The year is winding down, but Striders have been hot during this Fall's marathon racing season. There were many PRs, with the women's open marathon record falling TWICE in just two weeks.
Adam Wytko opened things up in September with a solid 2:53:54 to win the Bagel to Beer Marathon in Columbia.
Linda-Lou O'Connor ran the Wineglass Marathon for 3rd Master in 3:22:51, and toed the line again less than a month later to run the NYC Marathon in 3:33:32.
Noel McCracken also ran the Wineglass Marathon, notching a 3:14:49, good for 17th.
Ed Wilson (3:18:26), Tunde Morakinyo (3:24:44 as a pacer!), Alex Wang (3:12:01, also a pacer) knocked out respectable performances in Baltimore.
Beth Hannon knocked out a solid PR at Marine Corps, running 3:10:44.
A contingent of Striders were also at the Philadelphia Marathon two weeks ago, with Craig Lebro leading the way with a huge PR (2:36:51). Kevin Ford was next in 2:44:32 (also a PR), while Alex Wang slashed about 5 minutes off of her PR by running 2:45:25. Alex's time was good for a women's RTR. Ed Wilson also set a RTR for the Grand Master category, destroying his Baltimore time and running under 3 hours (2:59:32).
The performance of the hour has to be Julia Roman-Duval's Olympic Trials Qualifying marathon performance at the California International Marathon. She ran even splits for a 2:40:36, which makes her the newest racing team record-holder. Great job Julia!
Congratulations to everyone who were able to see their hard training to completion this Fall. Keep up the great work!
Established in 2006.
Showing posts with label Baltimore Running Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baltimore Running Festival. Show all posts
Sunday, December 6, 2015
Sunday, October 20, 2013
Why Ragnar when you can B-more?
Only a couple weeks behind once again...
Rewinding back to the first weekend of the month, we sent a group to take on Ragnar DC, an overnight relay from Cumberland to National Harbor. he team consists of 12 runners, each running three designated legs. The team is split into two vans, and the entire team only meets at major exchange points and the finish line. This year was a bit different in that the Government shutdown closed three of the final six legs (legs 31, 32, 35). This made the race roughly 186 miles total and the three cancelled legs had to double up and run with legs 33, 34, and 36. Driving time to skip the cancelled legs was subtracted from the overall time since nobody was running on the course.
The Run4Beer team consisted of: David Horrocks, Emily Drew, Mick Slonaker, Yasuo Oda, Tiffany Hevner, Michael Mbugi, Jessica Ivy, Jack Ivy, Jorge Renjifo, Mark Buschman, Kendra Smith, and Ed Reynolds. While I'll spare all of the details, we started with the last wave of teams at 2pm, only five started then. During leg 7, Jorge's first, a sign was moved on the course that sent him and two other runners way off course. He ended up running 5 extra miles and we were in dead last. However, we fought over way back and ended up taking second overall with a time of 22:13:30. The runners in Van 2 spent their first two legs running in the pitch black darkness along the C&O canal and rural roads outside of Frederick. By the time we reached the final leg of the race, it was in the low 80s and very humid. Crossing the finish line as a team was an experience, but we were then limited to two large pizzas (split by 12 people) and one cheap can of beer post-race. Overall a fun experience but the race management left more to be desired.
Here's a few photos documenting the journey:
And here's a video courtesy of Yasuo:
Fast forwarding to last weekend, it was finally time for the Baltimore Running Festival. We had several people running the various events. Let's start in the Marathon. Dave Berdan took the overall crown, winning in 2:30, eight minutes ahead of second place. He is an absolute beast and did Corrigan Sports a favor but agreeing to still run a race with no prize money. On the men's side, Nick had a tremendous performance, finishing 6th in 2:49:21. Right behind him was Kent, who allegedly slept until nearly 7am and barely made the starting line. His training is so erratic juggling four kids and long shifts at the hospital, but he still manages to get it done; 2:49:24 for 7th. Jason had cramping issues but still ran a BQ (though slower than his qualifying time) in 3:03:47 for 35th. Kevin also had major cramping issues, having to come to a complete stop at mile 26 and walk backwards across the finish line. It was amazing to watch the determination he showed to finish the race. Sometimes time isn't the most important thing, it's the effort exerted. He clocked a 3:05:10 and will have redemption at Boston...I'll bet that!
