Mike SciaccaSometimes not being at your best...
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Mike Sciacca
Sometimes not being at your best can prove to be more than good
enough.
That was the case with Chris Rael when he competed in mid-February
at the 50-kilometer Race Walking National Championships in Clermont,
Fla.
The Huntington Beach resident was among the leaders that day, his
stride helping him maintain a sixth-place standing throughout much of
the event.
He ended up in eighth-place, injured shin and all, and that finish
earned him a coveted spot on the eight-member 2005 National
50-kilometer Racewalk team.
At 45, Rael is one of the oldest members to compete at the elite
level, and he will now compete for the USA at various competitions in
the upcoming season.
“It’s an honor to make the team, but I wasn’t even close to
achieving my best,” said Rael, who finished the Florida race, which
attracts the finest 50-kilometer walkers in the country, in five
hours and 15 minutes.
His personal best in a race is 4:40.
“It’s a dream come true,” he said. “The goal of every
national-class race walker is to make the national team. It is very
competitive, so if you make the team, it means you have accomplished
something very few people can.
“For me, personally, it is the validation that everything I did in
training was right. All the sacrifices, all the pain and effort, all
the years of ups and downs, have paid off. And now, I’m looking
forward to even better races for this upcoming year.”
Philip Dunn, who met Rael at the 1991 U.S. Olympic Festival in Los
Angeles, recalls Rael as being determined and dedicated in his
pursuit of a 50-kilometers, which he says is a “tough race distance.”
“Chris is one of those rare athletes who has incredible
perseverance,” said Dunn, who competed for the U.S. team in the 50
kilometers at the 2000 and 2004 Olympic Games, and is a five-time
national champion. “He may not win a gold medal, but he more than
makes up for it with determination and hard work.
“He also knows how to have a good time. Anyone who meets Chris
will tell you that he is the most friendly, down-to-earth guy you
could meet. I always give Chris a little credit for introducing me to
the 50K because he was the first real 50K walker that I met. I guess
I thought he was just cool enough and just crazy enough, to want to
emulate.”
Rael, a resource specialist in the special education department at
Santa Ana High, has been involved with race walking for the past 30
years. He trains 10 miles each day, with weekend training taking
between 20 and 22 hours.
His favorite local spot to train, he says, is the Bolsa Chica
Wetlands -- starting at the bridge and walking along Pacific Coast
Highway until it takes him to a trail that leads to the back woods
and canal.
“It’s a beautiful walk,” he said. “I’ve seen coyotes -- they
follow me sometimes -- many different species of birds and ducks, and
it’s nice just to be out in nature instead of running on a city
street.
“When I come back up the trail, it is usually around sunset so I
get these fantastic views from atop the cliffs of the sun setting
into the ocean. It’s beautiful and inspiring.”
Race walking has been an Olympic medal sport since the 1932 Los
Angeles Olympics. The solitude of the sport, Rael said, allows for
much thought, but the high is appealing and the challenge, rewarding.
“After you’re on a walk for an hour, there is no more pain, you’re
just floating,” he said. “It’s just so graceful and natural.”
A race walking competition is held on a circle-type loop, a
2-kilometer loop, Rael said, with five judges stationed around the
course.
One foot must be on the ground at all times. If both feet come off
at once, it is referred to as, “floating.”
When a walker extends one leg in front of the body, and that leg
passes under the body to support it, that leg must be “stretched
out.” If it is not, that is called “creeping.”
Both will draw a runner a warning card. Three card warnings means
disqualification.
Rael has never been disqualified.
“It’s all about the form,” he said. “It sounds simple, but it
takes a lot of focus.”
This upcoming competition slate for the 2005 National 50-kilometer
Race Walk Team members includes the World Championships in Helsinki,
Finland; the Pan American Games in Lima, Peru; and a five-event Race
Walking Grand Prix, which begins with a competition in this month in
Tijuana, Mexico.
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports and features. He can be reached at
(714) 966-4611 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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