Celebrating 300 marathons
When 91³Ō¹Ļ Dentistry professor Richard Rayman laces up his shoes to run in the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon on October 20, heāll be just one of more than 20,000 competitors in the event. But for Rayman, the event will mark a major milestone ā itāll be the 300th time heās run a marathon.
A marathon race course is 42.195 kilometres. Three hundred of them equals 12,658.5 kilometres, or almost one-third of the Earthās circumference. Thatās a lot of running, and Raymanās colleagues and students ā including Dentistry Dean Daniel Haas and dental student society president Jeff Lam ā are going to celebrate the achievement by running with him and raising money to support the dental clinic at Princess Margaret Hospital.
āIām very touched and almost embarrassed by the support from the students and faculty,ā Rayman says. āItās very generous of them.ā
Rayman heads Dentistryās Comprehensive Care Program, which is the dental studentsā primary clinical program involving the treatment of their patients. A 91³Ō¹Ļ dental graduate himself, Rayman has been practising dentistry for over 40 years and running marathons for 35 years. This year alone heās run 19 of the gruelling races. Two weeks after the Scotiabank Waterfront event heāll be running in the Hamilton Marathon. And though heās going to ease off next year (heās only planning to enter 12 races), heās still as active as ever. He holds the Canadian record for the longest consecutive-day running streak ā since 1978 heās run every day for at least 30 minutes regardless of weather, sickness, or holidays.
After 35 years and 300 marathons, two events in particular stand out for Rayman ā the New York marathon (āthe energy, the excitement, being in that city ā at mile 10 you reach Manhattan and there are a million and a half people; the noise is deafening!ā) and the Boone, North Carolina marathon (āitās a complete contrast from New York; there are only 300 runners and it includes a brutal 4,300-foot inclineā).
His worst marathon was the Limberlost Challenge north of Huntsville, which he ran earlier this year. The race course went along trails that were mostly mud, rocks and trees.
āI had to walk the last 28 kilometres. It took me nine hours to finish, but my wife was still waiting for me at the finish line.ā
Itās the support of his wife, his two children and his grandchildren that keeps him going, Rayman says. Theyāll be there again on October 20 as he, his colleagues and students pound the pavement in aid of the Prince Margaret Hospital dental clinic.
āRickās accomplishment is truly impressive,ā says Haas, who will be running the race alongside his colleague. āHe is a dedicated faculty member always looking out for the studentsā best interests. In fact you could consider him a role model for dedication and self-discipline, as can be seen by his relentless pursuit of marathons.ā
Running is also a passion for the dean, though he says heās not on the same level as Rayman.
āMy usual routine is a 5-mile run in the morning before I get in to work," says Haas. "My last full marathon was 30 years ago. This one will be my third ā that is if I can complete it, something of which Iām not certain! Iāve not really trained properly. Yet, I wanted to sign up for this to be there with Rick to support him on his amazing accomplishment.ā
Thereāll be many students in the race as well, Haas says.
āItās so great to see our students supporting him on this run,ā Haas says. āOur students are great at knowing the importance of giving back to the community, so they are also taking this opportunity to make this a fundraising activity.ā
Lam, who will be running the marathon along with Rayman and Haas, says this is the first time the dental students society will be fundraising for the clinic through the marathon. In the past, the society has fundraised for the clinic through a hockey tournament and has participated in the CIBC Run for the Cure in recent years.
āDr. Rayman is an excellent clinical instructor,ā Lam says. āHe also cares a lot about the students: He understands the stress of dental school and frustration of dentistry so he is always there to help and guide the students through difficult times.ā
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Terry Lavender is a writer with University Relations at the 91³Ō¹Ļ.