NYRR Half-Marathon Grand Prix Presented by Continental Airlines: Brooklyn Local Gallery

[Results] [Story] [Event Gallery]

John Henwood, a New Zealand Olympian representing the New York Athletic Club, won the race with a strong move in the final two miles. His time was 1:08:37


Jorge Eliecer Real, of West Side Runners, dueled with Henwood for most of the race. He took a brief lead in the 10th mile on the race’s biggest hill, but Henwood reclaimed the advantage on the downhill. Eliecer Real finished second in 1:08:56.


Eduard Gapak of the Warren Street Social & Athletic Club went out hard and hung on for third place in 1:09:58.


Joseph McElhoney (left) of the Nike Central Park Track Club and Elmustafa McHkirate of WSX fought for fourth place; McElhoney prevailed, 1:10:29 to 1:10:59, but their teams finished in the opposite order at the top of the open men’s competition.


Olympic Trials Marathon qualifier Karl Dusen of the Brooks Manhattan Track Club ran this race as a hard workout—and still took sixth place in 1:11:06.


Jorge Pardo of Urban Athletics led his team to a strong third-place finish in the open men’s division. He was seventh in 1:11:50.

David Nash of MTC seemed unimpressed by his excellent 1:11:55—good for eighth overall.


Because of work-related travel, Thom Little of CPTC trained for this race in six different countries. He ran 1:12:03 for ninth place.


Michael Cassidy of the Greater New York Racing Team and Chris Ellis-Ferrara of NYAC finished 10th (1:12:04) and 11th (1:12:17), respectively.


Piotr Karasiewicz, 46, of the Polish Runners Club finished 13th overall in 1:13:09, which put him more than six minutes ahead of anyone else in his age group and first in the age-graded competition.

Sara Vergote of CPTC started the race as a training run but pushed the second half and won in 1:20:19, leading her open women’s team to a second-place finish behind perennial rival NYAC.


Arianne Field took second overall in 1:21:34 to lead the NYAC women to a resounding victory over yearly team-points leader CPTC in the open women’s competition.


Amanda Pisano was NYAC’s second scorer with her 1:23:07 performance—good for fourth overall among women.


Victoria Ganushina of WS ran 1:24:16 to take sixth place; she led her team to a fourth-place finish in the open women’s division.

The second scorer for CPTC’s open women’s team was Felice Kelly who ran 1:24:37, good for seventh place among women.


Kristin Harper was NYAC’s fifth finisher—and 10th in the women’s race—in a time of 1:25:25; she won the women’s 30-39 age group.


Deborah Gaebler, 43, of GNY was the top woman master at 1:26:28. She was 16th overall and led GNY to the 40+ women’s team title.


The finest age-graded women’s performance was turned in by Cindy Pomeroy, 46, of the Westchester Track Club, who won the 45-49 age group—and finished third among all 40+ women—in 1:28:03.

Emily Conlon was the final scorer on the CPTC women’s open team. Her time of 1:29:16 put her 31st in the women’s race.


Emily Sanderson of the Prospect Park Track Club made good use of her home-field advantage; she was fourth in her age group in a time of 1:30:18, and she led PPTC to a second-place finish among 40+ women’s teams.