November 20, 2002
Contacts: Nancy Hobbs
Dave Dunham
USATF MUT Sport Council USATF MUT Sport Council.
PO Box 9454 108 Ferry Rd
Colorado Springs, CO 80932 Bradford, MA 01835
(719) 573-4405/fax (719) 573-4408 (978) 373-9118 phone/fax
Trlrunner@aol.com
dave.dunham@verizon.net
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: USATF Mountain Runners of the Year 2002
On Saturday, December 7, the 2002
USATF Mountain Runner of the Year awards will be presented Hyatt Regency in Kansas City,
Missouri during a breakfast banquet as part of the USATF annual convention. For the first
time masters athletes will be honored in the mountain running discipline as well as open
athletes.
The USATF Mountain Runner of the Year
award recipients in the open category are Paul Low, Amherst, MA and Anita Ortiz, Eagle, CO
and Craig Fram, Plaistow, NH and Kari DiStefano, Telluride, CO in the masters category.
Paul Low, 28, Amherst, MA was a
member of the Teva US Mountain Running Team earning his spot on the team with a
second-place finish at the Vail Hill Climb (Central regional selection race) and a
fourth-place finish at the Mt Washington Hill Climb (East regional selection race). Low
was the top US finisher at international events including the World Mountain Running
Trophy in Innsbruck, Austria (32nd overall), the WMRA Grand Prix race in Susa,
Italy, and Sierre-Zinal Mountain Race in Sierre, Switzerland. Additional top finishes in 2002 included a win at
Colorado's Barr Trail Mountain Race, a course record-win at the 7-Sisters Mountain Race in
Massachusetts, third place at Pack Monadnock (third race in the USATF New England mountain
circuit), and fourth place in the USATF New England 10K Championships (30:41). Low was
also a US team member in 1999 and 2000 (second and fifth US finisher respectively). Low
was born and raised in Mount Pleasant, Michigan where he graduated from Central Michigan
University in 1999 with a B.S. in Biology and Geology. He is a graduate student at UMass
Amherst in Geoscience studying igneous petrology and tectonics and represents the Central
Massachusetts Striders.
Anita Ortiz, 38, Eagle, CO was
virtually unbeatable in the mountains in 2002. Ortiz traveled to all three of the mountain
running team selection races winning both the Vail Hill Climb and Wolverine Hill Climb and
finishing second at Mount Washington (first US finisher) to earn her spot on the Teva US
Mountain Running Team. Her exceptional 11th place finish at the World Mountain
Running Trophy was the best finish by a US woman since 1995, the first year the US sent a
women's team to the Worlds. Says Teva teammate Julie Bryan, "Anita performs to top
standards while being a school teacher, wife, and mother of four young
children. She does what it takes to be the best in many areas of her life."
Adds training partner Ellen Miller, "I participated in many snowshoe races with Anita
this past winter, and not only does she win all the races, but she exhibits great
sportsmanship, and a cheerful attitude at the events. At the races, she often waits at the
finish line for some of us slower women to finish!" Ortiz was the North American
Snowshoe Champion and US National Snowshoe Champion in 2002. She is a graduate of Colorado
State University and received her Master in Education at Florida State with an impressive
4.0 average. Ortiz teaches kindergarten at Eagle Valley Elementary and has four children
all under the age of 10. View Q & A
Session with Anita.
Craig Fram, 44, Plaistow, NH ,
is among the top master runners in the country on the track, on the road, and in the
mountains. In 2002 Fram won the masters divisions at Mount Washington (third overall), and
at the Wachusett Mountain Race (second overall) with a time ranking as the third fastest
ever run at Wachusett. Fram's overall victory at Pack Monadnock, the third USATF NE
Mountain circuit race, was exceptional as he beat 2002 Teva US Mountain Running Team
members Paul Low, Richard Bolt, Eric Morse, and Dave Dunham. Fram was a member of the 1995
US Mountain Running Team, but declined a berth on the 2002 Teva US Mountain Running Team
due to work-related travel commitments. He may try for a spot on the 2003 Teva US Mountain
Running Team. "I like to run 2 or 3 of the USATF NE circuit races, noted Fram,
They make a nice switch from road racing and can be an extreme challenge.
Presently Fram has his sites set on bettering the 5,000 meter indoor track record and his
own US record for 3,000 meters (8:32.5). Fram is the Managing Director of Product
Development for Puma.
Kari DiStefano, 43, Telluride, CO,
last year's USATF Mountain Runner of the Year, earned a spot on the Teva US Mountain
Running Team after her second-place finish at the Vail Hill Climb and was the third US
finisher at the World Mountain Running Trophy. The week after the Trophy Race DiStefano
earned a silver medal in the 40-44 year age division at the second annual WMRA World
Masters Mountain Running Championships shaving more than one minute off her finish time
from the week before (same course). DiStefano was victorious in the inaugural running of
the Telluride 360 Hill Climb edging out former US Mountain Running Team members Lisa
Goldsmith (1997) and Rene Frazee (2000). Equally impressive on the roads, Distefano set
the course record in the hilly Rim Rock 37KM last November with a time of 2:28:07.
DiStefano has three children and works as a mapper for San Miguel County.
This is the fourth year for the USATF Mountain Runner of the Year awards. Past
winners include Colorado athletes Danelle Ballengee, Matt Carpenter, and Kari DiStefano,
Cindy O'Neill, Dave Dunham, MA, and Eric Morse, VT.
Criteria for this years selection included top results in US mountain/trail
competitions and international competitions during 2002, current USATF membership, and
serving as an ambassador for the sport.