Showing posts with label Madison Sims. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Madison Sims. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 1, 2023

Patrick Koon pounds a 14:59 5K win at FHSAA 3A District 1

Before Wednesday, 1 November 2023, no one had ever broken 16:00 on the five-kilometer cross-country course at Twin Oaks Park in Niceville, Florida. That morning, Patrick Koon didn't just break 16:00, be broke 15:00. The Leon High senior ran 14:59, taking first in the FHSAA 3A District 1 boys' cross-country race. Koon's win led Leon to a 28-point score and the District title. Another Leon athlete, Madison Sims, won the earlier girls' 5K at the District meet in 19:01. The Fort Walton Beach girls had the top team, scoring a winning 35 points.


The girls raced first. There was a vanguard of three juniors most of the way--Madison Sims of Leon, Elyse Carmichael of Washington, and Belicia O'Grady of Fort Walton Beach. O'Grady was the defending champion, having won the previous year's race over competition that included Lillee Tang, the 2022 state champion. But in 2023, O'Grady was the first of the lead trio to fall behind when the charge for home started, leaving Sims and Carmichael to duel for the win. Sims won that duel, reaching the finish line first in 19:01. Carmichael was second in 19:05 and O'Grady third in 19:13.

Madison Sims
Madison Sims

Reece Knowlton, a Fort Walton Beach senior, took fourth in 19:42. Fort Walton Beach had a third athlete in the top ten as well; sophomore Martha Curtis was eighth in 21:18. Fort Walton Beach frosh Leilani Lichlyter (12th, 21:24) and junior Charity Lobzun (12th, 21:26) finished the scoring for the Vikings, giving their team 35 points and a District champion trophy.


Gulf Breeze took second in the team standings behind the seventh-place, 21:15 performance of fosh harrier Zoe Liguori-Bills. Lincoln was third with 87 points, led by junior NyAshia Wright (6th, 21:00). Fort Walton Beach, Gulf Breeze, and Lincoln each qualified for the 3A Region 1 meet, as did the next five teams--Mosley (4th, 146 points), Choctawhatchee (5th, 146 points), Washington (6th, 146 points), Pine Forest (7th, 184 points), and Rickards (8th, 199 points).


Girls' Team Standings, 2023 FHSAA 3A Distict 1 Cross-Country Meet
  1. Fort Walton Beach, 35
  2. Gulf Breeze, 65
  3. Lincoln, 87
  4. Mosley, 146
  5. Choctawhatchee, 146
  6. Washington, 146
  7. Pine Forest, 184
  8. Rickards, 199
  9. Milton, 225
  10. Escambia, 272

Top Ten Girls, 2023 FHSAA 3A Distict 1 Cross-Country Meet
  1. 19:00.70, Madi Sims (Leon) JR
  2. 19:04.50, Elyse Carmichael (Washington) JR
  3. 19:12.90, Belicia O'Grady (Fort Walton Beach) JR
  4. 19:41.60, Reece Knowlton (Fort Walton Beach) SR
  5. 20:10.80, Isabel Harter (Choctawhatchee) SO
  6. 20:59.60, NyAshia Wright (Lincoln) JR
  7. 21:14.80, Zoe Liguori-Bills (Gulf Breeze) FR
  8. 21:17.90, Martha Curtis (Fort Walton Beach) SO
  9. 21:19.80, Annie Caulkins (Lincoln) SR
  10. 21:22.30, Victoriah Reed (Washington) JR

Patrick Koon had won the 3A District 1 race in 2021 and again in 2022. At the senior's valedictory appearance in District competition, he made it three in a row, taking first in 14:59. Behind Koon, Gulf Breeze frosh Andrew Beroset became the second athlete to break 16:00 at Twin Oaks Park, placing runner-up in District 1 at 15:35. Another half minute after Beroset finished, Fort Walton Beach senior Grant Chastain edged Lincoln sophomore Matthew Hauser for third, 16:11 to 16:12.

Patrick Koon
Patrick Koon

The next three places belonged to Leon seniors--Quinn Carrasquilla was fifth in 16:19, Will Winsor sixth in 16:25, and Will Springer seventh in 16:34. Once Leon junior Cadden Maxwell crossed the finish line ninth in 16:51, the Lions had 28 points and a team title.


Tallahassee had the top two teams, as Lincoln put up 83 points to place second. Fort Walton Beach was a close third with 87. The other teams advancing to the 3A Region 1 meet were Gulf Breeze (4th, 103), Mosley (5th, 117), Arnold (6th, 137), Milton (7th, 226), and Escambia (8th, 245).


The 3A Region 1 Meet is scheduled for Saturday morning, 11 November 2023 at Matanzas High School in Palm Coast. The top eight teams in each race at the Regional Championship will advance to the FHSAA Cross-Country State Championship Meet at Apalachee Regional Park in Tallahassee on Friday morning, 17 November 2023.


Boys' Team Standings, 2023 FHSAA 3A Distict 1 Cross-Country Meet
  1. Leon, 28
  2. Lincoln, 83
  3. Fort Walton Beach, 87
  4. Gulf Breeze, 103
  5. Mosley, 117
  6. Arnold, 137
  7. Milton, 226
  8. Escambia, 245
  9. Rickards, 254
  10. Choctawhatchee, 255

Top Ten Boys, 2023 FHSAA 3A Distict 1 Cross-Country Meet
  1. 14:58.40, Patrick Koon (Leon) SR
  2. 15:34.30, Andrew Beroset (Gulf Breeze) FR
  3. 16:10.10, Grant Chastain (Fort Walton Beach) SR
  4. 16:11.90, Matthew Hauser (Lincoln) SO
  5. 16:18.20, Quinn Carrasquilla (Leon) SR
  6. 16:24.90, Will Winsor (Leon) SR
  7. 16:34.00, Will Springer (Leon) SR
  8. 16:43.50, Nicolas Waddell (Mosley) SR
  9. 16:50.20, Cadden Maxwell (Leon) JR
  10. 16:55.70, Walt Haber (Leon) SR

Links
#3008

Sunday, September 17, 2023

Wakulla County Meet means more cross-country wins for Madison Sims and Patrick Koon

For the Big Bend's high school cross-country teams that remained in the region on Saturday, 16 September 2023, the place to be was 3Y Ranch outside of Crawfordville, Florida. There, Wakulla High was hosting their second annual Wakulla County Cross-Country Meet. The Wakulla High girls put up 23 points in their race, taking first, while Leon took the high school boys' event with 19 boys. Leon junior Madison Sims was first in the high school girls' 5K at 20:02, her second win in two weeks. Leon senior Patrick Koon improved his 2023 cross-country record to three wins with no losses by defeating everyone in the high school boys' 5K with a 16:26.

