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Tri-umphs
by Jim Starr March 2002 For the Washington Running Report
A combination of a thin local calendar and life demands meant
that this column was absent from the last issue of WRR. This
issue's column will cover a good bit, despite the fact that most
of us are into an off-season training schedule--a schedule
blessed by weather good enough that most folks ought to be
easily maintaining their fitness. It's the time of year to
review last year's final local event, the Seneca Creek Duathlon,
and to track the accomplishments of multisporters over the last
year.The Seneca Creek Duathlon
A coolish and breezy dawn (for this winter) broke over Seneca
Creek State Park between Gaithersburg and Germantown in upper
Montgomery County (MD) on December 9. The athletes, by and
large, were ready for the final local event of the season...but
was the race staff? It is difficult to adapt a racecourse to
last minute changes caused by others, but this is precisely what
veteran RD Brad Jaeger had to do. In the weeks immediately preceding this second running of the
race by Jaeger's TriAthlantic Triathlon Club, speed bumps had
been installed throughout the park. Understandably Jaeger had to
think in terms of course redesign to try to avoid problems like
trying to take speed bumps at high speed on a bicycle. The
course was redesigned and was almost assuredly slightly longer
than its billed 14.4-mile bike sandwiched between two 2.4-mile
runs. The course was something less than straightforward,
notably on the two run segments, as Jaeger endeavored to avoid
having runners and bikers dangerously crossing paths. He also
added a wave start that had the women starting thirty minutes
ahead of the men so that they were already on the three-loop
criterium-style bike course when the men began their initial run. More than 250 athletes started the race and about twenty percent
of them ended up racing a short course and were disqualified.
Many were disgruntled, but to many of them Jaeger might
say, "Get gruntled!" Multisport athletes are responsible for
knowing and completing the course. Several of the bikers decided
to do two loops instead of three. Several of the runners did not
complete the second run as mapped. The mass confusion of people
running different courses eventuated in a race that should be
accurate in terms of order but whose times have not been (and
will not be) sorted out. The women's race was won by Hatboro, PA's Heather Houseknecht
(26). She was followed by Susan Baehre (43) of Triangle, VA and
Michele McGleish (35) of Germantown, MD. Steve Smith (35), also
of Germantown, led the men home. Timonium's Otho Keller (24) and
Jeff Fritz (33) of Reston, VA finished second and third
respectively. Age group winners (including the author in his
first real multisport race since being a victim of a hit-and-run
by an SUV in DC a year-and-a-half earlier) appear in the
accompanying table (below).
Inside Triathlon (IT) All-American Awards
IT magazine's All-American awards provide an eagerly-awaited
recognition of excellence among age-groupers during the season.
This year competitors from the seven states of the mid-Atlantic
region (NJ, PA, DE, MD, VA, NC) and the District garnered nearly
ten percent of the 248 triathlon awards and more than fifteen
percent of the 111 duathlon honors. In the area (DC, MD, VA),
the charge was led by perennial triathlon All-Americans Marge
Stahl of Annandale in the 70-74 age group and David McNeely (55-
59) of Glen Arm, MD. Their consistency is remarkable in a sport
with relatively high turnover. Repeat triathlon selections from
last year included Sterling's Chase Baker and DC's Brian Leske
among the physically handicapped, coach Eric Sorensen (30-34) of
Falls Church (featured in several earlier columns), Des Nunan of
Ocean City and Tom Shinners of Arlington (both in the 45-49
division), and Anne Viviani of Arlington (50-54). Viviani was
also selected as the top All-American duathlete in her age
group. Son Willy was a duathlon All-American among Junior men
(under 20).A couple of IT triathlon All-Americans from the late '80's and
early '90's regained their form as Marge Burley of Baltimore (55-
59) and Don Kane of Newport News (60-64) rejoined the All-
American team. Other local triathlon All-Americans included DC's
Matt Cooke (20-24), Richmond's Karen Holloway (25-29), Hanover's
Mitchell Gold (30-34) and Annapolis's Bill Kvetkas (40-44). In duathlon, veteran racers Judi Carbary (50-54) of Columbia,
