Laurie Decker:
Competition,
Camaraderie,
Fun Combine
Ron Marinucci
January 2004
Michigan
Runner
The Friday
before Laurie
Decker left
for the
Detroit Free
Press
Marathon,
several of her
special-needs
students and
their teacher
held a pep
rally for her.
"They gave
me
encouragement.
It was really
a 'Kodak
moment,'"
Decker says.
MR's 2003
Female Masters
Runner of the
Year remembers
this pep rally
as a highlight
of her season.
"I thought of
it at Mile 20,
when the
marathon was
getting hard,"
says Decker.
"Their
encouragement
helped me
through."
Camaraderie
-- human
connections --
got Decker
started as a
runner seven
years ago, at
age 36, and
continues to
be important.
She and her
husband,
Kevin,
inherited this
odd passion
from their
children. When
Eric and Erin
began running
cross country
for coach Dave
Foley's
Cadillac High
School team,
their parents
enjoyed the
vigor and
togetherness
shared by team
members. Soon,
Mom and Dad
were hoofing
it out there
too.
Decker also
loves running
because "it
helps the body
and the mind.
When you're
out there, you
get thoughts.
It helps
creativity,
gives you
confidence.
You feel
better about
everything in
life."
But make no
mistake: this
magazine's
2001 Female
Master of Year
and overall
Runner of the
Year in 2002
is more than a
"fun runner."
"I'm told
I'm quiet,
till I get in
the races,"
Decker says.
"I have a lot
of
determination
and am
competitive.
"Whatever I
do, I strive
to do well,"
she says.
Decker
credits some
of her success
to other
runners, such
as Robin
Sarris Hallop
and Laura
Ankrum.
"Competing
with good
runners helps
make you
better," she
declares.
Decker's
finishes in
the six MR
Series races
she entered
last year tell
the tale. She
was first
Michigan
women's master
at the Fifth
Third River
Bank Run 25K
(1:44:23);
third open
female and
second master
at the Allen
Park 8K
(31:09);
second state
women's master
in the Crim 10
Mile
(1:05:02);
second open
female and
first master
at the
Cadillac 10K
(39:18); first
open female at
the Kensington
Challenge 5K
(18:33); and
top state
master, third
Michigan
female at the
Free Press
Marathon
(3:03:23).
The Freep
was her second
marathon. At
her first,
Traverse
City's
Bayshore last
May, she
qualified for
Boston in
3:01:27. "I'm
hooked on the
marathon now,"
she says.
Also in
store for 2004
are relays.
"Fred Vanhala
(of Front Line
Racing Team)
asked me to
run a few,"
says Decker.
"I'm excited
about that
too."
To keep
things fresh
(and fast),
she and Kevin
incorporate
variety in
their
training. They
do hills,
trails, speed
work and long
runs, taking
advantage of a
"trail system"
through the
woods steps
outside their
door.
Decker also
runs intervals
of 400 and 800
meters on the
track. She
follows this
regimen "most
of the year,
with some down
time" for
recovery.
After the Free
Press, she
didn't run at
all for three
weeks.
Decker
seems to have
found a
formula that
works for her,
mixing
determination
and discipline
with fun.
"I'm not
afraid to
compete," says
Decker. "Win
or lose, it
brings out the
best in me.
"That's
difficult to
discover
unless you
try."
Ron
Marinucci can
be reached by
e-mail at
RMarin6424@aol.com.
MR
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