

ZOOMA Annapolis Half Marathon and 10K
Zoom, Zoom, ZOOMA!
By James Moreland June 1, 2008 Annapolis, MD For the Washington Running Report
Photo above: Happy racers cross the ChampionChip mats at the
finish line. Photo below: The race finished in a riverside park
with beautiful views of the Naval Academy.
For many years women's running has been growing. Now, there are
often more women than men in races. From the early days of
Katherine Switzer's dramatic entry for women into the marathon
to the grass roots swelling of the mighty Women's Distance
Festivals, women are being empowered to come out and challenge
the roads, to challenge themselves in a vigorous, healthy life
style. The ZOOMA series began here in Annapolis, MD on the first day
of June. The day before, it was storm after storm. The
picturesque Maryland capital has long been a fine traveling
destination for road racers throughout the region. Just like
the nationally famous Annapolis Ten Miler of late August, the
race offers the three H's of running: Hot, Hilly, and Humid.
The ten miler, coincidentally, opened registration this morning. The two races, which started together by the Navy-Marine Corps
Memorial Stadium, gave the runners a wide range of distance to
choose from. The 10K offered runners the same beginning and
parts of the middle of the 10 mile course, without the arduous
climb back over the Severn River on the U.S. Naval Academy
Bridge. The finish line was just under the bridge at Jonas
Green State Park, adjacent to the Severn Inn, and some two
miles from the stadium. This afforded the
runners the luxury of the last quarter mile charge down the
curve to the finish. There were plenty of refreshments in the
little park, which is at the water's edge. The half marathon worked its way farther, going up the B&A
Trail after the 10Kers began their journey home about 4.25
miles
into the race. After the finish, buses met the happy racers to
shuttle them back to the Stadium for the post race festivities
and awards. All the finishers received a commemorative silver
necklace with the race date engraved.
Noncash prizes were awarded to the top three finishers in the
Half Marathon and 10K. The ZOOMA After-Party Expo was planned as a unique combination
of post-race party and race expo with a fun "girls' weekend"
atmosphere. Food, wine tasting, mini spa treatments, demos, and
shopping pampered runners after the race. Live music helped
runners enjoy shopping at the many booths.
The racers charged out the north side of the stadium. Runners
were amazed as Molly Pritz (20) of Lewisburg, PA
jackrabbited over the ChampionChip mats and out the gate. By
the first turn, heading toward Taylor Avenue, she was nearly
out
of sight. She blasted through the first mile in a sub 6:00
minute mile. Twenty seconds behind, eventual 10K winner
Christina
Morganti (43), of Severna Park, MD, probably thought she was
trailing a 10K runner. Some 30 seconds back, three top
masters runners--Sheryl Kline (45) of Arnold, MD, Becky Nathan
(42) of Arlington, VA, and Win Persina (48) of
Washington, DC--were settling in for the long run. If that fast
disappearing
racer was in the half marathon, they would not be able to do
anything about it. The night before at the fabulous V.I.P. Reception, the three
runners talked proudly of the empowerment of women's running
that the race symbolized. Persina, a 5K specialist, happily noted that she was not trying
to run fast, "Maybe a 7:30 pace." She was just running to
support her friends. Translation: They had better have the
best game on or she was going to race on by. Nathan was worried about a tight hamstring and planned to take
it easy. Translation: Don't expect a waltz in the park. You
are going to have to bust one to beat her. It should be
noted that Nathan hit the first mile just behind Kline in 6:30
with Persina a few meters back. Nathan gasped and told
fellow racers, "This is too fast. I am going to have to slow
the pace." She wished me good luck and I prepared to pull away.
A mile later, after cresting the Naval Academy Bridge, she was
still two paces behind. At the 5K, she was still just one
second behind. We had briefly passed Kline going down off the bridge before
she started to move. By 5K, she had a small 30-meter gap
which she would never improve on from Nathan. Kline, now 45,
had a secret weapon to help give her the impetus to hold off
Nathan. Translation: Kline has a new running friend from the
same age group but from an entirely different sex. Kline thinks of herself as a fast twitch sort of runner. Still,
her confidence is growing as she works on the longer distances.
She needed all her speed in the final quarter mile to hold off
Nathan. In fact, she was looking forward to following a Pacer.
