The 19th annual Leona Divide 50 mile trail run will once again take place at the Lake Hughes Community Center (
here) on April 30th, 2011.
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2011 Version |
How I got to the Starting line:
After years of saying I was going to do a fifty miler, I finally signed up for it this year. Though I have never quit running or walking since I started in 1979, by 2008 I was over 300 pounds and mainly a walker. Despite walking an average of ten miles a day, I just kept getting bigger and bigger and slower and slower.
In 2008, I returned to the marathon and renewed my desire to complete a fifty miler. I walked the LA marathon and was going great for about 16 miles. I was walking a sub six hour marathon (13:44 pace) and felt great and the wheels fell off literally. from the ankles up, I felt great but my feet were killing me. My weight and the constant pounding of the walking made them hurt beyond description.
My 13 minute miles became 20 minute miles in a blink of an eye. After a few miles they went numb and I managed to finish in 7:01 (16:04 pace) and realized my dream of maybe walking a fifty was not possible. My feet would not allow it. I really enjoy walking more than running and so doe my left knee but if I wantred to complete a fifty miler, I knew I had to run some. Plus I had to lose weight.
But instead, I decided to walk even more and see if that would work and i started doing more and more miles with a little running thrown in. In 2009, they move the LA marathon to May and I decided to pass on it because I figured it would be to warm, So instead I decided to walk the Calico 50k in january but my training over the winter did not go well.
I could do 70 to 90 miles a week but could never go longer than 4 or 5 hours without my feet going out on me. with a few weeks to go till Calico, I realized I could not finish it before the time cut-offs and decided to have my oldest take my place and run the 30k in preparation for his marathon debut (He ran Surf City in 3:16). So once again I realized that I had to run despite my balky left knee if I ever wanted to be an ultra marathoner.
Why ultra marathons? Mainly because of Eddie Lujan Sr (The Chief) who I originally meet when I first moved to Bakersfield and I played NOR baseball with his son. Eddie drove us to practice but i do not really remember him as a runner back then but when I went to Highland his son Eddie Jr. was a really good runner and then I heard about the Chief running marathons.
So when I started running my junior year, I decided I was going to run a marathon and I did in the spring. I ran the BTC marathon and ran 3:01 and was really disappointed because some many older Bakersfield runners including the Chief beat me badly. In fact, the Chief use to run sub 2:40 marathons despite running 10ks at about the same pace.
Then I heard that he started running further than a marathon and I was intrigued. He and others in town ran 50 and 100 milers and were good at it. There was a time in town where at least ten guys were regularly running ultras and I knew I had to run one some day. But by my senior year, I had already found a new passion and despite running a 2:55 marathon, I started doing triathlons.
In 1981, (my senior year) Bakersfield had it's first triathlon and I entered it and won it. So even though I ran for UCSD, I thought of myself as a triathlete. I ran cross country for two years at UCSD and ran a 2:50 marathon after my sophomore cross country season and ran the
Royal Bricker 50k (I believe in February on 1983.) from Oceanside to La Jolla. I did it in under 3:50and won a pair of Sacouny shoes.
But despite this success I took the triathlon path. In 1982, I came in second and for a number of years I was the top Bakersfield finisher and one year I won the Clydesdale division (over 200 pounds) but kids came and I did not have the money or time to do triathlons. So I went back to being a runner but I was a Clydesdale and did not even think of running marathons much less ultras.
Despite my size I could run about a 40 minute 10k but the weight kept coming on and soon I was 220 and running 44 minute 10ks. I did do the Long Beach marathon in the early 90s and ran 4:10 or so and felt so slow. then i really quit racing and got slower and slower. by the late 90s I was doing LA from time to time but doing in 5:30 or so and by 2000s, I quit racing completely after I won the Handicap Series.
Then for the next couple years I mainly walked a lot on my own and started coaching at Bakersfield High in the fall of 2006. Around this time I got a Garmin and started racking up more and more miles as a challenge to not only myself but also my athletes. As
Arthur Lydiard (A Great New Zealand coach) often said "Miles Make Champions!". I soon did 70 mile weeks and challenged my varsity runners to meet my weekly mileage.
