In a wonderful day of cross country racing, Golden Gate Park became a celebration of all things cross country, as 1,922 cross country runners ran in five amazing races. Each with their own excitement, and each with their own drama.
The women’s 6k master’s race and Men’s Masters’ 8k (60 plus) and Men’s Masters’ 10k were thrilling! Sonja Friend-Uhl won in an upset in the first race of the day. In the second race, a huge field competed over the 8k course, with Rick Becker winning the overall title.
Jonathan Grey leads the Men’s Open 10k, photo by Larry Eder
The men’s 10k open was a battle to the end. Garrett Heath lead a chase pack as Jonathan Gray built up a strong lead. ” At 5k and 6k, and 7k, Jonathan was leading, and I did not think I could catch him. With 200 meters to go, I thought I had a chance. With fifty meters to go, I had nothing left.” Garrett Heath told me right after the race. The HOKA ONE ONE Norther Arizona Elite, a club sponsored by HOKA ONE ONE last spring, won their first national club title, with their men’s team taking the honor.
In the women’s open race, over 6k, the race was close again, between Laura Thweatt and Amy Van Alstine (HOKA ONE ONE NAZ). With less than 200 meters to go, Amy Van Alstine took the lead and the win. The B.A.A. women, who ran fantastic, defended their crown from 2015.
A very happy Ben Rosario, coach of HOKA ONE ONE’s NAZ was pleased to see his men’s team win the title and his top women, Amy Van Alstine rise to the occasion.
For me, the day of cross country races was a chance to reconnect with West Coast friends. Peanut Harms and Leo Lenting, two great friends, and fine cross country runners in earlier lives were there. Joe Rubio, coaching the ASICS Aggies, was there cheering on his team.
The crew from the Pacific Association should be commended on how well they ran the event, from the officials in the start area, to the finish line, which was run flawlessly . The food trucks were well recieved. I had my first Vietnamese iced coffee (nice taste). Congrats to Irene Herman of PAUSATF, who made her vision, with her team, a reality. An amazing cross country champs!
There were several thousand people in the Hellman area of the Park, with the Polo fields getting the most use. The announcer was hysterical, making little comments on different athletes-he had done his homework!
For me, the USATF Club Championships are all about the best part of the sport. Cross country can be run by runners of all ages. Cregg Weinmann, RN footwear editor, competed in the 60 plus Men’s Masters 8k. “The race went out very fast, ” was how Cregg described the race. Like Cregg, many ran PBs.
A great day of competition, and a great day of seeing friends I had not seen in two decades.
B.A.A. defends USATF Club XC title despite streak of upsets in San Francisco
SAN FRANCISCO — Saturday’s USATF Club Cross Country National Championships were nothing short of stunning, with an idyllic backdrop and stacked fields in every race as national championship contenders took to Golden Gate Park to see who reigned supreme. Individual national champions were crowned in open men’s 10 km and women’s 6 km races, as well as masters age group victors at 6 km, 8 km and 10 km distances.
Amy Van Alstine of HOKA ONE ONE NAZ Elite ran a tight race alongside defending individual champion Laura Thweatt and NAZ Elite teammate Rochelle Kanuho, keeping things neck-and-neck over the last 3/4 mile after splitting 9:51. The trio barrelled to the finish, but Van Alstine surged over the final 200 meters to edge Thweatt by a second, 19:51-19:52. Kanuho was right on their heels, crossing in 19:53. In the team race, the Boston Athletic Association defended their women’s team title with an exceptional 28-point performance courtesy of three top-10 finishes from Emma Bates, Sarah Pagano and three-time Olympian Jen Rhines. The second place team was High Performance West with 107 points and Club Northwest came in with a podium finish, scoring 156 points for third.
On the men’s side, Garrett Heath continued to prove his dominance on the cross country circuit, taking the men’s individual title in 29:06. Heath, who took the Bupa Great Edinburgh individual crown in early 2015, battled with Boulder Track Club’s Jonathan Grey, who finished just behind Heath in 29:10. Scot Fauble’s third place finish in 29:26 for the HOKA ONE ONE NAZ Elite men proved to be the catalyst for their victory in the team race, as all five athletes finished in the top 25 individually to edge the B.A.A. men, 60-106. The third place team was Boulder Track Club (127 points) behind Grey’s runner-up individual finish.
Masters races see defending individual champions dethroned
In an upset, Sonja Friend-Uhl was the first runner across the line in the masters women’s 6 km race in 21:59, beating Janet McDevitt by seven seconds. Defending champion Chris Kimbrough was another nine seconds behind for third.
The overall masters age-grade winner was Hall of Fame runner and 2015 Runner of the Year, Kathy Martin, 64, at 95.64%, followed by Sabra Harvey, 66, 2014 Runner of the Year, at 92.63%.
West Coast and Mountain West clubs ruled the team contests with Club Northwest (WA) defeating 22 other Masters teams to take the 40+ crown. Athletics Boulder (CO) claimed 50+, Impala Racing (CA) the 60+, and Tamalpa Runners (CA) the 70+ title.
In addition to W40 Friend-Uhl, W45, Kimbrough, W60 Martin, and W65 Harvey, notable individual age group winners included: Marisa Sutera Strange who took her third straight gold this year in the women’s 50 group, and hall-of-famer Carmen Ayala-Troncoso in W55. Lynne Hurrell, 81, was the oldest gold medal winner in W80.
Lafayette, Louisiana’s Kevin Castille was first across the finish line in the masters men’s 10 km in 31:00, defeating defending champion Greg Mitchell by over a half minute.
Castille, 43, also took the men’s age-grading crown at 91.52% with Rick Becker, 61, second at 90.77%.
The West Coast again dominated in the team contests. Mitchell led his Bowerman Track Club (OR) to the M40+ win. Other team winners included: Cal Coast Track Club in the 50+, Club Northwest(WA), led by Becker in the 60+, and Tamalpa Runners (CA) M70+.
Apart from M40 Castille and M60 Becker the age group crowns went to: Peter Hammer, M45; Mike McManus, M50; Dan King, M55; Doug Winn, M65; and Tamalpa Runners teammates, Len Goldman and Hans Schmid in M70 and M75 respectively. Bill Dodson was the oldest gold medal winner, taking the M80 crown at age 80.
Event Coverage
The USATF Club Cross Country Championships will be available on demand at USATF.tv. Race video, results, post-race interviews and photos will be available Saturday evening.
Masters recaps contributed by Paul Carlin, USATF Masters LDR Executive Committee
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Author
Larry Eder has had a 52-year involvement in the sport of athletics. Larry has experienced the sport as an athlete, coach, magazine publisher, and now, journalist and blogger. His first article, on Don Bowden, America's first sub-4 minute miler, was published in RW in 1983. Larry has published several magazines on athletics, from American Athletics to the U.S. version of Spikes magazine. He currently manages the content and marketing development of the RunningNetwork, The Shoe Addicts, and RunBlogRun. Of RunBlogRun, his daily pilgrimage with the sport, Larry says: "I have to admit, I love traveling to far away meets, writing about the sport I love, and the athletes I respect, for my readers at runblogrun.com, the most of anything I have ever done, except, maybe running itself." Also does some updates for BBC Sports at key events, which he truly enjoys. Theme song: Greg Allman, " I'm no Angel."
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