Welcome to the Mass Velocity Track Club


Welcome to the Mass Velocity Track Club

A Track Club for Master Sprinters


A few Mass Velocity members at the 2007 Masters Indoor Nationals

We Masters - A Poem about Masters Track by James Morton

Mass Velocity TC at the 2009 Penn Relays


There are running clubs for road racers, marathoners, cross-country harriers and joggers, but there are few clubs dedicated to the the purest form of running - the sprint. Welcome to the Mass Velocity Track Club. This club is built around Master Sprinters from throughout New England and the Northeast. Friends of Mass Velocity belong to other running clubs and some are unattached but we all share a camaraderie as sprinters in particular and track & field in general.

Since 2005 the Mass Velocity Track Club has become the fastest-growing Masters track club in the country and is rapidly gaining a reputation both nationally and internationally for raising the awareness of Masters track and whose members are great competitors and great people. Our Yahoo Forum is open to anyone interested in our sport or our club.  Mass Velocity is a club for everyone. Welcome!



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and Feel Free to Join Our Group Discussions


Mass Velocity Slogan: Not Far, Just Fast 




To Get A Better Understanding of The Club
Click Here To Go To The Newsletter Archive
And Read Some of Our Past Newsletters

Click for MVTC Slides
Click Slides Above for a 2006 Pictoral Review of Mass Velocity Competition and Camaraderie


Other Meet Photos and Commentary Can be Found:
-> in News/Updates - Mass Velocity News
-> in About Us - Additional Photos


Our Guest Book


USATF Club #02-0273
Mass Velocity Track Club is
a Member of USATF- New England
Club #02-273

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March, 2005

Hey Larry, et al:

Just a quick note of support here for your Mass Velocity efforts. Mass Velocity has already made a significant difference in keeping us old-and-not-really-that-fast-anymore guys informed and encouraged. I had a few thoughts I wanted to add.

Having been an active participant in other masters/seniors sports, I find sprinting to be the most physically demanding. As others have similarly said, what we're doing is so far out on the edge of the bell curve for our age group, that small differences in performance level are really not significant. As for the Bill Collinses of the world, I just don't know what to say, he is as rare as can be. Myself, I'm running primarily for the same reason I did 35 years ago: it just feels cool to get it going - whatever "it" I happen to have. It's no different than putting on that brand new pair of sneakers when you were a little kid and right away wanting to run, fast, no stopwatch required.

I can't have the same goals in running as I did when I was young. After all, while I might get a bit faster in the short run, the long term change is inevitable: I'm going to slow down. So are Bill Collins and Michael Johnson. And there are certainly less demanding ways to stay fit for the sake of general health. But in the bigger picture the aim is the same as ever, to do what I can with what I've got. The attendant benefits of fitness, excitement, comraderie, and a reason to stay focused make it more worthwhile. So I hope I can stay physically able to do this - frankly it's touch and go in that regard - and find a way to work it in with the other demands of life in general.

So a pat on the back to all of us!

Rob Porcaro

 

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