Broken Arrow 23K M30-39: Douglas Charges Home for the Win
- Andrew Douglas (37, Edinburgh) won M30-39 in 1:54:28 (8:01/mi), posting the fastest High Camp→Finish split among all men in the field — a closing surge that moved him from 17th to 7th among men overall.
- Darren Thomas (30, Reno) held 2nd in 1:56:17, finishing 1:49 back — the only other M30-39 finisher under two hours.
- Joseph Demoor, Patrick Parsel, Ondrej Fejfar, and Martin Dematteis finished 3rd through 6th within a tight 1:05 window (2:03:25–2:04:30).
- Kirby Garlitz and Brandon Dougherty crossed the line in an almost identical 2:32:57 — Garlitz edging Dougherty by just 0.13 seconds to claim 18th.
Andrew Douglas came to Palisades, Tahoe from Edinburgh and made it count. He was running in 17th among men at the first checkpoint, a solid but unspectacular position in a race that climbs to nearly 9,000 feet through thin Sierra Nevada air. What followed was a systematic, methodical charge: 17th to 14th to 10th, and then — on the final High Camp→Finish leg — all the way to 7th among men. That closing split was the fastest of any man on that segment, and it sealed a winning time of 1:54:28 at an 8:01/mi average over brutally technical terrain.
Darren Thomas, the local from Reno, was the early standout in M30-39. He was running 9th among men at the opening checkpoint — well ahead of where Douglas sat — and held that position through the middle of the race. But while Thomas was steady, Douglas was accelerating, and by the finish Thomas had slipped to 11th among men. His 1:56:17 is a genuinely strong result; he simply ran into a man who was getting faster as the race wore on.
Behind the top two, the race for the podium was a genuine battle. Demoor (Carbondale, CO), Parsel (Midway, UT), Fejfar (Vrchlabí, CZE), and Dematteis (Sampeyre, Italy) were separated by just 65 seconds across 3rd through 6th — four athletes from four different corners of the world racing each other to a near-standstill at altitude. Fejfar posted the 16th-fastest High Camp→Finish split among men and nudged past Dematteis in the closing stretch, with only three seconds between them at the line.
AI recap · generated from official results
