Hey everyone! Here is a couple minutes of B-Roll spliced together so you can get a little flavor of the event this year. This is what we sent out over the wire for online viewing! Other vignettes to follow.
Posted on 15 May 2009.
Hey everyone! Here is a couple minutes of B-Roll spliced together so you can get a little flavor of the event this year. This is what we sent out over the wire for online viewing! Other vignettes to follow.
Posted in Audio, Blog, Digital Media, Photos, Pursuit, Pursuit 2008, Pursuit 2009, Sean William Scott0 Comments
Posted on 22 April 2009.
To populate the Pursuit, Drambuie held events around the country to entice potential athletes to sign up, and offered invites through the web sites of some media outlets, for whom some of the teams are named.
The resulting mélange of competitive talent was impressive for a group of regular Joes and Janes, highlighted by professional forest firemen, triathletes, marathoners, river guides, at least one SWAT team member, and an actor who played a top NFL draft pick in “Jerry Maguire.”
And aside from one ne’er-do-well who was excused from the trip upon arriving in Glasgow following an especially obnoxious cross-Atlantic flight, there wasn’t a lout in the lot. If you’re eyeing the ’09 Pursuit, hit up pursuitof1745.com for information.
Best Dram Team

Mark Bishop (Albuquerque, N.M.), Travis Stephenson (Colorado Springs, Colo.), Ben Millspaugh (Colorado Springs, Colo.), Tony Roldan (Gilbert, Ariz.)
Their motto: “Aut viam inveniam aut faciam,” Latin for “I will find a way, or I will make one,” according to Millspaugh. Their way involved not staying out to the feckless wee hours of the morn and slamming back Edinburgh’s local brews, leading some to peg this disciplined, fit bunch as a pre-race favorite.
Team Current TV

Brian Cresto (Boise, Idaho), Scott Logan (Los Angeles), Steve Stroud (Boise, Idaho), Alex Abols (Boise, Idaho)
Logan is a native Scot and the rest of the bunch make their livings by jumping out of planes to fight forest fires out West. A prohibitive pre-race favorite by dint of their camaraderie and presumed stamina.
Four Princes

C.J. Wright (Columbus, Ohio), Mequel DeVaughn (Dublin, Ohio), Paida Saburi (Westerville, Ohio), Jamison Float (Westerville, Ohio)
If the race was run on physique alone, these guys might have taken it — but they were hamstrung by, well, a hamstring injury, to DeVaughn. Saburi, originally of Zimbabwe, may drag them to South Africa for the 2010 soccer World Cup.
Team Men’s Journal

Mark McDonald (Atlanta), Jason Graning (Atlanta), Adam Goldstein (Atlanta), Bill Gifford (New York City)
A fine crew, top to bottom, that featured the best cyclist, in Gifford, and perhaps the toughest individual uphill runner, in Goldstein. They finished strong but were impeded by a stomach virus Graning smuggled through customs.
Team National Geographic Adventure

Andrea Minarcek (New York City), Phil Lewis (Austin, Texas), Chris Lewis (Austin, Texas), Reagan Evans (Austin, Texas)
The Austin men were running for a friend of theirs, Justin Whitehead, who died of Lou Gehrig’s Disease — and who used to order a round of rusty nails (that’s Drambuie and whiskey) at last call. A very competitive group; Phil Lewis, who proved to be the field’s best archer, believes the secret to winning rock-paper-scissors is to hate your opponent deeply.
On the Rocks

Matt Patrizi (Austin, Texas), Kristian Watkins (Austin, Texas), Landon Hill (Austin, Texas), Drew Patrizi (Austin, Texas)
An unassuming bunch that didn’t generate much early buzz among the caravan — but fit enough to finish in the top 3. This is especially impressive considering Drew Patrizi’s commitments to his indie rock band, What Made Milwaukee Famous. A rocker who runs can probably take over the world.
Team Penthouse

Brian Chirigos (New York City), John Bolster (New York City), Charlie O’Connell (Los Angeles), Heather Vandeven (Palm Springs, Calif.)
The headliner was Vandeven, a Penthouse model, but O’Connell — a former “The Bachelor” bachelor and player in “Dude, Where’s My Car?” — set the tone. “My archery skills are solid,” he said. “My archery skills, my nunchuk skills, my Chinese stars skills… ”
Pursuit of Glory

