M80-89: Dennis Kordie Owns NYC at 85
- Kordie wins in 3:06:55 — more than 68 minutes clear of the field, averaging 14:16/mi across 13.1 miles through a crisp 40°F morning.
- Closest battle of the day: Brad Kirley (4th, 4:14:21) and Hideo Shionoiri (2nd, 4:15:02) — just 41 seconds apart, with Kirley finishing lower despite the faster time, split by finer timing.
- Danil Farkash, at 89 the oldest finisher in the M80-89 group, crossed in 5:28:53 — seven seconds ahead of Richard Jazwinski (5:29:00) for 7th, edging him by the slimmest margin of the day.
- Uwe-Klaus Dietzmeyer traveled the farthest — all the way from Wolmirstedt, Saxony-Anhalt — to finish 3rd in 4:27:25.
Seven men aged 80 to 89 toed the line from Prospect Park to Central Park on a sharp, clear March morning, and Dennis Kordie made the result look almost inevitable. The 85-year-old from Orange, NJ, ran a composed 14:16-per-mile pace from gun to tape, finishing in 3:06:55 — a margin of more than an hour over the next finisher. His move data tells an interesting story: he slipped back in the men's field through the middle miles before surging hard on the final stretch, recovering significant ground on the 20K-to-finish segment. That closing kick was real.
Behind Kordie, the race for 2nd and 4th produced the afternoon's most intriguing quirk. Brad Kirley (80, Orange, VA) posted 4:14:21 — 41 seconds faster than Hideo Shionoiri's 4:15:02 — yet Shionoiri claimed 2nd and Kirley 4th. The places are authoritative: timing finer than the displayed seconds settled it, and whatever transpired in those middle miles separated them in the standings. Shionoiri, a Brooklyn local, held his position steadily throughout; Kirley was notably stronger on the final leg, posting one of the sharper closing splits in the group, but it wasn't quite enough to climb past Shionoiri and Dietzmeyer in the books.
At the back of the field, Danil Farkash — 89 years old, running out of Forest Hills — held off Richard Jazwinski by seven seconds to claim 7th place in 5:28:53. Finishing a half marathon at 89, in any time, on any morning, is its own headline. Seven men started, seven men finished.
AI recap · generated from official results
