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Copyright© 2004 by Robert Speik. All Rights Reserved.
Bend's Larsen, Waskom win Pacific Crest events
The Bulletin
By Inge Scheve
June 27, 2004
Bend triathlete Steve Larsen so dominated the first day of the Pacific Crest
Sports Festival on Saturday that he nearly beat the top duathlete.
Larsen, 34, won the Half-Ironman triathlon, finishing just 52 seconds behind the
duathlon winner, who started at the same time as Larsen but did not have to
complete a swim.
Larsen also set a course record, finishing the 1.2-mile swim, 56.3-mile bike
segment and 13.1-mile run in 4 hours, 15 minutes and 32 seconds.
Douglas Obletz of Portland, winner of the duathlon, finished the same course,
minus the swim, in 4:14:40.
Larsen, a former professional cyclist, recently "retired," but he obviously has
not lost his competitive edge.
"Honestly, I didn't know what to expect," said Larsen after the race. "It's been
since last October since I trained full-time for anything. It's always fun to
win, but I really didn't know who was going to be out there. It was a hard race,
and pretty hot.
"The scenery is spectacular and crystal clear. The Pacific Crest is one of the
most beautiful courses anywhere and a great way to showcase Central Oregon,"
said Larsen, who has competed throughout the world during the past two decades.
Larsen, who also won the 2002 Pacific Crest Triathlon, said he doesn't consider
his background in cycling to be a competitive advantage, but he believes his
experience in competing at a world-class level gives him a mental edge.
"I know what it takes to win at a certain level," Larsen said with a grin. "I
have suffered through the biggest, toughest races in the world. I know I can
push it through. I didn't really train for this event, but I have trained for 20
years so I have a big reserve tank.
"I still love to compete, but it takes a lot more out of me than it did two
years ago."
Tracy Orcutt, 37, of Seattle, was the top female in the triathlon, finishing in
4:57.41.
"This was my first time here, so it's beginner's luck. My strategy was to have
low expectations," said Orcutt, who has raced triathlons for nine years.
"I loved the bike ride, although going down was scary. I am quite a chicken when
it comes to that. I felt the altitude slightly, but I tried to forget about it."
Orcutt, who said the bike leg is her favorite part of a triathlon, said the run
is always a challenge, and that the swim also poses some problems for her.
"I am never quite there on the swim, but today I think I had a good swim for a
change," she said.
The Half-Ironman triathlon, which is USAT-sanctioned and also serves as the 2004
TRI Northwest Long-Course Championship, treats participants to a 1.2-mile swim
in Wickiup Reservoir, a 56.3-mile bike ride from Gull Point at Wickiup Reservoir
around the Cascades Lakes Highway and Mount Bachelor, and finally a 13.1-mile
run to the finish line in the Sunriver Country Mall.
The duathlon covered the same bike and run course as the triathlon. Jill Waskom
of Bend was the top female finisher in the duathlon with a time of 4:37:38.
The first day of the 2004 Pacific Crest Sports Festival proved to be a feast for
first-timers of all sorts.
Soto Marcial, 51, of Mexico City won the half-marathon, finishing in 1:16:11,
just in front of Bend's John Stolz (1:16.24) and Jeff Cook of Canby (1:16:46).
"This is one of the most beautiful courses I have raced," said Marcial, who
currently lives in Eugene and was visiting Central Oregon for the first time.
"It was a mix of flat and rolling. I started in the back because I really felt
tight. But by mile seven I started pushing, and I was in the lead before mile
eight."
But winning or losing doesn't matter much to Marcial.
"I am really happy to be here, not because I was first," he said. "I am happy to
be here in this kind of environment.
"I don't run marathons anymore, so I need a push," Marcial explained, noting
that he is trying to increase his race distances and enter a marathon in the
fall.
Kristin Duyn, 24, of Beaverton, was the top female in the half-marathon,
finishing the 13.1-mile course through Sunriver in 1:24:30, followed by Jennifer
Overlock of Corvallis (1:24.47) and Bend's Cheryl Tronson (1:25.05).
"I loved it! It was a great, beautiful course ... flat, very flat," said Duyn,
who thanked her husband and two friends who joined her in Central Oregon for
their support and cheering. "Support is the key. I didn't really have a
strategy."
In the Pacific Crest Marathon, which serves as a BAA Boston qualifier, Murray
Thorson, 49, of Richland, Wash, finished first in 3:01.00, more than seven
minutes ahead of second-place racer Chad Pilgeram of Grandview, Wash. Nathan
Dufault of Corvallis was third in 3:09.44.
