Team breaks a record in Virginia Beach marathon
Posted to: News Sports Virginia Beach
VIRGINIA BEACH
What's the worst thing about running a marathon tethered to four other runners?
Tommy Neeson's teammates were quick to respond.
"Running 26 miles with Tommy," they said in unison before the start of the 40th running of the Yuengling Shamrock Marathon early Sunday at the Virginia Beach Oceanfront.
"Yep ... having to listen to Tommy for three hours. This is gonna be painful."
Neeson and friends Joel Bell, Drew Midland, Mark Manny and Jon Leiding started the 26.2-mile run with a couple of goals in mind.
First, they were attempting to break the Guinness World Record for running a full marathon linked together.
They also were running to raise awareness for Preston's March for Energy, a group devoted to buying adapted bicycles for children suffering from mitochondrial disease, a condition that affects muscle development.
Preston Buenaga, 13, is the nephew of race director Amy Frostick. Preston completed the Anthem Half Marathon while being pushed in a racing wheelchair.
The Guinness record - which was three hours, 26 minutes and 15 seconds, set June 4, 2011, in Coudersport, Pa. - required at least five runners to be tethered together for the duration.
"We're not gonna pull this off if Tommy has to stop to go to the bathroom," Midland said.
With that thought burned in their minds, the group took off with the first and fastest group of runners, at first front to back with hopes of finding a place on the course where they could spread out and run side by side.
"It's going to take some communication on our part," Neeson said. "Much easier side by side, though.
"But the hardest part is being the guy next to me. For three hours that could be just horrible."
Leiding was that unlucky link in the chain, picked for the part because he was a late entry into the group after a friend who was to participate was injured several weeks ago.
A bit of a local running celebrity, Neeson has run from Maine to Florida to raise money for the Ronald McDonald House, was part of a relay team that ran from Woodstock to New York City, and once owned a record for running a marathon on a treadmill.
Neeson also helps organize a local version of the Doughnut Run - where participants run two miles to a Krispy Kreme, down a minimum of six doughnuts, and run back to the start.
"We stole the idea from others like it around the country," Neeson said. "But we've done it for four of the last five years and not one person has regurgitated.
"I just don't know what we're doing wrong."
His tethered group did nothing wrong Sunday, shattering the Guinness record by more than 20 minutes.
"This went awesome even with so little practice," Bell said. "We were hanging on our pace and settled in. We really had no problems."
When the group hit "the wall" - somewhere between the 18- and 22-mile marks, Bell said, increased chatter kept everybody motivated.
"This was my 10th marathon and I've always had to stop at some point in the others," Leiding said.
"See, being tied together was a good thing," Neeson chimed in.
"We didn't want it to turn into a drag," Manny said, laughing.
At that point during the celebration, something caught the team's attention while posing for pictures in a sea of well-wishers.
"Thank God," Leiding gasped as a volunteer wheeled two kegs of beer past the group.
"Is that ours?"
Lee Tolliver, 757-222-5844, lee.tolliver@pilotonline.com
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