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Kendall couple runs for the love
Love is a unifying theme when it comes to Bruce
and Sherry Wilk of Miami running in the New York Marathon.
BY LINDA ROBERTSON
NEW YORK - Bruce and Sherry Wilk were born,
raised, educated and married in New York City. Bruce-grew up in
Forest Hills, Sherry in East Flatbush. They met in a physiology
class in Brooklyn. “We’d probably still be living in New York if
we hadn’t decided after our wedding that instead of a nice
bedroom set we needed nice weather,” Sherry said. “So we moved
to Florida.” On Sunday, the Miami couple will do a homecoming
tour - a grueling one. They will celebrate their love for their
hometown and each other in the 26.2 mile, five-borough adventure
known as the ING New York City Marathon. They will be one of
some 38,000 stories in the race that starts on the Verrazano
Bridge and ends in Central Park. They won’t be together. Bruce
will run and Sherry will walk, It’s his fourth NYC Marathon, her
first. “For me, it’s a dream come true,” Sherry, 52, said, “I’ve
seen all the pictures of the runners going over the bridge, and
now I’ll be in the middle of it.”
The Wilks, who live in Kendall, are
co-owners of the Runner’s High running shop in Suniland. He’s a
physical therapist, she is a former registered nurse. They will
be cheered on by friends - including Sherry’s two best friends
from Samuel J. Tilden High School and daughter Rachel, a
Killian High and University of Florida graduate who is working
as a fashion assistant at More magazine.
“Bruce will probably finish two hours
before me,” Sherry said.” But we don’t compete again t each
other. This is about competing against yourself.”
Sherry dedicated herself to an exercise
regimen after recovering from breast cancer eight years ago.
Now, she and Bruce lead weekly sessions for the Miami Runners
Club, They estimate about 100 marathoners from Dade, Monroe,
Broward and Palm Beach Counties will participate.
Among the professionals, defending champion
Marilson Gomes Dos Santos of Brazil will be challenged by a
strong contingent of Kenyans, including former champion Rogers
Rop. The women’s race could be the most intriguing. England’s.
Paula Radcliffe will push and Jelena Prokopcuka of Latvia is
trying to win for a third consecutive year. New York’s marathon
is the last in the World Marathon Majors Series, and the overall
winners will earn $500,000. The money is what lured Ethiopia’s
Gete Warni into trying to win two in 35 days. Wami won in Berlin
in September.
“I wanted to win more points, and after
the Berlin face I felt good and I recovered well,” Wami said.
The Wilks will be back in the pack, for
fulfillment, not placement. “You can have a bad run, but you
can’t have a bad when you do a marathon,” said Bruce, 50 - whose
best time was 4 hours, 15 minutes, “but that was when I was in
my 30s.”
On Monday, which is Sherry’s birthday, they
plan to celebrate with a feast in Chinatown. “We’ll be wearing
our medals,” Sherry said.
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