Harry Campbell wanted to be a pro athlete. By six he already knew it wasn't happening. He wasn't fast enough or quick enough. But he could run the same speed for ten thousand meters as he could for a hundred, so he became a long distance runner. In 1982, at a night race on the University of Tennessee track, he set the Vanderbilt school record for ten thousand meters. It stood for thirty-four years. That race is the story underneath the rest of Harry's career, including a brand management run at Procter and Gamble, a humbling dot com collapse, and a late chapter built around speaking, coaching, and a charity he runs in his wife's honor.