Slowly my weekly mileage to 80 then 90 and then finally I did a 100 mile week. In the spring of 2009, I left high school coaching and started coaching some local college runners at Yokuts Park. That summer I started seeing Joe Petersen coaching his boot camps and I camp up with the idea of a run camp and pitched it to him.
Joe saw the value of the run camp so in August of 2009, we started it. This was also when I decided to incorporate some running into my mileage. I still walked all the time by myself but would run at our practices with my clients. By time the LA marathon came around I was down to 260 and decided to use a walk a quarter mile then run a quarter mile strategy and hoped to break 6 hours.
During the race, I felt pretty good and then had to run a fast couple miles to break 6 hours but I did it. Since I barely broke 6 hours (5:58) I decided that I could not do the Leona 50 miler and finish under the cutoff. So I increased my mileage (70 to 90 miles a week) and tried to run a little more. Besides wanting to take on a 50 miler, I also wanted to summit Mt Whitney.
In August of 2009, I went there with Debbie Wells and her friends and despite doing a lot of 6 hour hikes in the Bakersfield heat and a few trail hikes like Half Dome and Mt Pinos, I did not make it to the top. I made it to 13,000 feet and had to turn around because because it was getting late and it is not safe to summit after 1pm. By the time I got back to the car, I was beat and thought this trail stuff is hard.
After the 2010 LA marathon, I decided to do my own 50 mile challenge at the Relay for Life event in May at CSUB. I raised some money and ended up walking 50 miles in around 22 hours. The course was 0.4 miles around and through the day I had to walk around a lot of people and then at night I was mainly by myself. It was a good walk to figure out how to eat and drink and keep moving for a long time. Besides a big blister on one foot, the 50 miler was pretty easy.
In early June, I traveled to the Rock N Roll marathon in San Diego. I was looking forward to running this race because I went to UCSD and ran my fastest marathon in San Diego (2:50) but this was an awful race in so many ways. The wave starts were dumb ( I started 50 minutes after the gun and it got hot,), the course was awful (Slanted concrete highways and 8 miles at butt ugly Mission Bay) and I did not feel good.
I started with a 2/2 (run/walk) but by mile 15, I just started walking and ended up walking the last ten miles with a nice lady from Arizona. I did the race in 6:10 but it was very disappointing and my hopes of finishing a trail 50 seemed remote. I was still in the 260 to 270 range and despite 80 mile weeks, I was not losing any weight. I was getting fitter because I was doing Joe's boot camp along with all those miles.
Besides training to do a fifty, I also had another goal: to summit Mt Whitney. Now this was not on my radar till the year before when I saw Debbie Wells and her friends on the bike path all the time and found out they were preparing for Whitney. So since I did not summit in 2009, I need to go back in 2010. Whitney and the Fifty would take the same kind of preparation and dedication.
In July, I did Half Dome again and the San Francisco marathon in 5:58 using a 2/2 run/walk strategy. I felt really good throughout the race and loved the weather. If I lived in the Bay Area I could do 200 mile weeks.I ended up running the same time as I did in LA: 5:58.
In early August I returned to MT Whitney for a solo attempt and despite all the training, I did not summit. I made it to within a half mile of the summit and had to turn around. My stomach went sour and it got late. In the end the storms came in and it even snowed so turning around was the smart decision. By the time I made it to the car, I had been hiking for almost 24 hours and it was the hardest thing I have ever done.
After the disappointment of Whitney, I had another failure in that I hoped to walk from Bakersfield to Tehachapi. When I started out it was warm and it only got hotter. The walk to Arvin was very boring and then when I headed through the hills, they were too steep and I realized that I might finish but it would have taken forever. In the end, I decided that it was not worth finishing.
After a disappointing September, I has a good October. After many long runs with Sarah and Michael, I realized that I needed to run harder in races. They had run 5:30s and I knew i could but just needed to trust my training and push myself out of the barely sub six comfort zone. So at the Nike marathon, I decided to run with Diana and use a 1/3 strategy.
