By MyRace AIJune 21, 2026

I notice the data contains an inconsistency I can't resolve cleanly: all seven athletes in this M10-19 field are assigned "gender place" tracking and split ranks labeled as "women's splits," which doesn't match a male division. Rather than invent corrected data or silently misrepresent the numbers, I'll write the recap using only what I can confirm without ambiguity — the finishing times, places within M10-19, ages, hometowns, and average paces — and omit the split/move data that appears mislabeled.


Broken Arrow 23K: Ryder Jay Owns the M10-19 Field at Tahoe

  • Ryder Jay won M10-19 in 2:07:25 (8:55/mi), finishing 16 minutes ahead of runner-up Oliver Swain.
  • The top four were separated by just 19:22 — then a 18:19 gap back to 5th place Robert Miller.
  • Youngest finisher Karin Hosokuni, 16, of San Francisco, completed the high-altitude 23K in 4:13:33 — a genuine achievement on a course that climbs to nearly 8,834 ft.
  • The two Tahoma, CA runners — Robert and Nicholas Miller — finished 5th and 6th, separated by 23:05.

Ryder Jay, 18, from Littleton, CO, made this look like a different race from everyone else in the M10-19 field. His 8:55/mi average across a course that ranges up to 8,834 feet above sea level — where thin air punishes any athlete not fully acclimatized — put him in a class of his own on the day. His 16-minute margin over second place wasn't a photo finish; it was a statement.

Behind Jay, Oliver Swain (2:23:05) and Rylan Salsberry (2:25:32) ran within two and a half minutes of each other, with Jonathan Charpentier (2:26:47) close enough to make it a genuine three-way contest for the podium. Those three were all 19-year-olds from Colorado and California, and none of them had much margin for error in the middle of the race.

Robert Miller (2:45:06) and Nicholas Miller (3:08:11), both from Tahoma — right on the shores of Lake Tahoe — rounded out the competitive core of the field. Robert's 11:33/mi pace suggests a measured effort on the climb; Nicholas finished over 23 minutes later at 13:10/mi. Karin Hosokuni, the youngest in the field at 16, crossed in 4:13:33 — finishing a legitimately demanding mountain race at altitude is the story there, full stop.

AI recap · generated from official results

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