M10-14: Roman Vinciquerra Runs Away with the Peachtree Boys Title
- Roman Vinciquerra, 14, Atlanta — won M10-14 in 36:13 (5:50/mi), finishing more than 2:30 ahead of runner-up Aarav Nagare.
- Camden Huffman's charge: the 13-year-old from Williamson started deep in the field and ran one of the most aggressive second halves of the day, posting the 258th-fastest 5M→Finish split among women — a benchmark that reflects just how hard he was moving late.
- Tight finish for 5th–7th: William Brown (39:44), Henry Pinto (39:45), and Keefer McGill (39:47) were separated by just 3 seconds across three spots.
- Clark Koepp, age 11 — the youngest finisher in the top 10 — crossed in 40:24 (6:30/mi), placing 9th in a field of 638.
Roman Vinciquerra made this one look easy. The 14-year-old Atlanta native ran a 5:50/mi average across 6.2 miles in 75°F humidity, opening with enough pace to sit among the top 200 in the women's field by the halfway mark and steadily climbing from there. By the finish he'd moved to 161st among women — a relentless, controlled effort from wire to wire. His 36:13 was in a class of its own in M10-14, with no one else in the top 20 breaking 38:47.
Aarav Nagare took second in 38:47 but his race told a different story than Vinciquerra's. Nagare went out fast — sitting 178th among women in the opening stretch — and progressively faded as the miles wore on, sliding to 354th among women by the finish. William Gilbert held steadier for third in 39:01, while the most eye-catching move of the race came from Camden Huffman. The 13-year-old from Williamson began buried deep in the field but ran the back half of the course with real authority, climbing hundreds of places to land fourth in 39:41 — a reminder that patience can be its own strategy.
The battle for 5th through 7th was the tightest cluster of the morning: William Brown (39:44), Henry Pinto (39:45), and Keefer McGill (39:47) finished within three seconds of each other at 6:24/mi. Andrew Carroll rounded out the top 8 in 39:59, just missing the sub-40 mark. And a special mention belongs to Clark Koepp — just 11 years old — who slotted in 9th at 40:24, holding his own against a field of 638 that skewed heavily toward the older end of the bracket.
AI recap · generated from official results