Though the pace felt fast in the early miles, by the time we got to the halfway point at the Golden Gate Park, I knew I was going to be able to run a fast time. It rained the whole second half but I did not care and I ended up running 5:31 and felt great. I even walked the 6 plus miles back to my hotel
A few weeks after Nike I was at Fresno and was planning on running faster but I meet Jessica before the race and ran with her instead. She wanted to finish and break 6 hours and we did that. We used a 1/4 pattern and I felt really good the whole way and ran 5:28. Later in the month I did my first PCTR event and ran the Santa Monica Mountains 30k in 4:55.
too be continued...
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Me finishing my first 50 miler! |
My Race Recap:
I finished in 12:46:27 and came in 224 out of 234 finishers. The elevation gain was 8,434 ft and I spent ten minutes not moving. My average moving pace was 15:41 and my average pace was 15:41. The elevation loss was 8,377 and the max elevation was 5,252 ft and the min elevation was 3,017 ft.
At the start, I was surprised at how many people were there and how many were jockeying for a pole position. It almost felt like I was at a 10k race and when the race started, I felt like I was at a big city marathon for a little while because the road was narrow and the crowd was thick and slow moving.
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Go! |
This did not last long because we started uphill from the get go.
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First Three Miles. |
- Mile 1 / 1548 up 370 down 0
- Mile 2 / 1355 up 284 down 0
- Mile 3 / 1314 up 172 down 0
I was glad I had previewed these early miles, so I knew what to expect because all we did was climb and climb. of course this would be the theme of the day. Finally around mile 4, I actually ran a bit and realized we had more fire road to run because we were not doing the course that I had done in the training run months ago.
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Sunrise |
That day we did the 30k course, where we climbed a couple more miles and then got on the fun PCT. Today we were heading downhill to some valley and I knew we would have to climb back up to get to the PCT eventually.
- Mile 4 / 1205 up 139 down 175
- Mile 5 / 1250 up 46 down 116
- Mile 6 / 1217 up 59 down 250
- Mile 7 / 1116 up 0 down 107
- Mile 8 / 1259 up 47 down 142
This par of the race was frustrating because I just can not run fast because of my size (240 pounds). I have to hold back or I will be like a runaway truck on the Grapevine. So I get passed by people and lose time on these sections of the course. Fitness wise I feel great but if I run fast I will destroy my joints so I have to just run along in first gear and watch the sports cars go by.
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Just before the first aid station. |
- Mile 9 / 1615 up 441 down 0
- Mile 10 / 1454 up 179 down 19
- Mile 11 / 1615 up 124 down 154
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PCT Entrance |
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30ker who thought she was lost. |
At around 8 miles, we made it to the first aid station but I just grabbed a couple cups of coke and some chips and headed up the next climb. I caught quite a few as we headed to the PCT and as we got close to the PCT, we could see the 30kers. They started an hour after us and were moving faster then I was. It was nice to have company at this point and the trail is downhill and very runnable.
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My friend Monica getting ready to pass me. |
- Mile 12 / 1258 up 0 down 256
- Mile 13 / 1425 up 126 down 140
- Mile 14 / 1423 up 45 down 194
- Mile 15 / 1344 up 65 down 400
- Mile 16 / 1541 up 0 down 449
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One of the 30k leaders. |
Besides the 30kers passing me, soon I had 30kers coming up the trail as well. This kept it interesting but also slowed me down a bit because the trail is pretty narrow so often I had to stop and step to the side. This often involved so slipping and falling almost at times, so it was not an ideal situation especially since I over 30 miles to go. But eventually I got to the bottom of the hill to the aid station which was also the 30k turn around.
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Monica leaving the aid station. |
This aid station was the biggest one on the course and was right by the main road. It was also where one could have a drop bag (I did not use a drop bag). I spent a couple minutes here refilling my Nathan, eating chips and I grabbed a banana, It was pretty hectic here with all the aid station workers and all the 30kers too. A nice lady offered me homemade cookies but I passed on them because sweets taste awful when I am out running for a long time.
It was nice to be leaving the 30kers but I knew I would soon be dodging 50kers. I also that we were going to be going uphill for awhile and it was going to be hard. We were to climb 1050 feet in two miles. That is a 10% average climb by the way.