Thorson, running in his first-ever marathon, was surprised to win, having
trained for only two months.
"I run about 50 to 60 miles per week," Thorson said. "I ran one 17-mile training
run. All my friends told me I had to run at least one run over 20 miles, so I
guess I didn't follow advice."
Among the women, 34-year-old Eva Lust of Yakima, Wash, was first in the
marathon.
"I've never won anything before, so this is really cool," Lust said. It was her
first marathon since giving birth to a daughter last summer. "I used to do quite
a few before I had my daughter. Now, I try to stay constant with my training and
get in long runs on the weekend."
Established in 1997, the Pacific Crest Sports Festival has become one of the
largest sporting events of its kind, attracting about 4,000 athletes from all
over the United States and several foreign countries to Central Oregon every
June, along with scores of support staff, friends and family members.
Today's schedule features an Olympic-distance triathlon (500-meter swim, 28-mile
bike and 10-kilometer run) and a duathlon (28-mile bike and 10-kilometer run),
as well as 5-kilometer and 10-kilometer run/walk events.
The Olympic-distance triathlon and duathlon will start at 9 a.m. at Gull Point
on Wickiup Reservoir.
The 5K event will start at 9 a.m. near the Sunriver Country Mall and the 10K
starts at 9:15 a.m. at the same location.
Complete results of Saturday's events will be posted at
www.racecenter.com/pacificcrest.
This paper caries all the news! Subscribe!
Seven TraditionalMountaineering folks thank the Pacific Crest organizers for
the opportunity to volunteer and assist this fine weekend of world-class aerobic sport!
~~Webmeister.
Read more . . .
Pacific Crest Race Central
Pacific Crest race results coverage
Race events in Bend, OR
Photos of the X-Adventure Raid World qualifier in Bend, Oregon USA
Map of the Raid adventure race course for 2004
Broadband only
Photos of the 2004 Pole Pedal Paddle race
transitions
Pole Pedal Paddle
2004 results by age group
Pole Pedal Paddle race changes in 2004
Pole Pedal Paddle 2003 race results
Pole Pedal Paddle 2002
Snowshoe Shuffle comes to
Bend, Oregon
Atta Boy 300 dog sled race start and finish from Mt. Bachelor
Bend Adventure
Racing Klub - The Wild Juniper Berry Race
Annual race to the
top of Pilot Butte
Pilot Butte - hike and run to the
summit
Cascade Cycling Classic 2002
Bouldering
gets a handhold at Smith Rock
ABS Contest night at InClimb Gym
Five Sisters Marathon
CORK, Central Oregon Running Klub plays in The Badlands
Traditional Mountaineering R & R in Central Oregon
Rafting class 3 on the Deschutes
River
Winterfest in Bend, Oregon
Bend's Tower Theater restored to 1940s
elegance
A snowshoe adventure with Bend
Parks and Recreation
Bend's Wednesday market near the
Deschutes River in Drake Park
Central Oregon's High Desert Museum
in Bend
Wolves seen at the Museum!
Bend Log Jam celebrates the opening of the Deschutes southern crossing bridge
Bend's southern crossing
bridge
The Beach Boys concert in Bend Oregon, Summer 2003
Cascade Music Festival in
Drake Park, Bend Oregon
Misty River Band plays a free
concert next to the Deschutes River
Riverfest boat-demo in Bend Oregon
Earth Day in
Bend, Oregon
Customer
appreciation night at a local store
Nordic
Club's fall ski swap
Sustainable
living expo in Bend
Fall festival in Bend
Joan Baez concert at the Athletic Club of Bend
Sunriver
Resort exotic car rally
Munch-n-Music
R & R in Bend
• Alpine Mountaineering: This is the central interest of TraditionalMountaineering.
This tradition-based sport includes: on and off trail hiking, scrambling, light weight wilderness
backpacking,
Leave-No-Trace camping and bivouacking, as well as technical travel and mountaineering on snow, rock and ice,
glacier travel, technical rock climbing and summitting peaks.
• Related Activities: Alpine Mountaineering is an
aerobic sport.
It includes jogging, running, hiking the hills, backpacking,
climbing, mountain biking, back country skiing, snowshoeing, telemark skiing and
similar sports all acting together to improve aerobic capacity, strength,
balance and athleticism.