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EXCELSIOR Running Club Results - 2003

Christmas Relays - 12/14/03
Christmas Relays: Masters 5th Overall, Open 8th For the second road race in a row, the master men ouch beat the open men . . . and this time without OMS. For the masters, Tim O'Rourke led off with the club's second fastest split of the day, 24:10 around the 4.464 mile Lake Merced course. Peter Lewandowski ran a strong 24:52 next, followed by Lloyd Stephenson's 25:36, with Tim Wallen closing in 24:32. The team finished fifth overall, first master, beating the Aggies for the second road race in a row. This put the team in second place on the year, just four points behind the Aggies! Open Women Byline Patti Bershers At the end of a long but largely successful season, the open women, realizing that heroics at Xmas Relays would change nothing in our year-end standings, opted to simply enjoy the sunny day. Our total time was 1:58:38, which was 2nd in the Submaster division, and 4th in the PA behind the Impalas, the Transports, and West Valley. Shelly Pierson ran our first leg, looking strong and fully recovered from her fall marathon effort. Up next was Nicole Britvan, in her super-cool RED singlet. Patti Bershers ran the third leg as a marathon pace workout, accomplishing her objective of testing but not re-injuring her newly-happy hamstring. Allie Bigelow took the lonely fourth leg and looked great doing it. The open women will finish the year at 2nd place in the PA Roads - well done, everyone! The 2004 Road Grand Prix kicks off on the second Sunday of January with Cal-10, the same day as Helen Kao's marathon in San Diego. Good luck to Helen, and everyone enjoy your holidays! Open Men Byline Chris Phipps After the end of a long road and cross country season it's pretty difficult to get a complete team together for the Christmas Relays. For the last team race as Hoy's Excelsior, the open men were able to field a team with a few last minute fill ins. Brian Gilliss led the team with a 25:36 opening leg. He handed off to Cesar Guillen who ran a 25:14, followed by Cliff Lentz, just back from Mexico in 25:10, and Chris Phipps anchoring in 24:04. No one had a stellar day, but we still finished in the top 10 in 8th place. Unfortunately, Tamalpa's team was 7th, 3 seconds ahead of us. Still, we did get the coveted Christmas Relays mugs! Time to start putting in the miles, the 2004 season opens with the Cal 10 on January 11th, just 3 1/2 weeks away! California International Marathon - 12/07/03 Men's Report Byline Daniel Shore Yay, the season's finally over!!! Well, for us marathoners anyhow. On Sunday, four open men (OK, three open men and one semi-master) ran CIM in Sacramento in near-perfect conditions. Believe it or not, the rain actually cleared out prior to race time this year, yielding a cool, sunny and slightly windy morning. With such weather, fast times should have been ripe for the picking. However, perhaps due to solar flares or an unusually strong pull from Confusion Hill, most people didn't run the race they had planned. One notable exception to this trend was Matt Regan, who ran a stunning 5-minute PR of 2:37:35 for 36th place overall. The rumor is that he was even strong enough to put in a kick at the finish. After a season riddled with illness and injury, he found a way to keep his composure and run a damn fine race. Way to go Matt!!! [Note to T.H. from M.R.: "Doh!" -Ed.] Things didn't go so well for the remaining open men. After suffering from a severe cold all week, a lingering cough left Jared Crave unable to get enough oxygen to hold his pace. He eventually stepped off the course at 16 miles. Craig Steinmaus, semi-master and honorary open member, simply didn't have a good day. Never really feeling good and unable to maintain his goal pace, he dropped out at midway leaving himself to fight another day. Dan Shore achieved his two goals of running sub-2:22 pace for as long as possible and finishing the race; however, not with spectacular results. Severe blisters on the balls of both feet brought his trials dream to a halt at 13 miles. Dropping out seemed like a real (and much welcomed) possibility by 14 miles were it not for the cheers and encouragement from Allie Bigelow and the Pierson family. He jogged/tempoed the remaining 12 miles to finish in 2:34:06 for 31st overall. Oh well, the season's finally over and a much-deserved break awaits [Note: except for Christmas Relays! -Ed.]. Rest up for the 2004 circuit! Women's Report Byline Whitney Stephenson The women of Hoy's braved the (wait a minute, is this CIM?) SUNNY weather to post 2 PRs (sort of.) Micha ran strong to finish in a satifying 3:11, one minute off her best time. Christine Wang ran a smart, but aggressive second marathon at CIM. Her goal was to qualify for the Boston Marathon, which she accomplished with a time of 3:31:34. She had a slow start, (Lesson learned--make sure to take the 5 a.m. bus if you want to have more than 2 minutes to warm up and stretch!!!) but by mile 9 had caught up with the 8:00 minute pace team. Feeling strong and relaxed Christine pushed herself in the middle of the race and ran 300 meters in front of 8:00 minute pace pack until mile 23. Her CIM time was a 25 minute PR from the Mayor's Midnight Sun Marathon in Alaska in June 2002. Whitney had a good race, staying right on PR pace all the way up to mile 25 when the barricade came down with the red lights flashing and a TRAIN crossed the marathon course. Whitney (and about fifty other runners) stood there for a minute and a half watching the flatcars pass by and her PR slip away. Ack! When one of the race directors heard the story he commented "heads will roll." It was still a good day. And congratulations to Malinda Walker on a fine race as well. Special kudos go to Christine Jegan who went up to cheer on friends and teammates. Thank you, Christine! Cross Country Nationals - 12/07/03 Gorman Second at Cross Nationals! On Sunday, Dan Mancini and Jim Gorman competed in the Fall XC National Championships in Greensboro, North Carolina. Though the day was a fine one for racing - sunny and 45 degrees - the undulating 10k golf course loop proved challenging and SLOW. In the Men's Masters race, Jim Gorman narrowly missed grabbing the top spot in the 55-59 age group, finishing 2nd in 39:26 (70th overall). Meanwhile, in the Men's Open race - won by miler Alan Webb in a spirited sprint finish - Dan Mancini ran 35:56, good for 155th (and 10th in the nonexistent 35-39 age group) in his final XC competition as an Open runner. Ryan Gallagher, competing for his Seattle Running Club team, finished 143rd in 35:21. Times were about 1:45 slower than our Golden Gate Park 10k course. Tucson Marathon - 12/07/03 Spangenberg Second @ Tucson Brian Spangenberg ran 2:28:18 for second place at the Tucson Marathon on Sunday. He was going for 2:25 but it didn't look like he had much help (winning time was 2:22:12). Also, team friend Michelle Hannaford won the women's race with a trials-qualifying time of 2:46:30! Bah Humbug 5K - 12/06/03 Wallen Wins 5K Congratulations to Tim Wallen on his win in Saturday's Bah Humbug 5k in San Ramon. Tim ran ouch 16:00.85--great job! Run to the Farside - 11/30/03 Our own Chris Lundstrom finished a strong third at the Far Side 5K Sunday in 14:46, just behind PA luminaries Jason Lunn and Christian Hesch. Tim Wallen finished first master in 16:11, after having to stop to tie his shoes! In the Ten, H-E had a 2-3-4 showing with Eric D.B. Ollila finishing second in 32:31 to Brad Hauser and Greg Menegat (33:35) outkicking Chris Phipps (33:39) for the last money spot. Raymundo Cruz followed Chris in 33:49. I'm afraid I haven't completely culled the results, but I know Susan Beck, Whitney Stephenson, Christine Wang, Katie Litzenberger, Brian Schultz, Andy Chan, and David Moulton were out there. Congratulations all! (And I apologize for the many others not mentioned here.) Pacific Association XC Championships - 11/23/03 PA Champs: Steinmaus Wallen Gouwens 2-4-8 for Masters Men For the third race in a row, the masters men fielded a top team, this time finishing a not-so-close second to a dominant Aggie team. The women fielded a very strong team they've had in a while, and seem to have beaten a competitive Humboldt team for 2d in the grand prix. The open men showed the strains of a long difficult fall, with the last scorer almost but not quite breaking the top 100 in an EXTREMELY competitive field, but still stayed ahead of Empire to take 4th in the GP. More below . . . Women Byline Patti Bershers With second place in the PA on the line, the H-E girls came out swinging at the GG Park cross country championships this weekend. We had our scoring five in before HTC got even their 3rd runner in, so congratulations are in order as we've locked up 2nd place in the XC Grand Prix. Woo hoo! On an individual level, Kathryn showed she's bounced back from what little marathon fatigue was left to finish strong in 6th place with a PR on the course (and she beat Tyler). Melissa MacPherson, taking a break from her law school studies, was in next at 39th place. Our East Bay contingent was next: Jenny Wong ran a smart race, blazing through the second lap to place 51st. Christine Brighton (welcome back!) was in next at 61st place, running very well despite some lingering hip pain from her fall marathon. Rounding out the scoring team was Allie Bigelow, who was right behind Christine in 63rd place. Achieving her stated goal to get out and have a good time was Shelly Pierson, who was 74th and enjoying herself the entire way and helping out with some displacement (Shelly got in before HTC's fourth runner). Micha Lowe came out for her last CIM tune-up, placing 103rd as our second displacer. Jamie Chomas re-acquainted herself with racing (OUCH! said Jamie) after a few weeks' break post-marathon, placing 121st. Helen Kao still amazes - she worked a 32-hour shift at the hospital on Thursday/Friday - and ran well to place 160th as she trains through to her January marathon. Also thanks to all of the other women who came out to cheer their teammates on even though they couldn't run - Christine Jegan, Helena Kimball, Pat Reilly, Jen Major, Christine Wang, Lee D'Alessandro, Susan Beck, Amy Pierson, Whitney Stephenson, and any others I didn't see! Oh, me too. That's it for XC. Next up: although not a PA race, several women are going up to CIM the weekend after Thanksgiving, so good luck to the very fit Christine Wang, Micha Lowe, Malinda Walker, and Whitney Stephenson up in Sacramento (hope I didn't forget anyone...). Open Men Byline Chris Phipps The Open Men's race at the 18th annual PA Championships was delayed, and had the course changed due to the tragic fatality of Tamalpan Ed Mooney who was competing in the earlier Masters race. The delay certainly didn't diminish the level of competition though in the traditionally deepest race on the PA circuit. In addition to strong squads from the Nike Farm Team, Adidias Transports, and Reebok Aggies, were large numbers of collegiate runners from Stanford and UC Davis. This was arguably the strongest field at this race in many years. Final scores have not been posted, but it looks like our open men placed 6th, but were ahead of Empire to hang on to 4th for the season and $200. Paul Wellman was our top finisher in 57th with a time of 30:37. (Mancini, when was the last time that we didn't have a single runner in the top 50 in a PA race?) Marathon men Dan Shore (67th in 30:52), and Stephen Donahue (87th, 31:55) were next, followed by Chris Phipps (92nd, 