• Print
  • Bookmark and Share
  • RSS Feeds Feeds

Racing to Save Lives

Hendrick Marrow Program Half Marathon and 5K Results

 
Story Summary
 
 

On Nov. 22, 2009, the Hendrick Marrow Program of Be The Match FoundationSM held its inaugural Half Marathon, 5K and Kids Dash.  There were 115 participants on hand to run, walk and dash at Lowe’s Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C. Runners came from as far away as Texas, Florida and Missouri. 

The local weather forecasters had predicted rain starting early that morning but fortunately the rain held off until after the venue was cleaned up and the truck was unloaded.

On this page:
 

Half marathon results

Women’s Half Marathon Overall Open Winners 

    • 1st Rebecca Thomason
    • 2nd Bobbi Carter  
    • 3rd Reba McLaughlin  

Women’s Half Marathon Overall Masters Winners 

  • 1st Julia Horn  
  • 2nd Diane Filer  
  • 3rd Jan Pigeon  

Men’s Half Marathon Overall Open Winners 

  • 1st Ben Hovis  
  • 2nd George Linney  
  • 3rd Jason Page  

Men’s Half Marathon Overall Masters Winners 

  • 1st Tim Hennessey 
  • 2nd Kerry Seal  
  • 3rd  Richard Hefner  

Return to top

5K results

Women’s 5K Overall Open Winners  

  • 1st Sheila Wakeman  
  • 2nd Michele Hoheiser 
  • 3rd Sara Fabian 

Women’s 5K Overall Masters Winners  

  • 1st Michele Gibbs
  • 2nd Portia Eley
  • 3rd Amy Masterton

Men’s Overall 5K Open Winners

  • 1st Alejandro Arreola
  • 2nd Chris Cave
  • 3rd Andrew Kendall

Men’s Overall 5K Masters Winners   

  • 1st Jeff Fabian
  • 2nd Joey Arnold
  • 3rd Bill Penn

Return to top

Kristin Akin's story

The most poignant part of the day came when Kristin Akin, a mother of two bone marrow transplant children, Andrew, deceased, and Matthew, was running her last stretch of her half marathon. 

Kristin writes:

The purpose of this run was multifold. Of course there was the physical aspect--I wanted to push myself as I have become mostly sedentary the last 2 ½ years. I believe it is good to push ourselves from time to time to remember what we are really capable of.

There was the support aspect--I absolutely had to support Rick Hendrick's Foundation as he was so very generous to our family--picking up the cost for 500 people to join the registry in honor of Andrew--I had to be there.

Then there was the emotional aspect--I knew this run would provide the opportunity for me to really grieve, process and take in all that has happened since August 2007.

It was a hard run, there were no fans to cheer us on and due to the few runners, I was alone most of the race. I talked to Andrew and God often, and I tried my best to think of all the kids that have passed from St. Louis Children’s and Cincinnati Children’s--I wanted them to know that their lives were not in vain. Many times I called on Andrew to help me, to keep me going, to lighten my load, as this was a very grueling race as I was not in top shape. But quit--never!

I made my way strong and steady until mile 11 and out of nowhere the course director greeted me on a bike. I was the last runner to come in and he said that he had heard my story and was going to stay with me the remainder of the race. I was so very grateful because it was at that point I became physically overwhelmed with grief. I could hardly breathe as the tears just overflowed non-stop. I had to slow down a bit and try and catch my breath but my emotions got the best of me. The reality of what has happened, the fact that I will never get my son back, that we are still fighting to save Matthew was more than I could process. I truly was gasping for air.

Slowly but surely, I made my way to the very end of the course. I rounded the last corner to finish the run and I quickly heard and saw all the runners and volunteers surrounding the finish line screaming my name--cheering me on as if I was their best friend. Obviously, this took my already streaming tears into nothing short of hysteria. I was absolutely flabbergasted--all these people stayed around to cheer me on.

Thanks to Courtney as I think she updated everyone as I was about to finish. I was moved beyond words and humbled to my knees. I could barely stand the love and affection that was being poured on me. It was the perfect ending to a perfect race.

I will be forever grateful to each and every one of those people who helped me finish strong for my boys.

Now that’s what we call racing to save lives!


No video available.

  Previous picture Next picture  
Hendrick Marrow Program logo
 Contact the Hendrick Marrow Program
Make a Contribution