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Note: All race results are posted in reverse chronological order of the race dates, not in the order of receipt. Therefore, some newly arrived information may be inserted in the middle of the page. Furthermore, additional comments and notes are inserted frequently. So browse carefully!

If you know of any unreported race results, please send e-mail.


HARVEST FESTIVAL 5K, Denville, NJ (September 27, 2000)

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
4 2 Peter Allen 40 16:20 5:15

FRED LEBOW CROSS-COUNTRY 5K, Van Cortlandt Park, NYC (September 24, 2000)

MEN, 2nd place open team

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
2 1 Toby Tanser 32 16:10 5:12
5 2 John Scherrer 24 17:03 5:30
9 3 John Kenney 44 17:32 5:39
12 1 Alston Brown 51 17:52 5:45
42 17 Larry King 39 20:29 6:36
78 24 Ray Prybylski 29 22:19 7:11
174 66 Michael Rosenthal 37 26:25 8:31

WOMEN

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
2 1 Kellie Quinones 39 21:21 6:53

RACE TO DELIVER (4 MILES), Central Park, NYC (September 24, 2000)

Toby Tanser, 20:06, 2nd overall

Note:  Toby did the daily double --- the Race to Deliver at 10am in Central Park, then the Fred Lebow XC 5K at 12 noon in Van Cortlandt Park.  This technical feat is made complicated by the fact that it was necessary to get off the #1 train to take a shuttlebus between 96th Street and 137th Street due to subway construction.  Combined with last week's results, this meant he had four second-place finishes in two weekends.  The monotony was interrupted by a first-place finish during the week on Wednesday.


RUNNERS CROSS COUNTRY (Half Marathon), Yuzawa, Japan (September 24, 2000)

Charles Allard wrote: "So I entered my first race in over six months. And I learned not to overestimate the power of a cross-country course. I entered the Runners Cross Country in Yuzawa (1/2 marathon distance). Yuzawa being famous for the Nobel prize winning novel, Snow Country, which was written and set there. Anyway, the course itself was run in light rain basically up a ski slope to the top of a mountain, back down the mountain to the valley, along the valley's river then back up to the ski lift.  My arms hurt, my shoulder blades hurt, muscles on the sides on my legs hurt, and I didn't even win! The winning time was 1:21:17 followed by 1:21:21 and 1:22:29. I struggled in at 1:32:20. I was too tired to find my placing among the 250 or so runners but it was around 20th. My excuse? No training, tough work schedule and two back to back nights of drinking to 3 in the morning. Plus I was the only one wearing a Central Park Track Club jersey! Ahh, the loneliness!"


LIBERTY SHORE HALF MARATHON, Jersey City, NJ (September 24, 2000)

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
20 1 Peter Allen 40 1:15:48 5:47

FIFTH AVENUE MILE, New York City, NYC (September 23, 2000)

PHOTO ALBUM

OPEN MEN
Isaya Okwiya
, 4:26, 2nd place
John Scherrer
, 4:30, 8th place
Stephen Sipe, 4:43, 15th place
Doug Bell, 4:48, 32nd place
Jeff Kisseloff, 5:19, 50th place
Yves-Marc Courtines, 5:20 (PR), 53rd place
Karel Matousek*, 6:03, 180th place

OPEN WOMEN
Lauren Eckhart
, 5:30 (PR), 5th place
Kim Mannen
, 5:41, 7th place
Shelley Farmer
, 5:52, 15th place (after doing that 20 mile marathon training run!!!)
Janice Brown, 6:13, 24th place

MASTERS MEN
Alston Brown
, 4:37.0, 3rd place overall, 1st M50-59
Tom Hartshorne, 4:45.1, 8th place
Craig Plummer, 4:59.4, 13th place

MASTERS WOMEN
Sue Krogstad-Hill
, 5:47.7, 4th place
Mary Rosado
, 6:14.0, 9th place

GEORGE SHEEHAN MILE (60-69)
Sid Howard, 5:06.9, 2nd place
Jim Aneshansely, 5:36.5, 5th place
Carol Tyler, 6:54.2, 3rd place

INVITATIONAL MILE - WOMEN
Devon Sargent, 5:24.6, 5th place

INVITATIONAL MILE - MEN
Jonathan Pillow, 4:19.4, 6th place

Jeff Kisseloff writes: "I'm not blaming my miserable outing today on this, but two weeks ago, an NYRRC rep assured on this site that the club is doing everything in its power to make the running experience the best possible for race participants. So can someone tell me why the NYRRC didn't see fit to post quarter split clocks along the Fifth Avenue Mile course? We were left with a clock on back of a truck (which, alas, due to my decrepitude was to far away for me to see less than 400 yards into the race), and a half split. That's ridiculous for a mile race."


AHA WALL STREET RUN (3.3 Miles), Wall Street, NYC (September 20, 2000)

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Official 
Time
Min/Mile
1 1 Toby Tanser 32 15:41 4:45
15 6 Dave Howard 28 17:44 5:22
24 7 Olivier Baillet 29 18:30 5:36
25 11 John Scherrer 24 17:18 5:34
27 14 Graeme Reid 39 18:35 5:37
73 37 Tim Grotenhuis 30 20:08 6:06
76 40 Larry King 39 20:13 6:07

NORTH AMERICAN TRIATHLON SERIES, Playland Park, Rye, NY (September 17, 2000)

Stuart Calderwood & Stacy Creamer     Josh Friedman

Josh Friedman, 1:46:45, 32nd overall male, 5th M25-29, 22:58 swim, 39:58 bike, 42:01 run
Stuart Calderwood, 1:51:10, 53rd overall male, 8th M40-44, 26:50 swim, 45:03 bike, 36:22 run
Lauren Eckhart, 1:54:39, 8th overall female, 1st F30-34, 25:06 swim, 45:43 bike, 41:37 run
Stacy Creamer, 1:55:26, 11th overall female, 1st Masters Women (AGAIN!!), 24:46 swim, 47:29 bike, 41:00 run


ODYSSEY TRIPLE IRONMAN TRIATHLON, Colonial Beach, Virginia (September 15-17, 2000)

PHOTO ALBUM

Ross Galitsky, 42 hours 27 minutes, 3rd place overall

Technical note:  In case you don't know, the triple ironman triathlon consists of 7.2 miles of swimming, 336 miles of biking and 78.6 miles of running.  Ross finished about 10 hours ahead of his predicted time!


MAC DEVELOPMENT MEET #1 (4K CROSS COUNTRY), Van Cortlandt, NYC (September 17, 2000)

Brian Barry, 18:55, 41st place


YONKERS HALF MARATHON, Yonkers, NY (September 17, 2000)

Toby Tanser, 1:13:13, 2nd place overall
Craig Plummer, 1:31:23, 31st place overall
Terri Sonenclar, 1:35:02, 5th place overall female, 1st masters

RACE REPORT:  According to Toby, this famously hilly course "should come with a Surgeon General's health warning.  We ran the first 8 miles at an average of 6 minute miling (the first 2 miles were 6:30's), then I pushed to get rid of 2 heel-clipping Mexican runners, and then Fouzi Aloui pushed even harder at 10 and got rid of me - easily."

Technical note:  This is a weekend double for Toby: 2nd place in the 5K yesterday and 2nd place here today.


PHILADELPHIA DISTANCE RUN, Philadelphia, PA (September 17, 2000)

PHOTO ALBUM

MEN

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Official 
Time
Split
Time
59 7 Rob Zand 30 1:12:58 (PR) 37:07
60 8 Richie Borrero 30 1:13:01 (PR) 36:44
71 13 Craig Chilton 32 1:14:17 (PR) 37:11
105 20 Hank Berkowitz 38 1:17:56 38:37
120 23 Gordon Streeter 32 1:18:32 39:29
127 26 Graeme Reid 39 1:19:02 (PR) 39:29
240 41 James Siegel 34 1:23:30 41:50
243 21 Rick Shaver 48 1:23:40 41:39
395 78 Alex Peterhansl 30 1:27:46 43:55
473 39 David Birchfield 24 1:29:25 44:25
904 172 Bola Awofeso 37 1:35:23 50:28

WOMEN, 5th place open team

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Official 
Time
Split
Time
43 12 Stephanie Gould 34 1:25:21 (PR) 43:24
62 10 Margaret Angell 23 1:27:38 43:29
103 27 Audrey Kingsley 31 1:32:13 45:31
191 29 Sarah Gross 43 1:36:19 50:27
572 39 Mindy Solkin 45 1:49:06 52:24
625 123 Maureen Elmaleh 37 1:50:06 57:40

First-place open mixed team:  Gordon Streeter, Graeme Reid, Rick Shaver, Alex Peterhansl, Mindy Solkin 


DEWEY BEACH SPRINT TRIATHLON, Dewey Beach, Delaware (September 16, 2000)

Randy Ehrlich, 1:22:53, 31st overall, 7th M30-34, 17:31 swim (150th place), 45:06 bike (40th place), 20:16 run (5th place)


THE LITTLE RED HOUSE 7.8 MILE SWIM, New York City, NY (September 16, 2000)

Scott Willett, 1:26:52, 1st overall

Technical note:  This is a 7.8 mile swim from the Little Red Lighthouse at the George Washington Bridge down the Hudson River and with the current to Chelsea Piers, Pier 62 at 23rd Street in Hudson River Park.  The race is 'tide-assisted' which explained why it took Scott 19:30 to swim one mile in the Park to Park race on August 20 but only 1:26:52 to do 7.8 miles today.


