MyBESTRuns

52nd Wharf to Wharf goes down to the wire

The 52nd edition of the Wharf to Wharf road race lived up to its billing, and then some.

Fresno’s Evert Silva surged past four runners over the finishing downhill stretch into Capitola Village and edged Aidan Reed, of Helena, Montana, at the finish line in front of hundreds of cheering fans Sunday.

Silva and Reed both completed the scenic, 6-mile trek from Santa Cruz with chip elapsed times of 27 minutes, 3 seconds on a brisk morning under an overcast sky, perfect for running.

It was Silva’s first time competing in the race. The Oklahoma City University junior student-athlete said he was hoping to perform well in several races this summer to earn some money to help pay for bills. He earned a great payday.

The top male and female finishers each earned $4,000. Silva was also awarded an extra $1,000 for finishing as the top American runner.

“I’ve heard a lot about it,” Silva said. “I know it’s a competitive race, so I wanted to show up when I knew I was in good shape to compete with all the top-level athletes who come here.”

Evert Silva raises his arms in triumph as he is cheered by the crowd at the Capitola finish line after winning the 2024 Wharf to Wharf on Sunday. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)

Evert Silva, 24, of Fresno, takes a final look back over his shoulder on Sunday before crossing the Capitola finish line to win the men’s title at the 2024 Wharf to Wharf race. Second-place finisher Aidan Reed, second from right, and third-place finisher Matt Baxter finished shortly after Silva. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)

Women's winner Everlyn Kemboi smiles as she breaks the tape at the Wharf to Wharf on Sunday. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)

Oliver Chang, of Santa Cruz, exults as he crosses the Capitola finish line with a time of 29:16 to win the local men's title at the Wharf to Wharf race. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)

Runners, including men’s winner Evert Silva, wearing bib No. 13, get off to a fast start as the Wharf to Wharf begins Sunday morning on Beach Street in Santa Cruz. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)

Reid Buchanan is splashed by a cup of water that was errantly put in his way by the outstretched arm of a volunteer as the lead pack runs through the Harbor roundabout Sunday morning. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)Dominique Scott crosses the finish line in second place with a time of 30:33 on Sunday, four seconds behind women’s winner Everlyn Kemboi. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)

Matt Baxter, takes the lead on Beach Street at the start of Sunday’s Wharf to Wharf. Baxter led on-and-off for much of the race and finished in third. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)

Former Aptos High track standout Trent Nosky is cheered by the crowd as he finishes Sunday’s race with a time of 30:11. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)

Grace Barnett, of San Diego, crosses the finish line with a time of 31:21, just edging out Alice Wright, at left, for fifth place. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)

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Evert Silva raises his arms in triumph as he is cheered by the crowd at the Capitola finish line after winning the 2024 Wharf to Wharf on Sunday. (Shmuel Thaler - Santa Cruz Sentinel)

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Reed earned $3,000 for second place. Matt Baxter, a two-time national champion from New Zealand, took third in 27:05 and earned $2,000. Ali Abdilmana of Ethiopia took fourth in 27:16 and earned $1,000, and Arturs Medveds of Latvia rounded out the top five in 27:28.

Race organizers expected a competitive race, given the times previously run by athletes in the elite field, and it was a thriller to the final step.

While plenty of the participants in the 16,000-runner field trained for the heralded event — arguably the biggest sporting event held in Santa Cruz County each year — few trained with ferocity of Silva.

Silva usually tries to train in the morning to avoid the suffocating, triple-digit temperatures that are commonplace in the Central Valley during the summer, but he added plenty of afternoon sessions, too. His showing along the coast, with views of picturesque Monterey Bay, was quite literally a breeze.

“I try to run in the morning,” he said. “But every afternoon run it’s 110 (degrees), so I said, ‘A lot of people aren’t training in that, and if I could just do it every week something good is going to come out of it.’ I guess it was being able to run fast in 60-degree weather in Santa Cruz.”

The lead pack featured eight runners for much of the first five miles. The runners traded the lead throughout that stretch. Baxter led at the mile marker, and Kenya’s Shadrack Keter, the third-place finisher at the 2023 Wharf to Wharf, crossed the second mile balloon archway in front.

Kenya’s Peter Mwaniki Njeru moved from second into the lead at the third archway, but he dropped back to fourth place as the lead pack thinned to five runners. Reed jumped in front and led at the fourth- and fifth-mile markers.

All the while, Silva stayed in the hunt, patient and ready to pounce.

“The downhill was extremely steep,” said Silva, of the finishing stretch. “And I’m a sub-4 miler, so I knew I can sprint with anybody. Those guys ahead of me, to my knowledge, they’re not sub-4 milers, so I knew I had some speed. Thankfully, I was able to hold it off.”

It was his second win in as many days. He took first at the Miguel Reyes Elite 5K in Fresno on Saturday.

American Everlyn Kemboi, a Kenyan native who won the 2023 NCAA title in the 10K, earned her second win as a professional. She topped the women’s field in 30:29. She passed Dominique Scott, who has citizenship in both South Africa and the U.S., with 600 meters to go.

“I’m so happy to be here,” Kemboi said. “I love racing in California. I came here last year. I was fifth. That was my first professional race.”

She wanted to come back and improve her showing. Kemboi credited her training for an improved effort. She said she’s running with peace of mind, so much so that she was surprised how quickly the race ended.

“I trust my finish, but today I was feeling great,” Kemboi said. “I was like, ‘Oh, we’re almost at the end. I only have six to seven meters to go. What?!?! I’m feeling good.’ ”

Scott, who was teammates with Aptos native and 2024 Olympian Nikki Hiltz at University of Arkansas, took second in 30:33.

If Scott returns next. year, she’ll have some useful course knowledge to rely upon.

“The girl that won, she made a little surge past me,” Scott said. “I didn’t realize how aggressive the downhill was going to be and that once she was two steps in front of me, I wouldn’t be able to catch her because it’s that aggressive of a downhill. That was definitely a mistake on my behalf. I would’ve loved the win, but I’m also happy with my race today.”

Scott is enjoying the process of training to compete in the next Chicago Marathon.

“It’s a hard course, but a fun course,” said Scott, of the Wharf to Wharf. “It’s cool how the locals come out to support. It was a great day. … They’re aren’t many races this time of year where you can get a perfect morning race. It’s usually pretty hot for all road races during the summer. I really enjoyed the weather.”

Kayley Delay of Jacksonville Beach, Florida, finished in 30:52 to hold off Ethiopia’s Atsede Baysa (30:55) for third place. Grace Barnett of Pawleys Island, South Carolina, took fifth in 31:21.

Santa Cruz’s Oliver Chang (29:16) and Watsonville’s Daniela Salazar (34:38) earned top local honors.

Chang, who grew up in South Pasadena and competed for Pomona College, moved to the area two years ago and used his extra year of eligibility competing for NCAA Division III UC Santa Cruz’s cross country and track programs.

Sunday was Chang’s first competitive race since competing in the San Francisco Half Marathon a year ago to the day. He began training in earnest 10 weeks ago.

“I’m ecstatic,” he said. “I couldn’t be happier with how the day went.”

Sunnyvale’s Daniel Mendez, who purchased a home in Brentwood roughly two weeks ago, competed in the race for the first time and came away with a handsome payday. His bib number, 9948, was drawn in the Golden bib contest, which earned him $5,000. He had no idea of the significance of being awarded a golden bib at the outset of the race, but several runners informed him that he should stick around and attend the awards ceremony.

“This is insane,” he said.

posted Monday July 29th
by Santa Cruz Sentinel