M25-29 at Shamrock'n 5K: Clayton Hall Runs Away With It
- Clayton Hall, 28, finished in 16:50 (5:25/mi) — a full two minutes ahead of runner-up Raymond Cuadra, the widest gap anywhere on the M25-29 podium.
- Cuadra (18:50) to Murillo (19:57): the battle for 2nd and 3rd was separated by 67 seconds, with Mason Mciver (20:42) and Chris Marin (20:48) pressing close behind for 4th and 5th.
- Marin and Myers nearly deadlocked: Chris Marin (20:48) and Nathan Myers (20:49) finished just one second apart for 5th and 6th in a field of 116.
- 12th vs. 13th, decided by fractions: Jorge Jimenez (24:17.02) and Nicholas Ziganto (24:17.06) crossed in the same clock second — four hundredths of a second apart — with Jimenez edging ahead for 12th.
Clayton Hall simply ran a different race than everyone else in the M25-29 group on a cool, clear St. Patrick's Day morning in West Sacramento. His 16:50 at 5:25 per mile wasn't just a win — it was a statement, putting two full minutes of daylight between himself and the next man home. In a 116-runner age group, that kind of margin doesn't happen by accident.
Behind Hall, Raymond Cuadra held 2nd at 18:50, running a solid 6:04 pace that would have won most age groups outright. Jonathan Murillo claimed 3rd in 19:57, just cracking the 20-minute barrier, while the fight for 4th and 5th was genuinely tense: Mason Mciver (20:42) and Chris Marin (20:48) were separated by only six seconds, and Marin and Nathan Myers (20:49) were practically stride for stride at the line.
Further back, the race delivered one of its sharpest moments at 12th place. Jimenez and Ziganto finished so close — 24:17.02 to 24:17.06 — that the gap was invisible to anyone watching but unmistakable to the clock. Jimenez holds 12th; Ziganto, 13th. And at 18th and 19th, Kolton and Kameron Fernandez — same last name, same listed time of 25:39.18 — arrived in that order, letting the timing chip sort out what the eye could not.
AI recap · generated from official results