Wakulla High girls' cross-country team
Wakulla High girls

The high school girls' race was first on the program, scheduled to start at 8:00 AM. As at the Panther Invitational seven days earlier, Leon athletes Madison Sims and Clifton Lewis ran together until the end, where junior-year harrier Sims edged the sophomore Lewis, 20:02 to 20:04. Wakulla junior Isabella Laughton followed the two Lions across the finish line, placing third in 20:13.


Laughton was only the first of five War Eagles in the top ten. The other four were senior Liliana Lewis (6th, 22:16), junior Lana Hawkins (7th, 22:46), senior Taylor Pfeifer (8th, 22:48), and senior Analecia Ferrell (9th, 22:51). With that, the Wakulla girls had 23 points, the best score of the seven teams in the race.


Lincoln High's first runner, junior NyAshia Wright, took tenth in 22:58, leading the Trojans to second place in the team standings with 70 points. Saint John Paul Catholic was third with 103 points; the team's top scorer was sophomore Serafina Rietow, fifth in 21:54.


High School Girls' Team Standings, 2023 Wakulla County Cross-Country Meet
  1. Wakulla, 23
  2. Lincoln, 70
  3. Saint John Paul Catholic, 103
  4. Community Christian, 106
  5. Thomas County Central, 114
  6. Liberty County, 152
  7. Rickards, 154

Top Ten High School Girls, 2023 Wakulla County Cross-Country Meet
  1. 20:02.00, Madi Sims (Leon) 11
  2. 20:04.00, Clifton Lewis (Leon) 10
  3. 20:12.50, Isabella Laughton (Wakulla) 11
  4. 21:07.80, Cadence Curnalia (Thomas County Central) 11
  5. 21:53.70, Serafina Rietow (Saint John Paul II Catholic) 10
  6. 22:15.50, Liliana Lewis (Wakulla) 12
  7. 22:45.30, Lana Hawkins (Wakulla) 11
  8. 22:47.20, Taylor Pfeifer (Wakulla) 12
  9. 22:50.40, Analecia Ferrell (Wakulla) 12
  10. 22:57.80, NyAshia Wright (Lincoln) 11

After the Panther Invitational on 9 September 2023, Patrick Koon had said that his focus was preparing for the Pre-State race at the FSU Invitational on 30 September 2023. But at 3Y Ranch the Leon senior's immediate order of business was the Wakulla County Meet's high school boys' 5K. Koon took care of business, winning by 100 meters in 16:26. Wakulla sophomore Henry Lewis took second for the home team, running 16:46. Leon seniors took the next two places, with Quinn Carrasquilla edging Will Winsor 16:54 to 16:56.

Leon
Leon High boys

Leon's remaining two scorers weren't far behind, with junior Cadden Maxwell fifth in 17:18 and senior Walt Haber sixth in 17:42. Only Wakulla's Lewis had prevented the Lions from scoring a perfect 15; as it was, they had a mathematically unbeatable 19 points and Leon's first Wakulla County team title.


Lewis and Wakulla scored 77 points, putting the War Eagles second in the six-team field. The Community Christian Chargers were a close third with 80 points, led by Charger eighth-grader Landon Reeves, seventh in 17:45.


High School Boys' Team Standings, 2023 Wakulla County Cross-Country Meet
  1. Leon, 19
  2. Wakulla, 77
  3. Community Christian, 80
  4. Lincoln, 97
  5. Thomas County Central, 114
  6. Rickards, 135

Top Ten High School Boys, 2023 Wakulla County Cross-Country Meet
  1. 16:25.50, Patrick Koon (Leon) 12
  2. 16:45.40, Henry Lewis (Wakulla) 10
  3. 16:53.10, Quinn Carrasquilla (Leon) 12
  4. 16:55.10, Will Winsor (Leon) 12
  5. 17:17.50, Cadden Maxwell (Leon) 11
  6. 17:41.70, Walt Haber (Leon) 12
  7. 17:44.80, Landon Reeves (Community Christian) 8
  8. 17:49.20, Yi'en Liu (Leon) 12
  9. 17:49.70, Jeremy Collier (Community Christian) 10
  10. 17:50.50, Theo McDonald (Leon) 9

The girls' 3K led off the middle school racing at the Wakulla County Meet. Holy Comforter sixth-graders Mackenzie McVay and Madison McVay headed the field, with Mackenzie taking first in 12:51 and Madison second in 12:56. Holy Comforter eighth-grader Elaine Ungru was third in 13:40.

Mackenzie McVay
Mackenzie McVay

Holy Comforter's next two scorers were eighth-grader Lillian Anway, fourth in 13:50, and sixth-grader Eleanor Blalock, fifth in 14:22. You can't do better than taking the first five places, so you couldn't have a better score than the Holy Comforter girls' 15 points--putting the Crusader girls first in the five-team field.


Riversprings was second with 73 points, the top Bear was eighth-grader Breland Smith, eleventh in 15:28. Marianna was third with 79 points, led by seventh-grader Jaymi Miller (8th, 15:00).


Middle School Girls' Team Standings, 2023 Wakulla County Cross-Country Meet
  1. Holy Comforter Episcopal, 15
  2. Riversprings, 73
  3. Marianna, 79
  4. Trinity Catholic, 98
  5. Liberty County, 100

Top Ten Middle School Girls, 2023 Wakulla County Cross-Country Meet
  1. 12:50.10, Mackenzie McVay (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 6
  2. 12:55.40, Madison McVay (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 6
  3. 13:39.70, Elaine Ungru (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 6
  4. 13:49.10, Lillian Anway (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 8
  5. 14:21.60, Eleanor Blalock (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 6
  6. 14:34.30, Kynley Cheesborough (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 8
  7. 14:39.90, Allie Winsor (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 8
  8. 15:00.00, Jaymi Miller (Marianna) 7
  9. 15:01.90, Danielle Sasso (Trinity Catholic) 8
  10. 15:19.90, Taylor Strohecker (Liberty County) 8

The first place showing by the Holy Comforter girls gave them a three-meet winning streak, but the Holy Comforter boys were perfect after the Wakulla County Meet--four wins in four outings.


Individual honors in the middle school boys' 3K, though, went to Trinity Catholic eighth-grader James Mogg, who won by nearly 200 meters in 11:02. Liberty County eighth-grader Sebastian Knight was runner-up in 11:52, and Holy Comforter eighth-grader Joshua Butera edged Trinity Catholic eighth-grader Asher McGrew for third, 11:57 to 11:59.

