PORTLAND, Maine (March 18, 2002) - Online registration is
now available
for runners entering this year's special 5th anniversary
Peoples Beach
to Beacon 10k Road Race on August 3 in Cape Elizabeth,
Maine.Race organizers are encouraging runners to register at the
race's newly
redesigned and updated web site, www.beach2beacon.org.
Printed entry
forms also will be available at all Peoples Heritage
branches throughout
the state of Maine in late April.
The field size will increase to 5,000 runners this year in
celebration
of the 5th anniversary of the popular race along the
picturesque shores
of Maine's rocky coast. Even with 1,000 additional
participants,
runners are encouraged to register early to ensure a spot at
the
starting line in August, said race organizer Meg Dempsey,
vice president
and director of public affairs at Peoples Heritage Bank.
The scenic course will be the same as last year, beginning
at Crescent
Beach along Route 77 and ending 6.2 miles later at the
Portland Head
lighthouse at Fort Williams Park. The event also features a
wheelchair
division of the race and a children's 1K race.
Organizers already are busy making arrangements for the
race, which
draws some 10,000 spectators and attracts elite runners
worldwide as
well as top and recreational runners locally and across New
England.
The 2001 race featured a course record in another exciting
women's race.
Catherine Ndereba of Kenya retained her crown for the
fourth straight
year and Evans Rutto of Kenya won the men's race. New
champions also
were crowned among Maine runners - Andy Spaulding of
Freeport and
Christine Snow-Reaser of Dayton.
Besides increasing the field size to 5,000 for the first time,
Peoples
Beach to Beacon race organizers are planning other ways to
celebrate the
5th anniversary. Details of special events will be announced
as they
become available.
The race was founded by Peoples Heritage Bank and bank
spokesperson Joan
Benoit Samuelson, a Mainer and running legend who has
won two Boston
Marathons and in 1984 won the gold medal in the first
Olympic marathon
for women.
The Peoples Beach to Beacon has quickly become a "must"
event on the
schedules of many elite runners worldwide as well as top
runners locally
and across New England. Its race director since its
inception, Dave
McGillivray, who also directs the Boston Marathon, was
recently named
the race director for the 2004 Olympic Women's Marathon
Trials in St.
Louis.
Last year, more than 900 volunteers from Cape Elizabeth
and surrounding
communities pitched in to further cement the race's
reputation as a
premier tourist destination and favorite among locals as
well. This
year, organizers will again develop lists of host families and
volunteers to help in a number of key areas, from course set
up to
running the water stops along the course.
"The race is a world-class event, thanks to the great
volunteers,
spectators, runners and elite athletes who come to Maine to
compete,"
said Michael W. McNamara, president and CEO of Peoples,
a Maine-based
bank with more than 60 branches throughout the state.
The youth organization chosen by the bank this year to be
the race
beneficiary is Opportunity Farm, a long-term, family-style,
residential
facility in rural New Gloucester for at-risk Maine youth. The
farm,
serving at-risk boys since 1910, will soon offer its
one-of-a-kind,
structured program to girls as part of a major expansion that
happens to
coincide with its selection as the race beneficiary. The
beneficiary
last year was the Kids First Center. Turning Point Farm,
Camp Sunshine
and Big Brothers/Big Sisters also were beneficiaries in
previous years.
As this year's race beneficiary, Opportunity Farm will receive
a $30,000
cash donation from Peoples Heritage Bank and will further
benefit from
fundraising opportunities and publicity valued at more than
$40,000.
"It's just been an outstanding effort on the part of the bank
and the
people of Maine to create this phenomenal event, and we're
also glad to
be able to really help a youth organization each year," said
Joan Benoit
Samuelson.