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You are here: Home / Columns / AJW's Taproom / Jamie Moyer and The Queen: Journeys That Redefine Age

Jamie Moyer and The Queen: Journeys That Redefine Age

April 27, 2012 by Andy Jones-Wilkins · 11 Comments 

AJWs TaproomTwo remarkable events over the past few weeks have quickly changed the way I think about getting old. While I have spent much of the past year bemoaning my aching bones and battling one injury after another, two remarkable individuals have completely reconstituted the optics of aging.

Earlier this month, 49-year-old Jamie Moyer, starting pitcher for the Colorado Rockies, became the oldest pitcher to ever win a Major League Baseball game. In doing so, Moyer not only impressed the sports world but the rest of the world as well. You see, Jamie Moyer is not your typical pitcher. Having spent a career bouncing from team-to-team and supporting his teammates in any way he can, Moyer has made a living off his cunning, somewhat whimsical approach to the art of pitching. In this day and age of powerful big men beating hitters with radar-gun-busting fastballs and devastating breaking balls Moyer is an averaged sized guy who baffles hitters with a fastball that is about the velocity of your average middle school kid and a command of the strike zone that reminds one of a secret service sharpshooter. Whether Moyer wins another game or not is immaterial. What does matter is that in his own unique and adaptable way he has re-defined aging.

Meghan Arbogast has done much the same thing over the past few years in ultramarathon running. Nicknamed The Queen by her Oregonian brethren, Meghan truly has performed majestically over the past few years. In addition to breaking age-group records in every race she has run, The Queen has also established a seemingly permanent spot in the Western States top-10 and represented the United States on the international stage in true royal fashion. Last year at the World 100K Championships she broke the 50-and-over World Record and just last weekend she re-broke her own record by an astounding ten minutes. And, all of this from a woman who is smart, down-to-earth, and incredibly humble.

I have gotten to know Meghan over the years and I know that she is an amazing person. In addition to her running accomplishments, Meghan is a devoted mother, a committed friend, and, a little more than a year ago, she became a widow. In the midst of her incredible training regimen and her active personal and professional life, Meghan supported and sustained her late husband Brian’s battle with a chronic and fatal illness. Throughout a more than year-long struggle, Meghan maintained incredible composure, powerful compassion, and deeply ingrained inner strength. I, for one, happen to believe that Meghan’s temperament and character have allowed her to weather this tragic experience with grace and dignity and, in the process, these experiences have not brought her down they have lifted her up. What we are seeing on the roads and on the trails, I believe, is not unlike the Phoenix rising from the ashes.

Last spring, a few months after Brian’s death, The Queen joined a bunch of us at the annual Michigan Bluff Training Camp a month before Western States. As usual, her fitness was second to none and her attitude going into the race was positive, contemplative, and focused. On our final big workout, The Ice Cream Sandwich Run, we set the goal of running from Foresthill to Cal 2 (approximately 8 miles) in under 75 minutes. We also were striving to do this after running 44 miles through the Canyons first. It was clear to all of us who would lead the run. Leaving Foresthill Meghan surged to the front and set the pace. Through the winding Cal Street Trail Meghan bobbed and weaved, gliding the downs and powering the ups all the while never breaking stride. As I was running behind her I could not help but think of myself as a lumbering bear chasing a sprightly gazelle. About halfway through the run I looked at my watch and realized we were five minutes ahead of pace. I told Meghan this and she said she would slow down. She didn’t. We finished the workout in 69 minutes. I couldn’t help but wonder if the journey Meghan had taken to get to that point gave her wings!

There are many sources of inspiration in this wonderful sport of ours. But there are few as grounded, thoughtful, smart, and transcendent as The Queen.

Bottoms up!

AJW Taproom’s Beer of the Week
This week the Beer of the Week review will be presented by the Editor-in-Chief of iRunFar, Bryon Powell.

Wasatch Polygamy PorterAJW assigned me to review Park City, Utah’s Polygamy Porter. I’m not very good at assignments, whether from tapmaster, headmaster, toastmaster… or just plain old master. However, with my two beers of the moment – Yuengling Lager and Racer 5 IPA – having been recently reviewed, I will yield to his authority and share a hometown brew.

Wasatch Beer’s Polygamy Porter is the most sessionable porter I’ve ever consumed. It won’t wow you with bold or complex flavor nor leave you laying in a litter of peanut shells on floor of Main Street PC’s O’Shucks and that’s this beer’s beauty. The dark brown brew is smooth with only a mild porter flavor. Normally, I’d enjoy, but want to call it quits with any microbrew porter within 24 ounces. This past Sunday, I enjoyed two 24-ounce “schooners” of Polygamy Porter back-to-back and could have enjoyed a few more.

Now, 48 ounces of beer would usually leave my a bit wobbly, but this truly a “Utah beer.” That is, it’s 3.2% alcohol by weight. What most folks overlook is that Utah “3.2 beer” is actually 4.0% alcohol by volume (ABV), the much more common measure of alcohol content. To give you a comparison, Guinness Draught is 4.2% ABV, while Sam Adams Boston Lager is 4.9% ABV. Some might take offense at this slightly less potent potable, but if you even come up from sea level to 7,100′ for some beers, particularly after a good run on our killer trails, you won’t notice, let alone mind, the difference. You may even think to yourself: Polygamy Porter, why have just one?