James Mogg
James Mogg

But Holy Comforter got the win by putting three more Crusaders in the top ten--eighth-grader Andrew Norby was sixth in 12:15, sixth-grader Hudson Cheesborough was seventh in 12:18, and eighth-grader Gavin McVay was ninth in 12:28. That was enough to give the Crusader boys 25 points, a mathematically unbeatable score, and first place out of five teams.


Mogg and Trinity Catholic put up 47 points, placing second. Christ Classical was third with 92 points.


Miles and Minutes, LLC, of Tallahassee timed and scored the 2023 Wakulla County Cross-Country Meet.


Middle School Boys' Team Standings, 2023 Wakulla County Cross-Country Meet
  1. Holy Comforter Episcopal, 25
  2. Trinity Catholic, 47
  3. Christ Classical, 87
  4. Wakulla, 92
  5. Riversprings, 122

Top Ten Middle School Boys, 2023 Wakulla County Cross-Country Meet
  1. 11:02.00, James Mogg (Trinity Catholic) 8
  2. 11:51.10, Sebastian Knight (Liberty County) 8
  3. 11:56.40, Joshua Butera (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 8
  4. 11:58.80, Asher McGrew (Trinity Catholic) 8
  5. 12:13.00, Aidan Glisson (Marianna) 8
  6. 12:14.10, Andrew Nordby (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 8
  7. 12:17.30, Hudson Cheesborough (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 6
  8. 12:27.70, Chase Sims (Unattached) 6
  9. 12:27.70, Gavin McVay (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 8
  10. 12:39.70, Kayson Gantt (Community Leadership) 8

Wakulla County Cross-Country Meet Winners, 2022 - 2023
High School Girls
DateTeamAthlete
17 September 2022Florida State, 2920:48, Niya Coleman (Florida State) 12
16 September 2023Wakulla, 2320:02, Madi Sims (Leon) 11


High School Boys
DateTeamAthlete
17 September 2022Mosley, 5717:30, Nicolas Waddell (Mosley) 11
16 September 2023Leon, 1916:26, Patrick Koon (Leon) 12


Middle School Girls
DateTeamAthlete
17 September 2022Maclay, 1612:42, Lilly Bell (Maclay) 8
16 September 2023Holy Comforter, 1512:51, Mackenzie McVay (Holy Comforter) 6


Middle School Boys
DateTeamAthlete
17 September 2022Maclay, 4110:54, Logan Phipps (Maclay) 7
16 September 2023Holy Comforter, 2511:02, James Mogg (Trinity Catholic) 8



Links #2976

Sunday, September 10, 2023

Patrick Koon rips a 15:45 5K at the Panther Cross-Country Meet

Saturday, 9 September 2023, was the morning of John Paul II Catholic High School's eighth annual Panther Invitational Cross-Country Meet, with four races on the school's campus in the Southwood neighborhood of Tallahassee, Florida. It was also the first time that Leon High entered the meet. The Lions made the most of their debut, with Leon junior Madi Sims winning the high school school girls' 5K in 20:13, and Leon senior Patrick Koon taking the high school boys' 5K in 15:45. Koon and the Leon boys grabbed first place in the team standings with 25 points, while the Chiles High girls' won the team title in their race with 23 points.

Patrick Koon, Madison Sims
Patrick Koon and Madison Sims

The Panther Invitational was scheduled to start at 8:00 AM with the high school girls' 5K. At 8:00 AM there was no one on the starting line. The timer had overslept. When it was clear that the timing company was going to be quite tardy, the race director assembled a volunteer finish line crew, and the starter got the first race underway at 8:23 AM.


Maclay sophomore Caroline Couch, the defending champion and meet record holder in the high school girls' race, charged out to an early lead, ahead by five seconds after half a kilometer. By two kilometers, Couch had widened that gap to 45 seconds, and 1500 meters later her lead was well over a minute.

Start
Start of the high school girls' race

Behind Couch, Leon's two entries--junior Madison Sims and sophomore Clifton Lewis--had started off more conservatively, tucked back in seventh and eighth position at the end of the first half kilometer. Steadily overtaking their competitors, Sims and Lewis had worked their way up to second and third with 1500 meters to go.


"We pretty much ran together and pushed each other," said Sims.

Madison Sims
Madison Sims and Clifton Lewis

Less than 200 meters from the finish line, Couch dropped out of the race.


"I didn't know I was leading until someone told me at three miles," said Sims.


With Lewis a few steps back, Sims drove to the finish line, crossing in a winning 20:13. Lewis was second in 20:19. Chiles High frosh Kaia Ables took third in 20:28.

Chiles
Chiles Girls

Ables was just the first of five Chiles Timberwolves in the top ten. The others were frosh Haley Heitmeyer (5th, 21:12), frosh Savannah Stanley (7th, 21:43), sophomore London Mellen (8th, 21:50), and frosh Andi Vilardo (10th, 22:23). With a mathematically unbeatable 23 points, the Timberwolf girls had won the Panther Invitational for the second year in a row.


With their top runner, junior Isabella Laughton, finishing fourth in 20:36, the Wakulla girls placed second in the team standings with 54 points. Florida State University School was third with 70 points, led by frosh Leah Boutwell (6th, 21:33).


John Paul II Catholic's 2023 Panther Invitational Team Standings, High School Girls
  1. Chiles, 23
  2. Wakulla, 54
  3. Florida State University, 70
  4. Saint John Paul II Catholic, 106
  5. Community Christian, 126

Top Ten High School Girls, John Paul II Catholic's 2023 Panther Invitational
  1. 20:12.20, Madi Sims (Leon) 11
  2. 20:18.44, Clifton Lewis (Leon) 10
  3. 20:27.80, Kaia Ables (Chiles) 9
  4. 20:35.50, Isabella Laughton (Wakulla) 11
  5. 21:11.30, Haley Heitmeyer (Chiles) 9
  6. 21:32.20, Leah Boutwell (Florida State University) 9
  7. 21:42.10, Savannah Stanley (Chiles) 9
  8. 21:49.80, London Mellen (Chiles) 10
  9. 21:52.60, Serafina Rietow (Saint John Paul II Catholic) 10
  10. 22:22.80, Andi Vilardo (Chiles) 9

Patrick Koon
Patrick Koon

"The plan was to go out with the team for the first mile and then start accelerating," explained Patrick Koon, describing his script for the high school boys' 5K. Koon played the part as written, remaining tucked behind the leaders for the early part of the race before setting his own faster pace. At two kilometers he was already well out ahead of the rest of the field, with senior year teammates Will Winsor and Quinn Carrasquilla holding the second and third positions. The only thing that changed after that was Koon's lead, which only grew.


No athlete had ever broken 17:00 at the Panther Invitational before; Koon left that mark far behind, winning the race in 15:45. Leon's Winsor also cracked 17:00, finishing runner-up in 16:58. Carrasquilla placed third in 16:58.