32:06), Dan almost a master Mancini (102nd, 32:46), Matt Regan (107th, 32:51), Parker Kelly (120, 33:46), Brian ? Gillis (134th, 34:56), Adam Lucas (147th, 36:35), Eric Yan (151st. 37:04), Dave visiting from the east coast Moulton (153rd, 37:20), and Brian Schultz (154th, 37:23). Due to the course alteration, times are approximately 1:30 faster than they would be on the regular course. Dan Mancini will verify the exact conversion later in the week. Old'uns Craig Steinmaus again led the squad with a second place by one second finish to archrival Tim Minor (33:16 on the newly measured 6.123 mi course). This gave Craig second in the GP! Tim Wallen followed closely in his best masters race to date, finishing fourth in 33:35. Hans Gouwens continues to give some of us hope that running and fatherhood are not mutually exclusive with a strong 34:06 8th place finish. Lloyd Stephenson (36:36, 25th) and Tyler Abbott (36:39, 26th) closed out the scoring. Ian Hersey (38:59, 65th), Michael Gama (40:43, 84th), David Schmidt (42:07, 100th), and Keo Zaiger (42:17, 103rd) rounded out the team. We seem to have ended up in fourth on the season, passing the Golden Valley Harriers after this race. The seniors fielded their first and only full team of the season. Don Paul led the team in a very strong 36:02, though he was second to recently seniored Aggie Tom Cushman. Jim Gorman (38:25, 9th) and Kevin Grady (40:17, 18th) rounded out the team. Clarksburg 30K - 11/09/03 CLARKSBURG: STEINMAUS FIRST MASTER, SIXTH OVERALL! For the umpteenth week in a row, Craig Steinmaus ran a superb race, this time at the ever-challenging Clarksburg 30K. Craig won the masters competition by almost four minutes! and, for the second week in a row, was the fastest Hoy's Excelsior runner overall. The masters team, in the meantime, is finally starting to live up to its potential, easily winning the race and coming within 2:10 of putting their B team ahead of rival Pacific Striders. More below: Open Women Byline Patti Bershers If it's a rainy weekend in November, it must be time for Clarksburg. Five women from the H-E open team made the trek to run 18.6 miles on the lovely levees of the Delta. Unlike prior years, the day did not involve hurricane force winds and torrential rains, and in these decent-to-good conditions Kathryn Krieger, Micha Lowe, Melissa Lode, Christine Wang and our very own Dr. Helen Kao set off. Kathryn hummed along around 6:15 pace, with a few 6's tossed in, until her body remembered around mile 12 that "Hey! I just ran a marathon 4 weeks ago!" With said body taking over at this point, the last 10K or so was pretty tough, but Kathryn still managed to run 2:07:05, good enough for 6th place. Next in was Micha, using the race to fine-tune for a fast-approaching CIM. Despite some fueling problems late in the race, Micha had a great workout, and scored some nice XX points by finishing second for the team with a 2:18:48. In next in her H-E debut was Micha's training partner Melissa Lode. In her first race for us, Melissa picked up her first XX points by scoring 3rd for the team, and while I don't have her time either [2:25:26], rumor has it she had a great day and is ready to have an excellent CIM. Christine Wang was our fourth runner, having a GREAT race as she prepares for CIM. Christine ran 2:27:51, holding her targeted CIM marathon pace for the entire 18.6 miles, and she wasn't even sore on Monday - she is going to crush her old PR at CIM. In 5th for us was the amazing Helen Kao--how does one train for a marathon, race cross-country and Clarksburg, and STILL survive her medical residency? Despite also having her fair share of fueling problems, Helen ran 2:36:15 as she prepares for the San Diego marathon on January 18th. All that's left PA-wise between now and Christmas are PA Champs and Christmas Relays. But we do have lots of girls running CIM (Micha, Melissa Lode, Christine Wang, Jen Major, did I miss anyone?), so if you can, plan on going up there to cheer your teammates on! Never underestimate how much fun it is to watch your friends suffer while you stand on the sidelines enjoying your Peet's coffee. Masters Women Byline Susan Beck I apologize in advance for this long entry. Those eager to get to The Week in Training may skip it. But some of the masters women, in a group "heal-the-pain" exercise, need to unburden themselves of the trauma that goes by the name of Clarksburg. >From Kim: Hamstring twinge, mile 5. Stomach cramps, miles 11 through 15. Got passed by two masters runners I thought I had beat, mile 17. General dispiritedness and hatred of Clarksburg, miles 15 through 18.6. Too windy, too hot, when oh when are they going to repave the roads, entire race. All in all, a REALLY miserable day. [Kim finished in 2:25 ] >From Susan: Feeling snappy for the first 11 miles or so, I thought this was going to be my day. Then things turned bad. At Mile 12 two masters women from arch rival West Valley scooted past me and I helplessly watched them vanish toward the horizon. (must ... try... to ... keep... up. uggh.) At Mile 13 I began to suspect that someone had replaced my insoles with cheese graters when I wasn't looking. My feet burned like never before. Mile 15 I was hit with a killer side stitch and had to stop. At Mile 16, Tamalpa senior citizen Bernie Hollander passed me, huffing and puffing like a man about to expire, but still moving faster than I was. After the race, I stood in the parking lot and heard the announcer warn of tornados. Even if a funnell cloud was barrelling toward me, my disabled body wouldn't be able to run. I would just have to hobble very very slowly toward safe cover. [Susan's time was 2:32] >From Barbara: I came down with the flu - and I felt it coming on at mile 1. At mile 3 I wanted to DNF - and couldn't understand why I felt so fatigued. At mile 6, some guy passed me by and said "How's it goin"? I said I'm already tired. He said "Oh, no that's not good". At mile 12 I started walking. Some guy passed me and said "What - you're dying - you're my bench mark". We continued to pass each other up along the way. I was walking and running all the way to mile 18. I kept looking for a taxi to take me back. I heard the thunder at mile 17, and hoped that it wouldn't start pouring until after I finished. The miracle is that I finished the race and that I didn't DNF. I still ended up 6 minutes faster than my time in 2001, and I wasn't walking in 2001. [Barbara's time was 2:42:06] >From Whitney: [Not suitable for publication] Open Men It was a rough day for the open men. There were some bright spots however: Sunday marked the return of Darrin Rohr, who moved to Reno a year to a year and a half ago, right after he joined the team. Darrin looks to be in good shape, running 1:49:57 for 12th place. Jared Crave also ran a fine race, one place behind Darrin in 1:50:41. Matt Regan suffered severe blistering with new shoes at the end of a 100 mile week, stopping multiple times before straggling in in 1:57:53 (30th). The open men seem to have finished third. Unfortunately, the open men lost to the masters men for the first time since Charlie Thompson and Jim Tracy were burning up the masters circuit. Nevertheless, this was good enough to clinch second place for the year for the open men. Old'uns As reported above, it was a great day for the masters men. Craig Steinmaus dominated the masters competition with his effort, and our 2-3, Hans Gouwens and Vitas Ezerskis, were 4th and 7th in 1:51:11 and 1:52:55, respectively. Leading our B team--which came within 2:10 of beating the Pacific Striders and giving us another two points on them for the season--was Tim O'Rourke in 1:54:24 (9th master), followed by Lloyd Stephenson (1:56:27, 12th) and Tyler Abbott (1:58:28, 15th). Ian Hersey (2:13:12), Keo Zaiger (2:21:27), and Greg King (2:38:44) rounded out the team. Yes, nine runners! The masters should be solidly in second when the standings come out. Don Paul led the senior race through seven, but an injury stopped him in his tracks. Fortunately we still had three seniors finish, which allowed us to score and clinch first place on the season! Ian Reid (age 60) led the seniors in 2:17:48 (11th? senior, 4th super senior), followed by Kenny Warde (2:24:37, 18th) and Allan Stanbridge (2:26:59, 21st). Presidio Trails 10K - 11/09/03 While some of us were being battered up in Clarksburg, Chris Phipps won the Presidio Trails 10K Sunday. Congratulations Chris! Presidio 10 Miler - 11/02/03 Congratulations to Jared Crave on his 4th place finish in the Presidio 10 last weekend (57:29). Tamalpa XC - 11/01/03 After scrambling to field full teams all Fall, the masters men finally put forth a competitive team at Saturday's John Lawson Tamalpa Challenge. Unfortunately the national champion Aggies showed up with the A team (albeit w/o Gonzales and Aispuro) and won easily, but we came in a strong second over teams that had been beating us all season. On the women's side, Kathryn Krieger ran a fine post-Chicago 8th place, with Melissa MacPherson, Jenny Wong, and Ally Bigelow close behind. On the open men's side, the race was a mess, with something like half the runners going off course and adding a couple minutes to the race. More below . . . Women Byline Patti Bershers On a perfect day for racing, the H-E girls set out to preserve their second place standing in the XC grand prix at the Tamalpa 4.62 mile John Lawson Challenge in China Camp. The seven women who turned out got the job done, with what looks like a 2nd place team effort at Tamalpa, just what we needed. Kathryn led the way with a 28:42 workout that was good enough for 7th place, showing how quickly she's returned to form only 3 weeks post-marathon. The phenomenal trio of Melissa MacPherson, Jenny Wong, and Ally Bigelow were not far behind, in 15th (29:03), 17th (29:23) and 21st (29:37) places, respectively. Micha Lowe was using this race as a hard training effort as she prepares for CIM, and she had an excellent day with a 31:37 that brought her in at 44th place. Close behind was Chelsey Remington. I saw Chelsey right behind a pack of 3 or 4 women at the last turn; like the true harrier she is, between that last turn and the finish, she managed to kick down all of them for a super strong 32:10 effort, 48th place. We should all have Chelsey's finish! Next up was Susan Beck. Susan's been training hard at the track and racing all through the fall, and it's all coming together now with an excellent 35:45 clocking, 29th master. Thanks to all who raced! Next up in XC: our last race, PA Champs, two times over the grass, dirt and hay bales on the GGP course. We'll need to field a good team here to hang on to 2nd place, so please let me know if you can race (
