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Sunday, March 30, 2003 -- Winchester, VA
Rotary 5K & 1/4 Mile Kids Run
(iPO Event Id#: 5639)
Story & photos by Karsten Brown, with
additional photos by Mark Stickley, Jolene Rippey, & Mrs. Dunlap.
[Details]
[Coverage]
Results:
[Overall Results]
[Results by Class]
[Kids Race]
Pictures:
[Set 1]
[Set 2]
[Set 3]
[Set 4]
[Set 5]
[2000 Coverage]
[2001 Coverage]
[2002 Coverage]
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Heading out into Jim Barnett Park
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Four years, eight different winners! This year it was Brad Rippey and
Carolyn Wilson leading 87 other runners and walkers at the
fourth annual Rotary 5K, a fine running race hosted by the Shenandoah Valley Runners
and the Winchester Rotary Club. Once again the participants followed a
moderately hilly 3.1 mile course around Jim Barnett Park and through
the Shenandoah University campus in Winchester, Virginia.
The race can be a challenge to one's pacing skills, as a couple of
quick hills in the first mile soften up your legs for a long, gradual
0.7 mile incline at the halfway point. A number of runners went out
too fast and paid for it by the time they reached the rolling final
mile. But at least the weather was not too bad this year, with
temperatures in the mid-60s and a breeze passing through the fairly
humid air. Some light rain fell as runners warmed up before the 9 AM
start time, but the precipitation stopped in time for a faint rainbow
to appear just minutes before race director Chris Northrup
shouted "Go!".
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A sprint to the finish
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Quickly heading out to the front of the pack were valley-area runners
Rippey and Frank Curiel, along with Dennis Coleman and Tom Leitz from
the Washington, DC area. But as the race progressed, Rippey, 36,
showed why he won the Shenandoah Valley Runners' Winter Series
recently. The Bunker Hill, WV resident gradually pulled away to win in
17:21 (the fifth fastest finish time in the race's four-year
history). Coleman, a 45-year-old resident of Gaithersburg, MD, crossed
the line in second place sixteen seconds later. 24-year-old Herndon,
VA runner Leitz took third in 18:02, seventeen seconds ahead of Curiel
in fourth.
21-year-old SVR member Mary Smith set a quick pace early among the
women, but experience won out in the end. 43-year-old Carolyn Wilson
of Millwood, who excels at races of much longer distances, ended up
pulling away for a 20:58 win. While this wasn't Wilson's best time at
the Rotary 5K, it was her highest finish-- she placed third overall at
the 2001 race, finishing thirteen seconds faster than she did this
year. Coming across one place behind Wilson that year was Winchester's
own Sandra Adams, and whaddya know? The now 53-year-old Adams followed
Wilson across the finish line this year as well, grabbing the
runner-up prize in a solid 21:17. The young Smith held on for third in
21:39.
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Neal Riemesnshcneider masters the 5K
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Although three of the men's and women's overall winners were over the
age of 39, the Masters awards go to the fastest 40 & over runners who
didn't win an overall award. Taking advantage of that on the men's
side was the local running institution known as Neal Riemenschneider,
who had also nabbed the top male Masters spot at the '00 and '01
races. Riemenschneider managed to hold off Chantilly's Tom Cook to
finish eleven seconds ahead in 19:04. Martinsburg's Mike Meadows
stayed strong for third Masters in 19:31.
Among the female Masters runners, Williamsport, MD's Margaret Horioka
returned to the race for a second year, and while she ran a few
seconds slower than she did in 2002 (25:05 this year), she improved
upon her second place age group placement last year to win the female
Masters award this time 'round. Horioka also beat Clarke County High
School cross-country and track coach Nancy Specht, to whom she had
lost the top spot in her age group last year. The 50-year-old Specht
took the second Masters award this year in 25:39, and White Post, VA's
Ann Hirschy won third in 27:28.
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The kids got their chance to run
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The ages of the 89 runners this year ran the gamut from seven to
seventy-nine, with Clearbrook's Brett Lewin being the youngest
finisher (and winning the 9 & under age group!) and Berryville's
cheerfully steady Robie Cone being the oldest. The Rotary 5K seems to
have trouble drawing female participants, however. Just 28% of this
year's finishers were women, the lowest percentage in the race's short
history. Only one women's age group had more than three
competitors. We have no idea why so few women run this race each year,
so we'll just have to hope to see more female runners in the future!
A couple minutes after the final 5Kers came in, thirteen youngsters
lined up for the quarter-mile kids run. The children, aged three to
ten, faced the usual mostly flat out-and-back route starting and
finishing at the 5K finish line. Because results of the kids run were
not kept, your author is not sure who the winners were. But hey, each
of the kids received a medal, so I doubt they had any complaints!
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Bring on the prizes!
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The 5K award winners also received medals, although it took a while
for some of the winners to get 'em! Yes, we admit that we had some
problems with the post-race results calculations. We saddled a couple
of non-running Rotarians with the task of compiling the awards list,
and, well, we didn't really instruct them well enough about the
vagarities of race awards. How were they to know that a Masters runner
who finished in the top three overall should be given an overall award
instead? Thankfully the runners at the awards ceremony seemed to react
to the errors with patience and friendly laughter, something for which
we were most grateful. We'll certainly do better next year!
And aside from the awards, the race was terrific, thanks to the race
directorship of Chris Northrup and the assistance of the Winchester
Rotary Club, the Winchester police, and various members of the
Shenandoah Valley Runners. The proceeds from the race will benefit
Rotary Charities!
Helping out the cause were our race sponsors: Jim Stutzman Chevrolet,
Cadillac, & Buick; H.N. Funkhouser, Co.; Edward Jones; Action
Mortgage; Powhatan School; White House National Fruit Products; Linden
Heights Animal Hospital; Virginia Property Group, Inc.; Valley Health
System; Signet Screen Printing & Embroidery; Alpenglow Sparkling
Cider; DK Industrial Services; Apple Blossom Mall; Clarke Motors; and
Phillip S. Griffin II. And of course we have to thank iPlayOutside for
putting up this report, the race results, and our many photos. We'll
see y'all next March!
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