MARCUS O'SULLIVAN 5K, Central Park, NYC (September 16, 2000)

Toby Janser (yes, that's how it was spelt), 15:52 (5:07 min/mile), 2nd overall (behind --- you guessed it --- Marcus O'Sullivan!)
Frank Schneiger
, 22:18 (7:11 min/mile), 18th overall, 1st M50-59


GREAT COW HARBOR 10K RUN, Northport, LI (September 16, 2000)

Craig Plummer, 39:48 (6:25 min/mile), 141th place, 20th age group
Arthur Cooke, 41:12 (6:38 min/mile), 193rd place, 34th age group
Kim Mannen, 43:12 (6:58 min/mile), 331st place, 14th age group


16th ANNUAL NEW YORK CITY BIATHLON, Central Park, NY (September 10, 2000)

John Megaw, 1:28:56, 24th overall, 1st M45-49
Laura Miller, 1:36:41, 3rd overall female
Margaret Nolan, 1:49:46, 15th overall female, 4th F40-44


SURVIVAL OF THE SHAWANGUNKS, Ulster County, NY (September 10, 2000)

PHOTO ALBUM

Scott Willett, 6th overall, 2nd M35-39, 4:34:44
Ramon Bermo, 16th overall, 5th M30-34, 4:52:30 (note: 1 flat tire)
Stefani Jackenthal, 21st overall, 4th female, 1st F30-34, 4:54:52
Julie Denney, 24th overall, 5th female, 2nd F30-34, 4:58:30
Olivier Baillet, 32nd overall, 4th M25-29, 5:09:08 (note: 1 flat tire and 1 crash)


PERIVALE 5 MILE, West London, United Kingdom (September 10, 2000)

Paul Stuart-Smith, 27:27, 3rd place overall

Technical note:  Weather was hot and humid (believe it or not!)


MIGHTY HAMPTONS, East Hampton, Long Island (September 10, 2000)

Michael Trunkes, 2:09:04.2, 9th overall, 1st M35-39, 22:34 swim (27th place), 1:46 transition, 1:03:16 bike (13th place), 1:03 transition, 40:23 run (12th place)


HARRY MURPHY XC 5K, Van Cortlandt Park, NYC (September 10, 2000)

PHOTO ALBUM

MEN, 2nd place open team, 1st place masters team

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Official 
Time
Min/Mile
1 1 Toby Tanser 32 15:53 5:07
9 6 Jonathan Pillow 25 16:42 5:23
11 5 Erik Goetze 32 16:44 5:23
25 11 John Scherrer 24 17:18 5:34
26 12 Craig Chilton 32 17:19 5:35
34 15 Isaya Okwiya 30 17:35 5:40
35 5 John Kenney 44 17:35 5:40
36 16 Rob Zand 30 17:37 5:40
38 1 Alston Brown 51 17:45 5:43
48 8 Stuart Calderwood 42 18:17 5:53
57 26 Eric Aldrich 30 18:32 5:58
76 14 Victor Osayi 43 18:58 6:07
131 14 Jeff Kisseloff 45 20:55 6:44
141 57 Alex Peterhansl 30 21:20 6:52
150 61 Arthur Cooke 36 21:36 6:58
153 19 Joey Gonzalez 45 21:41 7:07
162 33 David Birchfield 24 22:06 7:07
170 170 Roger Liberman 40 22:27 7:14
182 27 Brian Barry 43 22:55 7:23
186 37 Ray Prybylski 29 23:02 7:25

WOMEN, 4th place open team

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Official 
Time
Min/Mile
9 5 Stephanie Gould 34 20:15 6:31
10 3 Stacy Creamer 40 20:20 6:33
17 6 Margaret Angell 23 20:55 6:44
23 12 Audrey Kingsley 31 22:04 7:07
37 11 Janice Brown 23 23:29 7:34

BROADWAY ON BROADWAY, New York City, NYC (September 10, 2000)

MEN

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
104 14 Blair Boyer* 41 16:54 6:45
111 7 Gerard McCarthy 50 16:58 6:47
288 129 Michael Rosenthal 37 19:21 7:44

Blair Boyer said, "I can't believe that I am the team leader."

WOMEN

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
17 3 Diane Lebowitz 41 17:48 7:07
28 1 Sylvie Kimché 53 18:17 7:18

USAT NATIONAL AGE GROUP CHAMPIONSHIPS, St Joseph, Missouri (September 9, 2000)

Shelley Farmer, swim 23:40 (17th division), 1:56 transition, bike 1:18:01 (12th division), 0:50 transition, run 43:27 (7th division), total time 2:27:53 (7th F30-34)

Bob Summers, swim 26:24 (44th division), 2:12 transition, bike 1:18:34 (40th division), 1:14 transition, run 49:29 (46th division), total time 2:37:41 (44th M30-34)

Note:  The first six finishers in each division qualify to go to the 2001 World Championships.  Shelley was 7th.  Ugh!  But she will get another chance next June in Lake Placid, where another six slots will be allocated. 


HARLEM RENAISSANCE 5 MILER, Harlem, NYC (September 9, 2000)

The CPTC Women's team of Sarah Gross, Eve Kaplan, Irene Jackson-Schon, Sandra Sibelli, and Caryl Baron won the Harlem Renaissance 5-miler on Saturday 9/9. First place age group awards went to Sarah, Eve, Irene and Sid Howard.  Sarah was 4th overall and Eve was 7th overall after doing the full Thursday workout, but the team would not have won without Sandra jumping in at the last minute after completing 18 miles of her long run.


MIRACLE MILES RUN 15K, Orlando, FL (September 4, 2000)

J.R. Mojica, 1:10:34 (7:34 min/mile), 101st overall, 7th age group


NEW HAVEN 20K ROAD RACE, New Haven, CT (September 4, 2000)

Alan Ruben, 1:10:42 (5:42 min/mile), 39th overall, 3rd age group
Shula Sarner, 1:30:59 (7:20 min/mile), 321st overall, 23rd age group


GREAT BONAC 10K FOOT RACE, East Hampton, Long Island (September 4, 2000)

Brian Barry, 46:08, 87th place

Brian Barry wrote:  "I did that killer middle-distance workout on Thursday.   I think I left it all there.  Is that a good excuse?  Also there were some fireworks at the race, when some guy named Kevin Barry, who is the coach of East Hampton, was mouthing off about our club president chickening out and not showing.  But I took care of him and made sure that he didn't finish first which he didn.t.  He won't be dissing our Prez again."


LABOR DAY 5K RUN, South Plainfield, NJ (September 4, 2000)

Sid Howard, 18:53 (6:05 min/mile), 24th overall, 1st M60+


JOHN DALY SR OCEAN MILE SWIM, Long Beach, NY (September 4, 2000)

Shelley Farmer, 27:53, 19th overall, 6th female, 2nd female 30-34
Bob Summers, 32:08, 39th overall


HENRY ISOLA CROSS COUNTRY (4 MILES), Van Cortlandt Park, NYC (September 3, 2000)

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
1 1 Toby Tanser 32 20:48 5:12
104 1 Guenter Erich 67 32:06 8:01

Race report from Jeff Kisseloff:

I tend to avoid NYRRC races because I am fed up with the lousy routes in Central Park and the general rotten treatment that runners receive at the hands of the club (*), but today's cross country race took the cake.  Someone could have died out there, and if so, NYRRC and MAC should be held criminally responsible.

From what I understand, the NYRRC designated today's Henry Isola cross-country race as one of its scoring races.  So if you ran this race, it counts as one of nine races that will guarantee entry into the next year's New York City Marathon.  As a result, there were many runners showing up in Van Cortlandt Park today so they can run in the marathon next year, and the people who do the registration for the race, which normally draws 150 or so people, were suddenly faced with a crush of hundreds of runners, and they simply couldn't handle it. 

So here's what happened.  At 10:30am or so, when it was already incredibly hot and humid, they told us, "Oh, we have too many applicants.  So the women are going off at 11:30am, but and men will have to wait until 12 noon."  So, that was another hour and a half in the sun.  Of course, they had one igloo barrel for everybody.  At 11:30am or so the women went off, and they sent the men to the line before noon, where we had to wait around for more than 40 minutes in the sun with the awful heat and humidity and with no water available. 

Of course, there were no apologies or explanations.  Now, of course there are never any water stops at Van Cortlandt Park, but they also do not usually send us off after 45 minutes in the sun, no water, and twice up the aptly named Cemetery Hill yet.  (Expletive), they should have called it the Bataan Memorial Cross Country Race!  It was insane.  People really could have died out there, and when I said something to one of the race officials, he couldn't have given a damn.  

But I put the blame on the New York Road Runners Club, which I guess isn't content to foul up its own races, but must find others to destroy. The XC tradition up at Van Cortlandt has been a very special one.  It draws the cross country fans, who are often track runners never found at road races.  These cross-countries races are intimate, the registration is easy (just walk up and put down $3), and the races go off on time.  I guess that this displeases the New York Road Runners Club, so they set out to draw more people to the race while ignoring to provide the additional race management resources.  It is time that the New York Road Runners Club realizes that the whole world doesn't revolve around the damned marathon. If they think so, they're wrong and today they could have been dead wrong.

(*)  Although Jeff does not elaborate, it is a club myth that the New York Road Runners Club manages to foul up his race information one way or the other all the time (e.g. no result listing, no club affiliation, mis-measured courses, etc) and then abusing him afterwards for daring to complain.  Since Jeff moved to Westchester and avoided the Central Park races, his role on the club has now been assumed by Blair Boyer (see Famous Saying #990).

