
Ricklefs,
Gardner Win USA 100K Titles at Edmund Fitzgerald
October 19, 2002
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
By Charlie Mahler, Running USA wire
DULUTH, Minn. - (October 19, 2002) - Chad Ricklefs of Boulder, Colo. and
Connie Gardner of Medina, Ohio won their first USA national road titles
at
the Edmund Fitzgerald 100K here today. The pair prevailed against gusty
winds
and temperatures in the 30s, a strong field and, of course, the 62 mile
distance itself. The two earned automatic spots on the USA team
for the 2003 IAAF World 100K Challenge in Taipei.
Ricklefs, 35, clocked seven hours, nine minutes and twenty-nine seconds
for
his victory - an average of 6:53 per mile. Duluth's
favorite-long-haired-son
Dusty Olson, 29, finished second in the men's competition at 7:17:02.
Bloomington, Minnesota masters runner Charles Hubbard, 41, was third in
7:23:29 (and first master).
Gardner, 38, ran 8:30:31 for her win - roughly 8:10 pace per mile. Laura
Nelson, 37, of Waynesboro, Maryland was second in 8:47:49, while Ann
Heaslett, 38, of Madison, Wisconsin who sought to become ultrarunning's
first
three-time national champion in a single year finished third in 8:53:03.
Ricklefs built his win on a bold move made after the 30K aid station. He
separated himself from Hubbard after the two of them had built a five
minute
lead on the loosely formed chasing group that included Olson and
defending
Edmund Fitzgerald champion Mark Godale (who would eventually finish 4th
in
7:39:59.) Ricklefs passed 26.2 miles in roughly 2:52. Although Ricklefs
lost
pace in the late-going - splitting 3:23 for the first 50K and 3:46 for
the
second - Hubbard suffered much worse in the 30K homestretch on Lake
Superior's North Shore and the fast-closing Olson would have needed a
longer
course to run down the eventual winner.
The win gives Ricklefs, a cross country
skier-turned-biker-turned-champion
ultra-marathoner, his third major victory in the last 12 months. The
urban
and regional planning graduate student won the JFK 50 Miler last
November and
set a new course record in winning the Leadville Trail 100 Miler last
August
prior to "The Fitz."
"The cold wasn't too bad," Ricklefs said of the conditions.
"It's the wind.
It would come in surges and slow you down a bit. The dirt sections were
pretty muddy so that slows you down a bit in the snow and stuff. I was a
little bit slower than I wanted to be. Just to come away with a win -
you
take whatever time you get, especially in a national championship."
Ricklets, who was an alternate for the 2002 World Challenge but when
called
upon was unable compete due to injury, was pleased to gain a spot for
2003.
"Definitely, it was a goal of mine," he said. "It's
pretty important."
Gardner's win came via the opposite strategy of Ricklefs - sticking
close-by
her rivals for as long as she could. Gardner, Nelson, Heaslett formed a
loose
pack that held together through 50K. Even at 70K, the three women were
still
within four minutes of each another. Gardner's even pacing - 4:14 for
the
first 50K, 4:16 for the second - found her running much stronger than
her
challengers coming home.
"You know what I said last night?" the first-time champion
asked
rhetorically. "'I'd really like to get an 8:30!' I had 4:15/4:15 -
I had it
even! When I went through at 4:15 I went, 'All right, maybe I'll get my
8:30.'"
Breaking away from her competitors was a mixed blessing for Gardner,
however.
"I was hoping to keep that pack together," she said. "I
liked the company. I
didn't pull away. I never made a move. I just kept running. I was just
running."
Prior to her success today, Gardner doubted whether she had the speed
for
"shorter" races like the 100K.
"I'm good at running slow," the Gardner joked. "I think
that's what I'm good
at. Like today, when I finished coming down the hill I was thinking 'too
bad
this isn't a hundred, because I could get a pretty good hundred mile
time
today.' It was a good day for me; I can't run much faster when I'm out
there."
Rounding out the top four for women was Tania Pacev, the USA's top
finisher
at the 2002 World Challenge, who finished fourth in 9:04:08 and first
master.
Over the point-to-point 100K course from Finland, Minnesota to the
outskirts
of Duluth, a hearty 48 runners (38 men and 10 women) finished the race.
Edmund Fitzgerald 100K: USA Men's, Women's and Masters Championship
Duluth, MN, Saturday, October 19, 2002
MEN
1) Chad Ricklefs, Boulder, CO 7:09:29
2) Dusty Olson, Duluth, MN 7:17:02
3) Charles Hubbard, Bloomington, MN 7:23:29
4) Mark Godale, Streetsboro, OH 7:39:59
5) David Dehart, Waukesha, WI 7:43:37
6) Scott Eppelman, Coppel, TX 8:00:54
7) Eric Bohn, Santa Rosa, CA
8:11:31
8) Eric Bindner, Littleton, CO 8:33:18
9) Marc Friesen, North Newton, KS 9:05:21
10) Dirk Reif, Eden Prairie, MN 9:47:17
WOMEN
1) Connie Gardner, Medina, OH 8:30:32
2) Laura Nelson, Waynesboro, VA 8:47:49
3) Ann Heaslett, Madison, WI
8:53:03
4) Tania Pacev, Littleton, CO 9:04:08
5) Sue Olsen, Burnsville, MN
9:59:16
AGE GROUP
40-44
1) Charles Hubbard, Bloomington, MN 7:23:29
2) David Dehart, Waukesha, WI
7:43:37
45-49
1) Eric Bindner, Littleton, CO 8:33:18
2) Jeff Bostow, Apple Valley, MN 9:50:42
50-54
1) Dan Calef, Adams, WI
10:35:09
2) Mick Justin, Nisswa, MN 10:46:22
55-59
1) Tom Perry, Pittsford, NY 10:31:27
60-64
1) Edward Rousseau, Minneapolis, MN 11:31:07
40-44
1) Tania Pacev, Littleton, CO
9:04:08
2) Marle Meshbesher, Eden Prairie, MN 11:14:08
45-49
1) Sue Olsen, Burnsville, MN
9:59:16
50-54
1) Jo Ann Fallis, Bemidji, MN
12:09:28
For deeper results and more, visit the race website at:
http://www.edmundfitz.com/results.html
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