Leon
Leon boys

After taking the top three places, the Lions also had a fourth athlete in the top ten--senior Walt Haber was tenth in 18:06. Leon's fifth scorer was junior Cadden Maxwell, eleventh in 18:23, after which the Lions had 25 points, putting them first out of seven boys' teams.


The Chiles boys, led by frosh Jonathan Kiros (6th, 17:29), took second with 64 points. Wakulla was third with 108 points behind the fourth place 17:15 showing of sophomore Henry Lewis.


John Paul II Catholic's 2023 Panther Invitational Team Standings, High School Boys
  1. Leon, 27
  2. Chiles, 64
  3. Community Christian, 89
  4. Wakulla, 108
  5. Florida State University, 120
  6. Rickards, 138
  7. North Florida Christian, 206

Top Ten High School Boys, John Paul II Catholic's 2023 Panther Invitational
  1. 15:44.10, Patrick Koon (Leon) 12
  2. 16:57.70, Will Winsor (Leon) 12
  3. 17:06.50, Quinn Carrasquilla (Leon) 12
  4. 17:14.50, Henry Lewis (Wakulla) 10
  5. 17:27.90, Xavier England (Florida State University) 12
  6. 17:28.10, Jonathan Kiros (Chiles) 9
  7. 17:38.00, Jonah Blay (Chiles) 12
  8. 17:45.50, Landon Reeves (Community Christian) 8
  9. 17:57.70, Jeremy Collier (Community Christian) 10
  10. 18:05.90, Walt Haber (Leon) 12

Florida State University School is quite literally across the street from John Paul II Catholic High, so FSUS seventh-grader Elin Quisenberry didn't have to travel far to win the middle school girls' race at the Panther Invitational. Quisenberry won the three-kilometer even by more than 60 meters, running 13:24. Holy Comforter sixth-grader MacKenzie McVay took second in 13:42, followed by two more Holy Comforter harriers--sixth-graders Madison McVay (3rd, 13:49) and Elaine Ungru (4th, 13:56).

Elin Quisenberry
Elin Quisenberry

Holy Comforter's two other scorers also made the top ten; Crusader eighth-grader Lillian Anway was seventh in 14:18 while her teammate, eighth-grader Harper McKee, was tenth in 14:58. With five Crusaders in the top ten, the Holy Comforter girls had an untouchable 26 points and first in the team standings.


Quisenberry and Florida State were second with 38 points. The Maclay girls, led by eighth-grader Mary Price (8th, 14:24), placed third with 80 points.


John Paul II Catholic's 2023 Panther Invitational Team Standings, Middle School Girls
  1. Holy Comforter Episcopal, 26
  2. Florida State University, 38
  3. Maclay, 80
  4. Trinity Catholic, 120
  5. Marianna, 136
  6. Cornerstone, 145

Top Ten Middle School Girls, John Paul II Catholic's 2023 Panther Invitational
  1. 13:23.20, Elin Quisenberry (Florida State University) 7
  2. 13:41.60, Mackenzie McVay (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 6
  3. 13:48.40, Madison McVay (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 6
  4. 13:55.60, Elaine Ungru (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 6
  5. 14:03.20, Julia Robinson (Florida State University) 8
  6. 14:09.30, Vera Vanlandingham (Florida State University) 6
  7. 14:17.40, Lillian Anway (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 8
  8. 14:23.20, Mary Price (Maclay) 8
  9. 14:41.60, Olivia Gibson (Florida State University) 7
  10. 14:57.70, Harper McKee (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 8

James Mogg ran away from the rest of the field in the middle school boys' 3K; the Trinity Catholic eighth-grader won the race by nearly 150 meters in 11:43. Florida State seventh-grader Lawson Phillips nabbed second with a 12:19. At 12:29, Marianna eighth-grader Aidan Glisson placed third.

James Mogg
James Mogg

Eighth-grader Asher McGrew took fourth place for Trinity Catholic in 12:30. Andrew Norby was the first finisher for Holy Comforter; the eighth-grader was fifth in 12:34. Norby was joined in the top ten by his teammate, sixth-grader Hudson Cheesborough, ninth in 13:00. The Holy Comforter's boys' next three scorers were seventh-grader Matthew Nowels (11th, 13:08), seventh-grader Beau May (12th, 13:09), and eighth-grader Gavin McVay (14th, 13:28), giving the Crusaders 38 points and the first place team.


Mogg's Trinity Catholic squad was a close second with 44 points, just better than the 46 points scored by third-place Maclay. Maclay's top finisher was eighth-grader Andrew Campbell, sixth in 12:49.


John Paul II Catholic's 2023 Panther Invitational Team Standings, Middle School Boys
  1. Holy Comforter Episcopal, 38
  2. Trinity Catholic, 44
  3. Maclay, 46
  4. Christ Classical, 120
  5. Cornerstone, 146

Top Ten Middle School Boys, John Paul II Catholic's 2023 Panther Invitational
  1. 11:42.90, James Mogg (Trinity Catholic) 8
  2. 12:18.70, Lawson Phillips (Florida State University) 7
  3. 12:28.40, Aidan Glisson (Marianna) 8
  4. 12:29.30, Asher McGrew (Trinity Catholic) 8
  5. 12:33.10, Andrew Nordby (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 8
  6. 12:48.30, Andrew Campbell (Maclay) 8
  7. 12:50.70, Henry Procter (Maclay) 8
  8. 12:58.10, Leo Perez (Trinity Catholic) 8
  9. 12:59.10, Hudson Cheesborough (Holy Comforter Episcopal) 6
  10. 13:03.40, Christian Acree (Unattached) 7

The 2023 Panther Invitational was timed and scored by Miles and Minutes, LLC, of Tallahassee.