Jesse Peralta (West Linn, Ore.), Mike Kirk (Beaverton, Ore.), Jay Kallberg (St. Helens, Ore.), Mason Davis (Beaverton, Ore.)
These guys love Portland. You like music? You should move to Portland. You like the outdoors? Dude, Portland. Come by Portland any time, and they’ll go to a show with you. Mason Davis, a cancer survivor and the emotional leader of the team, was the only competitor whose parents tailed him around the country to the various venues in support.
The Rusty Nails

Cris Stephan (Astoria, N.Y.), Russ Nazrisho (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Jon Reisner (New York City), Dov Calderon (New York City)
A quartet of city boys who admitted they’d never done anything like any of the events contained in the Pursuit. Yes, they did finish in last place, but they almost finished in next-to-last, and “almost” is great training fuel.
Team Jerry

Greg Burhop (Evanston, Ill.), Jill Boyer (Hood River, Ore.), Jerry O’Connell (Los Angeles), Doug Morris (New York City)
Another motley crew led by an O’Connell — this one graced “Jerry Maguire” and the short-lived show “Carpoolers” — and joined at the last minute by Morris, who performed beautifully by surviving the race on so little notice.
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Posted on 22 April 2009.

“When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.”— Maxwell Scott, “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance”
CULLODEN BATTLEFIELD, Scotland — Here’s the premise: A Scottish prince with an eye on the crown led a rebellion deep into England in 1745, suffered some dissention in his ranks and retreated to this open, wind-swept patch of grass for what turned out to be the last pitched battle in Britain. It was the last, because when his hardscrabble army of kilted highlanders blitzed the government lines on foot, the Redcoat musketry stood fast and salted them with lead. The English then killed survivors, raided villages in search of rebels and later built a picket fence in London with the defeated soldiers’ swords.
And the leader of the insurrection, Charles Edward Stuart — Bonnie Prince Charlie, to history — had a price on his head surpassing, in the exchange rate of the time, what Osama bin Laden presently has on his. So he fled.
That flight north to the Isle of Skye has become the stuff of Scottish lore, the way Yanks recall Paul Revere’s ride. The prince with the audacity to storm towards London became a fugitive, ambling his way across his native land with a king’s ransom awaiting anyone willing to betray him.
The liqueur Drambuie traces its origins to the prince’s journey of survival, as the drink is whiskey blended with spices the Prince’s apothecary is said to have devised. Did Charles really offer the recipe to clan leaders who harbored him on his way to exile in France? Who knows.
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It’s a great yarn, and it’s why Bacardi, which distributes Drambuie, brought a gaggle of amateur American athletes to an old battlefield in Scotland — the launch point for a 10-stage adventure race it calls the Drambuie Pursuit. Ten American teams of four began it on this evening in late April, but first, they had to look at the swaying, knee-high grass and imagine bleeding out in this field.
In describing the patchwork rebellion, a tour guide asked whether there was anyone of Irish descent in the group. A couple of hands went up. “It was you, I’m afraid, who couldn’t keep up with the Highlanders,” she said.
The group laughs, and someone muttered, “We’ll see about that tomorrow.”
Slings and arrows
Scott Logan — who now works for Current TV in California, but is a native Scot — likes the Bonnie Prince Charlie story, but for one fact: “It’s about us getting our asses kicked.”
He said this in a Manhattan bar a couple of hours before the teams fly to Glasgow from Newark, N.J. No one openly acknowledged it at the time, but it was the beginning of competition. The rest of Logan’s team consisted of three men who jump out of airplanes to fight forest fires for a living; the smart money seemed to be on them and on a couple of other squads. But it would require fortitude to withstand the rigors of travel and then succeed in an archery contest, a speedboat race, a sprint, an uphill bike race, an uphill footrace, a downhill footrace, a white water rafting race, a dune buggy race, a canoe race and then yet another footrace.
Sam Eifling
Mason Davis, of Pursuit of Glory, admires the vista after sprinting up the hill.