In the ladies race, Julia, who only runs 3-4x per week, led the race for 22 miles before running into cramping issues herself, but ran 3:00:30 for a 5 minute PR and 2nd overall!!! I'm telling you this woman could run an Olympic Trials qualifying time if she could put in a year of solid training!
In the Carefirst Half, Maurice led the way, crushing his AG per the usual, running 1:22:36. John was 2nd in the AG, running 1:28:08. Robyn had a solid run on the tough course, crossing the line in 1:31:36 for 2nd in her AG.
Finally, in the Team Relay, we had a men's, women's, and Master men's squad. The team of Mark, Carlos, Tim Burns, and Izzy solidified 2nd place in a course best of 2:22:35 behind Falls Road who broke 2:20 for the first time in race history for the relay. The HCS/BWAC Master's team of Chris, Dave, Peter, and Steve Kartalia showed age doesn't matter, finishing 4th in 2:32:34. The ladies team of Caroline, Emily, Suzy, ad Jessica crushed 3 hours, finishing 2nd in 2:54:29 for a new team course in the relay.
Rewinding back to the first weekend of the month, we sent a group to take on Ragnar DC, an overnight relay from Cumberland to National Harbor. he team consists of 12 runners, each running three designated legs. The team is split into two vans, and the entire team only meets at major exchange points and the finish line. This year was a bit different in that the Government shutdown closed three of the final six legs (legs 31, 32, 35). This made the race roughly 186 miles total and the three cancelled legs had to double up and run with legs 33, 34, and 36. Driving time to skip the cancelled legs was subtracted from the overall time since nobody was running on the course.
The Run4Beer team consisted of: David Horrocks, Emily Drew, Mick Slonaker, Yasuo Oda, Tiffany Hevner, Michael Mbugi, Jessica Ivy, Jack Ivy, Jorge Renjifo, Mark Buschman, Kendra Smith, and Ed Reynolds. While I'll spare all of the details, we started with the last wave of teams at 2pm, only five started then. During leg 7, Jorge's first, a sign was moved on the course that sent him and two other runners way off course. He ended up running 5 extra miles and we were in dead last. However, we fought over way back and ended up taking second overall with a time of 22:13:30. The runners in Van 2 spent their first two legs running in the pitch black darkness along the C&O canal and rural roads outside of Frederick. By the time we reached the final leg of the race, it was in the low 80s and very humid. Crossing the finish line as a team was an experience, but we were then limited to two large pizzas (split by 12 people) and one cheap can of beer post-race. Overall a fun experience but the race management left more to be desired.
Here's a few photos documenting the journey:
![]() |
Van 1 before driving to the start |
![]() |
The ladies |
![]() |
Some the guys barely staying awake |
![]() |
Mark and Jess after crossing the finish line |
![]() |
Team photo at the finish line |
Fast forwarding to last weekend, it was finally time for the Baltimore Running Festival. We had several people running the various events. Let's start in the Marathon. Dave Berdan took the overall crown, winning in 2:30, eight minutes ahead of second place. He is an absolute beast and did Corrigan Sports a favor but agreeing to still run a race with no prize money. On the men's side, Nick had a tremendous performance, finishing 6th in 2:49:21. Right behind him was Kent, who allegedly slept until nearly 7am and barely made the starting line. His training is so erratic juggling four kids and long shifts at the hospital, but he still manages to get it done; 2:49:24 for 7th. Jason had cramping issues but still ran a BQ (though slower than his qualifying time) in 3:03:47 for 35th. Kevin also had major cramping issues, having to come to a complete stop at mile 26 and walk backwards across the finish line. It was amazing to watch the determination he showed to finish the race. Sometimes time isn't the most important thing, it's the effort exerted. He clocked a 3:05:10 and will have redemption at Boston...I'll bet that!
In the ladies race, Julia, who only runs 3-4x per week, led the race for 22 miles before running into cramping issues herself, but ran 3:00:30 for a 5 minute PR and 2nd overall!!! I'm telling you this woman could run an Olympic Trials qualifying time if she could put in a year of solid training!
In the Carefirst Half, Maurice led the way, crushing his AG per the usual, running 1:22:36. John was 2nd in the AG, running 1:28:08. Robyn had a solid run on the tough course, crossing the line in 1:31:36 for 2nd in her AG.