Panther Invitational Cross-Country Meet Winners, 2016 - 2023
High School Boys
DateTeam ChampIndividual Champ
9 September 2016Lincoln, 3818:18, Gatlin Nennstiel (Aucilla Christian) 12
23 September 2017Wakulla, 1518:17, Chris Porter (Wakulla) 11
8 September 2018Maclay, 1917:30, Junious Brown IV (Maclay) 11
7 September 2019Community Christian, 4718:00, David A. Keen (North Florida Christian) 12
12 September 2020Maclay, 2317:32, Jackson Yarbrough (Maclay) 11
11 September 2021Chiles, 2317:09, Ben Kirbo (Chiles) 12
10 September 2022Chiles, 6317:56, Lucas Mauch (Maclay) 12
9 September 2023
Leon, 2715:45, Patrick Koon (Leon) 12
High School Girls
DateTeam ChampIndividual Champ
9 September 2016Florida State, 4121:52, Gianna Forte (Bishop Snyder) 10
23 September 2017Community Christian, 2922:31, Alyssa Langston (Wakulla) 11
8 September 2018Maclay, 2121:49, Ella Porcher (Maclay) 8
7 September 2019South Walton, 1721:10, Ava Flaherty (South Walton) 10
12 September 2020Wakulla, 3721:30, Morgan Wilson (Community Christian) 11
11 September 2021Wakulla, 2620:55, Niya Coleman (Florida State) 11
10 September 2022Chiles, 3520:13, Caroline Couch (Maclay) 9
9 September 2023
Chiles, 2320:13, Madi Sims (Leon) 11


Links
#2973

Sunday, May 22, 2022

Leonardo Canete and Madison Sims barrel through the Backwoods

West of Tallahassee, Florida in the Apalachicola National Forest, you can find Forest Road 301. The United States Forest Service maintains the sandy strip, which stretches from Silver Lake Road to the Blountstown Highway, almost fifteen kilometers. On Saturday morning, 21 May 2022, two-and-a-half kilometers of that was taken up by the out-and-back course of the second annual Fort Braden Backwoods 5K. Tallahassee master runner Leonardo Canete won the race, covering the 3.1 miles of sand in 19:01. Leon High frosh cross-country runner Madi Sims was the first woman in the race, placing third overall in 24:05.


Caden Maxwell finished second behind Canete, running 20:03. Justin Mosley was third in the men's standings and fourth overall in 25:58.


At 28:18, Crystal Chadwll was the second woman in the race. Keri Levingston, a recent alum of the Wakulla High cross-country team, placed third on the women's side with a 28:36.


Top Men, 2022 Fort Braden Backwoods 5K
  1. 19:01, Leonardo Canete
  2. 20:03, Caden Maxwell
  3. 25:58, Justin Mosley

Top Women, 2022 Fort Braden Backwoods 5K
  1. 24:05, Madi Sims
  2. 28:18, Crystal Chadwell
  3. 28:36, Keri Levingston

Links
#2833

Saturday, February 16, 2019

Charlie Kline and Amanda Sava finish a dozen kilometers in a Flash

On the outskirts of Saint Marks, Florida less than fifteen seconds separated four runners racing south on the Saint Marks Trail. It was Saturday morning, 16 February 2019, and Charlie Johnson, Charlie Kline, Michael Rhodes, and Chris O'Kelley were leading Gulf Winds Track Club's 31st annual Flash 12K, just 2500 meters from the finish line at Fort San Marcos de Apalachee State Park. Minutes later it was Charlie Kline who crossed that finish line first, passing Charlie Johnson late in the race to win the 12K in 43:04. Amanda Sava was the first woman, placing twelfth overall in 52:08.

Chris O'Kelley, Charlie Kline, Charlie Johnson
Chris O'Kelley, Charlie Kline, and Charlie Johnson

The race also started from the park, with the runners heading six kilometers north on the Saint Marks Rail Trail before turning around to retrace their route for the second half of the race. Three minutes after the 8:30 AM command to start, Michael Rhodes was leading the 12K field. The Perry, Florida master runner had also led the Flash in 2018. That year he had eventually been overtaken by Chris O'Kelley, who went on to win in 44:20 while Rhodes took second in 45:39. This year O'Kelley was in a group of three runners chasing Rhodes, including Charlie Johnson and Charlie Kline. At two kilometers Rhodes was 80 meters ahead, but the pursuit was closing.

Michael Rhodes
Michael Rhodes

"They passed me right at the water table at the turnaround," said Rhodes.


Johnson led on the return trip, followed by Kline and O'Kelley, then Rhodes. Defending champ O'Kelley fell back, and he and Rhodes began racing for third place. But Kline kept in contact with Johnson.

Charlie Johnson
Charlie Johnson

"Charlie had the lead coming off the bike path," said Kline. "He was still five seconds up on me and I didn't think I could close. But he started waving to me and saying, 'Come on, Charlie!' I passed him with 600 meters to go. I thought he would come back, but he didn't."


No, he didn't. Kline made it back to the Fort first in 43:04, with Johnson second in 43:11. O'Kelley passed Rhodes on the final stretch to take third in 43:23. Close behind in 43:27, Rhodes was the first master runner in the race and fourth overall.

Charlie Kline
Charlie Kline

Twelve kilometers is an unusual distance in the world of road racing, which is dominated by five kilometer races with a sprinkling of ten kilometer events, half marathons, and full marathons. 12K was not a familiar distance for Amanda Sava.


"I hadn't run 12K before," said Sava. "But I ran several 6K races back in college. I ran for FIT in Melbourne."

Amanda Sava
Amanda Sava

Six kilometers is the championship distance for women's cross-country in the NCAA, so she had raced 6K more than once while competing for the Florida Tech Panthers cross-country team. Now studying for a master's degree in meteorology at Florida State, Sava was doubling that distance at the Flash 12K. She trailed Brittney Barnes in the early going, but by the two-kilometer mark Sava was setting the pace for the women's field.


"The course was flat and fast and the weather was great," said Sava. "It was hard after the turnaround, though. There wasn't anyone to run with."

Stephanie Liles-Weyant
Stephanie Liles-Weyant

The long, straight stretches of the Saint Marks Trail may not be physically difficult, but they are psychologically taxing. Sava toughed it out, though, finishing with a 300 meter lead over the next woman in the race in a winning 52:08. About two miles from the finish, Stephanie Liles-Weyant overtook Barnes. Liles-Weyant, the first woman in the 2008 Flash 12K, went on to finish runner-up in the women's standings and fifteenth overall in 53:23. Running 54:31, Barnes was the third woman and 22nd overall.

Brittney Barnes
Brittney Barnes

Top Ten Men, Gulf Winds Track Club's 2019 Flash 12K
  1. 43:04, Charlie Kline (M, 26)
  2. 43:11, Charlie Johnson (M, 39)
  3. 43:23, Chris O'Kelley (M, 25)
  4. 43:27, Michael Rhodes (M, 50)
  5. 46:34, Ryan Truchelut (M, 33)
  6. 48:06, Myles Gibson (M, 52)
  7. 48:54, Don Smith (M, 39)
  8. 49:25, Thomas Murphy (M, 49)
  9. 49:45, David Knauf (M, 54)
  10. 50:07, Bill McNulty (M, 60)

Top Ten Women, Gulf Winds Track Club's 2019 Flash 12K
  1. 52:08, Amanda Sava (F, 24)
  2. 53:23, Stephanie Liles-Weyant (F, 46)
  3. 54:31, Brittney Barnes (F, 31)
  4. 55:31, Lourena Maxwell (F, 44)
  5. 56:22, Sherri Wise (F, 37)
  6. 56:37, Laura McDermott (F, 39)
  7. 56:59, Jillian Heddaeus (F, 35)
  8. 57:55, Laura Sellati (F, 39)
  9. 58:03, Monica Toth (F, 30)
  10. 58:12, Ruffian Tyner (F, 43)

Since 2009, the Flash has included a 6K race, run concurrently with the 12K. Jana Stolting, at the time a Maclay School cross-country runner, won that inaugural 6K, running 21:36. No one had run a faster Flash 6K since.