Still, this was part athletic event, part reality TV show and all party. Some of the guys from an Ohio team called the Four Princes decided the group of strangers was too uptight and smuggled a couple bottles of Drambuie onto the bus to pass around on the way to the airport. Thus began a series of events that dulled some teams’ competitive advantage. At least one of the competitors spent most of her time at the airport hurling into various stalls; one, actor Charlie O’Connell, arrived in Scotland to learn that his luggage had been forwarded instead to Alberta; and a late night in Edinburgh of free drinks and haggis rolls and dancing to a ska band called Big Hand in a dive bar called Whistle Binkies surely didn’t exactly fortify some of the more intemperate teams, though watching Portland, Ore., competitor Mason Davis bounce on the dance floor, was to see the manic bright side of jetlag.
The next day, it was to the battlefield, then through the Highlands, passing castles and impossibly long puddles such as Loch Ness, that fill great seams along faultlines. The teams arrived at a castle called Eilean Donan, which counts its history back nearly 1,500 years, to learn they in fact would not be camping that night, as planned, because rain and 50 mph winds the previous day had shredded the camp site. They were given tutorials on safety, then handed bows and arrows to fire at targets as the sun sank over the ocean. A Texan named Phil Lewis scored 76 of a possible 80 points, but the Current TV team edged the field to take the early advantage.
“Bad weather wiping out Sunday,” Logan announced. “The competition’s over, we win. Let’s go drinking.”
A Day of No Rest
No such luck for Logan. The next morning — clear, cool and ideal — the competitors lined the banks at the Kyle of Localsh, all in drysuits and bright orange helmets. They were to race to the waiting inflatable Zapcat speedboats and ride around a course marked with buoys; one boat driver describe the competitors’ role as that of “dynamic ballast.”
“I couldn’t sleep,” said Mequel DeVaughn, of Dublin, Ohio. “I kept playing scenes from ‘Braveheart’ in my head. It’s messed up, man.”
Said Davis, the dancer: “I’m so jacked.” He woke up by throwing himself out of bed and doing pushups.
At a signal, the competitors waddle-waded to the boats, threw themselves in, and tried to become helpful cargo. Round and round they spun, swapping leads until finally pulling one by one back to the shore, for the final rider to tag a teammate for a sprint. In a pack they dashed down the stony beach, through a public square, and then out of sight behind Saucy Mary’s Lodge.
That led to a backstreet footrace, then to an uphill bicycle chase and to the foot of the centerpiece of the Pursuit: Boch Baeg, and a calf-burning clamber up a muddy, loamy hillside that sank underfoot with each step, hugging a runner’s shoes as would a mattress. This led past streams and over a fence and up and up and along rocks and up and finally to the top of a mound that overlooked sky and mountain and water and … a line of tenacious ants that eventually turned into people.
“Just straight uphill,” said Adam Goldstein, of Atlanta, the first runner to summit. “I should have brought my soccer cleats.”
As Goldstein waited for the rest of his Men’s Journal-sponsored team, the Current TV smokejumpers — Alex Abols, Brian Cresto and Steve Stroud — became the first team to clock in together. Abols arrived first, and screamed to his teammates: “Come hard with every breath!” A helicopter thub-thub-thubbed overhead, offering vantage to a videographer.
Sam Eifling
As the featured celebrity competitor, Jerry O’Connell’s team was named for him. He anchored the biking leg of the hill climb, so his run up the hill was strictly for grins.
Gradually each team scaled the 700-or-so-foot vertical rise, though bringing up the rear was DeVaughn, who had aggravated an old hamstring injury and had to be partially lugged up the hill by his teammates and the actor Jerry O’Connell, who had biked but decided to run the hill for fun with the rest of his team.
Nearly unnoticed in a ravine near the summit was the shaggy, rotting carcass of a red stag. Somehow it seemed a reminder the stakes for most of what inhabits the hills.
One of the track officials, Duncan Cleary, hearing of the deer, guessed that it was the remains of an animal that had been there months earlier. Seeing pictures, he revised himself.
“It’s got skin, still,” he said. “Must be a new one.”
And it had quite the handsome pair of antlers, free to anyone enterprising enough to claim it.
“I don’t know what the law is,” he said. “I do know that if you hit one while driving, you can’t eat it. But if you’re the car driving behind the car that hits it, you can.”
That would seem to eliminate some of the incentive to aim for a deer.
“Aye,” he agreed. “But you could get people driving around in twos.”
Sprint to the Finish
