Broken Arrow 23K — F30-39: Tkint de Roodenbeke Runs Clear in a Stacked Field
- Lauren Tkint de Roodenbeke (Bend, OR) took the F30-39 win in 2:40:29 (11:14/mi), finishing more than 8 minutes clear of second place across a 125-woman field.
- Tightest battle of the day: Lauren Bartels (2nd, 2:48:54) and Erin Storck (3rd, 2:49:17) were separated by just 23 seconds at the line — a gap that likely felt enormous on the climbs but nearly vanished by the finish.
- Anna Purcell made one of the bigger moves in the field, climbing from 80th among women at the first checkpoint all the way to 58th by the finish — her 35th-fastest women's split on Snow King→KT 22 doing much of the work.
- The top-20 spanned a range from 2:40:29 to 3:17:07, with Jennifer Schaffhouser (5th, 2:51:36) and Melissa Ostaszewski (6th, 2:54:21) holding firm in the middle of a competitive cluster.
Lauren Tkint de Roodenbeke controlled this race from a position of quiet authority. She entered the High Camp→Finish stretch ranked 49th among women and rode home with the 31st-fastest women's split on that segment — moving up five spots in the women's field over the final leg to seal the win in 2:40:29. At altitude ranging up to nearly 8,800 feet, an 11:14/mi average across this terrain is a genuine statement.
The real drama unfolded behind her. Lauren Bartels and Erin Storck ran nearly the entire race within earshot of each other in the women's standings — both hovering around 50th among women through the early checkpoints — before Bartels edged ahead to claim 2nd in 2:48:54. Storck crossed 23 seconds later in 2:49:17, her strongest segment coming on Snow King→KT 22 where she posted the 49th-fastest women's split. Anna Purcell (4th, 2:50:45) was the day's most dramatic climber: starting 80th among women, she ran herself into the F30-39 top four on the strength of a top-35 women's split on Snow King→KT 22, finishing just 88 seconds behind Storck.
Rounding out the top ten: Carlie Stowe (7th, 2:56:11), Alice Prodger (8th, 2:59:51), Megan Wilmarth (9th, 3:00:30), and Kasey Ohara (10th, 3:01:58) all broke or just touched the three-hour mark — no small feat on a course that climbs through thin Sierra air. With 125 finishers in F30-39, the depth here was real, and every minute earned on this course was worked for.
AI recap · generated from official results