Finally, in the Team Relay, we had a men's, women's, and Master men's squad. The team of Mark, Carlos, Tim Burns, and Izzy solidified 2nd place in a course best of 2:22:35 behind Falls Road who broke 2:20 for the first time in race history for the relay. The HCS/BWAC Master's team of Chris, Dave, Peter, and Steve Kartalia showed age doesn't matter, finishing 4th in 2:32:34. The ladies team of Caroline, Emily, Suzy, ad Jessica crushed 3 hours, finishing 2nd in 2:54:29 for a new team course in the relay.
![]() |
Julia was all smiles after her 2nd place marathon finish |
![]() |
Pre-race group shot |
![]() |
Start of the Marathon and Team Relay |
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Baltimore Marathon Supported Course Run - Saturday, September 21st
For those of you who are going to be weenies and not participate in or help out at the Striders Metric Running Festival like you should, Falls Road is hosting a supported run on the Baltimore Marathon course the same day for those signed up for the race or any other fall marathon for that matter. Here's some details:
The 20-mile course run will be held on Saturday, September 21. There is a 10-mile option for half-marathoners, and the 20 miles may be modified shorter or longer depending on your specific training plan. The run is almost entirely on the Baltimore Marathon course. Details and registration are at http://beta.active.com/ baltimore-md/running/ baltimore-running-festival- training-2013
The 20-mile course run will be held on Saturday, September 21. There is a 10-mile option for half-marathoners, and the 20 miles may be modified shorter or longer depending on your specific training plan. The run is almost entirely on the Baltimore Marathon course. Details and registration are at http://beta.active.com/
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Baltimore Running Festival
There was plenty to celebrate at the 12th annual Baltimore Running Festival this past weekend. The festival, consisting of a 5k, half marathon, marathon, team relay, and kids fun run, brought together a record attendance of 27,000 runners and an estimated half a million visitors. It was the 6th year in a row that the event has sold out. Among the throngs of runners, there were plenty of royal blue and navy Striders/Bullseye Running singlets to be spotted.
In the marquee event, the marathon, four Striders finished in the top 50. The top finisher for the Striders was none other than our resident mileage king, Keith Levasseur, who decided that running a marathon with shoes was not enough of a challenge for him. Instead he opted for some "comfortable" flip flops to carry him across the distance. His time of 2:46:58, was good for 29th overall and set the Guinness World Record for world's fastest marathon in flip flops.
Only a few minutes behind Keith were Jason Tripp (2:48:24, 31st), Peter Keating (2:52:47, 38th) , and Adam Wytko (2:53:34, 41st). Jason's time was good for 3rd in the master's category (40+).
Starting concurrently with the marathon was the team relay. On the men's side, the Bullseye Running team, consisting of Carlos Renjifo, Phil Lang, Tom Williams, and Mark Buschman, was looking to repeat as winners for the third year straight. On the women's side, the Bullseye Running Ladies (Kelly Westlake, Vicki Lang, BeaMarie Altieri, Robyn Humphrey) were trying to go for the win as well. The men faced stiff competition from a team of UMBC alumni (Adventures for the Cure), while the ladies had to contend with a very strong women's team from the Falls Road Running Store.
In the women's relay race, the Bullseye ladies took an early lead over Falls Road, as Kelly Westlake ran a superb first leg, giving the team almost a two minute lead over their rivals. This lead, however, was short-lived, as Falls Road's second leg ran a tremendously fast and essentially put the chance of victory out of reach. This fact did not seem to deter the Strider/Bullseye women, who ran their hearts out, with Vicki running a gutsy second leg (48:39), followed by Strider hall of famer Bea Marie (41:54) on the third leg, and a very strong finish by Robyn on the final leg (48:02). Even though they finished 4 minutes behind the Falls Road team, they obliterated the team behind them by nearly 14 minutes, with a time of 2:54:40. Oh ... and one more thing I forgot to mention ... these women are all 41 years young or better, which makes the feat all the more remarkable!
In the men's relay race the race ended up being a nail-biter. Carlos led off with a fantastic first leg, which saw him handing off to Phil almost a minute and a half in front of the UMBC team and nearly a minute in front of the top Kenyan's in the marathon. Phil ran a brilliant leg, which was over 90 seconds faster than his previous best over that leg of the race. Although the Bullseye team was caught by the UMBC team, Phil's effort limited the gap to a little over 30 seconds, which kept the team in contention. On the third leg, Tom cut the gap to less than 10 seconds, giving Mark the opportunity to take a shot at the victory. Mark did not disappoint, as he threw in a few surges early in his leg to close the gap and take the lead. Despite being taken off course by the pace bike, Mark kept his composure and came home strong with a convincing victory over their challengers. The time of 2:23:54 was almost 6 minutes better than last year thanks to great performances across the board.
