did wrote:
22 Jessica McClain F 1/66 31:40.00
26 Natosha Rogers F 2/66 32:00.00
Jess crushing Natosha! Sending a message? Did she gobble gobble when dropping her?
did wrote:
22 Jessica McClain F 1/66 31:40.00
26 Natosha Rogers F 2/66 32:00.00
Jess crushing Natosha! Sending a message? Did she gobble gobble when dropping her?
I can’t wait to hear Kara Goucher’s back pedaling on how Jess wouldn’t have done well in Paris on her garbage podcast.
Podcast in 2021 wrote:
Streamed on USATF . TV (runnerspace) September 21, 2024 9/21 8:30 AM ET Northport, NY
Link:START LISTS Women BIB # FIRST LAST AFFILIATION
- 2 Erika Kemp Brooks
- 4 Natosha Rogers
- 6 Keira D'Amato NIKE
- 8 Jess McClain Brooks Running
- 10 Emma Grace Hurley ASICS/Heartland Track Club
- 16 Amanda Vestri Brooks
- 18 Sophia King Unattached
- 22 Kasandra Parker Crown Running
- 24 Katie Izzo Adidas
- 26 Annamaria Kostarellis ASICS
- 28 Kylie Anicic Unattached
- 30 Clara Mayfield Unattached
- 32 Caroline Garrett Hanson-Brooks Distance Project
- 34 Maggie Donahue Hanson-Brooks Distance Project
- 36 Makayla Perez Hanson-Brooks Distance Project
- 38 Kathryn Munks Hanson-Brooks Distance Project
- 40 Sarah Disanza Hanson-Brooks Distance Project
- 42 Hannah Eagon Unattached
- 46 Ryann Helmers Unattached
- 48 Annika Urban Unattached
- 50 Zariel Macchia Unattached
- 52 Lillian Anderson
- 54 Annie Rodenfels Boston Athletic
- Association/Adidas Men BIB # FIRST LAST AFFILIATION
- 1 Biya Simbassa Under Armour
- 3 Willy Fink Under Armour Baltimore Distance
- 7 Sam Chelanga
- 9 Hilary Bor HOKA
- 11 Anthony Rotich US ARMY
- 13 Afewerki Zeru Mckirdy Trained
- 15 Kirubel Erassa Unattached
- 17 Diego Estrada Unattached
- 19 Merga Gemeda Minnesota Distance Elite
- 21 Kristoffer Mugrage Lakewood Distance Project
- 23 Ryan Kutch Central Park Track Club Tracksmith
- 25 Jack Mastandrea Greenville Track Club ELITE
- 27 Jason Weitzel Greenville Track Club ELITE
- 31 Nick Randazzo Unattached
- 33 Ethan Gregg Hanson-Brooks Distance Project
- 35 Shuaib Aljabaly Hanson-Brooks Distance Project
- 37 CarLee Stimpfel Hanson-Brooks Distance Project
- 39 Joshua Joseph 41 James Mwaura Unattached
- 43 Jackson Siddall Unattached
- 45 Brett Brady Unattached
- 47 Matthew Pereira Central Park Track Club - Tracksmith
- 49 Brandon Olden Unattached 53 James Dickinson
- 47 Matthew Pereira Central Park Track Club - Tracksmith
- 49 Brandon Olden Unattached 53 James Dickinson
USATF TV/Runnerspace interviewed 2024 US Women's 10km Champion Jessica McClain
USATF TV/Runnerspace interviewed 2024 US Men's 10km Champion Biya Simbassa
Podcast in 2021 wrote:
- 2024 USATF 10 km Championships Northport, New York Top 10 Women
- 1. Jessica McClain 31:40
- 2. Natosha Rogers 32:00
- 3. Emma Grace Hurley 32:05
- 4. Erika Kemp 32:10
- 5. Keira D'Amato 32:13
- 6. Amanda Vestri 32:21
- 7. Annie Rodenfels 32:25
- 8. Katie Izzo 32:34
- 9. Annamaria Kostarellis 33:09
- 10. Hannah Eagon 33:35
- Top 10 Men
- 1. Biya Simbassa 28:18
- 2. Hillary Bor 28:24
- 3. Sam Chelanga 28:34
- 4. Kirubel Erassa 28:50
- 5. Anthony Rotich 28:59
- 6. Afewerki Zeru 29:10
- 7. James Mwaura 29:15
- 8. Jackson Siddall 29:19
- 9. Ryan Kutch 29:20
- 10. Jack Mastandrea 29:21
USATF TV/Runnerspace interviewed 2024 US Women's 10km Champion Jessica McClain
USATF TV/Runnerspace interviewed 2024 US Men's 10km Champion Biya Simbassa
As professional runners, I'm surprised at just how slow these times are.
