I walked the 38th Street Loop this morning in 31:51.
PETE'S FIRECRACKER FAST 5K ADVANCE, from nearly a month ago
PETE PERKINS
The founder of Little Rock’s Fourth of July Firecracker road race was instrumental in the first running boom. He was along for the next one, too. “I think we’ve had two booms,” Gary Smith said. “And the second one might have been bigger than the first.”
Boom No. 1 was built on a foundation set by American track stars of the 1960s, including Billy Mills, Jim Ryan, and Marty Liquori. With the stones in place, marathon elites Frank Shorter and Bill Rodgers constructed the framework through the 1970s—Shorter with his 1972 Olympic Marathon victory in Munich, Germany, and Rodgers with multiple victories in the Boston and New York City Marathons. Smith and dozens of others across the country put up finishing touches with running shoe stores and road races like the Firecracker.
Smith directed the first Firecracker race, set along seven miles of neighborhood streets through Cammack Village and Little Rock’s Heights, and raced on July 4, 1977.
The 40th Firecracker, known since 1989 as the Firecracker Fast 5K, starts Monday at 7:30 a.m., within shouting distance of the first, on Kavanaugh Blvd.
Shorter has raced on the contemporary course three times. He said Smith, with his running store and Firecracker race, was among those instrumental in the sport’s expansion beyond the base framed by gold medalist and champions. “Races like the Firecracker 5K are personality driven,” he said. “They are driven by certain kinds of personality. You have to have that, people who love to run and have great organizational skills. In his own low-key way, you had that in Gary. He gets things done.”
Results of the second running boom were evident among those who finished the 2015 Firecracker Fast 5K.
A total of 67 runners finished the first Firecracker, 39 years ago in Little Rock. Neither Smith nor the first women’s winner, Lou Peyton, were sure how many women finished the race. Smith guessed there were four or five. Peyton said there might have been as many as six. Among the 1,253 Firecracker finishers last year, 632 were women and 621 men.
Other Arkansas races reflect the gender change in similar ways. For instance, 762 people finished the first Little Marathon, raced in 2003. Of those, 501 were men and 261 women. Last year, 1,213 women finished. There were 1,098 men finishers. In 1999, women made up 34.4 percent of 355 finishers at the Spa 10K in Hot Springs. At last year’s Spa 10K, there were 429 finishers, of whom women were 57.1 percent.
Many believe the birth of this new boom appears to have come with a new federal law in 1972, coincidently the same year of Frank Shorter’s emergence as an American running star. Shorter and current Firecracker race director Sean Coughlan mentioned the influence of Title IX, which was introduced as a law that prohibited discrimination on the basis of sex in any federally funded education program or activity.
No one knows when, if ever, it will reach full fruition, but data in the sport of road running demonstrates no end in sight.
According to research conducted for USA Running, a non-profit group organized on behalf of the American running industry, about 4.8 million people ran in U.S. road races in 1990. Of those, about 25 percent were women. Last year about 17.1 million raced. Women made up approximately 57 percent of that total.
“There are more runners than ever right now, and that’s mostly because of women,” Rodgers said. “Women have changed the sport big-time, and I think more than anything, it’s because here the doors have opened. It’s not like a lot of popular sports, like football or baseball, where women don’t have as many opportunities. In running the door is open.”
“It has been no surprise to me to see women embracing the sport,” Shorter said. He recalled his days as a student at Yale, when he used running as a form of stress release at the end of long days of study. Shorter said those sorts of benefits apply to everyone, regardless of gender. “For many women, it serves the same purpose,” he said. “And then there’s the socialization aspect of running. There are just so many people you can go run with, so to me, the large increase in women running was no surprise, and I think it’s great. If you want gender equality, look to runners.”
Peyton said the change in Arkansas is obvious. When she first began to run, in 1968, she said she knew practically every woman runner in Little Rock by name. “There’s no doubt women have caught up and passed men in numbers,” she said. “I notice it while I’m just out running on the River Trail.”
Peyton, Rodgers, and Shorter each spoke of another change in the makeup of runners. “Back when I first started, almost everyone out there was male, and everyone was very thin, very fit,” Peyton said. “Now you see men and women who are definitely heavy, but they are out there. I think everyone has figured out that you don’t have to be thin to be healthy.”\
“You see some people who are very, very heavy out there running,” Rodgers said. “You didn’t see that 20 or 30 or 40 years ago, and we need that. We need everyone to know they have a place in our sport, and I think people are starting to figure that out. We still want the fast guys to show up, but also the joggers and walkers who aren’t out there to set records. They’re out there to get fit, and that’s what it should be all about.”
Shorter said America’s running champions from the 1970s may have helped demystify the very act of running. “We might have helped people to see that with running there was really nothing to be intimidated by,” he said. “Initially I think it attracted very goal oriented runners, and mostly male. And then, shortly thereafter, when races began to open the door to women and encourage them to get involved, you saw more women out there, but most of them were also very competitive. But then as we moved into the 1980s, it began to expand out, and a lot of people came to the sport who knew they were never going to be very fast. They realized they just liked doing it.”
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