Stephanie Bruce wins her first US title, USA-10k at AJC Peachtree, photo by PhotoRun.net
Bernard Lagat wins his first road title, USA 10-K at AJC Peachtree Road Race, photo by PhotoRun.net
Stephanie Bruce and Bernard Lagat won the USA 10-K titles today, 4 July, as hosted by AJC Peachtree Road Race. For Stephanie Bruce, it was her first US title and she ran a PB. For Bernard Lagat, who has won titles on the track too numerous for me to count here. David Monti, a great friend of the sports, and his wife Jane, cover our sport’s distance races, on the track and on the road. We are grateful for their coverage and use their articles with permission.
BRUCE, LAGAT WIN USA 10-K TITLES AT AJC PEACHTREE ROAD RACE
By David Monti, @d9monti
(c) 2018 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved, used with permission.
(04-Jul) — Proving that experience counts, veterans Stephanie Bruce and Bernard Lagat executed tactically brilliant races at today’s AJC Peachtree Road Race in Atlanta, each taking home their first USA 10-kilometer road running titles. For Bruce, 34, of Flagstaff, Ariz., today’s win in a personal best 32:21 represented her first-ever national title, while Lagat of Tucson, Ariz., won his 15th overall national title –but his first on the roads– in 28:42. At 43 years-old, Lagat became the oldest-ever USA 10-K champion. Both athletes won $10,000 in prize money.
Both Bruce and Lagat used patience to their advantage today. In the women’s contest, Bruce hung back with chasers Sara Hall, Allie Kieffer, and Gwen Jorgensen after her Hoka One One Northern Arizona Elite teammate Aliphine Tuliamuk, the defending champion, took off past halfway and built up a sizable lead. Bruce worked first with Hall to catch Tuliamuk, then dropped the reigning USA marathon champion to reel in her teammate. She drew even with her with about 400 meters to go, then powered away for the win. Tuliamuk got second in 32:29, Hall third in 32:41, and Kieffer fourth in 32:52.
“It was a long time coming,” Bruce told race organizers, the Atlanta Track Club. “I knew how strong [Aliphine] was, but this was just years of accumulated work and believing in myself. This may be the highlight of my career this far, and it’s exciting to do it in Atlanta.”
Lagat ignored the early breakaway attempt of Augustus Maiyo of the U.S. Army team, stayed tucked in the pack after Maiyo was caught just past the 5-kilometer mark, then sat at the back of a five-man group of Haron Lagat (no relation), Lopez Lomong (the recently-crowned national 10,000m champion), Tyler Pennel, and Sam Chelanga in the final stages of the race. Lagat knew what was coming next.
“I hung in as much as I could and waited patiently until the last minute,” Lagat said in a text message to Race Results Weekly.
Chelanga was the first to crack in the final kilometer, then Pennel, then Lomong. The taller Haron Lagat tried mightily to hang on his namesake, but the five-time Olympian’s sizzling drive to the finish left his rivals gasping behind him in Atlanta’s warm and sticky air.
“I was fifth last year and I wasn’t satisfied,” Lagat told race organizers. “So I told Atlanta Track Club that I was going to come back and I was going to win. I trained so hard, but it was worth the sacrifice and it means so much to win because it’s on July Fourth.”
Haron Lagat got second in 28:48, followed by Pennel in 28:49, the Chelanga in 28:56 and Lomong in 28:57.
The AJC Peachtree Road Race is part of the USATF Running Circuit.
Author
Race Results Weekly is the news service of record for global road racing, published by David and Jane Monti, with support of Chris Lotsbom. RunBlogRun publishes their stories with permission.
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