After their performance on the mountain, it would have taken a serious stumble in the final stages for anyone to catch up to the Current TV foursome. They managed to negotiate the mountainbike trek through the forest, and the white water rapids, and the canoeing stages without calamity. Their points gave them a head-start on the final sprint through the northern city of Inverness — and all that remained was for them to lug a small crate containing a bottle of liqueur to the finish.
Sam Eifling
That’s Scott Logan, Steve Stroud, Alex Abols and Brian Cresto — Team Current TV — crossing the finish line of the Drambuie Pursuit in Inverness.
They finished as a group, Abols carrying the box, his fellow smokejumpers a couple of paces back, and Logan, grimacing as if he’d swallowed hemlock, running with his hands on his hips. They crossed the finish line almost in a group hug. Gradually the other teams followed, none surprised that the toughest guys in the field and the Scotsman had pulled it off.
“There were some flashbacks that I had,” Abols said. “The mountain bike, for instance. I kind of felt like I was on a horse, and trees were just whizzing by. Helicopters buzzing are over you, and people are chasing you, and know you’ve just got to keep going, and you don’t want to look at what’s behind you.” Then he seemed to catch himself describing his overactive imagination. “It’s kind of stupid,” he added. “But it puts you there.”
“That’s not a flashback, dude,” Cresto chided. “It’s called mud in your eyeball.”
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Posted on 20 April 2009.
Last year’s Pursuit had a little bit of everything … action, adventure and really, really great scenery. Heather Vandeven, a Penthouse Pet of the Year in 2007, led Team Penthouse to a respectable finish in the 2008 Pursuit. Vandeven eschewed her glamorous persona as she got down and dirty mountain biking, hiking and fighting her way through the Scottish Highlands.
Posted in Pursuit 20080 Comments
Posted on 20 April 2009.
INVERNESS, Scotland (May 2, 2008) /PRNewswire/ – A native Scotsman and three smokejumpers who fight forest fires in the American West emerged victorious in the Drambuie Pursuit Sunday. This was the third annual Drambuie Pursuit, but the first allowing Americans to compete.
The 10-stage adventure race across the Scottish highlands pitted 10, four-person teams against one another in events as diverse as white-water rafting, mountain biking, buggy racing and archery. Such a feat proved attainable for Steve Stroud, Brian Cresto and Alex Abols, of Boise, Idaho, who are accustomed to wielding chain saws and shovels for 16 hours a day during fire season.
The men applied to join the Drambuie Pursuit and were paired with ‘Current TV’ personality Scott Logan, a Scot now living in Southern California. He was determined not to be the weak link among his teammates, especially on his home soil.
“Back home, people call me ‘True Braveheart,” Logan said. “I always say to myself, it’s really nice, because all these friends of mine I work with, it’s a nice quote, to be called a true Braveheart. I feel like today I proved that.”
Logan’s sentiment was appropriate, given the history of Drambuie. The drink descended from a formula by the personal apothecary of Charles Edward Stuart, better known to Scots as Bonnie Prince Charlie. After the Prince’s rebel army was routed by the English-led government forces at the Battle of Culloden, he fled across the country for several months with a bounty on his head.
Legend has it he blended spices with Scotch Whiskey to revive himself on his flight and bestowed the recipe on a loyal clansman in gratitude for safe harbor before he fled to France. The prized elixir, handed down over generations, still remains a secret to all but the MacKinnon family.
Team ‘Current TV’ distinguished itself by winning the first two events – the archery round and a land-sea sprint in Zapcat boats – and further established itself as the team to catch midway through the day by beating the other nine teams up an alternately muddy and loamy mountainside.
Naturally, if there was any activity in which the firefighters excelled, it would be dashing up a remote mountain.
“We’re used to this from our work, gravity’s the same,” Cresto said. “It’s just wetter.”
Among the teams they beat were a foursome led by film and television actor Jerry O’Connell and another anchored by 2007 Penthouse Pet of the Year, Heather Vandeven.
For more information on the Drambuie Pursuit, or to apply for a chance to relive the legend of Bonnie Prince Charlie in the 2009 race, visit www.pursuitof1745.com.
Posted in Pursuit 20080 Comments
Posted on 20 April 2009.
Posted in Photos, Pursuit 20080 Comments