Race for the Heart


Here's the itinerary for my 100 miler. Sept. 2, Friday - meeting on the Shady Lane Elementary Playground in Menomonee Falls on the corner of Shady Lane and St. Thomas Dr. at 6:30. Media will be there and hopefully members of the Falls cross country team. Run starts at 7:00 a.m. with a lap around the school block , then on to Appleton Ave. north to County Line Road (Hwy Q). Due west for a long time. Mullens Ice Cream Parlor in Watertown will be my support crews lunch stop around 1:30 – 2:00. Next stop Riley – Deppe Park at the west end of town in Marshall. This will be around 5:30 – 5: 45. I’ll stop there and talk to the press and public for a few minutes, and take of with the Marshall cross country team pacing me for a few miles.


On to Sun Prairie, where we will stop for dinner. By this time I will be hungry for Pizza, so we will stop at the Pizza Pit on Main St.(Hwy19) and Union St. and say hi to the owner Jerry and his gang. This should be around 7:30 p.m.


This is where my wife, Laura, gets to lay down in the back seat, and my buddy , Randy, takes over driving duties. Amy, my navigator, running buddy, and run documenter, will ride along as long as she can due to some serious health conditions. (She inspires me). This is also where my trail running buddy, Buck, joins us for the remainder of the run. ON to Waunakee and the end of Hwy 19. Once we hit highway 12, it'll be dark and scary. Will go about 12 miles to go to get to Marion Park, Prairie du Sac, Wisconsin. Should arrive at the park approximately 4:30a.m., and will meet up with lots of folks that are going to run the last 10k with me.


I will start running the 10k Saturday at 5:00 a.m. and finish around 6:30 a.m. That will give me a little time to shower, stretch and go to the Food Court stage by 7:30 a.m. at Marion Park for the presentation of the check to Sauk Prairie Ambulance and The American Heart Association. I will be at the finish line for awhile after the race, so come and talk to me.


Again, feel free to call during my run...262-442-4364, I will be sending updates to this page from my phone.


Please go to this page, if you haven't already done so and donate to these two wonderful charities.


Thanks for all your support!


Hans Wegesser

"Friend" Hans Wegesser on FACEBOOK



Hans' Story

On Sept. 4th, 2010, 12 days before my 50th birthday, I had just crossed the finish line of the Cow Chip Classic 10k in Sauk City, Wisconsin. I felt a small tightness in the middle of my chest, and assumed I was dehydrated and out of breath from sprinting in the last few hundred yards. Within moments, I became light-headed and nauseous. Upon noticing that my face was gray and ashen, my friends went to get help. As I sat down by a tree at the finish line, I couldn't understand what all the fuss was about. I had up to five EMT's working on me, getting vitals and placing nitro glycerin pills under my tongue. Never once did I feel that I was in imminent danger.

The EMT's convinced me to go to the hospital across the street to be checked out. They knew all along how serious and dire my situation was, but never let on. At the hospital, the Emergency Room doctor took my two buddies out in the hall and told them that I was having a massive heart attack and that I was in grave danger. He wanted to air lift me to UW-Madison's Heart Hospital Immediately. Unfortunately, the helicopter was having mechanical problems, and I was told I would be transported by Ambulance.

A 45-minute ride later, I was whisked into an operating room with four or more doctors waiting for me. One hour later, I awoke, and was informed that two stents were placed in an artery near my heart. The doctors opened a 100% blockage in my lower anterior descending artery. (Commonly known as The Widow Maker). I was told by my primary care doctor later in ICU that 90% of patients with this kind of heart attack don't survive. Strength of my heart and lungs, due to my running, was what saved my life. I was told that if this would have happened 7 or 8 years earlier, I would not have survived.