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) Open Men The first unwritten rule in racing is "If you don't know the way, don't lead." At last Saturday's Tamalpa Challenge, the 4th year in a row on the same course, not only the leader, but possibly over half of the field didn't know the way and due to an absent course monitor at a key turn went off course. Of the 7 Hoy's runners, only 3 ran the correct route. Because so many went off course, the current ruling from the race referee is to nullify the results as if the race had not been run. For what it's worth, here is how the Hoy's runners finished. Chris Phipps was 14th in 25:27, followed by Dan Mancini 40th, 26:19, Paul Wellman 46th, 26:29 (ran long), Jesse McAlman 68th, 29:54, Brian Gilliss 75th, 30:10 (ran very long), 77th, Brian Schultz 77th, 30:21 (ran long) and Bill Whetstone 85th, 31:01 (ran long). Needless to say, having several of our runners going long certainly didn't help our team score, but the team scores will likely be thrown out anyway. Old'uns Craig Steinmaus led most of the way before succombing to the Aggies' (more rested) Tim Minor and Kevin Ostenberg, finishing third in a club-leading 25:06 (beating the time of all open men). Hans Gouwens proved that once-a-week training works in his first cross effort of the season, finishing 5th in 25:36. And in his second masters race (and first masters only race), Tim Wallen finished 8th, 25:53. Tyler Abbott (27:21, 20th) and Lloyd Stephenson (27:28, 23rd) finished the scoring, with John Spriggs (29:58, 73rd), Keo Zaiger (30:51, 90th), Dave Schmidt (30:57, 93rd), and Michael Gama (31:51, 108th) rounding out the team. Lake Natoma Four Bridges Half Marathon - 10/26/03 Wellman Wins Lake Natoma Four Bridges Half Marathon Paul Wellman ran his 2nd half marathon in as many weeks. This time it was the Lake Natoma Four Bridges Half Marathon in Folsom, and Paul won it with a time of 1:13:57 holding off MIA club member Darrin Rohr who finished 2nd in 1:14:12. Shoreline XC - 10/25/03 SHORELINE CROSS: STEINMAUS FIRST MASTER, WALLEN SECOND IN MUCH-DELAYED DEBUT Craig Steinmaus appears to have jumped into the lead in the masters cross country grand prix with his second win of the year, running 23:46 to beat runner up Tim Wallen in Tim's long awaited and much postponed masters debut (23:58). More below . . . Open Men Byline Chris Phipps On yet another unusually warm weekend on the PA cross country circuit the Hoy's Excelsior guys managed to just barely field a full team . This week's stop was the flat and fast 4.6 mile Shoreline Open. The team was led by Chris Phipps who finished in 20th in 23:42. He was followed by Jerad Crave, 39th, 24:33, Dan Shore 46th, 24:59, Cesar Guillen 59th, 25:56, Danny Lilot 63rd, 26:02, and and allergy-infected Parker Kelly 78th, 26:43. With our 3rd place finish here we have moved into a virtual tie with WVTC for 3rd place, and the Reebok Aggies are just 3 points back. We've got just 2 races to go, this weekend's Tamalpa Challenge and the PA Championships, so let's get strong teams out there! Open Women Byline Chelsey Remington The Shoreline Women's 5K was this past Saturday at 9:00 AM, and needless to say, a little bit of a sea breeze might have been nice. It was steamy hot down in the South Bay, even along the coast. The super hot temperatures didn't stop much of anyone, however. In fact, Allie Bigelow was on fire, running a 19:32 PR (6:30 pace) for 37th place. Jenny Wong was next to cross the line at 19:55 (42nd) with Micha Lowe very close behind at 20:05 (47th). I was a minute back finishing in 21:15 (70th), not one of my better days. Masters Men After Craig and Tim ran 1-2, the masters fell off a bit. Tyler Abbott was third on the team in 26:12 (15th master), followed by Ian Hersey (27:30, 31st), Michael Gama (29:28, 54th), Keo Zaiger (29:39, 56th), and Greg King (30:43, 66th). Fortunately team competition looks to have been fairly weak, so it looks like we improved our GP position. Thanks all for coming out! Humboldt Half Marathon - 10/19/03 HUMBOLDT: MEN SWEEP?!?!?!?! For I believe the first time EVER (anyone remember another time?), the Hoy's Excelsior men seem to have swept the top three male team titles at the Humboldt Half Marathon: open, master, and senior. Post-race calculations are always tricky, and there are a couple unknowns in the top 25, but with optimal drop-downs and any luck it looks like we've won all three. It also looks like the masters women may have won, which could give us four half marathon team titles! Of course it doesn't hurt that this year's race featured the weakest competition in memory, but we'll take what we can get. On the individual side, both Craig Steinmaus and Jim Gorman won their age groups, and Dan Shore ran a PR 1:09:59.3, for 6th overall. Congratulations all. Open Women Byline Susan Beck The women's ranks were thinned by the Chicago and Columbus Marathons, but still we had a successful and fun trip up North, with several people running PRs. (But would somebody please take a bulldozer to that stupid traffic-clogging pumpkin patch on 101!) Jenny Wong led the open team with a PR of 1:25:47, good enough for 8th place among women. Jen Major, in the midst of marathon training, followed in 1:29:32. Christine Wang, also training for CIM, ran a solid 1:40:09. She was followed closely by Jody Fordham, who ran a PR of 1:40:32. Pat Reilly, donning a Hoys uniform after a long absence (good to see you!), ran a big PR of 1:44:17, improving her previous half marathon best by 16 minutes! And new member Katharine Rogers got her feet wet for Hoys with a 1:50. Welcome Katharine. And thanks to Kathryn Krieger for cheering us on from the sidelines. Open Men: Hoy's Dominates the Redwoods! Byline Daniel Shore The Open Men's team continues its streak of road race scoring by managing to just field a full team at Sunday's Humboldt Half Marathon. Good thing too since the Open team seems to have FINALLY won its first race of the year (with some fancy scoring from Tyler) AND the Masters crew won as well. Special thanks to the five stalwarts who helped fatten the x-points prize purse with $275! And very special thanks to the Transports for taking a week off! Leading the Open team was Dan Shore, finishing in his road-best 6th place finish in a PR of 1:09:59.38 (and just 2 seconds off his 10 mile PR!). Two places behind Dan was Paul Wellman, running 1:11:24 for 8th overall. Following Paul and scoring for the Open team (thanks Masters!) was Craig Steinmaus, winning his division in 1:11:47 (9th overall). Following Craig in 23rd place was Matt Regan, running 1:15:26. Rounding out the Open A Team was Tim O'Rourke, another Masters loan, running 1:17:07 for 27th overall. Parker Kelly led the B Team scoring with a 30th place finish of 1:18:06, despite having walked a half mile. Dan Rhodes took one for the team with a fatigue-induced 1:21:44 finish (43rd overall). Thanks again to Tyler and the Masters team for dropping down Craig and Tim, thus apparently giving the Open Men a road win. Next up is Clarksburg 30K on November 9. We need three runners to field a full team so please plan on making the trek and keeping the streak alive. Masters Women (Take First?) Byline Susan Beck We're holding our breaths, but it looks like the Masters Women took first place at Humboldt. Thanks to Kim Fanady, running 1:34:07, who was the sixth master. The vastly-improving Barbara Hancock (coached by Shelly) ran a 4-minute PR of 1:39:40, and was 4th in the 45-49 age group. Susan Beck's 1:42:04 wasn't a PR, but she was pleased with her tactical negative splits. Masters Men Humboldt marked a bright spot in a somewhat lackluster year for the masters. We finally pulled our top runners together, and were able to beat the nearest competitor by almost three minutes per man. Because of this and with some help from the seniors, we were able to drop down a couple of our runners and probably take first open. Craig Steinmaus led us and all masters in the race in 1:11:47 (9th overall). Hans Where Have You Been? Gouwens finished next in 1:14:42 (6th master), with Vitas Ezerskis hot on his tail in 1:14:47 (7th). Tim O'Rourke marked his return to sanity in 1:17:07 (9th; word has it this was just part of a 4x13.1 workout), with Tyler Abbott and Lloyd Stephenson finishing close together in 1:20:04 and 1:20:33 (13th and 14th). Greg King (1:43:25) and Michael Gama (1:51:48) rounded out the team. Senior Women Byline Susan Beck Our senior women's team was represented by Fernanda Franco-Ferrer, who ran a PR of of 1:57:19. Senior Men: Seniors Score Easy Win Byline The Rocket The seniors team had no competition at the scenic Humboldt 1/2 marathon. Our first five finishers placed in the top eleven. Jim Gorman lead the way with a first place finish in 1:21:20. He remains in first place in the senior long division. Jim has won the short division and could win the long with one race to go. Jim Gorman-1:21:20 Tom Bernhard-1:23:27 Les Ong-1:26:08 Bob Darling: 1:27:14 Al Stanbridge:1:29:48 Steve "Death March" Ferraz: 1:42:17 Update: Last week's speculation is official: we won all of our men's divisions (open-master-senior) for probably the first time ever and women's masters at Humboldt last week! Over $600 in team funds! Congratulations all. In the road grand prix, according to my calculations: the open women have clinched second; the magic number for the open men to clinch second is 5; and the magic number for the senior men to win the grand prix is 11. Both masters teams are in tight battles for second, battles that will definitely be decided in the last two races, Clarksburg and the Christmas Relays, both double point. US Half Marathon - 10/19/03 Mancini First American at US Half Dan AOMM C.P. Mancini appears to have finished first American at the US Half Marathon this Sunday in the City. Dan ran 1:17:53 to finish second overall behind Takamichi Hayashi. Congratulations Dan! Columbus Marathon - 10/19/03 Amy Pearson ran an 11-minute PR 3:34 at the Columbus (Ohio) Marathon Sunday. Amy's goal was a Boston qualifier, which she achieved with minutes to spare. Congratulations Amy! From Amy,
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: "I wanted to thank everyone for their support along the way during my training." Chicago Marathon - 10/12/03 Byline Patti Bershers The marathon is tough - even a well-organized one like Chicago, under good conditions (a bit on the warm side near the end, but otherwise very nice). On the men's side, Evans Rutto won the race with a 2:05.50 marathon debut that beat Khalid Khanouchi's previous debut record (tough month for Khalid, seeing his world record and debut record go down!). On the women's side, Svetlana Zakharova won in 2:23.07. The H-E girls had a mixed day. Kathryn, Shelly, and Christine set out for trials qualifiers, but unfortunately, some bad luck got in their way. KK ran very strong through 21 before she suffered a dementor attack causing her lower back and hamstring to lock up; Shelly was running well until her IT band acted up at 16; and Christine had to deal with a painful hip flexor that did not react well to the camber of Chicago's roads (we don't know what they use out there, but we all agreed that midwestern roads are much less forgiving than California's). Patti had a great day despite going out a little faster than she should have, running 3:02.28 for a 6 minute PR and 100th place among the women. Jamie Chomas worked through some tough miles on her way to a 3:25.22 finish, very close to her target time. Whitney had an excellent day, running her 2nd fastest marathon ever with a 3:58.17. Team pal Katy Hollbacher got her Olympic Trials B standard qualifier with seconds to spare, running a steady 2:47.47 (chip; gun was 2:47.51). Also, congratulations to Nicole Britvan on her PR 3:41:13. From Nicole: "I pr'd myself in Chicago - but missed qualifying for boston by 13 seconds...rats!" On the men's side, Ryan Gallagher ran a strong PR (I think) 2:30:41, and Stephen Donahue, in his first marathon, ran 2:34.08. According to Stephen, "I slowed down on the last 10k but not a complete blowup. Just sort of bled some time, but pleased for my marathon debut." Providian Relay - 10/11/03 Phipps/Rhodes Lead Winning Team Byline Chris Phipps The Napa to Santa Cruz Relay, a 199 Mile California version of Oregon's Hood to Coast was won this weekend by "12 Angrier Men". This team consisting of mostly Tamalpans also included Hoy's Excelsior