Rebecca Strode of Springfield (45-49), and Russ Preble of Oxon
Hill (70-74) took All-American honors. They were joined on the
team by relative newcomers Billy Edwards of Virginia Beach (20-
24) and Alida Anderson of Silver Spring (30-34). Other Awards
Desiree Ficker of Potomac had another outstanding year. She
recently received Montgomery County Road Runners' Outstanding
Achievement Award by unanimous vote of the Runner of the Year
Committee. (MCRRC is among the largest of the affiliated clubs
of the Road Runners Club of America.) Below we quote from the
presentation made by Jim Whitnah (quite a runner in his own
right) to Desiree: "A little less than a year ago, Desiree Ficker was selected to
be a member of the Resident Team Program, one of USA Triathlon's
National Teams Programs. Headquartered at the US Olympic
Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colorado, the program
called for Des to relocate for nine months of intensive
training, first-rate coaching, and use of the state-of-the-art
facilities. The program seeks to identify and assist those with
potential to compete at a world-class level and it was a
remarkable achievement and honor for Des to have been selected,
especially so after having just started competing in triathlons
in 1999. She was the only woman selected for the 2001 team. The
program is designed also to be a potential stepping stone to the
Olympics. "The reports that filtered back indicated that the training was
rigorous, with most of her time spent preparing for workouts,
doing workouts, or recovering from workouts. Her race results
were outstanding, including ninth at the US Triathlon National
Championships, second at the US Duathlon National Championships
and tenth at the Pan American Championships. One international
periodical ranked her 68th in the world. "Despite her demanding training and racing schedules, she
managed two trips back to this area for road races. She
surprised even herself with an overall win and breakthrough PR
in April at Pike's Peek by running a 34:22. In the process she
defeated two top area runners, Naoko Ishibe and Irina
Suvarova." The mid-Atlantic region also had another major award winner.
Greg Watson of Newark, DE was named USA Triathlon's elite
Duathlete of the Year. He captured four first-place finishes in
the formidable Dannon Duathlon Series of 10K (6.2 mile) run, 40K
(24.85 mile) bike, 5K (3.1 mile) run events. He also captured
tenth place in the 15K (9.3 mile) run, 60K (37.28 mile) bike,
7.5K (4.66 mile) run International Triathlon Union (ITU) long
course championship. Watson finished 38th in the ITU World
Championship in Rimini, Italy. He earned second-place honors at
the Powerman, AL Duathlon. Notes and News
It was good to see world class professional duathlete Marjan
Huizing begin to work her way back from a months-long injury by
running (in a low-key way) a club race recently.... Yes, that
really was three-time Tour de France winner (and triathlete)
Lance Armstrong that was spotted at the Dirty Duathlon in Texas
on December 1. He finished sixth after flatting four times.
Armstrong had not participated in a duathlon in more than ten
years.... Two triathletes were chosen to be featured on Wheaties
Energy Crunch "Everyday Champions" cereal boxes. Hawaii Ironman
age-group champion Cherie Gruenfeld of Blue Jay, CA is one and
Marie Bartoletti of Finleyville, PA is the other.
Seneca Creek Duathlon
December 9, 2001
Gaithersburg, MD
Age Group Results
Men Women
14 & under 14 & under
1 Steve Duplinsky 1 Megan Johnson
15-19 15-19
1 Andrew King 1 Sara Fritz
2 Josh Nichols
3 Richard Wiles 20-24
1 Jessica Geist
20-24 2 Natalie Kostenbader
1 Nik Haynes 3 Julie Boslego
2 Elam Stotzfus
3 John Glick 25-29
1 Nancy Olson
25-29 2 Linda Miller
1 John McGuire 3 Tonya Watson
2 Steve Nester
3 Matt Clancy 30-34
1 Monique Farah
30-34 2 Lark Dunham
1 Trevor Orthmann 3 Deborah McGuire
2 Brian Hoyt
3 Tripp McHenry 35-39
1 Rebecca Herman
35-39 2 Jean Troutman
1 Ron Mentus 3 Susan Smiga
2 Dan Labarca
3 Ken Woodard 40-44
1 Lynn Browning
40-44 2 Jennifer Elcano
1 Steve Tague 3 Cheryl Thim
2 Bob Strange
3 Dan Bowen 45-49
1 Sandra Ruprecht
45-49 2 Janet Krones
1 Warren Elvers 3 Cindy Johnson
2 Jeffrey Timm
3 Rod Bergstrom 50-54
1 Jane Godfrey
50-54 2 Camille Pulcino
1 Jean-Pierre Bacle 3 Laura Cantrell
2 Steve Petouvis
3 Larry Cunningham 55-59
1 Mary Kuta
55-59 2 Sam Robey
1 William Vogler
2 Dave Gearin
3 Walter Brown
60-64
1 Everett Rice
2 Nathan Jacoby
3 Jim Starr
65+
1 Harry Bratt
2 Russ Preble
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