Record Field for
Silver Anniversary Race
Price
Leads Big Day for adidas Raleigh Track
By
Robert Stocks
The Winchester Star
5/8/06
It
took a five-hour drive for adidas Raleigh Track
Club members Kristin Price, Heather Lee, and
Tara Wojciechowski to make it to Winchester for
Saturday’s Shenandoah Apple Blossom SunTrust
Mortgage 10K, but they made sure they didn’t
leave empty handed.
Price made her debut in Saturday’s race a
memorable one by taking first place, finishing
just seven seconds shy of tying the women’s 10K
record with a time of 35:08.

Kristin Price, a member of the adidas
Raleigh Track Club, won the women’s race
in 35:08.
(Photo by Jeff Taylor) |
Price, a 24-year-old graduate student at N.C.
State, set the pace with her adidas teammates in
the first mile, but pulled away at about the
four-mile mark to finish 16 seconds ahead of
runner-up Elena Orlova (35:24) in the largest
field in the 25-year history of the event.
“I
was kind of hesitant at the start. I didn’t know
what to expect and then once we came back
through the starting area I felt a little more
comfortable,” said Price, who won the NCAA
10,000-meter championship in 2002. “It really
helped out having teammates here. We run
together all the time.”
Price, Lee, Wojciechowski and Orlova set the
pace with 2004 winner Rebecca Stallwood about
two seconds behind through the first mile and no
one else moved into the top five.
Price ran a 5:39 pace and said she was pleased
with her time.
“I
don’t really race on the roads that much and I’m
just kind of getting into it, so I’ll take it,”
said Price, a 12-time All-American in cross
country and track. “Of course everyone wants to
go faster.”
Lee
came in third (35:35), followed by last year’s
champ Wojciechowski (35:57) and Stallwood
(36:33).
Price took home the $750 first-place prize and
teammates Lee and Wojciechowski completed a
solid day for the adidas Raleigh Track Club by
sweeping three of the top four spots. Lee took
home $500 for third and Wojciechowski won $400
for fourth as prize money was awarded to the top
five runners for the first time.
Only
three female winners in the 25-year history of
the 10K race had won with sub 36-minute times.
In Saturday’s silver anniversary race, the top
four women finished in under 36 minutes.
“I
think we ran well as a group and individually so
I’m really excited,” said Lee, a 25-year-old
former Campbell University standout who owns 14
school records. “The weather was perfect. It was
great running weather.”
Wojciechowski, who finished 10 seconds off her
winning time in last year’s race, said she would
have liked to have run a little better but was
pleased for her teammates.
“I
was definitely happy for our team,” said
Wojciechowski, 30, of Cary, N.C. “I was wishing
I could be a little closer to Heather, but I
just didn’t have it. I was lacking a little bit
of confidence from missing some (training) days
in the past two weeks and I just did what I
could (Saturday).”
The
sunny, 70-degree weather made for ideal race
conditions in what turned out to be the largest
field — and maybe the most competitive women’s
10K in race history.
A
record 879 runners finished the race and there
were more than 900 entries. The top five women
placed in the top 25 overall. Price finished
12th overall, Orlova came in 14th, Lee followed
in 16th, while Wojciechowski and Stallwood took
19th and 25th overall, respectively.
“It
was definitely a great race and I felt pretty
good. But I’ve been plagued with an injury for
the past two months, so considering everything I
felt pretty good,” said Stallwood, who set the
race record (35:01) in 2004. “It was a deep
field. Kristin Price has won the 10,000 meters
and the rest of them are great competitors.”
The
talent, however, wasn’t limited to just the
women’s open division.
Alisa Harvey, a former University of Tennessee
standout who won the 1986 NCAA championship in
the 1,500 meters, won the Master’s Division
(40-44-year-olds) with a time of 37:26.
Harvey broke the U.S. Master’s Record in the
mile (4:46) at the Penn Relays on April 29 and
won the Master’s title in her first Apple
Blossom 10K.
She
said the hill around Handley High School in the
first mile makes the race a little tricky at the
start.
“The
first mile is a serious grade, so you’ve got to
control yourself because it’s the first mile and
you want to go out hard. But if you do you’re
dead meat,” said Harvey, 40, of Manassas. “It
made it tough. Plus, it’s a competitive field,
so you want to challenge yourself but you have
to time it and pace yourself.”
Jennifer Davis, 23, of Romney, W.Va., finished
sixth (36:57) overall and won the 20-24-year-old
age group. Davis, a former standout at Hampshire
High School and West Virginia University,
finished ahead of Harvey, who came in seventh.
Susan Graham-Gray (37:34) came in eighth.
Maria Spinnler, a five-time champion in the
race, won the 40-44-year-old age group but came
in second to Harvey for the Master’s title.
Spinnler, who ran collegiately at Eastern
Kentucky, said she has a long history of racing
against Harvey that dates back to her collegiate
days at Tennessee.
“Alisa Harvey, the Masters’ winner, she’s world
class,” Spinnler said. “I’ve been racing her
since back in college and she’s probably the
best Masters runner in the country.”
Spinnler said Saturday’s Apple Blossom race
might have been the deepest field ever.
“I
was fourth overall last year, but this was the
most competitive one that I’ve been to and I’ve
been running in them since 1993.”
Local age group winners included Crystal Printz,
14, of Cross Junction (44:45); Alina Dawson, 31,
of Winchester (40:09); Melissa Langan, 45, of
Stephens City (45:39); Mary Mayhew, 60, of
Winchester (58:01); and Bessie Solenberger, 70,
of Winchester (1:10.26).
Saturday’s race was sanctioned and certified by
the USA Track and Field and timed by Runner’s
High.