runners Dan Rhodes and Chris Phipps. The team started to build a lead early, but lost it and fell several minutes back when their 5th runner made a wrong turn and ran an extra couple of miles. The team fought back over the next 8 legs and took back the lead on leg 13. After that they continued to build on their lead and won by a comfortable 20 minute margin in 20:53:55. Also running in the relay was Matt Regan competing on the not so competitive Providian corporate team. They were short a man, so Matt stepped up and ran 6 legs! >From Matt: "I ran legs 4&5, 16&17, 28&29....long frickin weekend! My team was pretty slow and their heads weren't really in the game either. After second pair of legs I get to Sausalito after hauling a$$ for 12 miles and the van isn't there....they went for burgers and didn't think I'd get there so quickly. After my 3rd set of legs in the very steep Santa Cruz mountains, where I nearly got run over by a drug dealer up to check his stash, I get to the exchange and the next runner isn't there..."he's waiting in the van because he's cold!...do you want me to go get him?" Ran 30 miles total at about 6:20 pace...good marathon training if nothing else." Sierra XC - 10/11/03 Wellman 7th Paul Wellman continued his fierce cross-country racing Saturday with a 20:46 seventh place finish at the Sierra Cross Country Meet at Sierra College in Rocklin. Cesar Guillen, who's been racing up a storm this cross season, ran 22:41 for 42d place. Most team members, however, other than those venturing to Chicago, decided to use this weekend as a well-deserved rest weekend, and our only other runners (as far as I could tell) were two in the masters race: Charles Griffin, 23rd in 24:24, and returning member John Spriggs, 38th in 26:10. BTW, this was the first road or cross gp race at which our open men have not fielded a full team in years. PRESIDIO XC CHALLENGE - 10/04/03 Congratulations to Paul Wellman on his stunning 3rd place finish in Saturday's Hoy's Excelsior Presidio Challenge. Paul was behind only grand prix leader Peter Clusener and Olympian Gabe Jennings, ahead of many of his x-c nemeses. And congratulations to the club in general and RD Chris Phipps in particular on another great race! This, our 5th annual Presidio cross country race, had the largest turnout yet, and everything (almost anyway) seemed to go quite smoothly. The club had great publicity before the race, with the unexpected Runners' World mention, and after the race: >From Phipps: "The 5th Annual Hoy's Presidio Challenge was again a success for the team this year. Thanks to all of the team members, their family and friends who came out to help, the event went off without a hitch! We had a record turnout with 275 finishers (70 Open Men, 119 Masters Men and 86 women)." More below . . . Women Byline Christine Wang This past Saturday morning five lone Excelsior women ventured out into the cold to race our home course that really lives up to its name---'Challenging.' Melissa MacPherson led the Excelsior women with a blistering 24:00, 11th place. Jenny Wong was right behind her, second runner for the team with a 24:06 12th place finish (Jenny's having a great fall!). Ally, surging up all the hills, finished in 24:50, good for 20th place. Despite not feeling well, Jen Major finished with a strong 25:43 for 25th place. Christine Wang ran a 28:04, 50th place, while trying not to think how much her legs were going to hurt on her 18 mile CIM training run the next morning. Way to go ladies!!! It looks like we'll be third, with Impala and a strong Humboldt Track Club just in front of us today (and seriously in the hunt to bump us out of 2nd overall in the XC standings - where'd these girls come from?!?!). Also, a big thank you goes out to the many Excelsior women who assisted with the race set-up, administration, and clean-up!! Open Men Byline Chris Phipps The open men's race was highlighted by the presence of 2000 1500M Olympian Gabe Jennings, who blazed the last half mile to post a 15 second win over Peter Clusener from the Humboldt Track Club. Gabe's time of 18:40 though was only good enough for 2nd best all time, as he was 2 seconds off the course record held by former Stanford teammate Jason Balkman. The $100 first prize was the first prize money that Gabe has been able to claim since turning pro. Leading a tough chase pack that included several of the PA's best runners was our own Paul Wellman who ran a huge course PR of 19:13 to finish 3rd and pick up $25! Nearly a full 2 minutes later, the rest of the team started to come in led by race director Chris Phipps who was 24th in 21:02, followed by Cesar Guillen 26th, 21:14, Dan Mancini 32nd, 21:32, Brian Gilliss 34th, 21:36, Parker Kelley 37th 21:55, Abel Eisentraut 44th, 22:41, Jesse McAlman 45th, 22:44, and Adam Lucas 57th, 24:07. On the team side, we placed third, well behind the adidas Transports and HTC, and just a few points ahead of Empire and the Wolfpack. With our 3rd place finish here, we are essentially tied with WVTC for 3rd overall on the season. Let's get out to the final 4 races of the season and make a move up the standings! Old'uns Unfortunately for the men's masters, this one will be known as "The Race that Might Have Been." The race was supposed to be Hans Gouwens's 2003 cross country debut and Tim Wallen's master debut. Tim turned 40 on Monday, and by Tuesday he was out with a hamstring injury. Hans was forced to continue his frantic race against the clock to shelter his family before the rains come. Nevertheless, Craig Steinmaus had yet another sterling performance. OMS led the masters once again in 20:55, third in the (separate) masters race. Tyler Abbott was just outkicked for 14th place, finishing 15th in 22:23. Charles Griffin finished close behind in 23:01 (22d), with Ian Hersey (23:52, 41st), David Schmidt (25:35, 65th), and Keo Zaiger (27:09, 80th) rounding out the team. In the very hotly contested master's division, the team seems to have finished 5th or 6th. It's VERY competitive this year--it'd be great if we could put our best feet forward the last few races. Heritage Oaks Bank 10K - 09/28/03 Paso: Seniors National Champs! Krieger, Fanady, Gorman Win Short GP! Our senior team seems to have brought home the club's 4th national championship Sunday at the Heritage Oaks Bank 10K in Paso Robles. Don Paul led the team, running 35:20 to take third individual honors, with Jim Gorman 22 seconds behind him in 5th. Kim Fanady ran a club record 39:54, winning the short grand prix in the process. Kathryn Krieger and Jim Gorman also seem to have won their respective short grand prixs. Special thanks to Kathryn who recruited her SLO-next door neighbor Stacey Herdlicka (sp?) just HOURS before the race to fill in for a recently-knee injured Monal Chokshi! Open Men Byline Daniel Shore Unlike previous years, the Heritage Oaks Bank 10K in Paso dawned cool and overcast -- perfect weather for fast times. Sadly, only a few of us took advantage of the conditions. Trailing numerous international and national-class runners but leading the HE-men in 27th overall, Erico Ollila ran a solid 31:46 -- somewhere around 18th in the PA. Following closely on Eric's heels, Stephen Donahue ran a 10K PR of 31:48 for 28th overall. Good luck in Chicago Stephen! Dan Shore suffered another sprint finish loss to Kendrick Sealy (dang!) finishing in a modest 32:23 for 32nd overall. Brian Spangenberg, deep in the throes of marathon training, followed Dan in 33rd place (32:41). Finishing out the scoring team was Matt Regan, running 34:04 for 42nd place. Pete Vicencio suffered through intense foot pain to round out the team in 34:46 (46th overall) -- get better Pete! Once again, Transports easily won the team competition. However, the HE men may have snuck into second place -- keep your fingers crossed. Next up on the road schedule is the Humboldt Half Marathon on Sunday, October 19. With a number of top local runners in Chicago the week before, we have a great chance of picking up a road win. Please come out if you can make it! Masters Women Byline Kim Fanady The few, the proud, the extremely dedicated - a/k/a the Excelsior masters women - trekked down to Paso Robles for the National Masters 10K Championships and made their usual strong showing. The ever reliable Susan Beck turned in a nice 47:36 despite not having her best day. Barbara Hancock cranked out a terrific 45:17, a THREE minute PR! And Kim Fanady posted a one-minute PR of 39:54 to finish 10th overall, 5th in the PA, and wrap up a totally unexpected victory in the masters short Grand Prix. Team results aren't out yet but this 3 point race can only help solidify the team's position (2nd before Jamba and PR). Way to go, girls - we're old but we still rock! Masters Men Old Main Steinmaus led the masters in a fine time of 32:37, good enough for ninth place in our national championship! New member Vitas Ezerskis followed in 34:09 (18th), with Lloyd Stephenson continuing his comeback in 35:11 (26th), Tyler Abbott running a master PR in 35:45 (34th), and Jim Misener (42:44, 104th) rounding out the team. We've scored Don Paul as a master, so it looks like we beat the Pacific Striders, by just 16 seconds (after our ONE SECOND loss last year). This is in spite of their beating us at positions 2, 3, 4, and 5--fortunately Craig put enough room on their 1st place runner that we still beat them. Great job Craig! Senior Men Byline The Rocket Our senior runners won their second National USATF team title in the last nine months. The fast 10K course and overcast conditions dictated good efforts. Don Paul rebounded from last week's hamstring strain to win the Pacific Association title and place third nationally. He ran 35:20 and was only 6 seconds out of second place. He was closely followed by consistent Jim Gorman in 35:42./4th nationally. Tom Barnhard and Les Ong continued to get in better shape. Don Paul-35:20/5:41 Jim Gorman-35:42/5:44 Tom Barnhard-36:45/5:54 Les Ong-37:55/6:06 Bob Darling-38:14/6:09 Al Stanbridge-40:39/6:32 Jamba Juice 5K - 09/21/03 Early in the morning in San Francisco at the tail end of Summer. Doesn't SOUND like a hot race. Nevertheless, the weather turned hot for the second weekend in a row, much to the joy of the surfers and the chagrin of the runners. I'm sure this next race won't be as hot. How far over 100 can it possibly get in Paso Robles in September? I didn't realize it at the time, but I believe we had what may be a club record 46 members run the race--16 open men, 9 open women, 8 masters men, 9 senior men, and 4 masters women. By the numbers: 1st-Jim Gorman, senior men 3rd-Craig Steinmaus, master men 4th-Kathryn Krieger, open women (only Jamba Juice coupon winner) 5th-Kim Fanady, master women, and Tom Bernhard, senior men Let's try to get a second placer next year. The short grand prix winds up this Sunday at Paso Robles, the biggest race of the year (3-points). Atop the standings: Kathryn Krieger and Shelby Pierson still seem to be 1-2 among open women, though their places flip-flopped, with Kathryn now leading and very probably the GP winner; unless all our calculations are wrong, Kim Fanady has run her way into first place, and is likely to remain there after Paso; and Jim Gorman increased his first place lead for the senior men, practically clinching the title. Open Men Byline Chris Phipps Yep, back in 2000 things were a lot different. A guy could cruise the Jamba Juice 5K in 16:30 in cool weather and win 52 Jamba Juice certificates. By 2001 it took 16:00 to win 26 certificates. In 2002 it was down to 15:31, so what would it take