M10-14 at Peachtree Road Race: Roman Vinciquerra Runs Away With It
- Roman Vinciquerra won M10-14 in 36:13 (5:50/mi), finishing 2:34 clear of runner-up Aarav Nagare — the largest gap between any two consecutive podium finishers.
- Camden Huffman made the most dramatic charge of the race, surging from outside the top 1,000 among men at the opening checkpoint all the way to 468th by the finish.
- Places 5, 6, and 7 — Brown, Pinto, and McGill — were separated by just 3 seconds across the line.
- Clark Koepp, age 11, cracked the top 10 in a field dominated by 14-year-olds, finishing 9th in 40:24.
Roman Vinciquerra's victory was never really in doubt. The 14-year-old from Atlanta steadily climbed through the men's field across every checkpoint — moving from 219th to 201st to 191st to 169th — before a slight fade in the final stretch still left him comfortably in 161st among men at the finish. His 5:50/mi average over 10K on a warm, humid Fourth of July morning in Atlanta was a full gear above anyone else in M10-14, and his 135th-fastest split among women in the closing 5M-to-finish segment underscores just how strong he ran late.
Behind him, Aarav Nagare had a very different race. The Cumming 14-year-old opened with genuine pace — 178th among women through the first half — but faded progressively through every subsequent checkpoint, dropping to 354th among women by the end. He still held second in M10-14 at 38:47, but William Gilbert of Roswell closed to within 14 seconds for third, running a more measured and consistent race at 6:17/mi.
The subplot worth savoring is Camden Huffman's back-half charge. The 13-year-old from Williamson started buried — over 1,000th among men at the first checkpoint — and simply kept picking people off. By the finish he'd climbed to 468th, posting the 258th-fastest split among women in the 5M-to-finish segment. He crossed in 39:41 for fourth, just three seconds ahead of a three-man logjam where Brown, Pinto, and McGill finished 5th, 6th, and 7th within a blink of each other.
With 638 finishers in M10-14, the depth of this field was real — and Vinciquerra ran straight through all of it.
AI recap · generated from official results