Elite racer Erin Swain ran the race as a "rabbit" or pacer for
the 7:00 pace group. With a balloon tied to her back, she
floated across the line just ahead of the determined Kline.
Swain did not wear a ChampionChip and was not expecting an
official time. Jennifer Lundeen (48) of Port Republic, MD was ahead of Persina
for the first half of the race but slowed on the more than just
muggy morning. At the finish she was proud that so many of the
top finishers were masters runners. Brittney Rooks (14) of Baltimore, MD, coached by her dad Remus
Medley, is gearing up for a fall marathon. Medley has her
training down to a science. Last Friday night she ran a solid
workout in Westminster, finishing second at the Falcon 2 Mile
in just over 12 minutes. After the race, she and her brother
Del'Vaughn ran 400 meters intervals in the 83-85 second range.
Rooks hit the 5K in 21:14 today but faltered later in the race
to seventh in a close battle with Julia Speer (27) of
Washington, DC. Rooks has already been the overall winner in
races from 800M to last fall's NCR HM in 1:33:28. Only 77 men ventured to the event that had more than 1300
finishers in the two races. Daniel Ordaz (32) of Holgate, OH
started well off the pace (2:00 behind Pritz at the 5K). He
turned on the jets and pushed her to a swift 1:22:53 overall
victory. He was the second finisher in 1:23:28. Both were a
mile ahead of the next finisher.
In the 10K, Morganti (in photo) cruised to an easy win in
40:18, proving that 43 is the new 23 when it comes to racing.
Andrea Williams (37) of Annapolis, MD was next in 41:29. After
that it was some time before the next runner appeared around
the final curve. There is always a little confusion with multiple distances.
Runners are supposed to sign up for a specific distance and run
that distance. With well over a thousand entrants and
conditions that started with a flash flood torrent of rain the
day before and warm muggy racing in the morning, some runners
switched distances. Cresting the toughest hill at mile four,
some tired runners turned a bit early, not getting to
experience
about 500 out and back meters down the wooded trail. For this reporter, counting heads at the turnaround at three,
it was a surprise to see five runners ahead on the way back.
The first was passed at mile five. The next two were caught in
the final mile, giving this 55-year-old man his first overall
win (men's division) in quite some time. It should be noted that more and more races are having an
overall winner (of either sex) be a women. This, of course,
happened today in both races, even as the men were
outnumbered by nearly 20 to 1.
James Moreland (55) of Gaithersburg, MD is the first male
finisher in the 10K.
Awards 10K
FEMALE OVERALL
1 661 Christina Morganti 43 Severna Park MD 40:18 V
2 1544 Andrea Williams 37 Annapolis MD 41:29 V
3 1239 Melanie Bryant 23 Annapolis MD 43:44 V FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 1 - 14
1 860 Samantha Downey 13 McLean VA V 64:17
2 847 Meredith Bloom 13 McLean VA V 64:57
3 190 Caroline Hutchinson 13 Annapolis MD V 71:43 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 15 - 19
1 1522 Jennifer Steinweg 16 Arnold MD V 56:14
2 1436 Megan Maguire 19 Rockville MD V 63:09
3 429 Eva Cohn 15 Severna Park MD V 64:06 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 20 - 24
1 1359 Stacey Banchek 23 Silver Spring MD V 55:30
2 458 Erika Hyrowski 23 Rockville MD V 55:42
3 1612 Amy Sonntag 24 Crofton MD V 56:00 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 25 - 29
1 927 Emily Knapp 25 Ellicott City MD V 46:36
2 1295 Cindy Wolf 29 Nottingham MD V 47:07
3 1589 Jessica Gross 26 Washington DC V 47:07 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 30 - 34
1 686 Bryna Dash 34 Fulton MD V 47:12
2 505 Katrina Holloway 31 Wilmington DE V 47:49
3 1274 Michelle Zachry 30 Abingdon MD V 48:56 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 35 - 39
1 1242 Amy Reed 38 Arnold MD V 47:53
2 1419 Carolyn Harris 36 Bel Air MD V 49:19
3 54 Karen Butler-Colbert 35 Bethesda MD V 50:21 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 40 - 44
1 1601 Cheryl Gilman 40 Annapolis MD V 45:50
2 1640 Elizabeth Sherwood 42 Severna Park MD V 48:17
3 897 Michelle Black 40 Baltimore MD V 50:38 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 45 - 49
1 1523 June Steinweg 45 Arnold MD V 51:36
2 668 Cheryl Valvano 47 Millersville MD V 54:48
3 602 Ann Andrews 45 Annapolis MD V 55:45 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 50 - 54
1 1595 Liza Recto 52 Lexington Park MD V 52:56
2 34 Robin Gay 53 Owings MD V 54:32
3 1189 Sheilah Ruppert 50 Chester MD V 58:07 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 55 - 59
1 5 Jane Godfrey 59 Takoma Park MD V 54:04
2 1287 Jan Sullivan 55 Annapolis MD V 57:18
3 1232 Linda Mills 58 Salisbury MD V 58:11 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 60 - 99
1 1634 Cheryl Costello 61 Fairfax VA V 71:15
2 1030 Rose Stocker 60 Annapolis MD V 93:54
3 1557 Anne McDonough 62 Chester MD V 94:34
Candy Cage (#1140) of Baltimore, MD finishes ahead of another
exulting half marathon finisher, Annmarie Jezioro (#959) of
Frederick, MD.