- Mile 17 / 1901 up 441 down 0
- Mile 18 / 2040 up 609 down 0
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50ker |
As you can see by the photo some of this trail was steep and the footing was not the best. Going up hurt the lungs but I knew going down was going to kill the joints. Once I got to the top the steepest section, I still had two miles of climbing before I got to the next aid station. Sadly on my way to this aid station, I saw the first 50 miler who decided to make it a 50k day.
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Changed to the 50k. |
I wish they also listed the DNFs and those who bailed out of the 50 miler and did the 50k instead. Really think you should not be credited for a 50k finish if you entered the 50 miler. I know heading to the 20 mile aid station that I saw a number of blue numbers (40 milers) heading back in.
I have no problem with knowing when to say uncle but you should not get an official 50k finish time. Plus knowing this option was available made bailing on the 50 miler easier for some and may have impacted the awards in the race too. But oh well.
- Mile 19 - 17:20 up 309 down 14
- Mile 20 - 16:48 up 218 down 74
Just before I got to the 20 mile aid station, the first 50 miler ran by me. he was moving fast and ended up winning the race in 6:24:46. 24 year old James Bonnet was at mile 40 when he passed me. He averaged 4:40 miles the whole!
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50 Mile Champ! |
When I got to the 20/40 mile aid station, the second place finisher was there (Jorge Pacheco) and there was a lot of excitement in the air.I chugged some more coke and looked for some sports drink but they were out. Some one offered me salt tablets but I never do new things during a race so I grabbed some more chips and a banana and head off to the next aid station.
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RunnerLand Aid Station |
As I headed to the next aid station, more of the leaders started to pass by me. One that looked super strong was the eventual female winner (Aliza LaPierre) who won the woman's race in a time of 7:37:56 and came in 12th overall.
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First woman. |
- Mile 21 - 1713 up 74 down 65
- Mile 22 - 1544 up 110 down 89
- Mile 23 - 1639 up 201 down 67
- Mile 24 - 1901 up up 240 down 48
These miles were along the ridgeline and were in the shade most of the time. The single track made dodging the returning traffic dodgy and often I stumbled getting out of the way of the faster returning runners. By the time I got to the 80s aid station I was in need of some food and coke. At the aid station I actually caught a couple runners but heading out of the trail the return traffic got even thicker.
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80s aid station. |
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- Mile 25 - 1857 up 399 down 302
- Mile 26 - 1719 up 444 down 205
- Mile 27 - 1512 up 182 down 329
As you can tell, the single track went up in these miles but I knew soon that I would be going downhill soon on a fire road to the turn around at mile 29.
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Crowded on the trail. |
The following I wrote before I wrote the above. I was reporting on my overall finish and wished that the results listed how many started the 50 miler because I came in 222nd out of 232 finishers but a number dropped out or decided to do the 50k instead.
- Mile 28 - 1355 up 0 down 458
- Mile 29 - 1350 up 0 down 247
I want to start my recap around the half way point when we went down that fire road. Until then, I had been just putting along and trying to stay hydrated and on some kind of pace. I knew there was a road but I did not preview it and did not know exactly how long it was. It appears to be over two miles long and it was ugly! By this point my camera was dead and from the looks of those climbing this beast, I doubt few wanted their picture taken.
At this point my left knee was bothering me and my 240 pounds was not doing me any favors. A couple people passed me and I could not take advantage of the downhill very much. I barely broke 14 minute pace and was very frustrated that I could not go faster but I had to protect my knee. As I descended, I saw that everyone was moving slow and thought that I was going to lose a lot of time going up as well. But I knew I could walk uphill fast so I hoped for the best.
I got to the aid station and they were all out of coke or mountain dew so I drank some ginger ale and grabbed some chips for the salt. i was hoping for a banana but they were gone and everything else was too sweet. Then I saw a bag of bread and asked for a slice. They want to but something on it but I just wanted the bread and took off.
