As race officials offered commentary on the USA Women's 10 Mile Championship over loudspeakers near the finish line Sunday, many spectators sighed when they learned that Minnesota's Katie McGregor, a six-time winner of the event, had dropped to sixth in the field.
She finished fourth in 55 minutes flat.
McGregor didn't make any excuses about her final position.
"I didn't really have the race that I wanted to, but it was still a solid race," she said. "When you race against the best women in the country, you have to be ready, really ready, if you want to win the race. I have a lot of work to do."
She said she wasn't upset about the result because she vied for her seventh championship against so many elite runners. It was a solid barometer, she said, and another step toward the Olympic trials.
"It just shows that I'm doing decent right now, but I just have kind of a ways to go but not that far off from where I need to be," said McGregor, an Edina resident. "I just need to tweak some things and hopefully I'll be where I need to be pretty soon."
Mendoza wins his eighthSaul Mendoza, winner of the men's wheelchair division of the Twin Cities Marathon, said he doesn't train as much as he used to because his motivational speaking engagements in Mexico demand a chunk of his time.
Still, the 44-year-old has managed to stay at the elite level of the sport. Mendoza, of Wemberley, Texas, won his eighth Twin Cities Marathon on Sunday with a time of 1:42:33. He said he's surprised he continues to top his younger competitors.