Awards Half Marathon
FEMALE OVERALL
1 1344 Molly Pritz 20 Lewisburg PA 1:22:53 X
2 126 Sheryl Kline 45 Arnold MD 1:31:47 X
3 58 Rebecca Nathan 42 Arlington VA 1:31:50 X FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 1 - 14
1 1538 Brittney Rooks 14 Baltimore MD X 1:35:45
2 170 Jean Lam 12 Fairfax Station VA X 2:14:17 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 15 - 19
1 1387 Kathryn Goode 17 Gainesville VA X 1:38:45
2 1362 Julia Zewe 17 Haymarket VA X 1:43:36
3 305 Alyson Frederick 18 Newark DE X 2:04:44 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 20 - 24
1 1449 Sarah Lebro 20 Columbia MD X 1:36:56
2 1222 Kristen Fallon 24 Washington DC X 1:45:05
3 939 Jessica Urie 23 Baltimore MD X 1:49:58 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 25 - 29
1 1420 Julia Speer 27 Washington DC X 1:35:34
2 1305 Carissa Stepien 27 Laurel MD X 1:40:45
3 543 Carrie Crooks 29 Towson MD X 1:47:19 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 30 - 34
1 516 Cara Fahey 33 Alexandria VA X 1:41:24
2 628 Chrissy Graham 34 Olney MD X 1:41:25
3 23 Gayle Vogel 33 Washington DC X 1:42:44 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 35 - 39
1 124 Amy Wigmore 37 Arlington VA X 1:38:37
2 432 Karen Myers 37 Harrisonburg VA X 1:39:09
3 709 Colleen Carroll 35 Davidsonville MD X 1:39:52 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 40 - 44
1 1484 Lori Mennitt 44 McLean VA X 1:41:41
2 556 Geri Nash 42 Annapolis MD X 1:44:48
3 963 Patricia Cuff 43 Alexandria VA X 1:46:42 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 45 - 49
1 1541 Win Persina 48 Washington DC X 1:33:33
2 1201 Jennifer Lundeen 48 Port Republic MD X 1:34:15
3 1439 Marie McIntee 48 Middletown DE X 1:44:40 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 50 - 54
1 107 Catherine Storrer 54 Columbia MD X 1:53:09
2 562 Anne Ostrenga 51 Derwood MD X 1:55:57
3 384 Linda Allen 52 Alexandria VA X 1:57:33 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 55 - 59
1 629 Amanda Falk 58 Annapolis MD X 1:59:19
2 177 Mary Rohde 55 Davidsonville MD X 2:09:34
3 605 Ellen Direneld 55 Arlington VA X 2:10:51 FEMALE AGE GROUP: NET TIME 60 - 99
1 26 Sandra May 62 Alexandria VA X 2:01:04
2 1485 Lucy Keough 62 Washington DC X 2:25:06
3 1527 Sharon Wollman 68 Annapolis MD X 2:59:16
Full Race Day Results
Race Day Report for 2008
Photo Gallery 2008
Look for the next race in the series at the ZOOMA Race
Series Web Page.
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