This note of support came from Guenter Erich:

I second Jeff's opinion wholeheartedly and like to add that this race was the pits.  The heat was nothing for a trained runner.  I was exhausted from cursing because I am not trained in THAT.

One had to admire the people that were volunteering for the race. They kept calm, at least, that's what I observed. The questions are: Didn't they learn from the last cross country race last year (Pete McArdle 15K) when everybody rushed to get their sixth race in?  That race was a mess too. And why would anybody turn me down, when I offered my help the moment I saw that there was trouble ahead? It is clear that nobody prepared for the race's necessary logistics.  Could it really be that nobody cares for the runners, as Jeff says?  I' ll miss Van Cortlandt Park ...

And after giving himself some time to calm down, Jeff Kisseloff has these further thoughts to add:

Yes, it's clearly time for a revolution. Let's start with NYRRC and end with the world. It was hilarious before yesterday's race to listen to these young chubby guys, these aspiring 4:50 marathoners, asking the race director for their t-shirts and "Do we need our chips?" This is what cross country has come down to, thanks to the NYRRC.  

I still remember going to an NYRRC staff meeting when Allan Steinfeld said that all runners really care about are t-shirts and getting their names in the back of the magazine. He felt that the club does that better than any other, and you know he's right. It's very good at that, but what it really excels at is treating runners like shit. We're just some commodity whose size guarantees the club TV money when the marathon rolls around, and hopefully it's enough money to pay the mortgage on a building they don't need.  

Everything is geared toward the marathon, and the fact is the marathon is a joke if you are a middle-of-the-pack runner trying to run a good time. They have stuffed so many people into it that running lanes are non- existent. They send you out on the bridge so early you stand around and watch people pee on each other because they can't get to a bathroom.  Having moved up to Westchester after 20 years of living in New York City, I've come to experience what races used to be in New York in the pre-Steinfeld days --- starts that are on time, races that are safe and well- planned on different and challenging courses and responsive race officials. 

What amazes me is that people in New York aren't up in arms about the way they are treated (maybe Steinfeld is right, they just want their names in magazines).  I've been in races during the winter, where hundreds of runners are herded into one half of the roadway at the start and directly up ahead is a long patch of ice; I've been herded at the start and made to stand there a half hour in the summer sun so Giuliani can show up and start the gun on national TV ("So what if we kill off a few runners, we got thousands left and we look good on national TV.")  I've been in races where nobody bothered to measure the course and it came up short and others where runners have nearly gotten killed by bike riders because no one had bothered to clear the course.  

The club doesn't only screw its runners out in the streets.  Look at the magazine, whose purpose is to glorify its advertisers and race sponsors in its editorial pages. That's called screwing the reader, or in this case, the runner, too. What is more important to Allan Steinfeld that runners have an enjoyable and challenging racing experience or that Tylenol, or whoever, forks over the big bucks and gets its ego massaged by having the faces of its executives on the cover and in the pages of the magazine. The fact is runners will run whether there is a sponsor or not. The club is supposed to exist to serve the running community and not the other way around. That's what it has forgotten.

Speaking of revolutions, there is an account that a spontaneously self-organized coup almost took place successfully in this race.  After waiting and waiting in 85 degree weather with humidity under the sun, some of the guys decided to start the race on their own initiative.  Using an old whistle, various members of the most prestigious clubs in the area assembled a starting line and were about to start the race with a volunteer timer, when the race officials frentically raced over to give the official start.  It would have been quite a sight otherwise ...

Technical footnote:  Did anyone read the cross-country race notes?: "Cross country is not for the faint of heart or fitness.  It is rugged; fun, but rugged; with few facilities, tough rocky hills, no water on the course, dirt spraying everywhere, shadeless stretches, no tee-shirts, no post-race treats... We love it and hope you will too but be prepared!"  They delivered on everything that they promised in those notes --- rugged terrain, no facilities, tough rocky hills, no water on the course, spraying dirt, shadeless stretches, no tee-shirts, no post-race treats --- and then they delivered even more goodies --- long unscheduled delays, information blackout and bad attitudes!

From John Kenney, President of the Central Park Track Club on September 7th, 2000:

Please review the following note regarding the resource problems that plagued this past weekend's cross-country race in Van Cortland Park. It's written by Mary Wittenberg, the NYRRC EVP/COO, and acknowledges these problems in a constructive, conciliatory tone. While long-term measures are promised to avoid this, there is still a good chance that this weekend's Van Cortlandt club scoring race could also experience some logistical problems. Please note Mary's commitments and suggestions, and please try to bear with the NYRRC and the other volunteers as they try to pull off this weekend's race.  And remember that we all love running!"

From Mary Wittenberg, Executive Vice President/Chief Operating Officer of the New York Road Runners Club on September 6th, 2000:

This weekend's points race will be okay. But, be prepared for our typical rugged cross- country - majority of registrants registering race day, no water on the course, hand scoring like the good ol days (requiring runners to stay in chutes after they finish until their tag can be pulled) etc. Please remind all your runners that this will be the case. Also, remember, bathroom facilities are VERY limited. We have been able to get a few port a johns up there, but please but be sure your runners do not expect usual central park race day amenities (or, at least what we try to deliver!). Also, please warn them to leave as little as possible in baggage and nothing of value. There are lots of kids and teams running around Van Cortlandt and, unfortunately, we have had trouble with baggage in the past.

As you many of you know, the usual NYRRC staff does not put these races on. We are extraordinarily lucky to have a great group of committed officials and long time friends of the running community to put them on. They are proud of their work and consider the series as their own. Please respect their efforts. We will supplement with NYRRC staff this week as best we can. As you may know, we also have a major race that morning on city streets (with separate start and finish requiring double crew for scoring and logistics etc.) - so we will be running a tight operation. We will, however, have extra help for the Van Cortlandt crew to assist with registration and ensure that the races start on time. Women at 11:30 a.m. and men at noon. Some of us will be there after the other race (before start of yours) and will help score the race and help wherever we can. If you have folks not running that are up there and willing to help - we may well take them up on it!

Also, if you have heard about last weekend, yes, we were crushed to hear that all did not go well (to say the least). Did we make a mistake permitting the cross country races to count toward the marathon? We sure did, and we sure will not make it again next year. As you can tell by the $3 fee, these races are not even about covering costs. We put them on because we want to provide folks with one of the best experiences in running in one of the greatest running venues in the world. We rely on our trusty crew up there as we have races in the city on the same day or weekend in most cases. To date, that has worked. This marathon qualification right has changed things rather dramatically. Unfortunately, we have posted the scored races for qualification in too many places and, at least for now, will do our best to cover this overflow rather than change the rules on folks at this point. To those who were there last week, please accept our apologies.  We work very hard to provide the best quality races always and hate to not deliver in any instance.


METROPOLITAN 50 MILE, New York City, NY (September 2, 2000)

Megumi Fukami, 7 hours 33 minutes, 3rd overall and 1st overall female (by a lead of over one hour)

(Technical note:  Oppressively hot and humid conditions)


MEDIA CORPORATE CHALLENGE, Central Park, NYC (August 29, 2000)

Dave Howard, 19:34, 1st place


CATS GREATER HARTFORD TRIATHLON, Hartford, CT (August 27, 2000)

Ramon Bermo, 2:15:17, 10th overall
Scott Willett, 2:15:42, 13th overall
Julie Denney, 2:33:14, 79th overall


NEW YORK CITY MARATHON TUNE-UP (18 MILES) Central Park, NYC, (August 27, 2000)

PHOTO ALBUM

MEN, 3rd place open team

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Official 
Time
Net Time Min/Mile
1 1 Toby Tanser 32 1:37:20 1:37:18 5:24
33 20 Craig Chilton 32 1:55:24 1:55:19 6:24
34 21 Hank Berkowitz 38 1:55:32 1:55:29 6:25
61 10 Victor Osayi 43 2:00:07 2:00:04 6:40
91 17 Guillermo Rojas 27 2:03:45 2:03:40 6:52
97 20 Olivier Baillet 29 2:05:03 2:04:58 6:56
102 10 Rick Shaver 48 2:05:57 2:05:52 6:59
163 88 Adam Riess 35 2:11:46 2:11:09 7:19
170 92 Peter Smith 33 2:12:19 2:11:55 7:21
203 113 James Siegel 34 2:14:05 2:14:01 7:26
233 132 Tyronne Culpepper 37 2:16:07 2:16:07 7:33
251 140 Arthur Cooke 36 2:17:18 2:15:57 7:37
299 161 Peter Hemsher 33 2:19:55 2:19:42 7:46
424 42 J.R. Mojica 45 2:25:25 2:25:19 8:04
587 303 Alex Peterhansl 30 2:32:22 2:31:45 8:27
630 96 Blair Boyer 41 2:33:41 2:33:35 8:32
633 27 Robert Francis 51 2:33:50 2:31:37 8:32
754 2 Guenter Erich 67 2:37:34 2:33:49 8:45
972 51 Robert Haig 53 2:44:56 2:44:29 9:09

