Broken Arrow 23K F10-19: Zoey Crosby Claims the Title
- Zoey Crosby finished in 2:41:32 at an 11:18/mi average — a strong effort across a course climbing through elevations up to 8,834 ft.
- Abigail Garcia completed the full 23K in 6:40:05, crossing the line to finish the field of two.
- Crosby's sharpest segment came on the KT 22→Siberia stretch, where she posted the 40th-fastest women's split in the field.
- Nearly four hours separated the two finishers — Crosby's 2:41:32 against Garcia's 6:40:05.
The F10-19 field at Broken Arrow's 23K came down to two young athletes willing to take on a course that spends most of its life above 7,500 feet — thin air that can turn even well-trained legs heavy before the finish line appears. Sixteen-year-old Zoey Crosby of Revelstoke, BC, made it look controlled. She moved through the women's field progressively, climbing from 49th among women at the opening checkpoint all the way to 41st by the penultimate segment before settling 46th at the finish — a trajectory that speaks to a measured, confident effort on a course that punishes anyone who goes out too hard.
Crosby's standout moment came on the KT 22→Siberia leg, where her 40th-fastest women's split in the field showed genuine speed at altitude. For a 16-year-old racing on a mountain course that routinely humbles experienced adults, that's a number worth noting.
Abigail Garcia, 19, from Watsonville, CA, had a harder afternoon. Her pace slowed through the back half of the course — her gender standing slipping steadily from 259th at the first checkpoint to 384th near the end — suggesting the altitude and accumulated climbing took a real toll as the race wore on. Still, finishing a high-alpine 23K at any pace is no small thing, and Garcia crossed the line to complete it.
With only two in the F10-19 field, this was less a race than a personal test against the mountain. Crosby passed that test decisively. Garcia endured it. Both can say they ran Broken Arrow.
AI recap · generated from official results