Other racing team members running on relay teams included Caroline Bauer (The Usual Suspects, 2nd coed team, 2:53:15) and Dorothy Beckett (Run4Chocolate, 4th female team, 3:13:46).
Finally, there was the half marathon, where John Chall and Stephen Olenick represented the team. John ran 1:20:16, which was good for 2nd in the grandmaster category (50+).
But by far the best performance of the day (in my humble opinion) was Stephen Olenick's 1:15:05 half marathon, good for 5th place overall. The time was a huge PR for Steve on a very challenging course. The feat becomes even more impressive when you consider that only two years ago, after setting a PR in the Baltimore Marathon (2:48:08), Steve was seriously injured and sidelined from running for 18 months. In less than 6 months, Steve has gotten himself back into top form and is arguably in the best shape of his life at the ripe old age of 36! Way to go Steve!
Congratulations to all who raced. Here are some pictures/videos, courtesy of Brian Fleming and Issel Lim:
More pictures are available on the Striders Website and the Racing Team Picasa Album.
In the marquee event, the marathon, four Striders finished in the top 50. The top finisher for the Striders was none other than our resident mileage king, Keith Levasseur, who decided that running a marathon with shoes was not enough of a challenge for him. Instead he opted for some "comfortable" flip flops to carry him across the distance. His time of 2:46:58, was good for 29th overall and set the Guinness World Record for world's fastest marathon in flip flops.
Only a few minutes behind Keith were Jason Tripp (2:48:24, 31st), Peter Keating (2:52:47, 38th) , and Adam Wytko (2:53:34, 41st). Jason's time was good for 3rd in the master's category (40+).
Starting concurrently with the marathon was the team relay. On the men's side, the Bullseye Running team, consisting of Carlos Renjifo, Phil Lang, Tom Williams, and Mark Buschman, was looking to repeat as winners for the third year straight. On the women's side, the Bullseye Running Ladies (Kelly Westlake, Vicki Lang, BeaMarie Altieri, Robyn Humphrey) were trying to go for the win as well. The men faced stiff competition from a team of UMBC alumni (Adventures for the Cure), while the ladies had to contend with a very strong women's team from the Falls Road Running Store.
In the women's relay race, the Bullseye ladies took an early lead over Falls Road, as Kelly Westlake ran a superb first leg, giving the team almost a two minute lead over their rivals. This lead, however, was short-lived, as Falls Road's second leg ran a tremendously fast and essentially put the chance of victory out of reach. This fact did not seem to deter the Strider/Bullseye women, who ran their hearts out, with Vicki running a gutsy second leg (48:39), followed by Strider hall of famer Bea Marie (41:54) on the third leg, and a very strong finish by Robyn on the final leg (48:02). Even though they finished 4 minutes behind the Falls Road team, they obliterated the team behind them by nearly 14 minutes, with a time of 2:54:40. Oh ... and one more thing I forgot to mention ... these women are all 41 years young or better, which makes the feat all the more remarkable!
In the men's relay race the race ended up being a nail-biter. Carlos led off with a fantastic first leg, which saw him handing off to Phil almost a minute and a half in front of the UMBC team and nearly a minute in front of the top Kenyan's in the marathon. Phil ran a brilliant leg, which was over 90 seconds faster than his previous best over that leg of the race. Although the Bullseye team was caught by the UMBC team, Phil's effort limited the gap to a little over 30 seconds, which kept the team in contention. On the third leg, Tom cut the gap to less than 10 seconds, giving Mark the opportunity to take a shot at the victory. Mark did not disappoint, as he threw in a few surges early in his leg to close the gap and take the lead. Despite being taken off course by the pace bike, Mark kept his composure and came home strong with a convincing victory over their challengers. The time of 2:23:54 was almost 6 minutes better than last year thanks to great performances across the board.
Other racing team members running on relay teams included Caroline Bauer (The Usual Suspects, 2nd coed team, 2:53:15) and Dorothy Beckett (Run4Chocolate, 4th female team, 3:13:46).
Finally, there was the half marathon, where John Chall and Stephen Olenick represented the team. John ran 1:20:16, which was good for 2nd in the grandmaster category (50+).