WOMEN

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Official 
Time
Net Time Min/Mile
15 15 Audrey Kingsley 31 2:13:27 2:13:22 7:24
86 26 Eve Kaplan 29 2:26:38 2:26:33 8:08
110 65 Etsuko Kizawa 30 2:28:29 2:27:47 8:14
165 92 Shula Sarner 30 2:33:28 2:32:27 8:31
170 16 Julie Francis 42 2:33:50 2:31:35 8:32
442 48 Margaret Nolan 40 2:50:38 2:48:13 9:28
523 2 Carol Tyler 61 2:54:20 2:52:48 9:41
1009 316 Martha Rojas 28 3:17:41 3:16:06 10:58

CENTRAL PARK TRIATHLON, Central Park, NYC (August 20, 2000)

Scott Willett, 1:10:49, 2nd place overall
Ross Galitsky, 1:12:03, 4th place overall, 1st M35-39
Olivier Baillett, 1:12:28, 6th place overall, 1st M25-29
Randy Ehrlich, 1:13:35, 8th overall, 1st M30-34
John Megaw, 1:17:32, 13th overall, 1st M40-44
Carlos Stafford, 1:30:55, 51st overall, 3rd M55-59

Julie Denney, 1:16:52, 1st overall female
Stacy Creamer, 1:19:09, 2nd overall female
Margaret Nolan, 1:45:46, 31st overall female, 3rd F40-44

FIELD NOTES

  • Weekend doubles (Saturday/Sunday races) by Olivier Baillet, Stacy Creamer, Margaret Nolan, Scott Willett and Julie Denney

  • First three out of the water --- Scott Willett, Olivier Baillet, Ross Galitsky

  • Julie Denney led the race from start to finish

  • How does Scott Willett do it?  The man hasn't run in months due to an injury ...

  • Stacy Creamer maintains her streak of second-place finishes over many years in the same race, each time losing to a different person

  • What?  No photos?  Sorry, but the alarm clock didn't work (note: should have borrowed Rob Zand's four alarm clocks)


SEACREST TOBAY TRIATHLON, Oyster Bay, NY (August 20, 2000)

Michael Trunkes, 1:00:16, 10th overall, swim 13:11 (74th place), transition  :54 (14th place), bike 26:24 (15th overall), transition :52 (177th overall), run 18:57 (4th place).


PARK TO PARK ONE MILE SWIM, New York City, NY (August 20, 2000)

Scott Willett, 19:30, 2nd male overall
Julie Denney, 23:07, 2nd female overall


FALMOUTH ROAD RACE (7.2 miles), Falmouth, MA (August 20, 2000)

Jennifer Lynch, 60:60 clock, 59:56 net, 658th female overall


MOUNT WASHINGTON BICYCLE HILL CLIMB, Gorham, NH (August 19, 2000)

Guillermo Rojas, 1:15:55, 78th overall, 28th division

Race description: "The Mt. Washington Bicycle Hill Climb is only 7.6 miles long, but it's arguably the toughest 7.6 miles ever raced. The road climbs 4,727 feet at an average 12% grade, with the final 200 yards at 22.5%. A third of the road is unpaved, and there are a total of 72 turns and switchbacks. The longest straightaway is only 3/10 of a mile, and it's on dirt. The wind chill factor plays a role almost every year, as Mt. Washington's summit winds are known as some of the most brutal in the world.  Mount Washington held the highest wind speed (231 miles per hour) recorded on earth, although Guam allegedly wrested this title courtesy of Super Typhoon Paka."


CLUB CHAMPIONSHIPS, Central Park, NY (August 19, 2000)

PHOTO ALBUM

Open Men 3rd place team
Masters Men 1st place team
Senior Masters Men 2nd place team

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Official 
Time
Net Time Min/Mile
3 2 Toby Tanser 32 24:32 24:32 4:54
29 14 Jonathan Pillow 25 26:01 25:57 5:12
42 3 Alan Ruben 43 26:27 26:23 5:17
44 20 Rob Zand 30 26:32 26:30 5:18
45 21 Richie Borrero 30 26:35 26:30 (PR) 5:18
54 21 Michael Rumer 24 26:45 26:41 5:21
55 28 Paul Stuart-Smith 38 26:46 26:44 (PR) 5:21
58 23 John Scherrer 24 26:48 26:47 5:21
61 32 Craig Chilton 32 26:52 26:48 (PR) 5:22
62 33 Erik Goetze 32 26:52 26:47 5:23
66 34 Ramon Bermo 33 26:57 26:53 (PR) 5:23
71 5 Peter Allen 40 27:06 27:06 5:25
72 36 Isaya Okwiya 30 27:11 27:06 5:26
76 7 John Kenney 44 27:17 27:13 5:27
89 10 Stuart Calderwood 42 27:37 27:34 5:31
101 1 Alston Brown 51 28:00 27:59 (PR) 5:42
121 41 Dave Howard 27 28:33 28:25 5:42
129 60 Graeme Reid 39 28:43 28:40 5:44
131 61 Gordon Streeter 32 28:46 28:40 5:45
132 18 Victor Osayi 43 28:47 28:41 5:45
139 18 Stephen Sipe 33 28:56 28:53 5:47
140 44 David Dunn 24 28:56 28:53 5:47
154 71 Jesus Montero 31 29:13 29:07 5:50
159 6 Tom Hartshorne 46 29:23 29:20 5:52
162 74 Eric Vanden Eijnden 31 29:29 29:23 5:53
180 57 Olivier Baillet 29 29:53 29:48 (PR) 5:58
183 81 Rich Hollander 36 29:56 29:49 5:59
186 58 David Newcomb 29 30:01 29:53 6:00
201 8 Robert Francis 51 30:24 30:19 6:05
208 11 Rick Shaver 48 30:34 30:34 6:06
213 93 Colin Frew 35 30:38 30:31 6:07
216 32 Michele Tagliati 40 30:41 30:41 6:08
230 99 Jose LaSalle 31 30:57 30:47 6:11
237 104 James Siegel 34 31:06 30:57 6:13
250 37 Craig Plummer 41 31:16 31:13 6:15
254 70 Josh Friedman 28 31:21 31:21 6:16
272 73 Bill Dunlop 27 32:00 32:00 6:24
278 1 Sid Howard 61 32:13 32:06 6:26
280 116 Theo Spilka* 38 32:18 32:18 6:27
281 117 Arthur Cooke 36 32:20 32:14 6:28
287 119 Adam Riess 35 32:33 32:26 6:30
308 128 Tim Grotenhuis 30 33:06 33:00 6:35
320 134 Bob Summers 32 33:33 33:24 6:52
336 51 John Gleason 43 34:00 33:57 6:48
344 24 Jack Brennan 51 34:13 34:01 6:50
345 144 Alex Peterhansl 30 34:14 34:07 6:50
347 54 Blair Boyer 41 34:18 34:09 6:51
359 32 J.R. Mojica 45 34:38 34:30 6:55
375 12 Frank Handelman 55 35:20 35:13 7:04
393 2 Guenter Erich 67 35:54 35:46 7:10
401 66 Brian Barry 43 36:18 36:11 7:15
431 43 Eden Weiss 53 37:29 37:29 7:29
449 168 Tyronne Culpepper 37 38:50 38:40 7:46
468 49 Robert Haig 53 40:02 39:52 8:00
538 181 Peter Homsher** 33 59:17 37:24 11:51

** Late start

Note:  For the longest time, you have all heard how everyone (and not just the official top scorers) count in a race.  Here is how we ended up in third place ahead of West Side Runners

POINTS

Team 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th Total
CPTC 3 29 42 44 45 54 55 58 61 62 453
WSX 5 26 36 43 46 51 63 67 69 74 480

CUMULATIVE POINTS

Team 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th Total
CPTC 3 32 74 118 163 217 272 330 391 453 453
WSX 5 31 67 110 156 207 270 337 406 480 480

Thank you, John Scherrer (58), Craig Chilton (61), Erik Goetze (62), Ramon Bermo (66), Peter Allen (71), Isaya Okwiya (72) and the rest of the team.


Open Women's team 4th place
Masters Women's team 3rd place
Senior Masters Women's team 1st place

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Official Time Net Time Min/Mile
20 4 Stacy Creamer 41 31:02 31:00 6:12
22 8 Margaret Angell 23 31:05 31:03 6:13
26 14 Shelley Farmer 30 31:20 31:19 6:16
31 10 Margaret Schotte 24 31:37 31:34 6:19
33 18 Stephanie Gould 34 31:39 31:36 6:19
54 31 Audrey Kingsley 31 32:58 32:55 6:35
61 34 Shula Sarner 30 33:22 33:19 (PR) 6:40
65 23 Molly Greig 25 33:24 33:21 (PR) 6:40
72 39 Jackie Cortes 38 33:43 33:39 6:44
73 40 Kim Mannen 35 33:45 33:43 (PR) 6:45
81 44 Etsuko Kizawa 30 34:14 34:09 6:50
93 11 Julie Francis 42 35:11 35:07 7:02
96 13 Sarah Gross 43 35:19 35:15 7:03
101 52 Julia Casals 36 35:29 35:26 7:05
102 53 Monica Bonamego 36 35:33 35:28 7:06
110 4 Mary V Rosado 50 36:02 36:00 7:12
112 58 Sandra Scibelli 33 36:11 36:06 7:14
129 5 Irene Jackson-Schon 53 37:02 36:59 7:24
130 20 Laura Miller 41 37:09 37:05 7:25
140 35 Ana Echeverri 29 37:28 37:23 7:29
161 40 Eve Kaplan 29 38:29 38:26 7:41
165 8 Mindy Solkin 45 38:36 38:27 7:43
170 9 Sylvie Kimché 53 38:53 38:53 7:46
190 1 Carol Tyler 61 39:51 39:48 7:58
252 50 Margaret Nolan 40 45:30 45:30 9:06