Gary Droze
Gary Droze

Not until 2019, anyway. Master runner Gary Droze, who had been Stolting's coach at Maclay, hammered the 2019 Flash 6K, leading from start to finish and winning by more than 900 meters in new event record of 21:04. Master runner Michael Martinez, himself the 2013 winner of the Flash 6K, took second in 24:56. Joshua Liles placed third in 25:34.


Eleven-year-old Madison Sims, a sixth-grader on the Fort Braden Middle School cross-country team, took first in the women's standings, placing seventh overall in 28:51. Georgina Hernandez was the women's runner-up and eighth overall in 29:04. Paula O'Neill was the first woman master and third female finisher, eleventh overall in 30:56.

Madison Sims
Madison Sims

181 athletes finished the 2019 Flash 12K, and another 111 completed the 6K. Gulf Winds Track Club chip-timed both races.


Top Ten Men, Gulf Winds Track Club's 2019 Flash 6K
  1. 21:04, Gary Droze (M, 57)
  2. 24:56, Michael Martinez (M, 53)
  3. 25:34, Joshua Liles (M, 19)
  4. 26:22, Kevin Lane (M, 29)
  5. 27:35, William Carter (M, 54)
  6. 28:10, Nathan Rhodes (M, 40)
  7. 29:46, Stephen Gensits (M, 63)
  8. 30:30, Kyle Sill (M, 35)
  9. 31:13, Erik Davis (M, 37)
  10. 31:35, Jonathan Jackson (M, 39)

Top Ten Women, Gulf Winds Track Club's 2019 Flash 6K
  1. 28:51, Madison Sims (F, 11)
  2. 29:04, Georgina Hernandez (F, 28)
  3. 30:56, Paula Oneill (F, 57)
  4. 31:13, Kristina Lamb (F, 32)
  5. 31:16, Mercedes Puig (F, 34)
  6. 31:19, Kaitlyn Lane (F, 26)
  7. 32:12, Holly Otoole (F, 42)
  8. 32:37, Kara Barrentine (F, 37)
  9. 32:37, Andria Achong (F, 34)
  10. 32:41, Kasey Gordon (F, 28)

Gulf Winds Track Club Flash 12K Champions, 1989 - 2019
DateDistanceMenWomenFinishers
28 January 198912K39:44, John Devine48:50, Barbara Balzer 155
17 February 199012K44:10, David Rigby54:40, Kathy Weiss 102
26 January 199112K39:36, Jessie Close50:24, Tina Davies163
18 January 199212K39:33, Jessie Close45:24, Paula Johnson132
23 January 199312K42:40, Jonathan Bigg45:43, Linda Nilges134
15 January 199412K38:02, Robin Rogers45:34, Jane Johnson91
21 January 199512K40:49, Gary Droze45:34, Jane Johnson145
27 January 199612K41:10, Gary Droze44:27, Jane Johnson132
11 January 199712K39:25, Brian Erb47:57, Sarah Williams75
7 February 199812K42:57, Clarence Calloway45:12, Sarah Williams164
20 February 199912K44:40, Tim Simpkins46:27, Sarah Williams82
19 February 200012K39:44, Michael Strickland46:06, Sara Docter-Williams107
17 February 200112K43:56, Tim Unger45:38, Sarah Docter-Williams 98
16 February 200212K40:35, Gary Droze47:17, Jane Johnson 148
1 February 200312K42:52, Shawn Patterson52:18, Lisa Whitworth 80
7 February 200412K42:46, Tim Unger52:49, Lisa Whitworth 89
5 February 200512K42:05, Lee Willis45:30, Sarah Docter-Williams 118
4 February 200612K42:49, Vince Molosky50:21, Lisa Johnson89
17 February 200712K44:58, Todd Smoot52:22, Kim Likens74
16 February 200812K43:10, Tripp Southerland50:57, Stephanie Liles131
21 February 200912K42:34, Jay Wallace50:48, Jane Johnson105
6K23:21, Brian Corbin21:36, Jana Stolting30
20 February 201012K41:57, Daniel Lee47:12, Sheryl Rosen176
6K24:43, Ben Kail31:35, Rachel Phipps53
19 February 201112K40:57, Thomas Kunish49:23, Kelly Stevens214
6K23:59, Caleb Harris31:26, Ashton McMurray73
18 February 201212K41:23, Stephen Cox49:52, Katie Showman214
6K24:57, Duane Evans27:39, Nancy Gribble89
16 February 201312K38:41, Kevin Sullivan46:17, Sheryl Rosen268
6K21:54, Michael Martinez25:09, Jessica Gillard70
15 February 201412K39:39, Stanley Linton45:20, Seeley Gutierrez262
6K21:56, Jon Mason28:15, Sarah Taff85
21 February 201512K42:03, Zach Deveau47:33, Sheryl Rosen207
6K23:30, Duane Evans24:20, Katie Gorman98
20 February 201612K40:52, Roger Schmidt50:43, Katie Sherron213
6K23:17, Travis Parks32:26, Leah Kiros87
18 February 201712K43:25, Vince Molosky47:31, Katie Sherron162
6K22:02, Geb Kiros26:02, Katie Sack128
17 February 201812K44:20, Chris O'Kelley48:20, Sheryl Rosen168
6K22:53, Geb Kiros27:05, Christina Linton114
16 February 201912K43:04, Charlie Kline52:08, Amanda Sava181
6K21:04, Gary Droze28:51, Madison Sims111
In 1989-2004 the race started and finished in Chaires. (FL88036BH and FL94001DL)
In 2005-2010 the race started and finished at J. Lewis Hall Park in Woodville. (FL05007DL)
In 2011-2019 the race started and finished at Fort San Marcos de Apalachee in St. Marks.
(FL11133EBM)


Links
#2429

Saturday, November 17, 2018

Many trailed Duane Evans and Madison Sims at the Trail Life 5K

2018 Trail Life 5KBecause of Hurricane Michael, autumn of 2018 was a season of canceled races in the Florida panhandle, and even as far east as Tallahassee. Saturday morning, 17 November 2018, saw a return to the normal in the Tallahassee-area racing calendar. Normal, of course, is ridiculously crowded. There were no fewer than three road races within a short drive of Tallahassee that morning. In the spirit of rebirth after the storm, each was a first-year race. One of those was the inaugural Trail Life 5K, south of Tallahassee in Crawfordville, Florida. Master runner Duane Evans won the 3.1-mile race, covering the distance in 19:50. Madison Sims, a sixth-grader at Fort Braden School, was the first woman in the race, placing third overall in 23:59.


