Running for their lives
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Lindsay Sandham
Brian Baker’s life changed when he ran his first marathon in 2001.
The Newport Beach resident began to consider his mortality when he
turned 40 in 1999 and started running. As if by fate, around this
same time, he received an announcement in the mail from Train to End
Stroke, a program put on by the American Stroke Assn. to raise money
for stroke research, education and programs.
Baker lost his mother to a stroke in 1993, when she was 61, so he
decided to participate.
“It was really my mom I was doing that for,” Baker said of his
first marathon.
The program started in 2001 in Orange County, one of about 15
pilot sites in the United States. Today, there are more than 40 Train
to End Stroke sites nationally, said Jason Lustina, the Orange County
director for Train to End Stroke.
Baker ran his first marathon in Kona, Hawaii, where he met John
Sidebottom of Aliso Viejo. Sidebottom now coaches with him.
After completing the first season, Baker was so impressed with the
program, he decided to continue participating and eventually took on
coaching responsibilities.
Baker, along with wife Jill Baker and Sidebottom, dedicates every
Saturday to coaching others and helping them train to end stroke.
Of the 70 Orange County participants, a little more than 20 will
be running in the upcoming Kona Marathon on June 19, and the rest will be competing in the San Diego Rock and Roll Marathon on June 5.
From those two marathons, the Orange County participants have
raised a combined $400,000 for the program.
“It’s amazing how generous people are,” Baker said.
He added that people are most afraid of the fundraising aspect,
which is actually the easiest part of the training.
Baker said what keeps him coming back, season after season, is the
satisfaction of seeing people accomplish something they never thought
possible.
“Race day is just amazing -- to watch people cross the finish
line,” he said. “Everyone on the team has some sort of personal
connection or story.”
Sidebottom said that through his coaching, he actually gets more
out of it than he puts in.
“It’s absolutely empowering; it really is,” Sidebottom said. “It’s
more emotional for me to see others complete a marathon I’ve helped
them train for than completing one myself.”
For more information on Train to End Stroke, call (888) 4-STROKE
or visit https://www.strokeassociation .org.
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