Call for Comments (from Bryon)

  • How do these two athletes inspire you?
  • What other beyond-the-normal-age-range athletes inspire you?
  • Eligible for your AARP card? Share your own stories of adventure, achievement, and inspiration, whatever they may be.

Related articles:

  1. Locals Repeat at 2011 Rothrock Challenge iRunFar covers the Rothrock Challenge, the seventh race in the 2011 La Sportiva Mountain Cup....
  2. MdS 2009: Stage 2 (36k) Stage 2 went well for me, the Dreamchasers, & Meghan. My effort was slightly reduced today – by necessity & design. I started without any major complaint & finished the...
  3. Meghan Arbogast Post-2010 Western States 100 Interview iRunFar interviews Meghan Arbogast following her second place finish at the 2010 Western States 100....

Filed under AJW's Taproom · Tagged with baseball, Meghan Arbogast

Andy Jones-Wilkins finished in the top 10 men at the Western States 100 7-straight times. He's sponsored by Patagonia, La Sportiva, and Drymax socks and is iRunFar's editorialist.
All posts by Andy Jones-Wilkins

Comments

11 Responses to “Jamie Moyer and The Queen: Journeys That Redefine Age”
  1. olga says:
    April 27, 2012 at 6:13 am

    Wonderful piece, Andy. I know ever time I feel like slacking Meghan is on my mind. Her every race is an inspiration, and indeed, her life. She is all you said, a remarkable person, and an athlete who doesn’t let me to use any excuses.

    Reply
  2. Nicholas Wied says:
    April 27, 2012 at 8:03 am

    This is a fitting piece with race season really heating up AJW! I am sure as the front packs get faster there will be more incredible blow ups this summer, maybe just a few of those will remember this article and hang on for those final miles!

    Reply
  3. Mark says:
    April 27, 2012 at 8:26 am

    What I find even more impressive than Meghan’s age group records is her 4th OVERALL at the world 100k event, now that’s inspiring!

    Reply
    • Danny says:
      April 27, 2012 at 10:25 am

      I was about to say the same thing. Some ≥50-year-old is always going to have and set the 50+ world record no matter what, so that fact alone is not noteworthy (although her times are darn insane). What’s truly incredible is a 51-year-old leading the best of the best in the world championships 96k into the race. Wow.

      Reply
  4. Trail Clown says:
    April 27, 2012 at 8:59 am

    I think if you have a bit of natural ability, good mechanics, and train smart, then age does not have to be that much of a deterrent for success in any sport/hobby. Now if you’re like me, and had bad mechanics from the get-go, then aging can interfere with enjoyment/success in running (and baseball for that matter).

    Very inspiring stuff indeed. And very well-written as usual…As others have said, iRunFar is now THE premo Go-to site. Awesome.

    Reply
  5. Frenchy says:
    April 27, 2012 at 9:11 am

    I read an article last year that stated the most competitive age groups are the 40 and up groups. They have the experience and the grit to grind out those miles. It’s awesome to see older runners out on the course, especially when they pass me. Yes, I mutter a few choice words, but I certainly hope that I am running that well when I get to be their age. Look at Meltzer and his 100 mile wins. Older runners just know how to get it done and don’t mess around. There are a few runners in my region that impress me. Met Bobby Keogh at Palo Duro who ran the 50 miler and the next weekend ran Deadman Peaks 50. Inspirational, yes. Motivational, absolutely! Met Susan Brozik and Jean Herbert at Palo Duro as well and they were the 1st and 2nd place finishers of the 50K. Amazing runners! We live in a disposable society where older ones are forgotten. That’s unfortunate since we can learn an awful lot from them. I know I always do.

    Reply
  6. Kristin Z says:
    April 27, 2012 at 9:49 am

    awesome. and yes, what a fabulous role model and inspiration in Meghan… as a warm, compassionate, and genuinely friendly person… and as a kick butt runner!

    Reply
  7. the "other" geoff says:
    April 27, 2012 at 9:51 am

    Polygamy Porter: Bring some home for the Wives! Great beer pick… my brother literally just saw that this brew is available out here in the Chicagoland area. I had it during my only visit to SLC… good stuff.

    Reply
  8. Gideon says:
    April 27, 2012 at 1:04 pm

    Exellent. Don’t forget that Marco Olmo was 56 years old when he won the UTMB for the second time in 2008. There’s still hope……

    Reply
  9. Ron says:
    April 27, 2012 at 10:30 pm

    An unbelievable athlete. I can’t imagine doing anything close to her training or racing, and I’m about the same age as she. It’s mind blowing. And very tragic life events can take their toll on us, too, as we get older. She deserves much admiration for having worked with her personal burdens, as well as her running.
    Well written piece, and the interview from the 100K was very well done and appreciated, also. Thank you all for your work and effort with these.

    Reply
  10. Steve Pero says:
    May 1, 2012 at 9:50 am

    Andy, aging in this sport can be a lot of fun. I’m now 60 and my wife, Deb is 57 and we just placed 1st and 2nd in our age groups at Collegiate Peaks. So much fun and is what keeps you wanting to continue to train. When I can no longer walk, that is when I will decide to no longer run ultra races. Have been running races now for 37 years and never get tired of it, thanks to all my fellow runners who make this sport so wonderful.
    Meghan is just an inspirational and incredible athlete, would love to see her take 1st woman at WS.

    Reply

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