrors Run Crew