Ten-year-old Grayson Stevens took the runner-up spot in the 5K with a 23:51. Master runner Michael Martin was third in the men's standings and fifth overall in 26:40.


Nancy Johnson was the first woman master and second female finisher, fourth overall in 25:45. Liliana Lewis, a sixth-grader at Wakulla Middle School, placed third on the women's side and sixth overall in 26:52.


The Trail Life 5K was the opening event of Trail Life Crawfordville's second annual Fall Festival. Trail Life Crawfordville is Troop FL-2327 of Trail Life USA, with describes itself as "a Christian Outdoor Adventure, Character, and Leadership Program for boys and young men. Trail Life Crawfordville is serious enough about their 5K to get the course USATF-certified (course number FL18042TY) and to hire professional timing for the race (Miles and Minutes, LLLC, of Tallahassee). 21 athletes finished the first year event on the streets of Crawfordville.


Top Five Men, 2018 Crawfordville Trail Life 5K
  1. 19:49.57, Dwayne Evans (M, 51)
  2. 23:50.59, Grayson Stevens (M, 10)
  3. 26:39.54, Michael Martin (M, 42)
  4. 27:38.63, Andrew Gordon (M, 27)
  5. 29:05.89, Casey Hutto (M, 64)

Top Five Women, 2018 Crawfordville Trail Life 5K
  1. 23:58.04, Madison Sims (F, 11)
  2. 25:44.10, Nancy Johnson (F, 44)
  3. 26:51.62, Liliana Lewis (F, 12)
  4. 27:27.86, Amaliya McCalley (F, 17)
  5. 29:59.60, Elizabeth Stevens (F, 39)

Links
#2373

Monday, May 7, 2018

Andrew Smith and Amanda Sava sail the trails at "Tails and Trails"

Tallahassee’s Tom Brown Park, Lafayette Heritage Park, and the Alford Greenway are connected by a network of trails, more miles of pathways than you could walk in a single afternoon. On Saturday morning, May 5, Andrew Smith raced 21.1 kilometers on those trails in 1:20:46, winning the Animal Shelter Foundation's seventeenth annual Tails & Trails Half Marathon. Amanda Sava was the first woman in the race, placing eighth overall in 1:45:35.

Andrew Smith
Andrew Smith

There were four races in the Tails & Trails that morning, also including a 10K, a 5K, and a one-mile fun run. The half marathon was the longest and it was also the earliest, starting from in front of the Tallahassee Animal Shelter at 8:00 AM. From the first, Andrew Smith was in the lead.


“After the mile I could tell there was no one there,” said Smith. “I just kept trying to hit six-minute miles.”


Don’t get the impression that it was easy, running in and out of the Lake Lafayette basin.

2018 Tails & Trails Half Marathon
The start of the 2018 Tails & Trails Half Marathon

“It was a tough one,” said Smith. “The hills were no joke.”


When Smith returned to the Animal Shelter, finishing the race in 1:20:46, he was nearly three kilometers ahead of the next runner. It could have been lonesome out on the trails, but Smith had a lead cyclist to follow. The other athletes, though, were out of sight of both Smith and the cyclist. They had to rely on course markers and course marshals to find their way through the race.

Geb Kiros
Geb Kiros

“I ran off the course twice,” said Geb Kiros after finishing the half marathon. “I am not very happy.”


In spite of those detours, Kiros was the first master runner in the race, finishing second overall in 1:32:57. Master runner Jack McDermott took third in 1:33:46.

Laura McDermott, Amanda Sava
Laura McDermott and Amanda Sava

Finishing second to Amanda Sava in the women's standings, Lourena Maxwell was the first woman master in the half marathon and fourteenth overall in 1:51:38. Michelle Hadden edged Laura McDermott for the third women's spot, both runners clocked in 1:52:58. Hadden and McDermott were fifteenth and sixteenth overall.


Top Ten Men, 2018 “Tails and Trails” Half Marathon
  1. 1:20:46, Andrew Smith (M, 23)
  2. 1:32:57, Geb Kiros (M, 51)
  3. 1:33:46, Jack McDermott (M, 49)
  4. 1:35:46, Jonathan Manry (M, 39)
  5. 1:37:22, Collin Woodrum (M, 19)
  6. 1:43:39, Laryn Flikkema (M, 42)
  7. 1:45:31, Steven Sheward (M, 29)
  8. 1:47:02, Edward Nabong (M, 27)
  9. 1:47:43, Emmanuel Nwala (M, 36)
  10. 1:48:49, Tyler Barnett (M, 27)

Top Ten Women, 2018 “Tails and Trails” Half Marathon
  1. 1:45:35, Amanda Sava (F, 23)
  2. 1:51:38, Lourena Maxwell (F, 43)
  3. 1:52:58, Michelle Hadden (F, 29)
  4. 1:52:58, Laura McDermott (F, 38)
  5. 1:59:53, Grace Kennedy (F, 29)
  6. 1:59:56, Sherri Wise (F, 36)
  7. 2:00:53, Nancy Stedman (F, 56)
  8. 2:01:45, April Bentley (F, 44)
  9. 2:02:02, Jennifer Jan Farinella (F, 28)
  10. 2:02:15, Rachel Lovestrand (F, 30)

At 8:30, while the half-marathoners were still on the trails, headed for the turnaround on the out-and-back course, the 10K and the 5K got underway. Charlie Johnson soon got down to the business of running away from the rest of the 10K field.

Charlie Johnson
Charlie Johnson

“He was about a minute ahead at the turnaround and he maintained that,” said Chris O’Kelley, the 2017 Tails & Trails 10K winner.


With 188 runners behind him, Johnson had a lot of outbound traffic to deal with on the return trip. One narrow gate was clogged by a file of runners headed for the turnaround. Johnson solved that problem by leaping the fence next to the gate. Undelayed, he continued to the finish line at the Animal Shelter, taking first in the 10K with a 37:16. Chris O’Kelley took second in 38:11, and Ryan Truchelut was third in 40:22. Paul Guyas was the first master runner in the 10K, placing seventh overall in 43:32.