There is no history of Coronary Artery Disease in my family. I was told that I gave it to myself. I had stopped running at the age of 25, started smoking two packs of cigarettes per day, abusing alcohol and gaining 80 lbs. through poor dietary habits. At the age of 39, I stopped smoking, drinking and changed my diet. Two years ago, I changed my diet even more, and immediately noticed results. After my heart attack, there were a few concessions I was forced to make. I could never eat Edy's Rocky Road Ice Cream again, and no more donuts. Two vices that I couldn't take out of my life, until now. Once I found out that Sherbet was a tasty and healthy substitute for Ice cream, I knew I'd be okay with the rest of my diet.

After speaking with Stan Theis, the Cow Chip Race Director, and the EMT’s that helped me that day, I made the decision to pass my good fortune forward. My 100 mile charity run will take place on Sept. 2 - 3. I will start in my hometown of Menomonee Falls, WI., and run a route to Sauk City, WI. I will start on Friday, Sept. 2nd at 5 a.m. from the playground of Shady Lane Elementary School and finish around 6 a.m. on Sat., Sept. 3rd at Marion Park in Prairie du Sac, WI. Along the way I will run through the towns of Oconomowoc, Marshall, Watertown, Sun Prairie, Waunakee and Sauk Prairie. I will meet up with local high school and middle school cross country teams, and they will help me run through their towns. The teams will also be fundraising, with the proceeds being split 50/50 between The American Heart Association, The Sauk Prairie Ambulance Association and the individual teams. I will present a check to the American Heart Assoc. and the Sauk Prairie Ambulance Assoc. after running the Cow Chip Classic 10k.

I have coached high school cross country and track for the last 8 years, and enjoy teaching young athletes about the importance of exercise and diet. Since my heart attack, I have picked up my training, and have completed a 30 mile trail race in Illinois. My time was 30 minutes faster than last year before my heart attack! My Cardiologist has given me several Echo Cardiograms since my heart attack, and has told me that my heart is completely normal! I have 1 - 2% permanent damage as a result of my attack. On the day of my attack, I had 20% damage! On May 14th, I will compete in a 50 mile trail race on Wisconsin’s Ice Age Trail. I look forward to your support, and hope that my charity run inspires young and old to exercise regularly and eat properly.

Remember..... Stay Vertical/Stay Fit

Hans Wegesser

2011 Sauk Prairie
Cow Chip Classic 5K and 10K Run/Walk
View 2011 Results Here




2011 Classic Run Shirt Art


Saturday, September 3rd, 2011




Thank you all for participating last year.
We hope to see you all again this year!


 

2004 Classic Run

I would like to extend my thanks to all who participated in the 2011 Cow Chip Classic Run/Walk.

 

Cow Chip Classic Run drew over 865 participants this year with 810 crossed the finish line.

 

Money raised from the run goes back into the community through the Sauk Prairie Area Community Club which provides funds for many local charities, youth centered activities and six college scholarships.

 

To register, please download the Classic Run brochure, print and mail or register online at www.active.com. If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, please feel free to contact me. I look forward to seeing you again this summer!

 

Stan Theis, Race Director
2131 Broadway Street
Prairie du Sac, WI 53578
608-643-6905


Please read HAN'S STORY to the right of this page, as you read, you'll find that you don't have to be born with heart disease. Anyone is susceptible to it, but there are things we can do to stay healthy and avoid it.

Please help support
American Heart Association and
The Sauk Prairie Ambulance Association
by donating to their designated websites.

American Heart Association
- Donate to Hans Wegesser

American Heart Association     Sauk Prairie Ambulance Association

Help Save A Friend Or Loved One's Life! Donate Today!



Click here to view map


The race routes are: 5K starts at Marion Park (actually 2 blocks North but registration and everything is at Marion Park and we announce the start line there) and goes up Park street to Water St., across the Hwy. 60 bridge, left on Golf Road to a turn around point at the golf course and back to the finish line along the same route back to Marion Park.

 

The 10K starts at the same point, up Park Street, across the bridge on 60, up the hill to Hwy. 188, left on 188 to Golf Road, left on Golf Road and back to 60 and Marion Park along the same route back to the finish line.


Past Years Results



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