The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Man has finished every race since its inception

Tuesday, octogenari­an from Tyrone expects to finish Peachtree No. 48.

- By Gabriel Burns Gabriel.Burns@ajc.com

On Tuesday, octogenari­an Bill Thorn of Tyrone expects to finish his 48th Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on Peachtree Road Race.

A sprained ankle, a battle with cancer, a gashed heel gushing blood throughout an experiment­al shoe — even an energy drink “detrimenta­l to life” — yet in every installmen­t of The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on Peachtree Road Race, Bill Thorn crossed the finish line.

Going on his 48th year running the race, Thorn said he’s done more interviews this year than any before. But he relishes the ever-growing platform.

“It doesn’t bother me one bit,” he said of the constant interviews. “Some people are curious, and I feel like it’s a good thing that I speak to anybody about it and be as truthful and honest as I can.

That’s just a part of what you do. I feel that I need to be thankful for what I’ve been able to do and

help anybody that I can.” Thorn has become synonymous with one of the more recognizab­le races nationwide. In 1970, he joined roughly 150 others and navigated through traffic and fumes to complete the inaugural — and disorganiz­ed — Peachtree Road Race.

On Tuesday, he’ll join a slightly larger crowd of 60,000 taking part in the world’s largest 10K race, held annually on the Fourth

of July.

“One race led to another one,” Thorn said. “People would hear about it, and then it just kept on going. ... It was done the best that you could do it back at that time . ... When something like that gets going, and it took off at a certain point, it just becomes another event.

“Who knows where it’ll go from here? Every year they could’ve had more, but they’d try to limit it to what they could control and handle. But that’s a lot of bodies .... 60,000.”

Thorn has resided in metro Atlanta 63 years after 23 years in Birmingham, Ala. He remembers the year he moved, 1954, because it’s the same year he married the love of his life.

Working out is a staple of Thorn’s day.

He has dedicated himself not only to maintainin­g optimal health, but to passing his wisdom to others.

He’s worked the past 28 years as a track and field coach at Landmark Christian School and estimates he’s taught for more than 50 years.

His teachings revolve around simplicity. If he shows younger generation­s how to take care of their bodies, he hopes it translates to other responsibi­lities later in life.

“I try to pass that on through my years of teaching and coaching and by running the road race for 48 years,” he said. “That’s given me a platform and opportunit­y to speak with others and hopefully have an impact for the better on their lives. It’s just how I’ve lived.”

Thorn can’t pinpoint a specific motivation for his consistenc­y, though he hasn’t forgotten the initial instigator. He encountere­d Kenneth Cooper’s “Aerobics” book in 1968. The book cites an exercise point system, with the most rewarding totals via running.

Thorn quickly took to it, and running became second nature.

“I’m some kind of a driven person,” he said. “Have been from the very early days of my life.”

There have been obstacles in Thorn’s racing commitment.

He had cancer, but it “never delayed” him. He sprained an ankle shortly before the race, but he took care of it as he would his students, and completed it.

A chiropract­or once gave him new shoes to help with his running, but a metal piece broke out, slashing his heel and producing an oozing problem.

Perhaps the most threatenin­g challenge, he recalls, occurred three or four years ago. Thorn tried an energy drink before the race. It made him sick to the point he was about to collapse. Medical workers tried to take him off the course, but he and his granddaugh­ter would have none of it.

“‘What do you think you’re doing?’” Thorn said his granddaugh­ter asked the crews. “‘He’s finishing this race.’ ”

“Not at my normal pace,” Thorn said. “But I made it through.”

Reflecting on the past 47 races, Thorn said he’s appreciati­ve to still be going strong. He credits his discipline and relationsh­ip with God for that.

He believes that one succeeds at what he or she does continuous­ly. That means staying focused and determined — something he declared is a foolproof philosophy.

“I know it works because I’m proof of it,” he said. “I believe in myself and I believe in what I do.”

 ?? AJC FILE ?? Bill Thorn — “kind of a driven person,” he says — relaxes after running his 47th AJC Peachtree Road Race on July 4, 2016.
AJC FILE Bill Thorn — “kind of a driven person,” he says — relaxes after running his 47th AJC Peachtree Road Race on July 4, 2016.

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