Chris O'Kelley
Chris O'Kelley

Jillian Heddaeus won the women’s title in the 10K, placing fifteenth overall in 47:16. Heddaeus finished more than 300 meters ahead of the next woman in the race, but she found herself running with one of the men.


“We had a good little back-and-forth going,” said Heddaeus. “Then he went forth and I went back.”

Jillian Heddaeus
Jillian Heddaeus

Kaley Ford was the second woman in the 10K, placing 21st overall in 48:54. Kenya Rich was the first woman master and third female finisher, 25th overall in 50:06.


Top Ten Men, 2018 “Tails and Trails” 10K
  1. 37:16, Charlie Johnson (M, 38)
  2. 38:11, Chris O'Kelley (M, 25)
  3. 40:22, Ryan Truchelut (M, 32)
  4. 41:09, Bobby Duggleby (M, 27)
  5. 41:13, Brad Busboom (M, 30)
  6. 43:23, Jim Halley (M, 38)
  7. 43:32, Paul Guyas (M, 40)
  8. 44:07, Isaac Bakan (M, 18)
  9. 44:07, John Schwenkler (M, 36)
  10. 44:35, Duane Evans (M, 50)

Top Ten Women, 2018 “Tails and Trails” 10K

  1. 47:16, Jillian Heddaeus (F, 35)
  2. 48:54, Kaley Ford (F, 23)
  3. 50:06, Kenya Rich (F, 45)
  4. 50:30, Melanie Leitman (F, 34)
  5. 50:40, Nikky Manausa (F, 36)
  6. 51:18, Nancy Proctor (F, 57)
  7. 51:35, Monica Toth (F, 29)
  8. 53:11, Ariel Urban (F, 27)
  9. 53:25, Marie Dennis (F, 43)
  10. 54:18, Jasmin McClellan (F, 29)

Kurt Dietrich won the Tails & Trails 5K for the second year in a row, running 19:13. Matt Triggs was the first master runner in the race, finishing second overall in 21:21. Ten-year-old Noah Deem took third in 22:29.

Charlie Johnson, Kurt Dietrich
Charlie Johnson & Kurt Dietrich

Another youngster, eleven-year-old Madison Sims, took first in the women’s standings, placing eleventh overall in 24:27. Amelia Bryant was a close second, placing twelfth overall in 24:31. Anna Dower was the third woman and fifteenth overall in 24:39. Amy Triggs was the first woman master and the fourth female finisher in the 5K, 32nd overall in 26:04.


821 athletes crossed the finish line at the 2018 Tails & Trails, 104 in the half marathon, 192 in the 10K, 460 in the 5K, and 65 in the mile. Gulf Winds Track Club chip-timed the races.


Top Ten Men, 2018 “Tails and Trails” 5K
  1. 19:13, Kurt Dietrich (M, 26)
  2. 21:21, Matt Triggs (M, 54)
  3. 22:29, Noah Deem (M, 10)
  4. 22:46, Tad David (M, 49)
  5. 23:33, Juan Padron (M, 48)
  6. 23:38, Patrick Deasy (M, 29)
  7. 23:46, Patrick Westman (M, 28)
  8. 24:15, Jordan Deem (M, 19)
  9. 24:18, Daniel McNair (M, 33)
  10. 24:19, David Guhl (M, 17)

Top Ten Women, 2018 “Tails and Trails” 5K
  1. 24:27, Madison Sims (F, 11)
  2. 24:31, Amelia Bryant (F, 29)
  3. 24:39, Anna Dower (F, 26)
  4. 25:31, Michelle Davis (F, 28)
  5. 26:04, Amy Triggs (F, 53)
  6. 26:25, Marina Byrd (F, 27)
  7. 26:27, Chloe Schaub (F, 25)
  8. 26:44, Jennie Merchant (F, 26)
  9. 26:50, Jami Lynn Cook (F, 26)
  10. 26:53, Ava Jones (F, 12)

“Tails and Trails” winners, 2002 - 2018
DateRaceMenWomenFinishers
30 March 20025K19:49, Tim Bolton23:06, Carrie Weyant179
15 March 20035K20:47, Justin Dickieson24:20, Carrie Weyant218
20 March 20045K18:56, Gary Droze23:02, Seeley Lovett221
19 March 20055K18:51, Mathew Dobson23:12, Stephanie Liles186
18 March 200610K37:46, Vince Molosky46:49, Kim Likens73
5K22:06, Roger Michaud21:48, Stephanie Liles178
5 May 200710K36:43, Vince Molosky43:54, Jana Stolting80
5K17:31, Tripp Southerland24:22, Claire Fruchtnicht250
3 May 200810K37:23, Vince Molosky41:55, Karen Geletko141
5K20:54, Jason Graham21:57, Katrina Unglaub272
2 May 200910K35:07, Vince Molosky41:34, Sheryl Rosen148
5K17:24, John Robida18:59, Kelsey Scheitlin464
1 May 201010K35:44, Vince Molosky42:38, Micah Adriani315
5K16:37, Ken Youngers22:13, Lisa Finn355
30 April 201110K36:41, Vince Molosky41:06, Heather Griffis
5K17:04, Kevin Sullivan19:41, Kelly Stevens
5 May 201210K34:52, Stanley Linton41:38, Micah Adriani246
5K18:22, Jonathan Grisiaffi23:00, Stephanie Stout494
4 May 201310K36:29, Vince Molosky46:31, Lindsey Pfau207
5K16:26, Stanley Linton19:40, Micah Adriani521
3 May 201410K37:04, Matthew Cashin46:12, Urska Dobersek211
5K16:53, Adam Wallenfelsz20:55, Sara Lane359
2 May 2015Half Marathon1:25:43, Eric Godin1:49:34, Mary Jane Hayden92
10K37:22, Matthew Cashin46:04, Brittney Barnes278
5K17:06, Roger Schmidt20:25, Alese Autore552
7 May 2016Half Marathon1:19:49, Matt Mizereck1:45:20, Katie Sherron178
10K37:45, Stanley Linton45:48, Anna Busby191
5K18:20, Peter Van Brussel20:50, Brittney Barnes562
6 May 2017Half Marathon1:27:34, Eric Godin1:36:48, Katie Sherron148
10K38:54, Chris O'Kelley44:40, Sheryl Rosen123
5K18:47, Kurt Dietrich23:44, Christina Linton395
5 May 2018Half Marathon1:20:46, Andrew Smith1:45:35, Amanda Sava104
10K37:16, Charlie Johnson47:16, Jillian Heddaeus189
5K19:13, Kurt Dietrich24:27, Madison Sims447
From 2002 to 2006 the event was called the "Furry Scurry."
No 10K was held before 2006.
No Half Marathon was held prior to 2015.


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#2269