Statistics:  Total of 80 finishers --- 55 men and 25 women

Missing in action:
-- David Pullman who came late because he thought the race starts at 900am
-- Noel Comess whose result did not appear
-- Kiet Vo did not run the projected 27:50; he DNF'd


CHALLENGE OF THE UNATTACHED, Central Park, NYC (August 19, 2000)

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
65 29 Casey Yamazaki 37 33:39 6:43

MEDIA CORPORATE CHALLENGE, Central Park, NYC (August 15, 2000)

Dave Howard, 19:35, 1st place


MAC MINI-MEET, CCNY, NYC (August 15, 2000)

1500m, Paul Stuart-Smith, 4:17.1, 1st place


CHASE CORPORATE CHALLENGE, Paramus, NJ (August 15, 2000)

Guillermo Rojas, 21:02


BRONX TRAIL 50K, The Bronx, NYC (August 13, 2000)

Ross Galitsky, 3rd place
Dan Sack, 4th place

Megumi Fukami, 1st place overall female

  • Note:  This race covers the many parks in the Bronx county, so there is actually a great deal of running on the sidewalk to go from park to park.  According to Ross, at one point, he arrived at a drawbridge and was held up as the bridge was drawn up to let a ship pass, thus giving the five race leaders a major advantage. 


15th ANNUAL NEW YORK TRIATHLON SERIES # 2, Harriman State Park, NY (August 13, 2000)

Olivier Baillet, 1:24:18, 16th overall, 2nd M25-29


THE CHILLMARK 5K, Chillmark, MA (August 12, 2000)

Steve Eick, 17:34 (5:40 min/mile), 11th overall, 6th age group


US NATIONAL MASTERS OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS, Eugene, OR (August 10-13, 2000)

W40-44 100m final, Sue Krogstad-Hill, 14.70, 7th place
M age-graded 100m (non-championship event), Alston Brown, 10.47, 3rd place

M40-44 200m preliminary, Richie Stewart, 26.75, 30th place
M50-59 200m preliminary, Richard Hamner, 26.44, 12th place

M40-44 400m preliminary, Richie Stewart, 59.59, 23rd place
M50-54 400m preliminary, Alston Brown, 55.94, 2nd place
M55-59 400m preliminary, Richard Hamner, 58.66, 7th place

M50-54 400m final, Alston Brown, 53.41, 2nd place
M50-54 400m final, Richard Hamner, 58.03, 4th place

W40-44 400m final, Sue Krogstad-Hill, 1:07.46, 5th place

M45-49 800m preliminary, Tom Hartshorne, 2:09.24, 6th place
M45-49 800m preliminary, Anthony Baker, 2:26.35, 17th place
M50-54 800m preliminary, Alston Brown, 2:10.88, 3rd place
M55-59 800m preliminary, Frank Handelman, 2:18.70, 8th place

M45-49 800m final, Tom Hartshorne, 2:06.52, 6th place
M50-54 800m final, Alston Brown, 2:09.26, 1st place
M50-54 800m final, Frank Handelman, 2:20.41, 8th place
M60-64 800m final, Sid Howard, DQ (he finished first in the race by a margin of two seconds, but was disqualified for having stepped on the inside lane line more than 3 times at the start)
M65-69 800m final, Jim Aneshansley, 2:32.20, 3rd  place

M45-49 1500m preliminary, Anthony Baker, 5:23.58, 20th place
M50-54 1500m preliminary, Alston Brown, 4:59.66, 2nd place

M45-49 1500m final, Tom Hartshorne, 4:30.35, 8th place
M50-54 1500m final, Alston Brown, 4:28.66, 1st place
M60-64 1500m final, Sid Howard, 4:50.53, 2nd place
M65-69 1500m final, Jim Aneshansley, 5:20.24, 3rd place

W50+ 80 meter hurdles, Skipper Clark, 17.32, 2nd place
W50+ 300m intermediate hurdles, Skipper Clark, 1:05.30, 1st place
W50+ long jump, Skipper Clark, 4.07m (13'4.25"), 2nd place

M30-89 4x400m relay, Central Park Track Club, 3:56.01, 1st place


VCTC CROSS COUNTRY 5K SERIES #6, Van Cortlandt Park, NYC (August 10, 2000)

David Pullman, 21:03, 17th place
Brian Barry, 22:26, 24th place


LINDSEY'S 5K RUN, Basking Ridge, NJ (August 9, 2000)

Peter Allen, 17:09 (5:31 min/mile), 2nd overall, 1st M40-44
Rhonda Allen, 26:05 (8:24 min/mile), 38th overall female, 10th F35-39


MAC MINI-MEET, CCNY, NYC (August 8, 2000)

3000m
Toby Tanser, 9:12, 1st place
Paul Stuart-Smith, 9:32.4

800m
Erik Goetze, 2:10.3
Craig Plummer, 2:16.8
Raphael Devalle, 2:29.2


HIGHLAND TRIATHLON, Yulan, NY (August 6, 2000)

Name Overall 
Pl
Swim Time Swim 
Place
Trans.
Time
Trans
Place
Bike Time Bike 
Place
Trans
Time
Trans
Place
Run 
Time
Run 
Place
Total Time
Stuart Calderwood 8 16:34 50 1:16 13 45:37 10 0:48 13 23:58 1 1:28:12
Stacy Creamer 17 14:55 31 1:12 10 49:18 29 0:46 11 26:58 7 1:33:07

Stacy Creamer, second overall female, first masters (extending her Masters' win streak to nine in a row)
Stuart Calderwood, eighth overall, (fastest run, 2:10 faster than the overall winner), third M40-44 (22 and 4 seconds behind two 40-year-olds in wetsuits)

Technical note:  Stacy and Stuart were definitely first in the no-wetsuit divisions.


BMW GREENWICH CUP TRIATHLON, Greenwich, CT (August 6, 2000)

Shelly Farmer, 1:21:16, 2nd overall female
John Megaw, 1:27:18, 16th M40-49
Laura Miller, 1:35:28, 4th W40-49

This note from Shelley Farmer:

I did the BMW Greenwich Cup Triathlon on Sunday.  The advertised distances were: 1/2 mile swim, 15 mile bike and 5k run.  Actually, the swim buoys were misplaced and everyone swam more like .75 miles, and the run might have been a tad short too.  This was a technical bike course, with lots of 90 degree turns and short hills.  The trail run finishes with a 200m sprint on a dry sand beach (the hardest part of the whole thing!).  I placed 2nd female overall with a time of 1:21:14.  Out of all male and female competitors, I was 16th in the field of  600+ entrants.

The speed work is working for me, as I was about four minutes behind the second- place woman off the bike, and I ran her down in the 3 mile run and beat her by over a minute.  She was last year's winner.  This year's winner was Donna-Kay Ness, (who beat me by a solid 5 minutes - ouch!).  Donna is basically a pro, and was the overall US National Champion by 6 minutes in last year's US National Championships.

John Megaw was also in the race and finished in 1:27, and he was happy with his race.  After hanging out with John and his friends and family, I biked from Greenwich back to NYC with my friend. 


BEACH TO BEACON 10K, Cape Elizabeth, ME (August 5, 2000)

Sandra Scibelli, 45:13 (7:17 min/mile), 744th overall, 24th F30-34


KEN KILLIAN NYC OCEAN MILE SWIM, Riis Park, NYC (August 5, 2000)

Scott Willett, 23:23.57, 9th place
Raqui Bermo
, 26:21.10, 51st place
Ross Galitsky, 27:42:69, 61st place
Julie Denney, 28:40.71, 73rd place

Actually, everyone was a winner today except for Raqui Bermo --- he was the only one not to win anything in the raffle prize drawing after the race.


4th ANNUAL GREAT HUDSON RIVER SWIM (2.8 MILES), Hudson River, NYC (August 5, 2000)

Scott Willett, 50:41, 4th overall, 1st M35-39
Olivier Baillet, 55:53, 9th overall, 1st M25-29

Technical note:  Scott Willett completes his daily double --- the Ocean Mile swim in the morning and the Hudson River swim in the afternoon.


