Hall of Famer Raschker to lead Olympians, world
champions in record assault at USA Masters Champs
BOSTON - More than 700 top competitors between
the ages of 30 and 90+ will descend on Boston this
weekend for the 2007 USA Masters Indoor Track & Field
Championships. Boston plays host to the meet for the
12th time since 1975 and boasts perhaps the best field
ever, including 36 current reigning world champions. Among
the headliners is 2004 Sullivan Award Finalist Philippa
"Phil" Raschker, who just turned 60 Feb. 21. The living
legend of masters track and field is entered in nine events
and looks to assault world and U.S. 60-64 age-group
records in each. Double American record holder Bob
Matteson of Bennington, VT, will similarly is in
the men's 90-year-old age group, with more records on his
mind.
The meet kicks off at 4 p.m. Friday, at the Reggie Lewis
Track & Athletic Center at Roxbury Community College,
1350 Tremont Street. Final events will be held from 4-6PM
Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, and 9:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Sunday.
Admission is free.
Each time a top masters athletes graduates to a new 5-year
age group, it creates a stir as records are in jeopardy. No
athlete embodies this more than Phil Raschker. A
resident of Marietta, Georgia, Raschker was the first and
only masters track athlete to be a finalist for the Sullivan
Award for America's top amateur athlete.
The other four finalists in 2004 were basketball star Lebron
James, Olympic speedskater Apolo Anton Ohno, swimmer
Michael Phelps, and University of Connecticut basketball
star Diana Taurasi. Raschker has set more than
200 U.S. and world track and field records during
her career. In Boston she will compete in the 60-meter
dash, 60 hurdles, 200 meters, high jump, long jump, triple
jump, pole vault, shot put, and pentathlon (another 5 events
combined).
Raschker said that she hopes her recognition "inspires
lifetime fitness as we age" and that "sports are breaking the
age stereotype." Raschker dedicates her medals to "all the
aging athletes out there. The majority of Americans are over
40 now, and 35 million Americans are over 65." She wants
to "send the message that we never need to lose our
competitive spirit and that we can remain healthy and fit for
an entire lifetime through participating in sports. There are
competitors even over 100 in masters track and field, and I
hope one day to be among them!"
USATF-New England is hosting the meet. Former
USATF-NE President Gary Snyder is now National Chair of
USATF Masters Track and Field, elected at the 2006 USATF
Annual Meeting in December in Indianapolis. Snyder, 63,
will be competing in the meet in the 60 and 200 meters.
This year's oldest entrants include four over 90: Bob
Matteson, age 90 of Bennington, VT, who holds American
records in the 200 & 400, is in five events -- the 60, 200, 400,
800 and 3000. Leland McPhie of San Diego, who turned 93
March 10, is the meet's oldest and is entered in seven
events--the 60 meters, high jump, long jump, triple jump,
shot put, 12-lb. Weight throw, and 25-lb.superweight throw.
Betty Jarvis (92), oldest female, of Aberdeen, N.C., is in the
shot put and weight throw. Rev. Champion Goldy (90), from
Haddonfield, N.J., is in the 60, 200, and shot.
In one of the nicest stories in masters track, symbolic of its
generational flow, 50-year-old Carla Hoppie of Centralia,
Wash., and her 20 year-old college sophomore son, Chris,
are going to college and competing on the SAME
COLLEGIATE TRACK TEAM (son in decathlon, Mom in
heptathlon & pentathlon) at Eastern Oregon University in La
Grande, Ore. Carla is competing in the Pentathlon in
Boston.