As soon as I bit into the bread, I wished I had taken a couple of slices because it tasted great! But i was not turning around and I felt really good. Not having the pounding of going downhill, I could just muscle my way up the hill and I started catching people. The best part is when I caught a couple really fit looking young guys (They were 31 from Newport Beach) about halfway up the hill.
They were very surprised when I went by them and one exclaimed "UNBELIEVABLE" and both gave me props. I told them they would catch me on the flats as I walked away from them. I also caught a couple more runners and then finally the very long warm climb was over and we were back on the ridge line single track that snaked along in the trees.
- Mile 30 - 1825 up 169 down 80
- Mile 31 - 1640 up 373 down 0
- Mile 32 - 1828 up 443 down 39
On this section, just about everyone I caught passed me because I just can not run fast because of my size. When I got to the 80s aid station (mile 36) I was feeling good and chugged some coke and got a bagel and continue my leaping frogging with a little gal in red. We went back and forth depending on the terrain and it was good to have someone to pace off.
- Mile 33 - 1529 up 78 down 267
- Mile 34 - 1522 up 258 down 420
- Mile 35 - 1614 up 67 down 172
- Mile 36 - 1734 up 26 down 168
Over the next few miles to the mile 40 aid station, I ran with the little gal in red. It was nice having someone to share the pace with and it did make the miles go by a little quicker. when we got to the 40 mile aid station, I was so glad they had some sports drink. I had only gotten water for most of the race and I really needed something else.
- Mile 37 - 1615 up 68 down 168
- Mile 38 - 1701 up 97 down 121
- Mile 39 - 1733 up 96 down 78
At this aid station one of the workers made a concoction that was diluted sports drink with salt in it and it worked. I filled my Nathan with it and it really helped over the last ten miles. Now ten miles is a magic number for me because on Tuesdays and Thursdays I always walk at least ten miles so when I get to ten miles to go, I just think it is only a Bagel walk. From my house to Bagels & Blenderz is ten miles and I do that distance so much that it is easy for me.
- Mile 40 - 1534 up 0 down 326
- Mile 41 - 1501 up 26 down 614
- Mile 42 - 1454 up 17 down 435
The next three miles were downhill and in two miles we dropped over a thousand feet which is a 10% grade. About half way down the hill, we caught the Newport Boys and they were not looking to good. I could not run as fast as i wanted because the hill was so steep and i was afraid of falling and/or hurting myself. But when I got to the 43 mile aid station, I was feeling good and was ready to hit the climb. I had three shots of MT Dew and grabbed some pretzels and I was out of there in less than a minute.
- Mile 43 - 1818 up 310 down 176
- Mile 44 - 1943 up 436 down 11
- Mile 45 - 1756 up 252 down 156
- Mile 46 - 1806 up 212 down 26
The next four miles were uphill and even though I felt great, I was not moving that fast. I caught one gal going up and knew I had to keep pushing so I would make the cut off. The evening was lovely and no one was around. Far off in the distance, I could see the fire road that returned us to the finish and I saw a few people going up it and the aid station.
When I got to the aid station, they asked what I needed and I said anything but water. They said they had Dr.Pepper and I was very pleased. Dr. Pepper has fueled all of my ultra training runs and it was nice to have it at the last aid station. The best thing was they had small bottles so I could take one with me. Then I headed up the final hill and realized I was almost done.
- Mile 47 - 1407 up 80 down 201
- Mile 48 - 1316 up 0 down 248
- Mile 49 - 1020 up 0 down 364
With the sun going down, the view was beautiful and if the road had not been so steep, I would have ran in faster. In the end, my last 2 miles were my fastest of the day and when I got back to the community center, I was able to sprint in. Over the last miles, I put a lot of time on my nearest competitors and I accomplished a goal that I had set over 30 years ago. I became an official Ultra-Marathoner!