But by far the best performance of the day (in my humble opinion) was Stephen Olenick's 1:15:05 half marathon, good for 5th place overall. The time was a huge PR for Steve on a very challenging course. The feat becomes even more impressive when you consider that only two years ago, after setting a PR in the Baltimore Marathon (2:48:08), Steve was seriously injured and sidelined from running for 18 months. In less than 6 months, Steve has gotten himself back into top form and is arguably in the best shape of his life at the ripe old age of 36! Way to go Steve!
Congratulations to all who raced. Here are some pictures/videos, courtesy of Brian Fleming and Issel Lim:
Adam, finishing his 4th marathon in 4 weeks.
Master superstar, Jason Tripp running a solid sub-2:49 marathon.
John, either flexing his muscles, or pumped up to finish 2nd in the grandmaster category of the half marathon.
Keith in his flip flops. Looks like he still has some spring in that stride!
Mark in some patriotic attire. No better way to celebrate a three-peat.
Robyn brings in the Bullseye Running ladies team.
Steve, in the form of his life, and probably wearing a singlet in a race for the first time in 2 years (he usually runs shirtless). The Striders logo looks great on you, buddy!
Mark, Carlos, and Tom pose for a picture after a thrilling relay victory.
Mark at the end of the race, showing his finishing speed.
More pictures are available on the Striders Website and the Racing Team Picasa Album.
Monday, October 8, 2012
What Time Is It?....PR TIME!!!
I was remiss in picking up any of race results from two weekends ago so let's start there...
Dorothy Beckett kicked off the action on Saturday, 9/29 cruising to an age group win at the College Park Cares 5k, running 21:20 for 7th. Marathon connoisseur, Adam Wytko kicked off his three marathons in three weeks in Akron, OH, clocking a 2:50:01 for 16th in what I was told was a comfortable effort.
On Sundau, 9/30, our Ironman, Keith Levasseur went down in enemy territory and took the overall crown at the hilly Falls Road 15k, nailing a PR in 54:50. SSSWEEETTT! Pekka and I participated in the BWI Airport 4 Miler. We both used it as a hard tempo run. I got outkicked in the last 100m and had to settle for a roundtrip ticketless 2nd, but ran a good race given the 13 miles the day before in 20:18. Pekka won the 'Furthest Traveled' award and hit his pre-race goal of sub 22, clocking 21:50 for 7th and 2nd in his age group. I can't believe he'll be a master in a couple months!
Now onto the this past weekend. Caroline and Craig took their talents to the Windy City for the Bank of America Chicago Marathon. Race morning conditions were damn near perfect (maybe a bit chilly). I streamed the end of the men's race and they were clocking mid 4:30s from Mile 22 on. Craig ran a BIG PR, running 2:44:03. Caroline followed suit, clocking nearly even splits and a HUGE PR in 3:14:43. All those scorching summer miles must have paid off!!!
Kevin Ford headed down to Alexandria, VA to run the Woodrow Wilson Bridge Half Marathon for a second straight year; this year as a tune-up for Marine Corps. Not sure if it was quite a PR or not, but he cracked the top 20 in a pretty competitive field with a 1:16:03. Adam ran marathon #2 of 3, this time in Johnstown, PA. This is usually the Karsten Brown show but he beat him by 5+ minutes, running 2:53:07 for 4th and unfortunately out of the money (?!?!), but taking his age group.
It was certainly an awesome start to the Fall racing season and it just keeps getting better. Good luck to everyone partaking in the Baltimore Running Festival this Saturday! I hope to see many of you out there!
Dorothy Beckett kicked off the action on Saturday, 9/29 cruising to an age group win at the College Park Cares 5k, running 21:20 for 7th. Marathon connoisseur, Adam Wytko kicked off his three marathons in three weeks in Akron, OH, clocking a 2:50:01 for 16th in what I was told was a comfortable effort.
On Sundau, 9/30, our Ironman, Keith Levasseur went down in enemy territory and took the overall crown at the hilly Falls Road 15k, nailing a PR in 54:50. SSSWEEETTT! Pekka and I participated in the BWI Airport 4 Miler. We both used it as a hard tempo run. I got outkicked in the last 100m and had to settle for a roundtrip ticketless 2nd, but ran a good race given the 13 miles the day before in 20:18. Pekka won the 'Furthest Traveled' award and hit his pre-race goal of sub 22, clocking 21:50 for 7th and 2nd in his age group. I can't believe he'll be a master in a couple months!
