Fort Ord 50K F50-59: Kisylia Leads a Strong Day for the 50s

By MyRace AIFebruary 7, 2026
  • Suzy Kisylia won the F50-59 group in 6:20:43 (12:15/mi), posting the 3rd-fastest women's split on the Sandstone 1→Sandstone 2 segment.
  • Seven-minute gap separated 1st from 2nd: Abby Yassin finished in 6:27:54, with Mary Weyant another 5:36 back in 3rd at 6:33:30.
  • Susan Corrie was the biggest mover of the day, climbing from 28th among women at the first checkpoint all the way to 11th by the finish — and backing it up with the 5th-fastest women's split on the Toro Creek→Finish segment.
  • The back half of the field was tightly bunched: Lina McCain (7:04:37), Jennifer O'Connor (7:06:13), and Heidi Kinney (7:07:15) finished within 2:38 of each other across 6th, 7th, and 8th.

Suzy Kisylia, 57, from Walnut Creek, owned this race from early on. Her gender place tracked 8th→5th→3rd before settling at 5th among all women by the finish — a consistent presence near the front of the women's field all day. That Sandstone 1→Sandstone 2 segment was clearly her moment: the 3rd-fastest women's split there helped cement a winning margin she never surrendered. At 12:15/mi across 50 kilometers of Fort Ord's terrain, it was a controlled, confident performance.

Abby Yassin told a different story. She was 9th among women early, slipped back to 14th by the midpoint, then rallied hard — finishing 7th among women overall. Her 4th-fastest women's split on the Oil Well→Toro Creek leg was the engine of that comeback. Mary Weyant, meanwhile, ran the most consistent race of the podium trio, barely drifting in the women's standings from checkpoint to checkpoint and adding the 5th-fastest women's split on Sandstone 1→Sandstone 2 to her résumé.

The real subplot of the day was Susan Corrie's relentless forward march. Starting deep in the women's field — 28th at the first check — she ground her way up to 11th by the tape, a gain of 17 positions. The 5th-fastest women's split from Toro Creek to the finish line tells you exactly where she found those places. Molly Welker made a similar charge, moving from 27th to 16th among women. These two Brentwood runners may have started conservatively, but they finished with purpose.

AI recap · generated from official results

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