FEATURE
Sports Complex
Striders: Front Runners' Historic Path
Jim Provenzano | July 07, 2004
San Francisco Front Runners' 25th annual Pride Run
photo courtesy - SFFR
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Running is the purest sport. Seriously. There are no sticks, balls, or nets.
Just legs chopping air and lungs heaving in and out in a race to the finish.
That form of racing goes back thousands of years, preceding even the first
Greek Olympic games. Across deserts and mountains, messengers bearing
important documents were probably the first sponsored athletes.
Jump ahead to A.D. 1976. A gay running group is born, becoming the first
organized GLBT sports group.
Chairman of the Marathon for the first Gay Games in San Francisco in 1986,
Bud Budlong's fascinating history of that group's origins (on their website
at www.sffrontrunners.org) tells of a free community college in San
Francisco called Lavender University, where it all began.
Jack Baker and Gardner Pond, supporters of Lavender U., were set on teaching
a furniture refinishing course. Both runners, at the last minute they
changed it to a "learn to jog" class, which became the Lavender U. Joggers.
"For many, Lavender U. Joggers was the first gay group they had joined,"
says Budlong, recalling a time when, "there were no gay hiking, track,
swimming, skiing, wrestling, bicycling, or tennis clubs, and no bands,
choruses, or theater groups." The running group would inspire others to
start their own sports groups.
Soon after the demise of Lavender U., the Joggers – with elected officers
and growing weekly events – changed their name to FrontRunners, a variation
on the title of Patricia Nell Warren's bestselling novel, The Front
Runner. By 1980, they premiered the first "Gay Run," in which 400 runners
participated.
Today, Patricia Nell Warren says she's delighted to have so many Front
Runners clubs bearing her book's name. She's also happy "to see the growing
international array of Front Runner clubs for running and walking, and their
contribution to the growth of GLBT sports."
Warren will be among the many participants at the next International Front
Runners Games (IFRG), July 21-25 in Seattle.
The IFRG includes a track-and-field meet, a "Run With Pride" 5K Road Race, a
5K Benefit Walk, and social events and meetings for more than 25 of the
nearly 100 Front Runners clubs. Front Runners members range from novices
getting in shape to distance runners going for the gold at Gay Games events
and national competitions.
About a dozen San Francisco Front Runners (SFFR) will compete in the IFRG.
This year, San Francisco's club celebrates its 25th annual Pride Run and its
30th anniversary as a group. In 2003, its Pride Run raised $8,700 for
charity.
SFFR has about 300 club members and about 100 "recurring guests," according
to Garrett Hayashida, president of San Francisco Front Runners. He says that
being part of such a historic legacy is "kind of amazing."
Hayashida says more than 500 people attended last year's Pride Run. Regular
Saturday runs have about 100 to 150 participants. "In the pouring rain,
though, it's only hardcore members," he adds.
International Front Runners President Alden Clark, of the Boston club – who
has been a Gay Games competitor since the third Gay Games in Vancouver –
says Boston Front Runners was the third GLBT running group to form. Clark's
been with them for 23 years.
Along with participation in the famous Boston Marathon, the club sponsors an
annual Pride Run and the Yuletide Stride, a chilly race set in December,
with proceeds supporting a holiday gift program.
Yet, of Boston's 110 members, Clark says only four runners are committed to
attending the IFRG. "We're trying to get more people." He noted that three
Canadian clubs will attend. He also mentioned a new club having formed in
Mexico, but so far none of its members have able to attend U.S. events. Adds
Clark, "It is more of an economic problem for some groups."
Still, the Front Runners community has expanded to five continents. Patrick
Lemaire of Front Runners Marseille says he's unsure who among his fellow
athletes may attend upcoming U.S. running events, like this summer's IFRG or
Gay Games VII in 2006.
Despite concerns about international travel, and many French residents being
opposed to the U.S. occupation of Iraq, Lemaire says that any doubts about
visiting the United States may be more economic than political.
"A few of us went to Sydney," says Lemaire, "and enjoyed it, although some
found the whole thing very expensive, and a money-oriented event."
Stefan Bellevue, a Berlin Front Runner and the representative for Europe
with Front Runners International, says that European running groups are very
often a part of a sporting club with many sections. "Many departments are
under one roof," he says. "In the U.S., you often have running groups, clubs
with their own bylaws. In Europe, the Front Runner movement is not as big
and organized as in the U.S. It took a long time for the American movement
to arrive."
This summer, German runners have their own anniversary – Berlin's 10th Gay
and Lesbian Run, which has expanded over the years to include track and
field events with long distance races. This summer's EuroGames, held July 24
to Aug. 1 in Munich, will welcome more than 5,000 participants, several
hundred of them runners.
Here's to 30 laps, Front Runners. May there be many more.
Jim Provenzano is the author of the novels PINS and Monkey Suits. Read more sports articles at www.sportscomplex.org
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