F35-39: Garvin Dominates at 7:12 Pace, Keller Holds Firm for Second
- Cristina Garvin won the F35-39 age group in 2:23:54 (7:12/mi), posting the fastest women's split on the Mile 4→Mile 10 stretch and never relinquishing the lead after the early miles.
- Danielle Keller ran the 4th-fastest women's split on that same Mile 4→Mile 10 segment to finish a clear 2nd in 2:27:41 — 3:47 back of Garvin, but a comfortable 7:08 ahead of 3rd.
- Halina Hrytskevich sealed 3rd with the 10th-fastest women's split on the Mile 16→Finish closing stretch, coming home in 2:34:49.
- Places 13 and 14 — Ashlynn Anderson (3:07:32) and Cori Hoffart (3:07:37) — were separated by just 5 seconds across 20 miles; and places 15 and 16, Megan Villapudua and Katie Stone, finished in an identical displayed time of 3:09:46 and 3:09:48 — two seconds apart after more than three hours of racing.
Cristina Garvin ran this race from the front and made it look controlled. She sat 4th among women through the opening miles, then moved to 3rd by Mile 10 — a position she earned in part by running the fastest women's split on that Mile 4→Mile 10 stretch. At 7:12 per mile across 20 miles on a warm 74°F November morning in Folsom, that's a performance that defined the F35-39 field.
Danielle Keller was the clearest challenger, running with purpose the whole way. She tracked through the women's field from 8th to 6th by Mile 10 and held that position to the line, backed by the 4th-fastest women's split on that middle stretch. Her 2:27:41 was never truly threatened for 2nd place. Halina Hrytskevich, meanwhile, was patient — sitting 12th among women through the mid-race checkpoints before turning in the 10th-fastest women's closing split (Mile 16→Finish) to lock up 3rd in 2:34:49.
Behind the podium, the F35-39 age group delivered some of the tightest racing of the day. Liz Liles-Brown climbed from 19th among women at Mile 4 all the way to 15th by Mile 15.6, aided by the 14th-fastest women's split on that segment — before settling 5th overall in the age group. And the battle around places 13–16 was genuinely gripping: four runners across just 2:06 of clock time, including Anderson and Hoffart separated by a mere five seconds after 20 miles of work.
AI recap · generated from official results