LAMISIL MANHATTAN HALF MARATHON, Central Park, NYC (August 5, 2000)

PHOTO ALBUM

MEN, 2nd place open team

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
1 1 Toby Tanser 32 1:08:15 5:12
15 2 Alan Ruben 43 1:14:02 5:39
22 13 Richie Borrero 30 1:14:59 (CR) 5:43
29 5 Peter Allen 40 1:16:23 5:49
33 16 Isaya Okwiya 30 1:16:47 (PR) 5:51
41 21 Paul Stuart Smith 38 1:17:52 5:56
65 29 Graeme Reid 39 1:19:58 (PR) 6:12
108 50 Harry Morales 37 1:24:17 6:26
123 40 David Dunn 24 1:24:40 6:27
164 8 Rick Shaver 48 1:26:14 6:34
201 94 Peter Smith 33 1:27:50 6:42
203 96 Jose LaSalle 31 1:27:52 6:42
244 14 Jerome O'Shaughnessy 46 1:29:15 6:48
302 88 Yves-Marc Courtines 27 1:31:20 6:58
304 37 Roger Liberman 40 1:31:22 (PR) 6:58
338 154 Alex Peterhansl 30 1:32:21 7:02
346 47 Craig Plummer 41 1:32:32 7:03
384 111 David Birchfield 24 1:33:55 7:10
417 190 Bola Awofeso 39 1:34:41 7:13
443 205 Matt Horvat 35 1:35:20 7:16
445 206 Rich Hollander 36 1:35:21 7:16
487 224 Peter Hemsher 33 1:36:42 7:22
533 72 Blair Boyer 41 1:38:06 7:29
571 40 J.R. Mojica 45 1:38:32 (PR) 7:31
641 297 Arthur Cooke 36 1:40:08 7:38
1400 110 Peter Tipograph 48 1:52:34 8:35

* MIA:  Dan Sack

WOMEN

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
11 5 Yumi Ogita 38 1:28:20 6:44
30 17 Audrey Kingsley 31 1:32:44 7:04
99 8 Sarah Gross 43 1:40:32 7:40
154 2 Irene Jackson-Schon 53 1:44:17 7:57
245 97 Ana Echeverri 29 1:48:36 8:17
383 149 Ann Coale 27 1:52:30 8:35
1471 565 Martha Rojas 28 2:17:08 10:28

NYRRC SUMMER SERIES 5K, Prospect Park, Brooklyn (August 2, 2000)

Isaya Okwiya, 16:40 (6th overall, 4th M30-39)
Victor Osayi, 17:39 (2nd M40-49)
Molly Greig, 20:35 (PR) (3rd place overall, 1st F20-29)

Field notes:

  • Weather: Very, very humid.  Perfect (?) for a short race.
  • Coach Tony Ruiz was there telling Molly to pump her arms; poor Molly thought the finish was around the corner so she started sprinting only to discover that there was 1.5 miles left.  Still, she ran a PR.
  • Victor Osayi said that he also kicked early when he heard the coach yelling at him, passed someone and stopped prematurely because he thought he had finished. 
  • Eden Weiss was also spotted running around the park and cheering on the Central Park Track Club runners
  • Kim Mannen and Julia Casals were expected to run but did not show.  Kim said, "This is my first week on my new job.  We had a meeting, and I thought that it would not be nice for me to want to leave at 430pm to run a race."

MAC MINI-MEET, City College of New York, NY (August 1, 2000)

1500m, Devon Sargent, 4:56

5000m
Toby Tanser, 15:06, 1st place
Erik Goetze, 16:22, 4th place
Paul Stuart-Smith, 16:32, 5th place

DNF: Tom Nohilly, Regina Jacobs and John Scherrer (pace setter)
Technical footnote:  No warmup time available


BROOKLYN BIATHLON, Prospect Park, NY (July 30, 2000)

Stuart Calderwood, 1:11:14, 5th overall, 1st M40-44
Kent Seki, 1:13:47, 11th overall, 2nd M25-29
Olivier Baillet, 1:15:11, 14th overall, 3rd M25-29

Stacy Creamer, 1:18:52, overall female winner
Margaret Nolan, 1:41:13, 20th female overall, 3rd F40-44

Stacy Creamer led wire-to-wire to win the Brooklyn Biathlon today--her 3rd consecutive overall race victory and eighth straight Masters' win. The 40-year-old took the Brooklyn overall title by more than two minutes with her 1:18:52 for the 3.35-run/10.05-bike/3.35 run event. As she circled Prospect Park for the fifth time (second on foot), the race director leaned out of his pace-van and said "I heard you were injured!" Creamer shouted back "I am!" (Stacy's coach comments: No one, not even Stacy, is advised to race while injured, it is perhaps needless to add.)  
  
Creamer has trained hard on her bike throughout her bout with plantar fasciitis (which has seriously limited her running and has replaced her CPTC Tuesday-Thursday attendance with Doug Stern's deep-water speedwork), and she was especially inspired while cycling today in the aftermath of her friend Lance Armstrong's second Tour de France victory.  On each of her three bike ascents of the decidedly sub-Alpine Prospect Park hill (familiar to Brooklyn Half-Marathoners as the 11-mile-mark hill), she mentally chanted "Hautacam . . . Hautacam . . ." invoking the mountain on which Armstrong smoked the world's best climbers and claimed the Yellow Jersey.
  
Creamer was joined in Brooklyn by several teammates. Margaret Nolan (1:41:13) placed 3rd in the 40-44 age group in her third biathlon, improving yet again and looking like she's been getting cycling tips from the pros; her aero position was flawless.  Stuart Calderwood took fifth overall and was first Master with a 1:11:14 after leading through the first run.  Kent Seki was 11th overall and 2nd among 20-to-29-year-olds at 1:13:47, and exhibited much-improved running that he attributes in large part to his recent Thursday-night speedwork attendance.  Olivier Baillet was 14th overall, 3rd 20-29, with a 1:15:11, and revealed post-race that his best event is ... swimming.
  
All of the CPTC athletes were sped along by seemingly ubiquitous cheering from all parts of the park. After the race, they found to their amazement that the support had emanated from one two-voiced source: the quickly traveling duo of Erik Goetze and Isaya Okwiya (PRs of 4:17 [mile] and 1:54 [800m], respectively), who seemed able to emerge from several clumps of trees simultaneously, or at least to ventriloquize shouts of "C-P-T-C!!!" over distances of up to a mile and a half. 
  
Calderwood credits the shock of their bizarre re-materialization for his first-run win. "You couldn't get away from them," he said, hands on knees after sprinting in "with dignity." "Every time I'd think 'Just cruise the first run, save some energy,' they'd leap out of another invisible trail in the woods and scream 'Go Central PAAAAARK!!!'  in my ear! If I hadn't taken the lead, they'd've hounded me clear to the bikes!"  Added Baillet, "C'est vrai--you look, and again it is them! I thought 'Do they have bicycles?'--but no! And they were able to shout 'Central Park' all of this time!" Creamer concurred: "The whole race, it was like 'How did Erik get here?!' And then Isaya's head would appear above his!  Once I heard them for the whole 3.3-mile lap!"  Goetze and Okwiya are now in training for the famous Backwoods Biathlon of sprinting and hog-calling.

IRONMAN USA, Lake Placid, NY (July 30, 2000)

Name Swim time Transition Bike time Transition Run time Overall time Overall place
Ramon Bermo 1:00:09 5:02 5:27:50 2:26 - - 1381
Julie Denney 1:04.50 4:03 5:41:42 4:03 3:55:51 10:48:43 194
(1st W30-34)
J.P. Gravier 58:56 6:40 5:51:41 6:40 3:53:04 10:54:04 217
(58th M30-34)
Stefani Jackenthal 1:08:25 5:24 5:47:09 5:24 3:57:58 11:04:06 256
(5th W30-34)
Richard Kixmiller 1:11:50 5:34 6:04:00 5:24 4:02:21 11:29:07 375
(4th M50-54)
Bob Summers 1:05:47 6:21 5:46:50 6:21 4:48:59 11:53:23 528
(128th M30-34)
Scott Willett 52:08 5:01 5:22:33 3:38 - - 1376

Note: Julie Denney qualifies for Ironman Hawaii but declined.  Stefani Jackenthal and Richard Kixmiller qualified and have accepted.


Cirulnick / Innamorato 6 Hour Distance Run, Kissena Park, Queens, NY (July 29, 2000)

Megumi Fukami, 40+ miles, 1st place

  • Megumi Fukami qualifies for the national championships.


NEW MILFORD 8 MILER, New Milford, CT (July 29, 2000)

Roger Liberman, 55:05 (6:53 min/mile), 59th overall, 15th M40-49

  • Roger said, "This race is billed as the toughest race in the whole state of Connecticut.  There was one place which was so steep that I walked for about 50 meters.  Someone else was trying to run up but he was wasted when he got up there, and I passed him easily once I started running again."

  • This was a personal record for Roger, especially given that the actual distance is 7.9 miles (but the race is billed as 8 miles to make people feel faster).


DASH & SPLASH 5 MILER, Central Park, NY (July 29, 2000)

MEN, 1st place open team

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
1 1 Toby Tanser 32 25:10 5:02
16 7 David Dunn 24 29:33 5:54
17 3 Noel Comess 42 29:35 5:55
22 19 Guillermo Rojas 27 30:34 6:07
37 7 David Monti* 40 31:34 6:18
39 14 Larry King 39 31:42 6:20
158 44 Yves-Marc Courtines 27 38:05 7:37
273 131 Alan Kipust* 37 42:59 8:35

WOMEN

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
21 3 Jane Harris* 43 37:15 7:27
32 7 Laura Miller* 41 38:36 7:43
37 16 Eve Kaplan 29 38:50 7:46
40 48 Ana Echeverri 29 39:06 7:49
63 2 Sylvie Kimché 53 40:33 8:06
196 84 Martha Rojas 28 47:28 9:29

* Members of "The Wedding Group", being the second-place open women's team  (photo: the two principals --- David Monti and Jane Harris)

From Yves-Marc Courtines: "According to what Eve Kaplan recounted to me later, she missed the chip mats (no, not just the 1st, the 2nd too -- and no, let's not go into any more than that).  It wasn't until a good 2-3 minutes that an 'imposing man in a blue uniform' got a chance to catch her at the water station and reminded her to go back and cross the mat.

