Record numbers and fast times highlighted the annual Yorktown
Freedom Run 5K Wednesday morning in historic Yorktown. There
was $2,400 in prize money, which went five deep in the open
category ($250-150-100-50-25), also five deep in the masters
(ages 40-and-over) category ($150-100-75-50-25), and three deep
in the grandmaster category ($100-75-50).Part of the Yorktown Fourth of July festivities, the Peninsula
Track Club event is organized by the Yorktown Rotary Club.
Conditions were mostly sunny and comfortable, with temperatures
in the 70s, low humidity, and a slight breeze. The re-certified
and historic course starts at the National Park Service Visitor
Center parking lot, crosses Route 238 down to the Colonial
Parkway for 1 3/4 miles; exits, then goes past the Yorktown
Victory Center, down the beautifully-renovated Water Street,
then up the infamous Buckner Street hill, to a left turn on
Main Street and a finish at the Yorktown Victory Monument.
There was a record turnout of 852 finishers, bettering the
previous marks of 739 finishers in 2005 and 733 in 2006. The
National Park Service limited the entrants this year to 900,
and registration cut off shortly before 7:30 a.m. for the 8:00
a.m. start.
At first glance, it looked like all but one of the ten overall
prize-money award winners were without local ties, but half had
area connections.
The top five open men were Stephen Mutisya (22) of Richmond
(15:14), Allen Carr (24) of Herndon (15:23), Jason Spong (30)
of Richmond (15:37), Guy Alton (23) of Richmond (15:52) and
Charlie Hurt (24) of Scottsville (16:16). Mutisya, from Kenya,
is an engineering student at Virginia Commonwealth University,
who just completed his first year, but has only two years
remaining collegiate eligibility (due to being over age,
according to NCAA regulations). He was injured during most of
cross country and track, with modest best times of 15:27 (5,000
meters) and 4:06 (1,500 meters), but is now healthy and
training well. Carr was a 2001 graduate of nearby York High
School, who competed for five years at James Madison and was
all-NCAA Southeast region in cross country. Spong is a
professional duathlete and triathlete from South Africa. Alton
was a track and cross country star for New Kent High School,
went to community college part time, and has now completed one
and one half years at VCU, where he broke the 3:50 barrier for
1,500 meters (a 4:07 mile equivalent) and ran 1:53 for 800
meters and sub-15:00 for 5,000 meters. Hurt was a former
William and Mary runner, who competes for the Williamsburg-
based Team Blitz. Neither Mutisya (1st place, $250) nor Alton
(4th place, $50) accepted prize money in order to retain their
NCAA eligibility. Last year's winner Ed Moran (in a near-record
14:39), an assistant track coach at W&M, has recently been
named to the Pan-American team for USA in track (5,000 meters).
For the women, it was 2007 Shamrock Marathon winner Cheryl
Anderson (25) of Richmond winning in front of 2006 Shamrock
Marathon winner Renee High (25) of Virginia Beach. Both
Anderson (2:42:56) and High (2:45:32) have qualified for the
2008 Olympic Trials Marathon. Defending champion Anderson, a
William and Mary graduate, improved her time from 17:12 last
year to 16:49 on Wednesday, the second-fastest time in race
history. W&M women's coach Kathy Newberry set the race record
of 16:37 at the 2005 Yorktown Freedom Run. After Anderson's
16:49, High was runner-up in 18:00, two seconds off her
personal record. Completing the top five were Fabiana
Perlingeiro (30) of Norfolk (18:17), national-class
ultramarathoner Jenn Shelton (23) of Virginia Beach (18:22) and
Crystal Pruitt (22) of Poquoson (18:27).
In the masters (ages 40-and-over) category, John Piggott (42)
of Williamsburg successfully defended his title with a ninth-
place overall finish and a 16:27 time, ten seconds faster than
in 2006. The other masters prize-money winners were Craig Hymes
(44) of Yorktown (17:29), Don Bond (44) of Norfolk (18:14),
John Scott (43) of Newport News (18:29) and David Witte (42) of
Yorktown in a PR 18:43.
For the masters women, Pamela Lovett (44) of Newport News
continued her excellent running of 2007, winning easily in
19:52 over Louise Wood (40) of Williamsburg (20:41), Michelle
Hogge (42) of Williamsburg (21:59), Carol Bartram (43) of
Yorktown (23:00) and MaryJo Bailey (46) of Williamsburg (23:09).
Stephen Chantry (52) of Williamsburg was the second 40 & older
runner, but for prize-money purposes, won the first-place
grandmaster award with his time of 16:53, that was much faster
than last year's 17:25. James Bates (51) of Hampton, just back
from a three-week trip to Ecuador, used his high-altitude
training to record a 17:54 for the second spot with Jim
Thornton (53) of Seaford next in 18:08.
The senior women's division was incredibly close with Ellie
Bustin (50) of Yorktown (24:33) edging Linda Whittaker (58) of
Williamsburg (24:38) and Lindy Warrick (54) of Williamsburg
(24:40).
There were a number of outstanding age-group performances,
including age group winners Joshua Peterson (9) of Williamsburg
(21:55), Graham Wilson (13) of Newport News (18:21), Lewis
Jones (63) of Yorktown (20:33), Winston Collins (66) of Newport
News (21:16), and Tom Ray (74) of Kitty Hawk, NC (23:00) for
the men.
Two precocious Williamsburg runners highlighted the women's age
groups. Dakota McManus (11) of Williamsburg won the 10-12
division by more than five and a half minutes with her time of
20:08. Heidi Peterson (13) of Williamsburg was seventh female
overall and won the 13-15 division by almost three and a half
minutes with her time of 19:07. Although slightly slower than
her PR 19:00 from May's Cheatham Annex "Salute to the Military"
5K, it was a superior performance, considering this hillier
course. Other women's age-group highlights included age group
winners Emily Low (22) of Newport News (19:36), Kristi
Markowicz (37) of Newport News (6th overall, 18:41).
The men's 20-24 division was particularly tough, with two
former Tabb High teammates, Sean Bossman (20) of Yorktown (now
competing as a senior at Radford University) placing first
(16:23, 7th overall), and Ryan Kent (21) of Yorktown (competing
for NCAA Division II Concord of West Virginia, with best times
this year of 4:06 in the 1,500 meters and 9:45 in the 3,000-
meter steeplechase) placing third (16:30, 12th overall), ahead
of former W&M runner and Team Blitz star Trevor Cable(24) of
Williamsburg (16:40, 13th overall). Cable had run a PR 2:28:50
at this year's Shamrock Marathon.