Catching up with Paul Carrozza – and the new Power Your Purpose 5K

Catching up with Paul Carrozza – and the new Power Your Purpose 5K

Chalk up two Paul Carrozza sightings in one week for me – the first, a sit-down meeting to discuss the new Power Your Purpose 5K; the second, a sweaty, unplanned fly-by during my 8-mile run through Northwest Hills early Monday.

Carrozza, you may remember, owned and operated RunTex, a gear shop he spent 25 years building into the hub of the Austin running scene. The flagship store was evicted from its longtime home on Riverside Drive in 2013.

Since then, Carrozza has focused on what he does best – coaching. He currently heads the cross country, track and field, and swimming and diving programs at St. Stephen’s Episcopal School, and leads the Born to Run training programs at Ready to Run, 3616 Far West Boulevard, where he recently launched a program specifically for runners over 50. (As a side note, his son Crayton just broke the 4-minute mile at the University of Texas.)

Carrozza is now teaming with the Whole Planet Foundation, which provides “micro loans” to help people start or expand their own businesses, to stage a new 5K run.

Jennet opened a small shop in front of her home in Uganda with a micro loan. Photo courtesy Whole Planet Foundation

The Power Your Purpose 5K and Soiree is scheduled for 7 p.m. May 14 at Camp Mabry, 2210 W. 35thStreet. After the race, participants will get international food and beer from countries where the foundation has made its loans.

This year’s event is limited to 500 people in Austin, but look for it to spread around the United States – and beyond – in coming years. Early registration is $40. To sign up go to https://www.classy.org/event/power-your-purpose-5k/e235441.

Proceeds will help fund institutions that make the loans, which average $175 for first-timers in countries including Bangladesh, Uganda, Zimbabwe and Cambodia. The loans have provided a boost to help a woman in Haiti set up a small store in her front yard to sell pastries instead of carrying them in a basket on her head. They also helped a woman built a small fruit stand.

The foundation made $5.8 million in disbursements in 2018. Nearly 90 percent of loan recipients are women; the repayment rate has held steady at 96 percent.

“We’re all about empowerment,” says Jason Martinez, fundraising program manager for Whole Planet Foundation.

 

 

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Breakfast with Iram Leon, the 2020 Cap10K race ambassador

Breakfast with Iram Leon, the 2020 Cap10K race ambassador

The tiny muffin in front is mine, but Iram Leon ate those three giant pastries all by himself this morning when we met for breakfast at Upper Crust Bakery. Pam LeBlanc photo

Iram Leon thinks it’s pretty amusing that he’s been selected as race ambassador for the 2020 Statesman Capitol 10,000.

Last year, Olympic gold medalist Sanya Richards-Ross held the post. In 2018, Olympic silver medalist Leo Manzano was ambassador.

“They went downhill fast,” Leon jokes about his appointment. But I think he makes a fine ambassador. I had breakfast with Leon this morning at Upper Crust Bakery. He’d already gone for a 6-mile run, and was planning to run again tonight with his 12-year-old daughter.

I watched as he tossed back three giant pastries. That in itself was impressive, but there’s more.

I first wrote about Leon in 2013, just after he’d won the overall title at the Gusher Marathon in Beaumont – while pushing his daughter in a stroller and despite a diagnosis of brain cancer.

A marble-sized tumor is entwined in the memory and language hub of Leon’s brain and has invisible “tentacles” that even doctors can’t detect. The average survival time for the disease is four years; only a third of patients live five years after diagnosis.

Cap10K officials have named Leon the race ambassador for the 2020 Cap10K. He has brain cancer but still logs about 60 miles of running each week. Pam LeBlanc photo

But Leon’s diagnosis came nine years ago. At his most recent checkup in June, doctors told him his tumor is stable. If you didn’t notice the scar that snakes across the side of his head you might never guess he was sick.

He runs – a lot – and he runs fast. The Cap10K was the very first race Leon ran when he came to Austin. He’s done the race five or six times since, alongside his daughter and with his parents and wife Elaine, whom he married last year in a run-themed weddingthat I wrote aboutfor the Austin American-Statesman.

Leon says he likes the Cap10K because it draws runners of all ability levels. For some, a 10K is the longest distance they’ll ever run. When last year’s Cap10K was cancelled due to bad weather, Leon showed up, unsolicited, to help break down the infrastructure.He’s also president of the Austin Runners Club.

So yes, he’s the perfect ambassador for the 43rdannual Cap10K on April 5, 2020.

As race ambassador, Leon will appear at the Cap10K Expo and participate in some of the themed training runs leading up to the race. He’ll also hit the starting horn at the beginning of the race – before he jumps into the crowd and participates himself, a first for a Cap10K ambassador. Afterward, he’ll hand out medals to finishers, something he loves to do.

“It’s like handing out happiness,” he says.

Leon, president of the Austin Runners Club, logs about 60 miles each week. Pam LeBlanc photo

The Cap10K began in 1978 with 3,400 participants. Now more than 20,000 run it.

“The Cap10K is about community and commitment, and who better to represent our 43rd race than inspirational Austin running community member Iram J. Leon,” race director Jeff Simecek wrote in a press release.

For more information go to cap10K.com. 

 

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Run, sip a marg and celebrate the trail June 6 at Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run

Run, sip a marg and celebrate the trail June 6 at Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run

 

That’s me, with an unknown runner, at last year’s Maudie’s Margarita Run and Party.

Because I believe there is no better way to celebrate the Butler Hike and Bike Trail around Lady Bird Lake than by running a 5K race and downing a margarita, I present to you the Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run.

I love this event, scheduled this year for 8 p.m. June 6 at the Seaholm Power Plant, 800 West Cesar Chavez Street. It’s the biggest fund-raiser of the year for The Trail Foundation, the non-profit organization that protects and enhances our beloved and much-used 10-mile urban path. The trail – the one you probably train on regularly, if you’re an Austin runner – logs more than 2.6 million visits each year. I love running the loop because I always bump into people I know.

The city’s running community shows up in force for the always sweaty run, then settles down for live music and Tex-Mex under the stars.

Tickets are $50 and are available here.

 

About Pam

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