My Garmin Stats:
15:41 Average
- 1548
- 1355
- 1314
- 1205
- 1250
- 1217
- 1116
- 1259
- 1615
- 1454
- 1238
- 1258
- 1425
- 1423
- 1344
- 1541
- 1901
- 2040
- 1720
- 1648
- 1713
- 1544
- 1639
- 1901
- 1857
- 1719
- 1512
- 1355
- 1350
- 1825
- 1640
- 1828
- 1529
- 1522
- 1614
- 1734
- 1615
- 1701
- 1733
- 1534
- 1501
- 1454
- 1818
- 1943
- 1756
- 1806
- 1407
- 1316
- 1103
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Mile 20 |
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Did miles 30 to 43 with her. |
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Caught them at mile 30, recaught them at mile 4. |
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Him and his friend could not believe I caught them. |
Division: 50 Mile
Place Bib # Name Start Finish Elapsed Age Gender City
1 288 James Bonnet 6:03:00 12:27:46 6:24:46 24 M
2 199 Jorge Pacheco 6:03:00 12:35:14 6:32:14 43 M Los Angeles
3 229 Kent Ryhorchuk 6:03:00 12:40:03 6:37:03 36 M Portola Valley
4 111 Fabrice Hardel 6:03:00 12:46:27 6:43:27 37 M San Diego
5 209 Chris Price 6:03:00 12:57:25 6:54:25 30 M Thousand Oaks
6 121 Evan Hone 6:03:00 13:05:51 7:02:51 33 M Thousand Oaks
7 106 Michael Halter 6:03:00 13:25:32 7:22:32 31 M Lancaster
8 12 Piotr Baizert 6:03:00 13:27:45 7:24:45 31 M Ridgecrest
9 177 Shad Mickelberry 6:03:00 13:31:41 7:28:41 35 M Las Vegas
10 239 Christophe Sigel 6:03:00 13:31:50 7:28:50 39 M San Diego
11 42 Michael Carson 6:03:00 13:37:11 7:34:11 24 M Gold Canyon
12 151 Aliza Lapierre 6:03:00 13:40:56 7:37:56 30 F Williston
13 157 Peter Livingston 6:03:00 13:56:53 7:53:53 38 M Wrightwood
14 286 Paulette Zillmer 6:03:00 14:02:07 7:59:07 28 F Scottsdale
15 56 Will Cooper 6:03:00 14:13:25 8:10:25 48 M Corona Del Mar
16 16 Maggie Beach 6:03:00 14:18:32 8:15:32 39 F La Crescenta
17 190 Sean O'brien 6:03:00 14:18:37 8:15:37 48 M Los Angeles
18 2 Brandon Adame 6:03:00 14:19:40 8:16:40 33 M West Covina
19 25 Neil Blake 6:03:00 14:21:50 8:18:50 45 M Rio Rancho
20 83 Steve Fry 6:03:00 14:24:19 8:21:19 53 M Riverside
21 8 Marco Arteaga 6:03:00 14:24:38 8:21:38 46 M Colton
22 291 Christopher Mead 6:03:00 14:28:53 8:25:53 40 M
23 59 Lucas Crespin 6:03:00 14:31:26 8:28:26 26 M Littleton
24 170 Mike McDonald 6:03:00 14:33:04 8:30:04 47 M Thousand Oaks
25 103 Katie Haldeman 6:03:00 14:33:29 8:30:29 29 F Santa Barbara
26 98 Ken Gordon 6:03:00 14:35:45 8:32:45 46 M Albuquerque
27 123 Rick Hoopes 6:03:00 14:36:46 8:33:46 56 M Lincoln
28 274 Kurt Whittington 6:03:00 14:38:25 8:35:25 33 M Stanton
29 197 Jaime Ortiz 6:03:00 14:41:09 8:38:09 50 M South Gate
30 66 Lance Doherty 6:03:00 14:42:04 8:39:04 34 M San Leandro
31 256 Masahiko Tamakami 6:03:00 14:43:10 8:40:10 39 M Torrance
32 164 Cari Martin 6:03:00 14:45:58 8:42:58 39 F Aptos
