Masters Men: Campos Commands Fresno While Goss Lights Up the Middle Miles
- Jesus Campos (2:43:33, 6:14/mi) won the Masters Men race by more than nine minutes, climbing from 48th among men at the one-mile mark all the way to 11th by the finish.
- Scott Goss (2:52:46, 6:35/mi) posted the fastest split among all men on the 10K-to-half stretch — a mid-race surge that briefly rocketed him to 2nd among men before he settled back to finish 2nd in the Masters Men field.
- Won-seok Yoo (2:55:58, 6:43/mi) was actually the earliest front-runner, sitting 1st among men at the 10K checkpoint before fading to 27th among men by the finish — still good for 3rd in the Masters Men field.
- Mirko Klein (2:59:54, 6:52/mi) was the only other finisher to crack three hours, doing it with the 16th-fastest split among men on the closing 25.2M-to-finish stretch.
On a warm November morning in Fresno — 74°F and clear — Jesus Campos ran a controlled, relentless race. He was deep in the pack through the opening mile (48th among men) but had worked his way to 13th among men by the 10K mark and never relinquished the Masters Men lead from there. His 6:14/mi average was a full 21 seconds per mile faster than runner-up Scott Goss, and he also logged the 11th-fastest split among men on the opening 1M-to-10K leg. In a 171-finisher Masters Men field running in the heat, that kind of sustained pace was authoritative.
The most dramatic mid-race story belonged to Won-seok Yoo, who went out blazing — he was the fastest man in the entire field through 10K, sitting 1st among men before the race had really settled. That early aggression cost him on the back half; he slipped to 27th among men overall by the tape, though his 2:55:58 (6:43/mi) still secured 3rd in the Masters Men field. Scott Goss ran the opposite arc, quietly sitting 53rd among men at 10K before uncorking the fastest men's split of the entire field from 10K to the half. He faded somewhat in the second half but held on for 2nd at 2:52:46.
Mirko Klein (2:59:54, 6:52/mi) was methodical throughout — moving steadily from 102nd among men early to 33rd by the finish — and earned 4th with a strong closing leg. Fredy Monroy (3:06:32, 7:07/mi) and Pedro Ramirez (3:06:42, 7:07/mi) finished 5th and 6th just ten seconds apart, with Andrew McGovern (3:07:25), Ricky Sarmiento (3:08:14), Evan Moore (3:09:32), and P Duarte (3:11:44) rounding out the top ten. Matthew Price (3:12:05), Sven Pontus Lindberg (3:12:11), and J.K. Lundberg (3:12:22) — all finishing within 17 seconds of each other — made for one of the tightest three-way clusters of the afternoon.
AI recap · generated from official results
