The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bill Thorn’s 51st Peachtree unlike all others

COVID- 19 greatly alters race but fails to dampen runner’s spirit.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ ajc. com

For his 51st AJC Peachtree Road Race, Bill Thorn will rise early on Thanksgivi­ng morning and will venture all the way to the end of the driveway of his home in Tyrone in Fayette County. The only person to have completed all 50 Peachtrees will not be joining a fifield of 60,000, as is normally the case for the world’s largest 10- kilometer race, and the event obviously is not being held July 4, as it was for the fifirst 50.

He’ll join a signifific­antly smaller group that is expected to include his daughter, Cheryl Thrasher, his longtime friend and running partner, Howard Dial, Dial’s wife, Beth, and a few neighbors.

“I don’t know which ( neighbors) will run and which ones won’t,” Thorn said. “I just tell ’ em, ‘ Meet me out in front of my house at 7 o’clock.’”

Thorn’s 2020 Peachtree experience likely will share similariti­es with the thousands expected to take part in a virtual version of the race that will take place over the Thanksgivi­ng weekend. In May, the Atlanta institutio­n was pushed back from its customary Independen­ce Day date to Thanksgivi­ng to buy time in hopes that an in- person event could still be staged amid COVID- 19.

In August, with race organizers

not confident they could deliver a safe Peachtree, the event was transforme­d into a virtual race, with runners and walkers challenged to complete a 6.2- mile course of their choosing, away from the thousands of competitor­s, volunteers and fans with whom t hey would be sharing tight quarters in any other year.

“It’s kind of a little different than anything they’ve done before,” said Thorn, who turned 90 in September.

There is at least one benefit to the format, representa­tive of a time when videoconfe­rence calls have facilitate­d connection­s across states and countries. According to the Atlanta Track Club, this Peachtree will be run and walked in all 50 states and on every continent except Antarctica, with participan­ts’ times to be recorded and collected for the track club through a smartphone app using GPS tracking. At least for those who have smartphone­s.

“I don’t, but my daughter does,” Thorn said. “I only have a little flip phone. That’s all I use. I’m not into all that.”

Thorn and the thousands who will join him in virtual fashion will miss the landmarks that help define the Peachtree — the massive American f l ag that hangs over the st art l i ne, the Cathedral of St. Philip, where the Rev. Sam Candler sprinkles holy- water blessings on participan­ts, the climb up Cardiac Hill and the rousing turn onto 10th Street for the homestretc­h.

Instead, Thorn can measure his progress by a lake in his subdivisio­n he’ll run around and, once his route reaches the center of Tyrone, a barber shop, a printing store and a Dollar General, among other sites.

“You come up and the new city hall they’ve just finished is on the right, there’s a Baptist church on the right before you get to it and then there is a little restaurant and the post office, and they’re doing a lot of constructi­on right in that area,” he said.

Thorn, a former high school coach in football, cross- country and track who won 38 state championsh­ips at Landmark Christian in Fairburn and an inductee into t he Georgia Athletic Coaches

‘ Bill is a man of routine and self- discipline, and he has been rock- like in his commitment to that as long as I have known him.’

Howard Dial, longtime friend and running partner of Bill Thorn

Associatio­n Hall of Fame, continues to be a model of fitness. He has a daily exercise routine that includes weightlift­ing, pushups, bounding on a trampoline, stretching, core exercises and, of course, running.

“Bill is a man of routine and self- discipline, and he has been rock- like in his commitment to that as long as I have known him,” said Dial, Thorn’s longtime friend who himself only missed four of the first 50 Peachtrees.

Thorn conceded that the event lacks the same excitement that the Peachtree normally generates “because of the way you’re having to do it ,” he said. “I’m just going to get up early and go attempt it.”

The real thing can’t be duplicated.

“It couldn’t feel more different for us as an organizati­on in terms of what our days look like,” track club executive director Rich Kenah said. “But it has been a lot of fun this week to see that usual excitement start to percolate.”

About 45,000 people are regi stered. Kenah acknowledg­ed hearing from would- be participan­ts with complaints about the sign- up process.

When t he r a c e was moved to Thanksgivi­ng, runners were given an opportunit y to have their money refunded — a rare option in the road- race industry — or to move their entry to 2021, but not when the format was changed to virtual.

“To those people, I simply say, and we have said, ‘ We’re sorry. We made a decision that we thought was in the best interest of the largest number of people who wanted to continue their Peachtree experience as well as in the best interest of the Peachtree,’” Kenah said, “and just ask them to give us a chance to deliver an authentic experience virtually and rebuild their confidence in us in 2021.”

That said, about 9,000 people signed up for the race after it was made a virtual event, according to the track club, perhaps evidence that many do want the Peachtree but, at least this year, not the in- person version.

Times can be recorded starting at 12: 01 a. m. today through 11: 59 p. m. Sunday. ( The coveted finisher T- shirts were shipped to participan­ts beforehand.)

This morning, Kenah will be the starter for a group of young runners from LEAD, a nonprofit serving young Black males from the inner city led by former profession­al baseball player C. J. Stewart and his wife, Kelli.

Kenah said he has had a lot of conversati­ons with people asking him where he’s going to run.

“It almost feels like someone asking you for the answers to the test, that they’re trying to figure out what’s the best course to deliver t he f astest possible race,” he said.

Thorn said his course in Tyrone is up and down, although there’s no incline like Cardiac Hill.

“You’ve got s ome of ever ything,” he said.

Af t e r t he r a c e , he pl a ns t o recover the rest of the day and have a l i mited gathering with f a mi l y F r i d ay. A s f o r f u t u r e Peachtrees, he i sn’t sure. But, he’ll line up today at his mailbox to tackle 10 kilometers.

“All I can do is go and give it a shot and see what happens,” he said.

For a 90- year- old runner taking his mark in a Peachtree unlike any other in the most trying of years, who can ask for more than that?

 ??  ?? Bill Thorn, 90, will run in his 51st Peachtree Road Race today with a smaller group.
Bill Thorn, 90, will run in his 51st Peachtree Road Race today with a smaller group.
 ??  ?? Bill Thorn keeps up a rigorous workout routine at his home in Tyrone. The retired, Hall of Fame high school coach continues to be a model of physical fitness at age 90.
Bill Thorn keeps up a rigorous workout routine at his home in Tyrone. The retired, Hall of Fame high school coach continues to be a model of physical fitness at age 90.
 ?? PHOTOS BY REBECCA WRIGHT FOR THE AJC ?? Bill Thorn looks over his collection of T- shirts from the Peachtree Road Race at his home in Tyrone. The 90- year- old has participat­ed in all 50 previous races.
PHOTOS BY REBECCA WRIGHT FOR THE AJC Bill Thorn looks over his collection of T- shirts from the Peachtree Road Race at his home in Tyrone. The 90- year- old has participat­ed in all 50 previous races.

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