Male Masters at CIM: Dailey Dominates in the Rain
- Adam Dailey wins in 2:27:09 (5:37/mi), more than a minute clear of runner-up Ken Rideout's 2:28:24.
- Rideout was the late charger: he moved from 181st among men at 10K all the way to 158th by the finish — the steadiest climber in the top three.
- Boyd Carrington and Chris Hooper finished 4th and 5th within 11 seconds of each other (2:30:23 and 2:30:34), both posting strong closing splits past 40K.
- Tim Meigs, at 53, cracked the top 20 with a 6:00/mi effort — the oldest finisher in the listed field and one of the most impressive results by age.
Sacramento delivered a proper suffer-fest on December 8th — 56°F, 90% humidity, and a steady light rain — and it was La Jolla's Adam Dailey who handled it best of the 2,302 masters men who crossed the line. The 43-year-old ran a commanding 2:27:09 at 5:37/mi, a pace that put him well inside the top 25 among all men in the opening miles. He did fade through the middle of the race — sliding back through the men's field as the miles accumulated — but the damage was controlled, and no one in the masters field could match his overall level. His winning margin of 1:15 over second place was decisive.
Pacific Palisades' Ken Rideout told a different story. The 48-year-old ran 2:28:24 but got there by grinding forward relentlessly — sitting 181st among men at 10K and working his way to 158th by the finish, including a 126th-fastest split among women on the 35K–40K segment that showed he still had something left in the tank late. Jose Merino (2:29:20, 5:42/mi) rounded out the podium in 3rd, closing with the 88th-fastest 40K-to-finish split among women in the field — a strong final push to hold off a crowded chase pack.
Fourth and fifth place produced the race's tightest battle. Boyd Carrington (2:30:23) and Chris Hooper (2:30:34) were separated by just 11 seconds after 26.2 miles, both posting sharp closing efforts past 40K. Just behind them, Bryan Huberty (6th, 2:31:15) and a cluster of four men — Nicolas Paradis, Eric Hollander, and Ricardo Carrillo — all finished 7th through 9th within 26 seconds of each other, all at 5:47/mi.
The depth of this field was real. Albert Wint went 10th in 2:32:58, and the top 17 all broke 2:36. The standout age story belonged to Tim Meigs, the 53-year-old from Raleigh who finished 20th in 2:37:27 — running 6:00/mi in the rain to close out a masters field that, top to bottom, was anything but slow.
AI recap · generated from official results
