Sean Quigley and Magdalena Lewy Boulet Win US Titles at Stratton Faxon New Haven 20k
By David Monti
September 6, 2010
(c) 2010 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved
NEW HAVEN, CONN. (06-Sep) -- Under clear blue skies with hardly a hintof wind, Sean Quigley and Magdalena Lewy Boulet both captured their
first USA 20-K road running titles here today at the 33rd Stratton
Faxon New Haven Road Race, part of the USA Road Circuit.
Lewy Boulet, 37, of Oakland, Calif., dominated the women's race in
1:07:41 despite being fatigued from a high-mileage week, part of her
build-up for the Bank of America Chicago Marathon on October 10. She
had finished a distant third here last year to masters ace, Colleen De
Reuck.
"I'm still in training, about five weeks out from the big race, from
Chicago," Lewy Boulet said after the race. "I decided not to taper for
it, but train through it, use it as a training run. I still have an
hour of cool down." She added: "I tried to make it as comfortable as I
could; the last four miles I pushed it a bit."
Lewy Boulet, who said she ran 115 miles in the week immediately before
the race, improved on her time from last year by 30 seconds. She said
that she ran too aggressively last year, and took it easier in the
early miles. Her strategy paid off.
"Last year I just went out too fast," she said. "Literally, the
difference between the first mile this year and last year was 30
seconds."
Stephanie Rothstein, 26, of Flagstaff, Ariz., was the surprise
runner-up in 1:08:26 in her debut at the distance. She was on crutches
last year with a back injury, and also discovered she was suffering
from Celiac Disease, an autoimmune disorder of the small intestine.
She moved to Flagstaff this year to be coached by Greg McMillan.
"It's been a very long road back," said Rothstein who choked back tears
of joy before receiving a congratulatory hug from McMillan. "I broke
my sacrum a year ago, but I've kind of been battling injuries for the
last two years, and we didn't know why. Then I figured out this April
that I have Celiac Disease, like Amy Yoder, and that's the reason why
I'd been injured so long. We had no idea. Right when I figured it out
in April, my life changed."
Unheralded Nan Kennard, 29, of Broomfield, Colo., finished third in
1:08:38, also making her 20-K debut. She is a some-time training
partner of Colleen De Reuck, and is coached by De Reuck's husband,
Darren. As for the 46 year-old De Reuck, who like Lewy Boulet is
running the marathon in Chicago next month, she had an off-day and
finished ninth.
While Lewy Boulet was able to relax in the final meters to the line,
Quigley had to push just to make sure he had clinched the race. In the
final flat mile on Whitney Avenue, Quigley remained calm while his only
remaining rivals, Mo Trafeh and James Carney, both put in surges which
they hoped would bring them victory. Trafeh had already tried to break
the race open at the 10 mile mark and was getting tired.
"I might have looked good, but I didn't feel good," said Trafeh, 24, of
Duarte Calif. "I just forced myself to it. I thought that would be
the best place to make the move."
With the finish line adjacent to the New Haven Green on the horizon,
Carney surged first and Quigley and Trafeh followed single file. His
lead was short-lived, and Carney came back. Quigley waited just a
little longer to make his bid for victory. He wanted to make just one
move and make it stick.
"My longest race up to this point was a 15-K," Quigley, 25, explained
later. "I was a little worried about adding another 5-K to it. So, I
made sure I was real patient and didn't do anything stupid during the
race. And then, if I felt like I could take it, just go for it."
Fifty-six minutes into the race, Quigley pushed to the front, and left
his two chasers behind for good. Not only did he make a successful
20-K debut with his 59:21 finish time, but the victory today for the
Philadelphian was his first ever national title on any surface.
"It feels great," said Quigley. "Up to this point I've felt that my
post-collegiate career has been a disappointment. To get this win is
huge."
Trafeh, the 2010 national 15-K champion, finished second, the same
position as last year in 59:29. Carney, who won this race in 2008,
finished third in 59:33. Defending champion Brett Gotcher fell back
from the lead pack around 15-K, and finished seventh.
Both Lewy Boulet and Quigley earned $8,000 in prize money, part of the total prize purse of $40,000.
The USA Road Circuit moves to Providence, R.I., next for the men's and
women's 5 km championship hosted by the CVS/pharmacy Downtown 5-K on
Sept. 19.
MEN
1) Sean Quigley (PA), 59:21, $8000
2) Mohamed Trafeh (CA), 59:29, $4500
3) James Carney (AZ), 59:33, $2500
4) Justin Young (CO), 59:45, $1500
5) Patrick Smyth (CA) 59:54, $1000
6) Ben Bruce (OR), 59:59, $700
7) Brett Gotcher (AZ), 1:00:21, $600
8) Jason Hartmann (OR), 1:00:44, $500
9) Mike Sayenko (WA), 1:01:00, $400
10) Patrick Rizzo (CO), 1:01:18, $300
WOMEN
1) Magdalena Lewy Boulet (CA), 1:07:41, $8000
2) Stephanie Rothstein (AZ), 1:08:26, $4500
3) Nan Kennard (CO), 1:08:38, $2500
4) Clara Grandt (WV), 1:09:02, $1500
5) Tera Moody (CO), 1:09:38, $1000
6) Loretta Kilmer
(NY), 1:09:43, $700
7) Amy Hastings (CA), 1:09:52, $600
8) Kristen Fryburg-Zaitz (CO), 1:09:56, $500
9) Colleen De Reuck, 46, CO, 1:10:23, $400
10) Heidi Westover (NH), 1:10:49, $300
More: Hartford Courant Blog With Recap Photos
*USA Running Circuit Website with Video of Race, Interviews
*Full Results
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