As for myself, I was late to registration and was pulling off my rollerblades at the bag check just in time to see all the starters (and all the laggards for that matter) zooming off.   I raced out of the bag check located well past the start and proceeded back to the unmarked race start (or what one of the bystanders promised me was the start, after much discussion).  Having given Toby and the rest of the field a merited 4+ minute head start, I proceeded to complete my tempo run in a blistering unofficial time of 33:58:59 (according to my watch) and even managed to wave at Stuart Calderwood and Stacy Creamer loitering on their Harleys at about the 1 1/2 mile point.

The way I see it, frankly, if I hadn't given Toby such a solid lead, I probably coulda shared that basket with him --- although he did look very nice in the winner's circle with his hula skirt."  (photo: Toby Tanser, Al Goldstein & Kari Ann Bertrand)

From Toby Tanser: "I did not dare go in the pool.  Despite the pool being only 3'8" deep, I have a phobia about communal pools after seeing something disgusting a few years ago.  Besides I swim like a two- legged dog.   Stacy Creamer and Stuart Calderwood are going to do the Brooklyn Biathlon tomorrow, so Stacy's pre-race schedule for today was cycle, run then yoga --- all before 9 am!!"  Question:  Where did the latte fit in the schedule?  Answer from Stacy: "In answer to the webmaster's no doubt rhetorical question, I latted once pre-cycling and twice post-yoga."  La-di-da ...


VCTC CROSS COUNTRY 5K SERIES #5, Van Cortlandt Park, NYC (July 27, 2000)

David Pullman, 21:08, 18th


EMPIRE STATE GAMES, Binghamton, NY (July 27, 2000)

M45-49 800m, Tom Hartshorne, 2:12.4, 1st place
M45-49 1500m, Tom Hartshorne, 4:33.6, 2nd place


MARATONINA CITTA' DI SABUADIA, Subaudia, Italy (July 23, 2000)

From Michele Tagliati:  "I'm writing from Rome, where I'm spending the last few days of my vacation. While enjoying the famous Italian food and sun, I found the time to race in the "Maratonina Citta' di Sabaudia" a 1/2 marathon held on July 23rd. Official results list me in 67th position with the time of 1h26:37.59.  However, a series of gross organizational mistakes made my time a couple of minutes faster and this nationally ranked race look like a farce ... 

We started at 6'30 pm, on a warm and humid afternoon in the seaside town of Sabaudia, founded in the 1920s by Mussolini.  A couple of internationally ranked runners (Halbri and Calcaterra) drew a good crowd in an otherwise lazy summer sunday.  Italian Track & Field Federation Officers gave the start of a race intended to develop on a mixed urban and country circuit to be repeated 4 times, PLUS a small loop around a downtown city block.  

This short loop, destined to create more problems than foreseen, was supposed to be completed right after the start, so that runners would pass twice from the start/finish area in short sequence. However, while the radio announcer was creating enthusiasm for the soon-to-come leading pack, all competitors were instead misdirected toward the long loop, thus missing the extra short loop.  Aside from the embarassment of the announcer wondering where all those runners had gone, nothing really happened until the leading pack reached the end of the first loop (about 4 miles).  At this point, the smart organizers decided to make up for the mistake forcing the runners toward the short loop.

However, while the faster runners followed this procedure, slower runners (including myself) arrived overlapping with the some of the former and were directed by the officers toward the long loop, thus missing AGAIN the extra 1/2 mile ... The ensuing confusion was apocalyptic ... faster runners finding themselves many places behind their true position in the race went ballistic and started insulting (while running) every officer they could possibly meet and - not happy - also some of the slower runners misled by the organizers into a shorter course.  I could hear several bickering exchanges such as "You're all cheaters!" "No! The Officers told us to cut this way!" "Shut up!" "F... you!" and so on ... Most of them must have been very well trained, to judge from the amount of air wasted in these venting activities! 

The Moroccan favorite (Hamam Halbri) ended up winning the race in a remarkable 1h06:43, considering that the course was as hilly as a Central Park loop.  Most of the following runners were very very upset because this was a scoring race valid as Provincial Championships.  I was personally disappointed because my half-marathon test had been shortened by a few hundred yards (probably my "real" time would have been around 1h29'), not to mention that they reported my results as Tagliati Marco (who was instead sidelined by a tendinitis).  In summary, a total disaster, partially sweetened by the offering of tender mozzarella bites after the finish line ..."


ESCARPMENT TRAIL RUN (30K), Wyndham, NY (July 23, 2000)

Peter Allen, 3:15:48, 6th overall


MONTAUK SPRINT TRIATHLON, Montauk, NY (July 23, 2000)

Randy Ehrlich, 1:12:47, 44th overall
Laura Miller, 1:23:16, 144th overall


HUDSON VALLEY VELO CLUB RACE, Uniondale, NY (July 22, 2000)

Aubin Sullivan, 3rd place (Women Category 4)


RUN FOR THE HOMEPLATE, Shea Stadium, Queens (July 22, 2000)

Blair Boyer (21:15) reports: "I went to Shea Stadium with Audrey Kingsley who had hoped to come home with the Gold Medal from this Run to Home Plate race. I didn't tell her that I got a message from Alexa Babakhanian the night before the race that she would be there.  I thought it would be best if Audrey saw her at the start line on her own. Well, as Mets magic would have it, Alexa was on our #7 train and the three of us became glued at the hip for the rest of the morning.  Alexa won (18:39) and Audrey got third (19:59) and I got to spend the day with two of my favorite medallists."


ACOSTA 5K RUN, Mahwah, NJ (July 22, 2000)

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
98 5th M60-69 Guenter Erich 67 22:13 7:09

TAVERN ON THE GREEN BREAKFAST RUN, Central Park, NYC (July 18, 2000)

Eddie Coyle wrote in the Daily News: "Toby Tanser, 32, owner of a host of Central Park golds, was runaway winner in 33:05 of Tavern on the Green six-mile Breakfast Fun Run.  'I didn't plan to come here (Wednesday),' Tanser said. But he dropped by to see friends and maybe jog it.  'I purposely wore these heavy shoes to slow me down,'  he said.  Tanser is already focusing on the November NYC Marathon. He hopes for "about 2:20." He'd done a tough marathon speed session the night before — 10 1,100-yard intervals on an outdoor track. Nevertheless, he ended up racing the breakfast run. 'It was compulsive. Once I pinned on my race number I knew I was going all out,' he said, flashing a winning smile."  P.S.  The title of the report was "Tanser Hungry for Win," although we might have used "Tanser Hungry for Bagels" instead.

Toby Tanser
"That Winning Smile"

Blair Boyer (41:38) reports:

  • PRE-RACE POSTURING:  Over the weekend Blair spoke to Audrey Kingsley in the park about running the upcoming Breakfast Run. She told me that this was a lucky race for her and maybe not too many fast women would show up at 6am.  Just to get her going, I told her that I heard that Kari Ann Bertrand, Laurie Corbin, Kim Griffin, Alexa Babakahnian & Shelley Farmer would be there :). 

  • ALL-STAR ROSTER:  Seen at the start were Central Park Track Club luminaries Alan Ruben, Peter Allen, Audrey Kingsley, Yves-Marc St Courtines, Randy Ehrlich and Toby Tanser who was running while pinning his number to his shirt as the race got underway.  Kari Ann Bertrand and Laurie Corbin were right on the start line too, which prompted the race director to ask "Is this the Olympic Trials?"  

  • PSYCHING UP:  As I approached the start this morning, I saw Audrey talking with Kari Ann Bertrand.  As I ran by Audrey, we exchanged exaggerated smiles.  Oh, well ... Later Audrey asked me what happened to Kim Griffin and I said I couldn't find her a babysitter (tsk, tsk, tsk).  At the race, Audrey was overheard telling Kari Ann that she walked by her apartment building the night before the race telling herself that Kari Ann won't show up at the Breakfast Run.  No such luck.

  • SPECTATORSJerome O'Shaughnessy was seen running before the race got underway and Bola Awofeso was spotted running opposite the race.

Have no fear, because Audrey will get another chance at this weekend's Run To The Homeplate 5K.  This other race is Audrey's sentimental favorite, because it was the first race in which she found herself listed among the top three finishers.  That was the race when Audrey, having previously only a 4:24 marathon to her credit, realized that she had potential and then she found the Central Park Track Club.  (Editor's note:  the preceding sentence is based upon a miscomprehension of the situation.  The proper sequence of events should be: "This was the race when the Central Park Track Club realized how lucky they were to have Audrey Kingsley become a member.").  Unfortunately, Audrey has not been running the Run To The Homeplate every year, and it seems that the winning times on the years when she was absent were always well within her reach.  So will she be out there this weekend to win her sentimental favorite race?  Will Kari Ann Bertrand, Laurie Corbin, Kim Griffin and company be out there to foil her yet again?  Stay tuned to your favorite website ...