to win free Jamba in 2003? Would you believe 14:32! Unfortunately, not one of our 16 open men was able to win the free Jamba. Dan Nelson came the closest with a 12th place finish in 15:06. The other scorers on the A team were Stephen Donahue 19th, 15:29, Eric Ollila 22nd, 15:34, Dan Shore 26th, 15:50 and Pete Vicencio 34th, 16:10. We had plenty of men out there, enough for a B and a C team. Ending his PR streak, Matt Regan was 40th in 16:23 (just a second off his PR). Cliff Lentz, in his first race since the Headlands 50K was 41st, 16:25, and Tim Wallen in his last or next to last race in the open division was 43rd, 16:26. They were followed by Chris Phipps, 48th, 16:40, Cesar Guillen 56th, 16:49, Jesse McAlman 78th, 17:18, Andy Chan 88th, 17:26, Abel Eisentraut 95th, 17:32, Dan Rhodes 120th, 18:00, Brian Schultz 124th, 18:03, and Adam Lucas, 148th in 18:25. It looks like we were 3rd or 4th as a team, possibly even 2nd if the Farm Team didn't have 5 guys. Next week it's down to Paso! Open Women Byline Micha Lowe Kathryn "Chicago-here-I-come" Krieger (17:16), Christine Brighton (18:28) and Kim "Master-at-FAST!" Fanady (19:37) each finished 2nd in their respective age groups. Shelly "I'm-following-KK-to-Chicago" Pierson (18:45) Jenny Wong (19:04), and Micha Lowe rounded up the "A" team in the women's open. Team "B" was led by Helen "work-all-night-race-the-next-day" Kao (21:06) followed by Patti "run22miles-thenpace3" Bershers, Nicole "I'm-doing-Chicago-too" Britvan, and Jody "I-need-a-break" Fordham. Good job ladies, and good luck to all training for Chicago! WOMEN WIN JAMBA! The open women won the team title at the Jamba Juice 5K Pacific Association 5K Championship. This is the women's first win in any grand prix race--roads or cross--ever, and, being a double points race, boasted one of the largest club paydays in the club's history, $500. Congratulations women! Masters Women Byline Susan Beck So it was hot. So the start was crowded and twisty and scattered with obstacles. Kim Fanady still ran a sizzling PR of 19:37 and was the fifth master's woman. With this strong finish Kim will likely take the overall lead in the PA Masters Women's Short-Course Grand Prix. By my rough reckoning, all she needs to do is run a solid race at Paso and she should emerge as the Grand Prix Champ. Go Kim. Minutes later (several, in fact), I finished in 22:50, followed not far behind by Barbara Hancock, running a PR of 23:34. New Member and East Coast transplant Deborah Ulian ran her first race for us, and is gaining her strength back after an injury layoff. (We sorely missed a very fit Jody Heyman, who tripped in the dark Thursday morning at Stow Lake and sprained some hip muscles.) Old'uns Craig Steinmaus led the masters men in 16:02, 31st place overall and third master. The next Hoy's Excelsior master was--believe it or not--Vytautas "Vitas" Ezerskis, who finally succumbed to the unrelenting recruiting pressure and officially joined us just before the race. Vitas confessed that the persistent phone calls and never-ending approaches were affecting his training, and he gave in. Yeah! Vitas ran 16:43, 9th master. Lloyd Stephenson finished next in 16:56, 12th master and first 45-49--remember, Lloyd'll be 50 in about a year. Peter Lewandowski followed Lloyd in 17:13 (16th master), with Michael Prutz (17:25, 20th) rounding out the team. In his first non-scoring performance since perhaps Paso last year, Tyler Abbott finished next in 17:47, with Michael Gama (19:13) and Keo Zaiger (20:14) rounding out the team. Seniors Byline The Rocket (Excelsior Club Member for 30 years, since the beginning in 1973!) Our senior team had a great turnout at the Jamba 5k race. Nine aging, yet fit seniors raced around Golden Gate Park on a toasty morning. The team prevailed in a victorious effort. We won the individual and team titles. This increased their overall lead in the Grand Prix standing. Jim Gorman ran a super race to finish first in a quick 17:25. He has been consistent all year. Don Paul suffered a hamstring strain, yet managed to finish the race. We hope for a speedy recovery. Charles Thompson made a modest comeback in 18:43. Not bad for averaging 14 miles a week and not racing for 6 months. Steve Ferraz continues his return to fitness by running 21:08. He has come a long way in a short period of time. Our next goal is to win the National Masters 10K title for seniors (50+) at this weeks Paso Robles race. Stay healthy and fit! Jim Gorman-17:25/5:36 Tom Barnhard-18:10/5:50 Don Paul-18:31/5:57 Bob Darling-18:35/5:58 Sir Charles Thompson-18:43/6:01 Les Ong-18:46/6:02 Jim Tracy-19:37/6:18 Al Stanbridge-19:48/6:22 Steve Ferraz-21:08/6:48 (times were off 1-2 seconds as were some places-it was a large race) Crystal Springs Cross Country - 09/13/03 Open Men Byline Chris Phipps Hot hot hot! A full 10 open men toed the line in the 90 degree heat to take on the dusty shadeless trails of the Crystal Springs Challenge. The team was led by Eric Ollila in 11th, 22:17, then we had a bit of a gap. (C'mon guys lets pick it up a bit and give Eric some company next time!) Next in for the men in yellow were Parker Kelly in 24th, 23:39, Cesar Guillen 27th, 23:47, Dan Shore 29th, 23:50, and Chris Phipps, 34th, 24:19 (first sub 6 minute pace race in nearly 4 months!) rounding out the scoring 5. Leading the B team was Dan Lilot 43rd, 25:11 followed by Abel Eisentraut, 53rd, 25:35, Adam Lucas 69th, 26:15, Jesse McAlman 71st, 26:18, and Brian Schultz 89th, 27:06. Needless to say, the times were a bit off due to the heat. I ran 2:30 faster last year, so that must be how much the heat slowed us down. On the team side, it looks like we were 4th behind Adidas, Humboldt and WVTC. Cross takes a couple weeks off for the road races (Jamba 5K and Paso 10K), but then we have our home meet, the Presidio Challenge on October 4th. We've been pretty weak in Cross so far this year, so I want to see all of our open men at the Presidio race so we can show the rest of the PA that we really do have one of the best teams out there! Old'uns Taking it easy in the blistering mouth-parching heat, Craig Steinmaus still led the masters in 23:48 (5th master, 28th overall). Lloyd Stephenson decided to run at the last minute and ran a fine 25:10 (10th master), showing steady post-injury improvement. Charles Griffin and Tyler Abbott finished next in 25:58 and 26:02 (18th and 20th), followed by Ian Hersey (26:33, 26th), 6th place senior Kim Lilot (26:42), Samuel Harvell (28:14, 41st), new/returning member David Schmidt (29:46, 56th), and Jim Misener (29:54, 58th). David collapsed from the heat at the finish line and was taken away in an ambulance, but was fine by early afternoon. Crystal Women's Report Byline Shelly Pierson On a nice and WARM Saturday morning our ladies looked awesome among the competition at Crystal Springs CC Invite. Leading the Hoy's women was Melissa MacPherson in 19:03 (8th), Followed by the unstoppable Patti Bershers who made it look so EASY with her 19:08 (12th) finish (I believe this was a HUGE PR!). Next was Jen Major looking great on the comeback road in 19:34 (17th), Micha Lowe 20:23 (25th), Helena Kimball 21:05 (40th), Jody Fordham 23:09 (57th) and last but NOT least, the all powerful senior Fernanda Franco-Ferrara in 26:11 (69th). This is a two minute PR for Fernanda when comparing the tough Crystal Springs course to a flat 5K!! Great Job Ladies! Race For The Cure - 09/07/03 Congratulations to Kim Fanady on a first master/4th overall performance at Sunday's Race for the Cure! Her official time in the results seems to be 15 seconds off, but her watch time was a PR 19:37. GOLDEN GATE PARK OPEN - 09/06/03 KRIEGER WINS CROSS "OPENER" In a carbon copy of last year's race, Kathryn Krieger came from well back at the mid-way point to run a very strong three mile and overtake the field, eventually winning by 14 seconds. The women overall had their tightest battle to date with the Impalas. The teams were tied after four runners (each of our top four was next to the corresponding Impala), with the Impalas ending up ahead by what looks to be just one point. On the men's side, Paul Wellman ran a strong 21:17 for twelfth place (what was Richter's second place time in '98 (?)?) in a very deep field. Craig Old Man Steinmaus finished was the next man on the team, running a lifetime PR 21:53 to finish 21st overall and second master, nine seconds behind a very fit Kevin Ostenberg. The open men noticeably did NOT repeat their 2002 "12 men between 21:30 and 22:30" performance. Results were late coming out, so team reports will follow . . . From Dan Mancini: Craig and and his golden fleece (heretofore known as Young Man Steinmaus) established a new H-E Masters course record at GGP with his 21:53 on Saturday. Not only did it tie his best ever performance (any age), but it is the 1st time one of our Masters has bettered the 22:00 barrier (on the Post-1995 revised course). He bested Lloyd's previous mark of 22:06. TEAM REPORTS Women Byline Jen Major The Women's team finished second to the Impalas by just ONE POINT (49-50) in Saturday's Golden Gate Park cross country race. Oops. But, everyone seemed very happy with their run! Kathryn Kreiger finished first overall and for the team with a speedy time of just 24:30. Jenny Wong led the next pack of Hoy's runners, finishing eleventh overall in 25:45. She was closely followed by Shelly Pierson, 25:50, and Melissa MacPherson, 25:51. Jen Major was next, 26:26 (I think it's my lucky number this year), followed by Allie Bigelow, Micha Lowe, Helen Kao, and Susan Beck. Everyone did a fantastic job, and thank you so much to all of the girls who ran, AND to our fabulous cheering sections. See you soon! Open Team Wrap-Up Cross Country made its first stop in San Francisco on Saturday with a day perfect for racing clear and cool. While the Open Men didn’t do any winning, it appears they did do some displacing. Thirteen men showed up to race while a handful of others turned up to limp around, cheer, or enroll their new babies in the H-E Development Program. Among the racers, Paul Wellman led the charge, finishing a respectable 12th in the competitive field with a time of 21:17 for the 4-mile course. On the comeback, Pete Vicencio finished second on the team and 28th overall with a time of 22:15. DJ Tim Wallen followed in 22:34 (38th), with Chicago-bound Stephen Donahue finishing his morning long run with a 22:43 stride-out (40th) and Robin Hart rounding out the A team in 23:06 (49th). Cesar Guillen led the B team with a 23:15 clocking, good for 54th overall. Following Cesar, Parker Kelly made a much-welcomed appearance finishing 61st in 23:33. Dan Lilot followed Parker in 63rd (23:38), with Abel Eisentraut (24:12, 75th) and new member Brian Gilliss (24:31, 83rd) rounding out the B team. Close on Brian’s heels was new member Bill Whetstone (24:41, 88th), followed by Adam Lucas (25:25, 117th) and Dave Moulton (26:12, 133rd) As noted in the Week in Training, the circuit goes to Crystal Springs this weekend a great race as long as you don’t go out too hard. After that, we move on to two multi-point road races in succession, Jamba Juice 5K and the ultra-fun and competitive Heritage Oaks 10K in Paso Robles. Racing season is in full swing so PLEASE come out if you can! FYI, the latest Runner’s World magazine lists our very own Presidio Challenge as one of the “best†XC races in the country! Hmmmm… Anyhow, make sure you plan on attending our OWN cross-country race! Old'uns As noted before, Craig Steinmaus ran a very strong 21:53 to beat all of our open men except Wellman