Freedom 5K draws larger-than-expected crowd for inaugural race
Bob Hayes has always been the adventurous
type.
In 1944, at the age of 16, Hayes lied about
his age to enlist in the United States Army during World War
II.
“I just wanted the adventure,” said Hayes, who
lives just outside of Missoula in Evaro. “When you’re young, you
want to do adventurous things.”
Sixty-eight years later, Hayes’s thirst for
excitement is stronger than ever.
Since he began running competitively about 25
years ago, Hayes, now 84 years old, has finished somewhere in the
neighborhood of 500 races. On July 4, Hayes and his son Tom were
among the approximately 300 runners who lined up for Bigfork’s
first Freedom 5K.
The race was organized by Grateful Nation
Montana, a first-of-its-kind program that offers tutoring and
mentoring—along with four-year, full-ride college scholarships—to
the children of fallen U.S. soldiers.
The father-son pair travel all over the state
for different running events. Last year, they ran close to 40
races, including three marathons and three ultra-marathons.
“Running with an 84-year-old, you feel like a
movie star because everyone is clapping for you,” said Tom, who
lives in Bozeman.
Although they usually run part of each race
together, neither man hesitates to pull ahead if he is feeling
fast.
“I’m real competitive, and so is he,” Tom
said. “I beat him today, but not by much. He’s not getting any
slower.”
The elder Hayes finished in about 32 minutes,
a decent time “considering that hill climb right at the beginning,”
he said.
Hayes used the 5K—which was run along the Swan
River Nature Trail—as a tune-up for next weekend’s Missoula
Marathon.
“It was a great course. It was nice looking at
the river and the falls,” Hayes said. “It was a lot better than a
road race.”
First-place finisher Kory Mauritsen, who was
visiting Bigfork from Artesia, N.M., also enjoyed the scenic
course.
“It was fun,” said Mauritsen, a recent
high-school graduate and track-and-field athlete. “Since I got
here, all those hills have been killing me, but it (the race) went
better than I thought.”
Julie Ackerlund of Helena placed first in the
women’s category. Ackerlund, who has a vacation home on Swan Lake,
trains with a running group in her home city.
A lifelong runner, Ackerlund said she has run
several races in the past, but his was her first overall win.
“I liked the trail portion in particular, and
I liked that it was an out-and-back course,” she said. “People were
cheering you both directions. It was neat. There was a very
friendly group of runners out there today.”