RUNNER'S ROOSTER RACE (3 miles), Darien, CT (July 16, 2000)

Hank Berkowitz, 16:12, 10th overall


USATF EASTERN MASTERS TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS  Springfield College Track Facility, Springfield, MA, Saturday, July 15, 2000

W400m, Sue Krogstad-Hill, 1:07.94, 1st W40-44
W800m, Sue Krogstad-Hill, 2:44.40, 1st W40-44
W800m, Mary Rosado, 3:04.38, 2nd W50-54
W1500m, Mary Rosado, 5:50.74, 1st W50-54

W200m, Skipper Clark, 31.72, 2nd W50-54
W80m High Hurdles, Skipper Clark, 18.57, 1st W50-54
W300m Intermediate Hurdles, Skipper Clark, 1:11.2, 1st W50-54
High Jump, Skipper Clark, 1.26m (4'01.50), 1st W50-54
Long Jump, Skipper Clark, 3.71m (12'02.25), 1st W50-54
Shot Put, Skipper Clark, 8.25m (27'01.00), 1st W50-54
Discus, Skipper Clark, 19.12m (62'09), 2nd W50-54
Javelin, Skipper Clark, 22.35m (73'04), 1st W50-54

M100m, Richie Stewart, 13.37, 6th M40-44
M200m, Alan Bautista, 25.78, 3rd M35-39
M200m, Richie Stewart, 27.37, 6th M40-44
M200m, Raphael Devalle, 29.93, 6th M45-49

M400m, Alan Bautista, 56.01, 2nd M35-39
M400m, Craig Plummer, 58.20, 3rd M40-44
M400m, Richie Stewart, 58.24, 4th M40-44
M400m, Raphael Devalle, 1:07.11, 4th M45-49
M400m, Alston Brown, 55.50, 1st M50-54
M400m, Richie Hamner, 58.08, 1st M55-59
M400m, Frank Handelman, 1:01.64, 2nd M55-59

M800m, Isaya Okwiya, 2:02.06, 1st M30-34
M800m, Craig Plummer, 2:45.80, 3rd M40-44
M800m, Alston Brown, 2:09.28, 1st M50-54
M800m, Sidney Howard, 2:24.06, 1st M60-64
M800m, Jim Aneshansley, 2:32.38, 1st M65-69

M1500m, Craig Plummer, 4:50.87, 4th M40-44
M1500m, Alston Brown, 4:29.71, 1st M50-54
M1500m, Sid Howard, 5:04.34, 1st M60-64
M1500m, Jim Aneshansley, 5:26.25, 1st M65-69

  • You must be wondering, but Skipper Clark did not do the triple jump nor the hammer throw ... that's about all she didn't do ...
  • In the 1500m, Alston Brown's accomplishment should be measured by his finishing ahead of the legendary Harold Nolan (4:31.32).

ROXBURY RACE # 21 (8.2 MILES), Roxbury, CT (July 15, 2000)

Roger Liberman, 58:59 (7:12 min/mile), 7th place overall


RACE FOR THE RIVER SWIM (2.4 MILES),  Hudson River, New York City, NY (July 15, 2000)

Scott Willett, 37:18, 5th overall, 4th male, 1st M35-39
Julie Denney, 43:39, 11th overall, 4th female, 1st female 30-34

  • Note:  I can see Scott (or his many fans) complaining, "What is this doing here?  Isn't the Central Park Track Club supposed to be a running club?"  Well, the right and the need of the people to know what Scott is up to supercedes this and any other consideration (such as the right to privacy) ...


SUMMIT BANK TETERBORO AIRPORT 5K RUN, Teterboro, NJ (July 15, 2000)

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/Mile
2 1 Toby Tanser 31 15:31 5:00
37 10 Julia Casals 36 21:55 7:03
  • Technical note:  As we have come to expect with these two, a deluge of rain again ... 

VCTC CROSS COUNTRY 5K SERIES #4, Van Cortlandt Park, NYC (July 13, 2000)

David Pullman, 21:38, 30th
Brian Barry, 22:08, 32nd


KURT STEINER SUMMER SERIES 5K, Clove Lake Park, Staten Island, NY (July 12, 2000)

Eden Weiss, 23:12, 10th overall, 1st M50-54


VINEMAN HALF IRONMAN TRIATHLON, San Francisco, CA (July 9, 2000)

Bob Summers, total time: 4:53:38 --- swim 35:28, bike 2:36:27, run 1:35:41, 238th overall, 14th age group


GARDEN STATE CLASSIC, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ (July 9, 2000)

100m, Dean Kerr, 11.1, 4th Open Male
200m, Dean Kerr, 23.2, 5th Open Male

400m, Alston Brown, 54.4, 1st M50-54
800m, Alston Brown, 2:04.5, 1st M50-54

800m, Sid Howard, 2:23.6, 1st M60-64


HUDSON VALLEY TRIATHLON (HALF IRONMAN), Town of Ulster, NY (July 9, 2000)

Overall Pl Age Pl Name Age Swim Pl Swim Time Bike Pl Bike Time Run Pl Run Time Total time
9 2 Ross Galitsky 39 11 32:36 13 2:46:13 23 1:39:29 4:58:18
14 3 Ramon Bermo 33 ? ? ? ?
(2 flats)
8 1:30:19 5:05:56
2 - Julie Denney 32 37 36:18 22 2:50:09 33 1:42:57 5:09:24

USATF EASTERN REGIONAL OPEN OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS, Connecticut College, New London, CT (July 9, 2000)

Women 1500m, Devon Sargent, 5:12.53, 2nd place

Men 800m, Isaya Okwiya, 2:04.16, 6th place

Men 1500m, Isaya Okwiya, 4:14.38, 2nd place


BOILERMAKER 15K, Utica, NY (July 9, 2000)

Harry Morales, 58:32 (6:17 min/mile), 44th M35-39, 286th overall


BRONX HALF MARATHON, The Bronx, NYC (July 9, 2000)

MEN, 3rd Open Team

Overall pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/mile
2 2 Toby Tanser 31 1:10:05 5:20
28 16 Richie Borrero 30 1:16:22 5:49
29 3 Peter Allen 40 1:16:28 5:50
33 18 Rob Zand 30 1:17:01 5:52
39 20 Erik Goetze 32 1:17:33 5:55
42 21 Craig Chilton 32 1:17:59 5:57
71 11 Stuart Calderwood 42 1:21:41 6:14
123 40 David Dunn 24 1:26:20 6:35
134 58 Graeme Reid 39 1:26:46 6:37
179 80 Michele Tagliati 39 1:28:50 6:46
210 97 Jesus Montero 31 1:29:52 6:51
223 14 Rick Shaver 47 1:30:12 6:53
234 15 Jerome O'Shaughnessy 46 1:30:50 6:56
269 35 Roger Liberman 40 1:31:56 (PR by 3 minutes+) 7:01
320 43 Craig Plummer 41 1:33:50 7:09
358 98 Yves-Marc Courtines 27 1:35:33 7:17
364 50 Blair Boyer 41 1:35:42 7:18
404 177 Bola Awofeso 39 1:36:55 7:23
508 227 Alex Peterhansl 30 1:39:57 7:37
598 269 Arthur Cooke 36 1:42:32 7:49
651 60 J.R. Mojica 45 1:43:53 7:55
832 364 Jarl Berntzen 33 1:48:36 8:17
  • Our fourth-place finisher Rob Zand is a new member who was just accepted into the club this week, although he has been running with us at workouts for a few weeks already.  Among his recent running credentials is a third-place finish (16:54) in the 5K Summer Series at Prospect Park.
  • By his own admission, Stuart Calderwood was 'not in shape' for this race due to missed training from a torn calf muscle for over a month now.  Nevertheless, in the absence of other Master runners, he ran this race for the team in a time that is much slower than his usual standard of excellence; specifically, it was a personal worse by more than 4 minutes.  The good news is that we can be sure that he will be back with a vengeance ...

Toby Tanser
(Click to listen to interview (.wav file))

WOMEN, 1st Open Team

Overall pl Age Pl Name Age Time Min/mile
7 4 Shelley Farmer 30 1:27:11 6:39
16 11 Stephanie Gould 34 1:31:30 6:59
20 14 Audrey Kingsley 31 1:32:17 7:02
39 2 Terri Sonenclar 43 1:36:16 7:20
95 7 Sarah Gross 43 1:44:07 7:56

ZIMMERMAN CUP, Central Park, NYC (July 8, 2000)

Stephanie Gould, 6th place overall, Women 1,2,3 category


SUMMER SERIES 5K, Prospect Park, Brooklyn (July 5, 2000)

Jim Aneshansley, 21:09 in his first race as a 65-year-old.


TOMAHAWK POW WOW DAYS 10K, Tomahawk, WI (July 4, 2000)

Tim Grotenhuis, 42:13, 10th place overall 


7th ANNUAL 4th of JULY VILLAGE RUNNER 5k, Redondo, CA  (July 4, 2000)

Tyronne Culpepper, 19:17


22nd ANNUAL PEPPER MARTIN MEMORIAL RUN, West Brighton, Staten Island (July 4, 2000)

Alston Brown, 28:03 (5:37 min/mile), 10th overall, 1st M50-54


JOHN DE MILLE FIRECRACKER 8K, Bethel, CT (July 4, 2000)

Roger Liberman, 33:44


WALL TOWNSHIP FIRECRACKER FIVE RUN, Wall, NJ (July 4, 2000)

Larry King, 31:08, 18th overall, 2nd M 35-39


PEACH TREE ROAD RACE (10K), Atlanta, GA (July 4, 2000)

Victor Osayi, 37:40, 248th overall, 52nd masters men


TOMMY'S AMERICAN 4 MILER, Central Park, NYC (July 4, 2000)

Photo album

Toby Tanser, 19:46, 1st overall

Note:  There is 1.5 megabyte .avi movie of Toby crossing the finish line


FIRECRACKER FOUR MILER, Cranford, NJ (July 4, 2000)

Sid Howard, 25:14, 82nd overall, 1st M60-69.


FIRECRACKER 8K, Southampton, LI (July 4, 2000)

John Kenney, 28:19, 4th overall, 1st master

(Important technical note: Ahead of Kevin Barry ...)

  Walrus Internet