Jared jumps to 11th in Boston Holiday Challenge

Jared increased his indoor PR by a half a foot with a 19’2″ 11th place jump at the Boston Holiday Challenge at the Reggie Lewis Center today(results, photo gallery). He was one of only 2 freshman to place in top 12 in meet (and one of only 6 underclassmen). The meet had high qualifying standards and teams traveling from NY and NH.

His jump moves him to 54th overall in Mass and 8th in the Bay State League. Among freshman it ranks him 1st in New England (by almost a foot) and #8 in the USA.

click here to see Jared at 1:52 in meet slideshow or go to gallery.

North wins MSTCA Team Pentathlon

Jared helped Newton North defend its Team Pentathlon crown, jumping an indoor PR 18’7.25″ for 2nd place among the jumpers and yielding the #1 freshman jump in New England thus far this year (and USA #16 of 534). Each school fields a team of 5 athletes who each take a pentathlon event and the performances are scored per the pentathlon tables rather than by placings. Newton scored a total of 3517 points (results, photos, jump sequences)

Jared figured out how to get photoshop to do this (1st jump)

These upper classmen are tall…

Jared opens high school track career with 2nd place 55m dash finish versus Brookline

Jared opened his high school track career with a personal best 7.14a in the 55m dash vs. Brookline, placing 2nd and scoring 3 points toward Newton’s win (photos) The performance ranks him 5th/266 among Massachusett high school freshman thus far this year and ranks him 13th in the Bay State League. He also won the JV 200m dash held at the end of the meet with a PR 24.4.

Boston Marathon 2013

I am running the 2013 Boston Marathon with the Genzyme “Running for Rare Diseases” Marathon Team in April.

This was an unimaginable concept for me until the last several weeks. Lisa and I have probably watched the race at least 15 times during our time in Boston, and I never seriously considered running it. I have always joked that with my frame and sprinter-twitch muscles, at best I might someday get fit enough to walk/jog from starting line to our home at mile 19.

Until this past few weeks, the longest run of my life was about 9 miles (when I got lost in the roads behind UConn). Until September I was lucky to get 10 miles in a week, but a 1000 miles of bike rides and commutes dropped 20 lbs of weight and some PT got my calf muscles working again.

Even since Brianna was diagnosed with HSP, I’ve been looking for the right angle to raise awareness of her disease within Genzyme and in the outside world. There isn’t a near term cure to pitch as a manufacturing opportunity and the R&D is in early pre-commercial stages. The company itself had several major issue to get past first as well. I have some of the right management connections internally, but at best I might be able to swing a seminar by a leading researcher.

It hit me that perhaps the best way to raise awareness would be through the Genzyme Marathon Team, which raises money for the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD). I helped get this team started in 2007 by setting up the team website (http://runningforrarediseases.org) and configuring a wordpress blog to serve as the silent auction site. The auction site raises over $5K a year towards the team’s fundraising.

I was the official photographer for the team last year (photo gallery) and one of my photos is the current background on the www.genzyme.com website. Genzyme also had a video made of the event (catch me with camera at 1:15):

I figured maybe this coming year I’d might be able to leverage my team membership as photographer to get some HSP news out. After Steve coaxed me into a 5K and a triathlon, I started to feel more like an athlete again. As the days got short and bike riding got less convenient, I started running more. I had been imagining running the marathon all year through my bike training, but now it started to feel like a real possibility. Just the thought of committing to the race almost instantly dropped off another 15 lbs, and I started to think of daily runs as not being x miles but as fractions of a marathon distance.

On Saturday Lisa dropped me off in Framingham on the course and I ran through Framingham, Natick, Wellesley, and up the Newton hills for 15 miles, so distance is starting to look feasible.

I was officially named to the Marathon team last week. I am so honored that Brianna will be my patient partner, and will join us on race weekend. Together we will raise awareness of HSP and SPG3A inside Genzyme and to the outside world. The race is Monday April 15th.

I just set up my fundraising page on firstgiving.org. All donations to the site pass straight through to NORD are tax deductible, and you will get a charity receipt directly from NORD (I can provide one as well). You can also send me a check I can pass along and avoid credit card fee they deduct if you prefer (it will still log onto the totals the site displays). My goal is to raise at least $2500 for NORD.

I figured I would share the link now in case you want to get a jump on 2012 tax deductions:

http://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/jackprior/2013bostonmarathon

The race is still 124 days away, but donating now will ensure I keep up my training schedule through the winter months :-). I’ll be posting something to the newtonsportsphotography.com site soon that you can share outside the family.

Kayla makes College Track Debut at Cornell Relays

Just 10 weeks after breaking a bone in her foot in training, Kayla showed surprisingly good form in her first track meet representing Ithaca College at the 2012 Cornell Relays (results, photo gallery of KP). Kayla set a new personal best in the 60m (0.11s better than her equivalent 55m dash PR), matched her PR in the triple jump (33′ 5.25″) and went 16’0.5″ in the long jump.

She had a track reunion with former teammate and now cross town rival Kayla Wong.
J