33 171 Ruperto Romero 6:03:00 14:47:35 8:44:35 47 M Huntington Park
34 28 Adam Bowman 6:03:00 14:47:43 8:44:43 32 M Pasadena
35 272 Mark Warren 6:03:00 14:49:04 8:46:04 43 M Santa Barbara
36 76 Ambrose Fisher 6:03:00 14:49:28 8:46:28 42 M Manhattan Beach
37 292 Andy Kumeda 6:03:00 14:53:55 8:50:55 43 M
38 119 Todd Hiskey 6:03:00 14:55:33 8:52:33 46 M Glendora
39 130 Matt James 6:03:00 14:57:35 8:54:35 34 M Fresno
40 191 Monica Ochs 6:03:00 14:58:22 8:55:22 42 F Anacortes
41 203 Gerardo Perez 6:03:00 14:59:26 8:56:26 46 M Elizabeth Lake
42 202 Angel Perez 6:03:00 15:03:00 9:00:00 39 M Joshua Tree
43 221 David Rhodes 6:03:00 15:05:52 9:02:52 41 M San Ramon
44 231 Andy Salinger 6:03:00 15:06:55 9:03:55 42 M Oak Park
45 212 Tim Putney 6:03:00 15:08:31 9:05:31 36 M San Ramon
46 80 Geoffrey Foote 6:03:00 15:09:35 9:06:35 43 M Chandler
47 240 Kari Sinoff 6:03:00 15:11:33 9:08:33 49 F Mt. Shasta
48 88 Chris Gaggia 6:03:00 15:11:49 9:08:49 41 M Bishop
49 156 Suzie Lister 6:03:00 15:12:19 9:09:19 46 F San Ramon
50 184 Katie Murphy 6:03:00 15:12:19 9:09:19 28 F San Ramon
51 241 Kyoung Moon Son 6:03:00 15:12:34 9:09:34 45 M Lawrenceville
52 186 James Murray 6:03:00 15:17:51 9:14:51 50 M Willow
53 91 Brandon Gaudren 6:03:00 15:19:59 9:16:59 34 M San Diego
54 39 Dan Burke 6:03:00 15:21:32 9:18:32 52 M Danville
55 29 Joanna Boyd 6:03:00 15:23:09 9:20:09 32 F Reno
56 14 Wendy Barth 6:03:00 15:23:56 9:20:56 39 F Glendora
57 175 David Messman 6:03:00 15:24:13 9:21:13 50 M Walnut Creek
58 117 Joe Herzog 6:03:00 15:24:21 9:21:21 43 M Moorpark
59 167 Erin Maruoka 6:03:00 15:24:28 9:21:28 34 F Santa Monica
60 273 Robert Whited 6:03:00 15:25:13 9:22:13 46 M Riverside
61 150 Jeff Lang 6:03:00 15:25:52 9:22:52 43 M Oakland
62 173 Ray Mena 6:03:00 15:26:37 9:23:37 55 M Long Beach
63 94 J Russell Gill III 6:03:00 15:27:30 9:24:30 47 M Charlottesville
64 131 Donovan Jenkins 6:03:00 15:27:36 9:24:36 29 M Northridge
65 277 Christina Williams 6:03:00 15:28:57 9:25:57 27 F Lafayette
66 161 Michael Maccoss 6:03:00 15:29:45 9:26:45 36 M Seattle
67 54 Howard Cohen 6:03:00 15:30:59 9:27:59 52 M Newbury Park
68 218 Jeff Reifers 6:03:00 15:31:20 9:28:20 48 M Danville
69 1 Yishaiya Abosch 6:03:00 15:33:29 9:30:29 45 M Fresno
70 69 Dion Doshier 6:03:00 15:35:36 9:32:36 42 M Fresno
71 53 Paulstephen Chierico 6:03:00 15:36:18 9:33:18 30 M Oceanside
72 253 Eric Swenson 6:03:00 15:36:32 9:33:32 30 M Las Vegas
73 77 John Fisher 6:03:00 15:37:37 9:34:37 51 M Santa Clarita
74 68 Douglas Donovan 6:03:00 15:37:38 9:34:38 40 M Henderson
75 158 Francisco Lopez 6:03:00 15:38:36 9:35:36 54 M Los Angeles
76 165 Emilio Martinez 6:03:00 15:38:36 9:35:36 41 M Arleta
77 144 Jeff Kozak 6:03:00 15:40:34 9:37:34 36 M Bishop
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