and finish second among the masters. Peter Lewandowski finished next for the masters in 24:05 (72d, 15th master), with Tyler Abbott just behind him in 24:13 (76th, 17th master). Soon-to-be-senior Charles Griffin finished next in 24:47 (96th, 26th master), with Kim Lilot rounding out the scorers in 25:47 (123rd, 6th senior). Returning member Keo Zaiger (27:05, 158th overall), Michael Gama (27:19, 163rd), new member Dave Schmidt (28:06, 181st), and Jim Misener (28:43, 191st) rounded out the team. EMPIRE CROSS COUNTRY - 08/30/03 Women Byline Micha Lowe The women managed to pull together a full team for the second cross country race of the season. Under cool, overcast skies the ladies endured the hilly (oh, the hills) and somewhat rocky course with decent early season results. Jenny Wong (27:43, 8th overall) racked up some 8.25 xx-points by scoring first on the team. Micha Lowe and Chelsey Remington followed a few minutes behind Jenny. Putting a sore foot behind her on the rocky course, Jody Fordham was the 4th woman to finish for us, and rounding out the scoring was Susan Beck, looking relaxed and happy and finishing strong in her first race since Pac Sun as she dropped down to help the open women. Oh, as if Empire wasn't enough training for the weekend, Chelsey Remington chased a cable car up Russian Hill the following day to finish 5th overall woman (39:39, 5.67 miles). Hope those knees are still holding up, Chelsey! Open Men Byline Matt Regan Eight Open Men made the trip up to Windsor on Saturday morning for the Phil Widener Empire Open and acquitted themselves very well despite a tough rocky and uneven course...just ask Tyler Abbott or Tim Wallen who both took hard spills...and some stiff competition from Humbolt and the host club Empire Runners. Paul Wellman led the way in 6th Place (22:53) breaking up a pack of Empire guys, followed by Eric Ollila in 23:23 (10th) and Tim "soon to be a master" Wallen in 24:00 (13th_ and in a time that would have placed him 3rd in the earlier (and much cooler) masters race. Next in for the men in yellow was Cesar Guillen in 24:31 (18th), followed by the final scorer Matt Regan in 24:38 (19th)...thereby assuring himself that he will not finish at the bottom of the PA XC points table for a second consecutive year. Next in was new member Jeff Watson in 25:08 (21st), followed by Abel Eisentraut in 25:59 (25th), Hood to Coast survivor Bill Whetstone in 26:41 (28th) and another new member Adam Lucas in 27:30 (31st)....all adding their names to the PA Cross Country points list. Humboldt easily won the team title with 2 of the first 3 runners and it looks like we were narrowly pipped by a very strong Empire team for second place. See you all this weekend in Golden Gate Park. Old'uns But one week off his sixth place (open) triumph in the national 50K trail championship, Old Man Steinmaus opened up what's shaping up to be a great cross country season with the win in the masters race, in a quick time of 23:47. A week off of Hood to Coast, Tyler Abbott finished 10th in 25:27. Just having started on the comeback trail, Lloyd Stephenson finished in 25:41. After running the first half of the race in the top 10, Ernie Stanton's hamstrings froze up and he limped into a 27:31 (34th place) finish. Also on the comeback trail, Kim Lilot finished just behind Ernie in 27:33 (35th) to close out the scoring. Our final two were two runners new to masters cross country racing, Tom Bernhard in 27:58 (38th) and Samuel Harvell in 28:33 (50th). Don't worry, Tom, this is the rockiest course! HEADLANDS 50K - 08/24/03 TEAM NATIONAL CHAMPIONS! Craig Steinmaus, Cliff Lentz, and Dan Shore brought Hoy's Excelsior its first national championship in several (Bob?) years Saturday at the Headlands National 50K Trail Championship in Marin. OMS caught a bonking Cliff on the very last hill to lead the team, finishing 6th overall in 4:05:04 on the extremely hilly course (6000 ft or so of climbing). Cliff finished next in 4:06:49, with Dan Shore--in his first ultra--three places back in 10th, 4:16:57. The men in yellow beat all of the ultra-heavy local teams plus a top team from Boulder to win the national championship. Chris Phipps again experienced severe stomach problems during the race, but was still able to finish 32d of 176 in 4:54:20. Congratulations gentlemen! Santa Cruz Cross Country - 08/23/03 Open Men Byline World Ollila Welcome to the S.C., bitch! Conditions were perfect for Saturday's cross country extavaganza in Santa Cruz, with cloudless skies, no wind, and warm temps. That and the newly wussified course produced some fast times. Paul Wellman led the rag-tag bunch of misfits that was the H.E. men's team with a 6th place finish, covering the four-mile course in 20 minutes and change (20:59). Not far behind were Eric Ollila in 8th (20:68), Cesar Guillen in 24th (22:50), Parker "Pray I don't score" Kelly in 31st (23:49), Abel Einstraut in 33rd (24:04), Brian Schultz in 49th (25:03), Kim Lilot in 55th (25:34), and Adam Lucas in 65th (26:08). As a team, just assume we won until you hear otherwise. Yay, team! Results came out late--women's report to follow . . . . Hood to Coast - 8/22/03 Extra Virgins Repeat! The Santini Extra Virgins, a team of twelve over-30s with nine club members--Pete IWEHBBAIGWTTS Vicencio, Dan Rhodes, Matt Regan, Ernie Stanton, Andy Chan, Peter Hsia, Pete Nowicki, Bill Whetstone, and Tyler Abbott--won the submaster division Friday-Saturday at Hood to Coast, a 198-mile 36-leg relay from Mt. Hood to Seaside on the Oregon coast. The team finished in a relatively slow 19:33* (*a few minutes lost to a slow freight train) to end up seventh overall once again in the race of 1000 teams. The race was highlighted by the team's closest finish ever. With two legs to go, the EVs were five minutes behind the next team. Fortunately that team's next runner was not feeling any too well, and Tyler put 4:40 on him to bring Dan Rhodes within 20 seconds going into the last leg. Dan quickly dispatched the other team's anchor, passing him in the first mile and eventually beating him across the line by 22 seconds. The sister coed open team, the Santini Popeyes and Olive Oils, after winning the last two years (though some categories were changed after the fact in last year's race), faced its first major logistical problems ever, losing some 13+ minutes when a van got lost, and ended up in third. The team included team members Chris Ashfield, Ryan Gallagher, van captain Jared The Buck Stops At Jen Crave, Jen Major, and last minute savior Chelsey Remington. The team finished in 20:18, 15th place overall. This year's race was marked by strong coed teams, and the Popeyes and Olive Oils had plenty of nearby competition, including two coed masters teams, one with x-c national champ David Olds running against Chris Ashfield (and Pete Vicencio), the other with Eddie Hellebuyck. Congratulations to all runners! Charts to follow . . . . Hook & Ladder 10K - 08/17/03 24 Brunches! Eric Ollila led our annual Hook & Ladder Brunchfest, running 32:37 to finish second to our own Chris Lundstrom. Chris ran 30:56 on the hilly course. Chikara Omine and Cesar Guillen finished 5th and 6th in 34:57 and 35:08, followed by senior winner Don Paul in 35:35 (7th), second master Tyler Abbott (36:18, 9th), a jogging 50K-ready Chris Phipps (37:35, 12th), The Rocket (39:12, 22d), and Mark Ford (40:40, 29th). Our men's team easily won the team prize (5 brunches). On the women's side, Jen Major finished third in 39:53, followed by Micha Lowe (41:34, 5th), Helen Kao (45:17, 10th), Jody Forham (43:43, 13th), and new member Julie Lloyd (45:55, 14th). The women also won the team title and 5 brunches. Plan on another post-Presidio trip to the Cliff House! Running of the Bulls - 08/17/03 Donahue Runs 24:51 with the Bulls Stephen Donahue ran one of his best races to date, 24:51 to finish 3rd in the first annual Farm Team Running of the Bulls in Palo Alto. Congratulations Stephen! Race Against Global Warming 8K - 08/17/03 Congratulations to Matt Regan on his 27:40 second place finish at the Race Against Global Warming 8K Sunday. This earned Matt a $250 Niketown gift certificate! I apologize to anyone I missed in the last two races--haven't seen official results yet. America's Finest City Half-Marathon - 08/17/03 Byline Patti Bershers Patti Bershers, Amy Pearson and some friends from other teams ventured down to San Diego this past weekend for the America's Finest City Half-Marathon. It should really be titled "American's Hottest, Most Humid City on Race Day Half Marathon". Times were off to say the least, with this year's winning woman off last year's time by 4 minutes. Early on when it became apparent that sticking to a goal pace of 6:40 per mile just wasn't going to happen, Patti adjusted to a marathon-pace workout instead for the first 10 miles, and then took it easy on the 2 mile climb to the finish. That was good enough for 40th place among the women, with a 1:32:34 time. Amy took a similar approach, and had an excellent marathon pace workout for 143rd place, 1:46:41. San Diego's great, but perhaps not for racing. We're sticking to the beach for future trips! Alameda Run for the Parks 10K - 08/03/03 Congratulations to Patti Bershers on a 28-second PR at the Alameda Run for the Parks 10K Sunday. Patti led several of our women who ventured to the East Bay. From Patti: "At last, sub-40. 39:51, good enough for 6th place among the women, and a 28 second PR. Also out there despite feeling pretty much like crap after struggling with stomach flu all week was recent new team member Jamie Chomas (42:21, a post-collegiate PR, 9th). Jenny Wong was also out there, still not feeling very good, so she just took it real easy with a 41:30 (7th)." On the men's side, the Cruz brothers, Raymundo and Agustin, ran 33:53 and 35:57 (6th and 15th). Abel Eisentraut in training mode ran an easy 37:59. Tracy Bean Festival 5k - 08/02/03 Congratulations to Eric Ollila on a stunning construction-assisted effort at the Tracy Bean Festival 5k--14:12! http://www.onyourmarkevents.com According to Eric, "Although the course is certified, it had to be altered due to construction. The course we actually ran was only 2.95 miles, turning my 14:12 into a crappy 14:56 [Ed.-I should run so crappy.]." Wharf to Wharf - 07/27/03 Congratulations to Dan Nelson on a strong 30:21 at Wharf to Wharf Sunday, good enough for 11th in one of the most competitive fields in Northern California each year. Parker Kelly (34:28, 90th) and Luis Sanchez (34:32, 93rd) also broke into the prestigious top 100. SF Marathon/Half Marathon/Relay - 07/27/03 The good news is that the women repeated as winners of the SF Chronicle Marathon Relay Sunday. The team of Jen Major, Jenny Wong, Chelsey Remington, and Micha Lowe ran 3:07:56 (slowed down due to last minute sicknesses), good enough for first women's team and 4th team overall. The other good news is that our second women's team--Christine Jegan graciously and fortuitously filling in for a last-minute injured Whitney Stephenson, new members Julie Lloyd and Michelle Fernandez, and Nicole Britvan--ran 3:21:18 for second place women's team. The men, for the SIXTH straight year, were the top male team that could drive. Though beaten by a couple of minutes by a team of--ouch--16-17 year olds, the men held their heads high by somehow eliminating themselves from the results. The team of P‡©‰??C?�egÕ marathoner, who graciously slowed down during the last 10K to allow our anchor to pass him. BTW, I apologize for any flakiness in my email--I've been having problems all day.