super shoes shmooper shoes wrote:
Podcast in 2021 wrote:
- 2024 USATF 10 km Championships Northport, New York Top 10 Women
- 1. Jessica McClain 31:40
- 2. Natosha Rogers 32:00
- 3. Emma Grace Hurley 32:05
- 4. Erika Kemp 32:10
- 5. Keira D'Amato 32:13
- 6. Amanda Vestri 32:21
- 7. Annie Rodenfels 32:25
- 8. Katie Izzo 32:34
- 9. Annamaria Kostarellis 33:09
- 10. Hannah Eagon 33:35
- Top 10 Men
- 1. Biya Simbassa 28:18
- 2. Hillary Bor 28:24
- 3. Sam Chelanga 28:34
- 4. Kirubel Erassa 28:50
- 5. Anthony Rotich 28:59
- 6. Afewerki Zeru 29:10
- 7. James Mwaura 29:15
- 8. Jackson Siddall 29:19
- 9. Ryan Kutch 29:20
- 10. Jack Mastandrea 29:21
USATF TV/Runnerspace interviewed 2024 US Women's 10km Champion Jessica McClain
USATF TV/Runnerspace interviewed 2024 US Men's 10km Champion Biya Simbassa
As professional runners, I'm surprised at just how slow these times are.
There's at least 1 doper on that list.
super shoes shmooper shoes wrote:
Podcast in 2021 wrote:
- 2024 USATF 10 km Championships Northport, New York Top 10 Women
- 1. Jessica McClain 31:40
- 2. Natosha Rogers 32:00
- 3. Emma Grace Hurley 32:05
- 4. Erika Kemp 32:10
- 5. Keira D'Amato 32:13
- 6. Amanda Vestri 32:21
- 7. Annie Rodenfels 32:25
- 8. Katie Izzo 32:34
- 9. Annamaria Kostarellis 33:09
- 10. Hannah Eagon 33:35
- Top 10 Men
- 1. Biya Simbassa 28:18
- 2. Hillary Bor 28:24
- 3. Sam Chelanga 28:34
- 4. Kirubel Erassa 28:50
- 5. Anthony Rotich 28:59
- 6. Afewerki Zeru 29:10
- 7. James Mwaura 29:15
- 8. Jackson Siddall 29:19
- 9. Ryan Kutch 29:20
- 10. Jack Mastandrea 29:21
USATF TV/Runnerspace interviewed 2024 US Women's 10km Champion Jessica McClain
USATF TV/Runnerspace interviewed 2024 US Men's 10km Champion Biya Simbassa
As professional runners, I'm surprised at just how slow these times are.
Am thinking you are not familiar with the course. Yes?
Diego Estrada 19th 30:54 Ouch!
Jess stan wrote:
I can’t wait to hear Kara Goucher’s back pedaling on how Jess wouldn’t have done well in Paris on her garbage podcast.
Gotta love Kara and Des posting to congratulate her. Can't question her fitness now, ladies! What a great race from Jess.
kmaclam wrote:
super shoes shmooper shoes wrote:
As professional runners, I'm surprised at just how slow these times are.
Am thinking you are not familiar with the course. Yes?
There are a couple of moderate hills and has a net elevation loss of about 40m. The men's winner was here barely running faster than men's marathon (42k) wr and the women were even slower. This course isn't that tough
truly nobody asked them wrote:
Jess stan wrote:
I can’t wait to hear Kara Goucher’s back pedaling on how Jess wouldn’t have done well in Paris on her garbage podcast.
Gotta love Kara and Des posting to congratulate her. Can't question her fitness now, ladies! What a great race from Jess.
So the pod is garage yet you listen to it and stalk their socials? Sounds like you are trying to create some drama. Sounds a bit obsessive.
Did they actually get any footage of the guy in the priest costume?
Every year, the Great cow Harbor race publishes their 68 page newspaper with articles on the top runners, history, sponsors, the streaks, and more. Fantastic work. All the local businesses advertise in it.
Other than the Shelter Island 10k, I haven't done other "national" races, but what other race puts out such an extensive publication for their race? Year in, year out it is a great read. Lastly, it seems to be authored by one person. Kudos to him!
truly nobody asked them wrote:
Jess stan wrote:
I can’t wait to hear Kara Goucher’s back pedaling on how Jess wouldn’t have done well in Paris on her garbage podcast.
Gotta love Kara and Des posting to congratulate her. Can't question her fitness now, ladies! What a great race from Jess.
Oh what could have been if Jess had gotten to run the Olympic marathon instead of Fiona!
Jess stan wrote:
I can’t wait to hear Kara Goucher’s back pedaling on how Jess wouldn’t have done well in Paris on her garbage podcast.
you're a happy person.
super shoes shmooper shoes wrote:
kmaclam wrote:
Am thinking you are not familiar with the course. Yes?
There are a couple of moderate hills and has a net elevation loss of about 40m. The men's winner was here barely running faster than men's marathon (42k) wr and the women were even slower. This course isn't that tough
It’s easily a minute slower than the track. Heck, even pancake-flat courses are slower than the track. Then consider the weather and the fact that nobody is training for the 10k right now (and likely training through this race), and the times make sense. These races are often run conservatively in the early miles as well. If you look at major US road races at sub-marathon distances, going all the way back to the 1970s, nobody is ever within spitting distance of their track PRs.
From personal experience, there’s no comparison between the pace you can run on a windless, 50 degree night, under the lights in California, after a season of fast intervals, and the pace you run for the same distance in on a humid September morning, on rolling roads, with mostly marathon training in the legs. Even if you’re in great marathon shape.