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Ford's Colony 8K Run
By Rick Platt April 26, 2008 Williamsburg, VA For the Washington Running Report
Jim Bates (52) of Hampton, VA is the oldest runner to ever win
the men's overall title in a CRR event.
Three newcomers to the Colonial Road Runners road racing scene,
Jonathan Weiss, Michael Soberick, and Pat Eden, had noteworthy
performances at last Saturday's Ford's Colony Run for Shelter,
while three "old-timers", Jennifer Quarles, Linda Kidder, and
Debbie McLaughlin, largely absent from CRR races this past
year, dominated the overall women's division.The CRR Grand Prix event, organized by and benefiting Housing
Partnerships, included an 8K loop course along St. Andrews,
Ford's Colony, and Blackheath roads, while the 5K walk and 5K
fun run were an out-and-back from D.J. Montague Elementary
School to the FC Swim and Tennis Club. There were 120 total
finishers. Jim Bates (52) of Hampton was the overall winner of the 8K in
29:27, holding off a challenge by William and Mary sophomore
Jonathan Weiss (19) of Williamsburg. Bates had the solo lead
after an early challenge by Michael Gibino in the opening half
mile and ran alone most of the rest of the way for the 4.97-
miles. Weiss closed to within a few strides around four miles
on the hills of Blackheath, but Bates surged back for the win,
and is now the oldest runner (at age 52 years, two months) to
ever win the men's overall title in a CRR event. Steve Chantry
won the men's division of the 2006 Governor's Land 5K Run at 51
years, 11 months (although women's winner Aurora Scott was
ahead of him in that race in a CRR all-time record 16:37, the
only time a female has been the outright winner of a CRR
event). Weiss was 14 seconds behind Bates in 29:41, while 2003
Walsingham graduate Michael Soberick (23) of Hayes was another
16 seconds back, but breaking the
30-minute barrier with a 29:57. For the women, four-time CRR Grand Prix women's champion (2003-
06) Jennifer Quarles (36) of Williamsburg returned to the
winners circle with a 33:04, well ahead of Linda Kidder (51) of
Williamsburg (35:39) and Debbie McLaughlin (42) of Vienna
(36:02). After a full year's absence from racing (due to two
stress fractures in her left foot, one in the spring of '07,
one in the fall, Quarles is happy to be back to training up to
45-60 miles per week. She was third at the Queens Lake 5K (in
19:55) on April 12, her first race since winning the Yorktown
Victory Run 8 Miler, March 24, 2007. Kidder goes long stretches without racing, but competed every
Saturday in April, starting with a age-group second at the
April 5th Ukrop's Monument Avenue 10K (44:47), then a women's
50-54 race record 21:26 at Queens Lake, a third-place overall
21:21 at the Walsingham Academy 5K, and Saturday's overall
second place at Ford's Colony (again setting a race record for
women 50-54). McLaughlin moved from Williamsburg to Northern
Virginia last July, but she and her husband have kept their
home in Windsor Forest and Debbie plans to visit often to race
(although her husband will be assigned soon to Mexico City for
a couple years). Her only other road race in 2008 was a 21:15
and an overall win at the MAD 5K at James Madison High School
in Vienna. Weiss and Soberick have similar running backgrounds, with PRs
of 4:45 (1,600 meters) and 17:15 (5K cross country) for
Soberick, and 4:48 (1,600) and 17:17 (cross country) for Weiss.
Soberick graduated in 2003 from Walsingham, where he ran track
four years and cross country for three. His 3,200-meter PR was
10:33. At UNC-Wilmington he tried cross country his freshman
year, but did not finish the season due to injury (shin). He
stopped competing in November of '03, and did not race again
until Queens Lake a couple weeks ago, where he was ninth
overall in 18:32. His motivation to return came from being an
assistant track coach at Walsingham (distance runners) and
workouts with head Walsingham coach Mark Tompkins. At UNC-
Wilmington, where he got a B.S. in Marine Biology, he spent
time on the water, competing in collegiate sailing for three
years. On tap now is 10 weeks of teaching sailing in the
British Virgin Islands, starting May 19th, then law school in
the fall (hopefully at W&M). Weiss is a sophomore biology major at W&M, and ran track and
cross country at Langley High in McLean. He also had PRs of 53
seconds for the 4 x 400-meter relay, and 2:03 in the open 800
meters. He tried workouts with the W&M-based Team Blitz, but
has been mostly working out on his own, or with college
friends, until recently joining the CRR group for Wednesday-
afternoon interval workouts at Walsingham. In races, he ran
1:27:28 at last September's Rock 'N' Roll Half Marathon, then a
1:23:02 at February's Anheuser-Busch Colonial Half, as well as
a 37:27 at the Monument Avenue 10K and as fast as 17:40's in
campus 5K races. The 5K race walk was won by Steven Shapiro (54) of Hampton
(28:28), ahead of George Fenigsohn (60) of Poquoson (31:52),
and by Cindy Steger (48) of Williamsburg (36:57) ahead of Ann
Manciagli (72) of Williamsburg (38:14). The 5K fun run was won
by Audrey Kroll (25) of Williamsburg, an employee of the Ford's
Colony Golf Course clubhouse restaurant, who won in 25:17 ahead
of Laura Obie (30) of Williamsburg (26:07). Besides Kidder's Ford's Colony age-group record in the 8K, the
other record set Saturday was by Pat Eden (77) of Williamsburg
in the 5K walk. Eden broke her own all-time CRR 5K record for
women 75-and-over with a time of 46:05, a sub-15:00 pace. The
previous record was 48:34 by Eden at the 2007 Heritage Humane
Society 5K at Ford's Colony, and before that Eden's 52:15 at
the '07 York River State Park 5K, her first CRR event. Prior to
her three all-time marks, the CRR record for women 75-and-over
was 57:35 by Anna Zeleny of Lewes, DE at the 2000 HHS 5K at
Ford's Colony. Eden and her husband Jack have owned a
condominium at Campus Court on South Henry Street (across from
the W&M law school) for the past 12 years, while still
maintaining a residence in Potomac, MD. Their son Scott
received his graduate degree in finance from W&M, and lives
with his wife in Williamsburg. Eden, who celebrated her 77th
birthday the day before the Ford's Colony race, was encouraged
to enter CRR races by Manciagli, one of the CRR's leading
racewalkers.
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