In the marathon, club friend Vitas Ezerskis ran a stellar on that course 2:35:56 at age 42 for second place, but a minute behind the winner; Chikara Omine ran 2:51:36 for 9th; and Chris Phipps trained a 2:54:59.998 for 11th.
In the Halves, Christine Brighton was 2d woman and 10th overall in the Second Half Marathon in 1:23:16; Greg Menegat ran 1:14:16 for 4th in the First Half; and Don Paul finished seventh overall in the Second Half in a strong 1:17:29. O'ROURKE DOES IT AGAIN! - 07/19/03 Tim O'Rourke made yet another splash in the record books Saturday, setting his third American Record in under nine months. Tim ran one hundred twenty-five yes one hundred twenty-five laps around the College of San Mateo track to break the 45-49 year old record in the track 50K by some 5 1/2 minutes. Tim ran 3:18:53 (give or take a second) at an amazingly constant pace. His goal was 6:20 per 1600 m. At the marathon mark (2:47 something) he was within five seconds of this pace, and to that point I believe every single lap was within 2-3 seconds of this. The timers were setting the clocks by his splits. In the end he lost less than a minute to that pace, a remarkable effort. Next up: 100 miles on the track! (I hope I'm kidding.) And say, Craig, aren't you going to be 45 before too long? Only 11.42 years to go, Phipps. Fleet Feet Davis Mile - 07/13/03 The mile was highlighted by Jim Gorman's 50+ victory and by two people breaking their own club road mile records, both set one year ago: Kathryn Krieger (open women) in 4:59 and Kim Fanady (masters women) in 5:43. In the PA standings, Shelly Pierson maintained a strong hold on the yellow jersey among the open women, Jim Gorman increased his lead in the senior men's grand prix, and Kim Fanady brought herself up from 35 to 23 points behind the leader in the master women's grand prix, solidifying her hold on second in the process. In addition, Jim and Kim's performances put them atop the club master/senior men and master/senior women performances of the year standings, respectively. And finally, the Dans got several ticks closer to the Chrisses in the ATXPFND (All-Time X-Point First Name Derby). Where have you gone, Lundstrom & Ashfield? Open Women Byline Christine Brighton The Brave, the proud, the few us of us who ventured to Davis to Run the Fleet Feet Mile on Saturday enjoyed a sunny, warm day. Well, saying it was warm may be saying it mildly. Everyone had solid runs in an attempt to knock the Umpaloompas (i.e. the Impalas) off the top rung in a PA Race. Winning the blue ribbon for bravery, Lee D'Alessandro entered the race at the last minute (with a bad hamstring and back problems) to give us a scoring five and surprised herself by running 6:03. Leading the way for Hoy's (or the soon to be "Place your name here track club") was Katherine Kriegmeister with a mile P.R. of 4:59 which placed her fourth in a very competitive race, with three Farm Teamers ahead of her. Coming in second in a time of 5:23 (17th overall) was Christine Brighton after a week of long marathon training. Shelly (I am moving to my new home this month) Pierson ran a strong 5:27 (21st). And Alexandra Bigelow ran 5:39 to win the women's B heat by five seconds. Just think what she could have done if she ran in the A race! Next PA race is the Jamba Juice 5K on September 21st, where hopefully there will be Jamba Juices all around. Masters Women Byline Susan Beck Kim Fanady and Whitney Stephenson had great PR races on Sunday, with Kim blazing to fourth place in 5:43, three seconds better than last year. Whitney ran a terrific 6:17, also faster than last year. Susan Beck ran very slowly. Open Men NOT-SO-FLEET FEET DAVIS MILE Byline Dan Shore This year's annual heat feet mile moved from the State Capitol to the much cooler confines of Davis, CA. With temperatures a near-frigid 95 and just eight 90-degree turns, the day was set for blistering mile times. Yet surprisingly enough the Men's Open team didn't fare too well. Dan Nelson once again led the team and helped boost "the Dans" by posting a somewhat disappointing (for him) 4:25 to take 10th overall. [*Note: all of the official times were rounded up to the nearest second.] Eric Ollila, having recently run Grandma's Marathon, blew by me at 600m to finish in 4:30 and 14th overall among Open Men (he really did break 4:30 though). Robin Hart showed some serious speed by running 4:35 to finish second in the B race and 18th overall. Yet again, I (Dan Shore) posted my annual 4:35 by running stunningly consistent positive splits (63, 2:10, ...oy!) and eventually dropping the hammer for 19th overall. Paul Wellman, another recent marathoner, rounded out the scoring team with a 4:41 27th-place finish (thanks for taking one for the team Paul!). Jesse McAlman was our sixth man, venturing away from his track home to finish 4:47 in 31st place. Thanks to everyone for showing up! Up front, Jim Sorenson put 11 seconds on the field to run 4:07.??, just missing the course record of 4:06.??. Both Adidas and WVTC had strong teams, so I'm guessing we snuck in for third (although I really have no clue because there are no team affiliations in the results and one never knows who shows up for this race). No more racing until the start of the XC season with Santa Cruz on August 23 (or Hood to Coast or Headlands 50K). Anyone wanna take the lead on organizing the Open Men for the cross-country season? The next road race is Jamba Juice 5K on September 14. Old'uns Once again, let's start with the good news (once again, seniors). The seniors won easily. Jim Gorman won in 4:57 by a hair over the ageless Don Porteus. Don Paul finished fourth in 5:03, with Tom Bernhard continuing his comeback in 5:11 (6th), Kevin Grady 10th in 5:21, Bob Darling 18th in 5:33, Wayne Plymale 24th in 6:00, and Tom Bennett 30th in 6:45. Now the other news (once again, masters). The bright side is that Jesus Garcia showed that his comeback from injury is proceeding well with a strong 4:57 (14th master). Second master on the team and 25th overall was Tyler Abbott in 5:10 (last year our FIFTH master was right at 5:00). After Tyler came Andy Sobozinsky (5:21, 35th), Michael Gama (5:27, 38th), Lloyd Stephenson continuing his Run Once Every Three Weeks While Injured training regimen (5:28, 39th--but he won the Cane division), and Greg King (5:31, 41st). I was reluctant to do the math, but our top 5 seniors beat our top 5 masters by 18 seconds. Ouch! Double Ouch! Fortunately there's a little known PA rule by which you can actually switch whole age division teams, so our seniors will all be scoring as masters and vice versa. Now there's over two months before the next road race--let's hope the masters can regroup by Jamba! Deep thanks to everyone who responded to my plea last week and made the 3-4 hour drive for five minutes of running. Double Dipsea - 06/28/03 LENTZ FASTEST AT DOUBLE DIPSEA Cliff Lentz ran a very tough 1:43 in the heat Saturday at Double Dipsea. This was the fastest time of the day, just besting surprise entrant Richie Boulet's first known foray into the Dipsea world (could be fun next June!). Cliff matched his Dipsea third place finish in the handicapped race. This was three minutes off Cliff's Double PR, but the heat easily accounted for that differential. Unfortunately I haven't seen official results, but I believe Dan Rhodes was third fastest, and Craig Steinmaus was up there among 40-44 year olds. Chris Phipps was approximately 15th overall in around 1:54, Abel Eisentraut around 18th in 1:58, and Tyler Abbott around 20th in about 2:03:42.372 (less 4 minute handicap). I'll try to get full results next week. Phipps also pointed me to a Marin IJ article on the Double Dipsea: http://www.marinij.com/Stories/0,1413,234%257E24414%257E1485071,00.html?search=filter I still haven't seen full results, but the article included times for the top 25. Among the Excelsior-Hoys or Ex-Hoys set (credit to Lloyd I believe for new team name), Cliff Lentz was 3rd in 1:43:48, 0 handicap; Chikara Omine was 9th in 1:52:04, 0 hc; Dan Rhodes 12th, 1:53:55/0; Chris Phipps 14th, 1:54:54/0; Craig Steinmaus 16th/2d master, 1:59:10/4; Abel Eisentraut 20th, 1:58:31/0; and Tyler Abbott 21st/5th master, 2:03:42/4. Finally, Jenny Wong shares her pictures from the Double: http://www.ofoto.com/I.jsp?m=67182028103.81882614903&n=1993500577 Missed Results Jenny Wong was fastest woman at Woodminster a couple weeks ago, finishing 11th in the handicapped race. Cliff Lentz was second fastest man, third overall. Along with Dipsea and Double Dipsea, this give Cliff the Handicapped Trail Race Triple Bronze Crown! Stephen Donahue reminded me that Eric Ollila ran 2:37 on an unusually hot day at Grandma's Marathon last weekend. Shriners 8K - 06/21/03 Club Record for Nelson; Fanady Breaks Own Club Record Dan Nelson ran a club record 24:13, just seconds under the old mark of 24:17 set by Francisjohn Gailson, and Kim Fanady ran 32:33 to break her own masters women's record of 33:20, to highlight another fun morning in Sacramento at the Shriner's 8K Saturday. Thanks to Dan Mancini for the record update. Women Byline Shelly Pierson A light breeze and slightly overcast skies made it a great day for the Shriner's 8k and for the Hoy's-Excelsior women. Leading the pack for the open women was Shelly Pierson finishing 6th in 29:47 running 30 seconds faster than last year and closely followed by teammate Christine Brighton who was 7th woman in 29:49. Next was rookie member and HEEB (Hoy's Excelsior East Bay) Allie Bigelow who respectively out-kicked veteran and running legend Diana Fitzpatrick for 25th place in a time of 31:50..........boy, she can kick!! Next was Lee D'Alessandro 31st in 32:06, just seconds off her PR, Micha Lowe 34th in 32:13, Chelsey Remington 45th in 33:20 and Amy Pearson 61st in 35:20. Our Master ladies also faired very well with Kim Fanady leading and finishing 37th