Now onto the this past weekend. Caroline and Craig took their talents to the Windy City for the Bank of America Chicago Marathon. Race morning conditions were damn near perfect (maybe a bit chilly). I streamed the end of the men's race and they were clocking mid 4:30s from Mile 22 on. Craig ran a BIG PR, running 2:44:03. Caroline followed suit, clocking nearly even splits and a HUGE PR in 3:14:43. All those scorching summer miles must have paid off!!!
Kevin Ford headed down to Alexandria, VA to run the Woodrow Wilson Bridge Half Marathon for a second straight year; this year as a tune-up for Marine Corps. Not sure if it was quite a PR or not, but he cracked the top 20 in a pretty competitive field with a 1:16:03. Adam ran marathon #2 of 3, this time in Johnstown, PA. This is usually the Karsten Brown show but he beat him by 5+ minutes, running 2:53:07 for 4th and unfortunately out of the money (?!?!), but taking his age group.
It was certainly an awesome start to the Fall racing season and it just keeps getting better. Good luck to everyone partaking in the Baltimore Running Festival this Saturday! I hope to see many of you out there!
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Baltimore Running Festival Results

Windy conditions at today's Baltimore Running Festival did not keep the Striders from posting some solid times. In the 5k, Pat Wilkerson ran 20:27, good for first place in her age group. Jason Tripp, John Chall, Kara Waters, and Caroline Bauer all ran solid times in the half marathon. Jason ran 1:19:40 (1st 35-39), Kara ran 1:21:40 (2nd Overall), John finished in 1:28:16 (1st 50-54), and Caroline crossed the line in 1:30:13 (3rd, 25-29 & 5th overall). In the marathon, Mark Miller ran a superb 2:58:10 (5th, 45-49), well under the 3 hour time he was shooting for. Finally, in the team relay, the Bullseye Running squad (consisting of Tom Williams, Phil Lang, Mark Buschman, Carlos Renjifo) took first overall, with a time of 2:28:59. The Howard County Striders/Baltimore-Washington Athletic Team (Mark Gilmore, Dave Berardi, Steve Kartalia, and a last-minute substitute for Chris Chattin) were close behind, finishing in 2:34:19 (1st Masters). The Run4Chocolate ladies fielded two teams this year, finishing 2nd and 3rd in the women's division with times of 3:08:29 and 3:09:29, respectively.
Some pictures from the race are posted HERE. A video of the Bullseye Running team finish is posted HERE. Relay team splits are posted below. The rest of the results are available HERE.
Great job everyone!
BULLSEYE RUNNING #8950
Age: 99
Distance
|
MAR
|
Clock Time
|
2:29:01
|
Chip Time
|
2:28:59
|
Overall Place
|
2
|
Division Place
|
2 / 126
|
Team
|
BULLSEYE RUNNING
|
Leg1
|
0:32:56
|
Leg2
|
0:42:28
|
Leg3
|
0:34:34
|
Leg4
|
0:39:02
|
Pace
|
5:41
|
HOWARD
CO. STRIDERS BW ATHLETIC CLUB #9147
Age: 99
Distance
|
MAR
|
Clock Time
|
2:34:23
|
Chip Time
|
2:34:19
|
Overall Place
|
4
|
Division Place
|
4 / 126
|
Team
|
HOWARD CO. STRIDERS BW ATHLETIC
CLUB
|
Leg1
|
0:35:19
|
Leg2
|
0:42:22
|
Leg3
|
0:36:45
|
Leg4
|
0:39:55
|
Pace
|
5:54
|
RUN4CHOCOLATE2
#9408
Age: 99
Distance
|
MAR
|
Clock Time
|
3:08:39
|
Chip Time
|
3:08:29
|
Overall Place
|
19
|
Division Place
|
2 / 288
|
Team
|
RUN4CHOCOLATE2
|
Leg1
|
0:42:36
|
Leg2
|
0:50:21
|
Leg3
|
0:43:32
|
Leg4
|
0:52:01
|
Pace
|
7:12
|
RUN4CHOCOLATE1
#9407
Age: 99
Distance
|
MAR
|
Clock Time
|
3:09:40
|
Chip Time
|
3:09:29
|
Overall Place
|
21
|
Division Place
|
3 / 288
|
Team
|
RUN4CHOCOLATE1
|
Leg1
|
0:41:59
|
Leg2
|
0:47:40
|
Leg3
|
0:45:49
|
Leg4
|
0:54:02
|
Pace
|
7:14
|
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