woman overall and 4th in her age group (32:33), Whitney Stephenson 74th overall and 11th in her age group (37:47) and Barbara Hancock 75th overall and 7th in her age group (37:57). SHRINER'S 8K - Open Men This weekend's Shriner's 8K race was not a highpoint of the Open Men's year. Falling very early in the morning at the end of a hard racing season, it proved difficult to attract most of our racers. Luckily, five open stalwarts showed up to eke out a full team. While we most likely didn't earn money, we did at least field a team. Hopefully, we can attract a few more members for the mile in Davis on July 13!! Taking it out hard from the gun to lead the Open Men, Dan Nelson finished in 24:13 to take 5th place overall. Following Dan was Dan (Shore) missing a PR by just 4 seconds, finishing 25:08 for 11th overall. [NOTE: For those keeping track, the Dans made a huge dent in the Chris' x-point lead!] Pete Vincencio took third for the Open Men, finishing 26:21 (24th place) and showing that his return to top form is coming along nicely. Following Pete, Robin Hart ran a strong 26:42, good for 29th overall. Brian Schultz rounded out the Open Team with a 30:01, 99th place finish. Thanks to everyone for showing up! See you in Davis! Old'uns "Where goeth Lloyd, there go the masters." The age-old saying proved its wisdom Saturday, as an injured Lloyd Stephenson ran several minutes slower than his usual top Shriner's performance. The masters were led by Tim O'Rourke in 27:40 (41st overall, 14th master, 1st 45-49). Tyler Abbott finished second on the team, his top masters team finish of the year, in 28:32 (59th overall, 20th master), followed by Jesus Garcia continuing his comeback in 29:21 (76th overall, 33rd master). Lloyd, literally whose only workout over the past six weeks has been a 5000-10,000 ladder, 1x5000 1x10,000 with three weeks rest, ran 32:39, and Greg King rounded out the team in 35:07. Greg only confirmed he could make it at the track meet Friday night, and I only heard from Jesus that he could make at 10:00 on my drive home from the track meet Friday! The seniors again dominated and should easily have won, with Don Paul finishing second in 27:32 to non-PA resident Doug Bell, Jim Gorman third in 28:05, Tom Bernhard 5th in 29:20, and Allan Stanbridge rounding out the team in 31:40 (16th senior). US National Track & Field Championships - 06/26/03 KRIEGER RUNS NATIONALS For the first time in decades, a club member toed the line in a national championship track race. Kathryn Krieger ran the women's 10,000 at USATF National Championships this past Thursday night, finishing 12th of 13 runners in her second-fastest time ever (34:22.68). After weeks of buildup and excitement, KK started the race a shade on the quick side, running her first mile in 5:19.09. She then settled into her planned pace of 5:20-25 per mile for the next two miles, which would hopefully lead to her goal of sub-33:30. Unfortunately, it wasn't Kathryn's night. She was almost immediately stuck leading a pack with two other collegiate runners drafting but never moving to the front. At approximately 3 miles, one of the collegians broke out of the pack and made a charge. KK was unable to respond. Feeling sluggish and stuck in no-woman's land, she slowed over the second half of the race with miles of 5:31.37, 5:42.57, and 5:38.89 to finish in 34:22, not her goal but her second-fastest 10K ever. Although disappointed in her time, KK ran as hard and fast as she could and took comfort in the fact that she didn't leave anything in the tank at the end. Her leg soreness the following morning also indicated that she had run as hard as possible. While she didn't run as well as expected, Kathryn was thrilled to have participated in a national event, especially under the team name. Meeting and getting to run with several national-class runners was a high point and the experience will certainly serve her well in many larger events to come. Above all else, she was immensely grateful for the cheers and support of team members and others throughout the race. [By my count, we had 27 team members out there, plus assorted friends, fellow competitors, etc. -Ed.] By far, she had the loudest cheering section out there. Thanks to everyone for their e-mails, phone calls, and cheers! Dipsea - 06/08/03 Byline Phippsea Lentz 3rd, Hersh Fastest, 7 Black Shirts! In the 93rd Annual Dipsea race this past Sunday, Hoy's Excelsior put together its best Dipsea team ever, but still came up just a bit short in the effort to unseat the dominant Tamalpa Runners, winners of the team trophy for the last 27 years in a row. The final score was 27-39 (XC scoring). In the process, the Hoy's team earned a team record 7 black shirt awards (awarded to top 35 finishers, previous team record was 3) and posted the 5 fastest times of the day and 8 of the 9 fastest times! The race was dominated by 61 year old Tamalpan Melody-Anne Schultz, who ran a time of 1:03:36. Subtracting her 21 minute handicap, she had an adjusted time of 42:36 to win the race by 5:33 over fellow Tamalpan Shirley Matson. Leading the way for Hoy's Excelsior was Cliff Lentz. Cliff, who already has every black shirt from 6-10, cracked the top 5 for the first time finishing 3rd with an actual time of 50:27 in his first year with a 2 minute handicap. Adam ($350 entry!) Hersh was next in for the team, winning the battle for fastest time with a blazing last 400M to finish 5th in 50:12 outlasting Chris Phipps who was 6th (2d fastest) in 50:16 (both with 1 min hc). Stephen Donahue passed more people than anyone and was the first scratch (no hc) runner finishing 10th with a time of 50:23 (3rd fastest). Stephen was the first top 10 finish for a scratch runner in at least 8 years. Our top four runners were within 15 seconds of each other in actual time! Hans (new papa) Gouwens completed the scoring running 53:50 (3 min hc) for 15th. Jim Sweeney earned his first black shirt running a PR 51:54 (scratch) to finish 24th, and Tim O'Rourke also finished in black running 56:15 (4 min hc) for 30th. Just out of the black shirts (but still earning their finishing place as next year's bib number), were Dan Rhodes (39th, 54:06, 1 hc), Pete Vicencio (40th, 54:21, 1 hc), Tyler Abbott (41st, 56:26, 3 hc), Matt Regan (Heinz 57th, 55:52, 1 hc), and Bernard Bassil (70th, 55:41, scratch). Also running for the team were Todd Greenhalgh (169th, 1:02:19, 2 hc), Manny Berston (172d, 1:02:21, 2 hc), David Moulton (205th, 1:02:20, 1 hc), Randy Guerrero (318th, 1:06:19, 2 hc), Marlin Gilbert (624th--runner's section, 1:08:19, 3 hc), Michael Gama (499th, 1:14:05, 3 min), and Jim Misener (505th,1:15:26, 3 hc). Black shirt notes: Cliff and Chris extended their black shirt streaks to 5 years to join 5 others with current streaks of at least 5 years. Tamalpan Greg Nacco had his record 10 year streak snapped this year when he injured his back last week, but still made a valiant effort to finish 43rd. The longest current streak now belongs to Russ Kiernan (8th) and Bruce Mace (31st), who have both won shirts for the last 9 Dipseas. PA Track & Field Championships - 06/07-06/08/03 [Rocket] Congratulations to Jesse McAlman on his 4:17.5/5th place finish in the 1500 & his 2:04.5/4th place finish in the 800 at the PAUSATF track championship at Sacramento City College! Lake Chabot Half Marathon - 06/01/03 Congratulations to Jenny Wong on her win in the Lake Chabot Half Marathon! Statuto 8K - 06/01/03 Congratulations to Matt Regan (27:20) and Andy Chan on their 1-2 finish at the Statuto 8K over the weekend. Malinda Walker was 4th woman. Pacific Sun 10K - 05/26/03 After slumming around 5:50 for the first couple of miles, Kathryn Krieger notched it down to 5:35 or so and ran by the leading women, winning the race by 21 seconds! Can't wait for Nationals! On the men's side, Dan Nelson turned the tables on the Transports who had edged him out at the 5Ks, finishing 3rd in 30:57. And Don Paul ran 35:29 for the senior win. Details below . . . Women Byline Kathryn Krieger Despite warm temperatures and a good dose of allergens, the women of Hoy's-Excelsior (open division) ran their hearts out to what looks like a 3rd place team finish. Leading the group was Kathryn "as a matter of fact, I did fall just minutes into my warm-up" Krieger finishing first in 35:16. Next up was Shelly Pierson running a full 1:45 faster than last year's time. This year's time of 37:36 put Shelly in 9th place. Christine Brighton ran a strong 38:42 to crack the top 15 (yes, she was 15th). Micha Lowe, sporting the increasingly popular RLX running bra, ran to a 34th place finish in 40:58. Chelsey Remington came out in full stride, running an excellent 43:23 to round out the scoring 5 this week. Next up was Christine "comeback trail" Wang in 44:12. And Amy "no relation to Shelly" Pearson clocked a fine 44:49 in bringing the H-E girls home. Thanks to all who came out and supported the team. We'll see you next at Shriners! Master's Women Byline Susan Beck The Hoys Masters Women should hold on to their second-place position after Monday's race. Kim Fanady had another great performance, finishing fourth PA masters woman in 41:07. She'll likely maintain her second-place position in the short grand prix standings. Jody Heyman ran a solid 43:39 (15th masters woman), and Susan Beck ran 46:21. New member Barbara Hancock (thanks to Shelley) ran a PR of 48:25, with her adorable teenage son on hand to watch. And Whitney Stevenson finished close behind in 48:33. Susan Beck wrote this article with the help of several unnamed stringers. Open Men: Dans lead the way Byline Chris Phipps Dan Nelson (3rd ! in 30:57) and Dan Shore (10th in 31:35--another PR!) both had strong races at the Pacific Sun 10K to lead the Hoy's Excelsior team to our fastest 10K team time ever (well, at least in the last 8 years). Eric Ollila (aka World Class Party Bush) was |