Chattanooga Times Free Press

Payne, Marlier win Chattanoog­a Chase 8k

- BY RON BUSH STAFF WRITER

University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a cross country runner John Payne made his first Chattanoog­a Chase a winning one Monday morning from Riverview Park, and Jessica Marlier had a successful return to a race she likes but a course she doesn’t.

The Chattanoog­a Chase 8-kilometer race is the Road Runners Club of America state championsh­ip 8k for 2017, and Payne won it in 26 minutes, 53 seconds. The 20-year-old chemical engineerin­g major from Portland, Tenn., is enrolled in the current summer-school session and hustled back to do homework, so he didn’t try to duplicate Seth Ruhling’s double victory in the 2016 8k and 1-mile race.

Bryson Harper, who won the

8k in 2008 and 2009 in 27:07 and 26:08, was third Monday in 27:20 in the 50th running of the Chattanoog­a Chase and then won the 1-miler in 4:45.

Nathan Holland was second in the 8k in 27:12, and 16-year-old Adan Rodriguez was fourth in 28:25. Kevin Huwe, masters winner Geno Phillips, Ryan Schumacher and Chad Dean also finished in less than 29 minutes. Ruhling was ninth in 29:23, and grand masters winner Dean Thompson was 10th in 29:31.

Marlier, 31, was the first female finisher and 19th overall in 31:24, and Rachel Mason — who won the Chickamaug­a Chase last month and the Market Street Mile on May 6 — was the women’s runner-up in 33:14.

Jennifer Huwe was the second-place woman in the 1-mile in 5:58, and 45-yearold Dianna Leun was the female masters victor in both races in 34:50 and 6:19. Tripp McCallie was the 1-mile men’s masters winner in 5:13.

The Memorial Day event had 812 total entrants for the two races, with some overlap, and 583 finished the 8k. It was run under a sunny sky that turned overcast before the 1-miler.

Sunny was a little bit of a challenge for the winner, but Shady even more so — Shady Circle off Hixson Pike, that is.

“It was a little warmer than I expected,” said Payne, who admitted he was prepared for rain. “I think I ran the race I wanted to, but I could have scouted better. I didn’t know Shady was as long as it was.”

That part of the 4.97-mile course provided tiring climbs preceding the Chase’s infamous Minnekahda ascent, which Payne had made on training runs.

“That hill hurts,” he said. “Both of them especially — all two miles.”

Marlier, who won the Chattanoog­a Chase in 2014 and was second to Olympian Lanni Marchant the year before, knows the feeling.

“The course is not one of my favorites,” she said, “but I love the history and tradition of this race.”

She also loves Chattanoog­a. She came to the area in 2005 to attend Southern Adventist University in Collegedal­e and has moved away twice but keeps coming back. She now lives in Ooltewah and works for Fleet Feet.

“It’s such a great place to be. The community here is so amazing,” she said.

Harper, who had success both as a runner and coach for Bryan College but now works for Unum in Chattanoog­an, didn’t get to run for a while because of a torn ACL in his right knee and a cracked right tibia — not from his “dangerous” pursuits such as hang gliding and motorcycle riding but from playing soccer — but he started running again last August and won the Karen Lawrence Run on New Year’s Eve.

And at 28 he’s not far off his Chattanoog­a Chase pace of eight years ago. His 1-mile win Monday came in his first time to run both Chase races.

Contact Ron Bush at rbush@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6291.

 ??  ?? John Payne Jessica Marlier
John Payne Jessica Marlier

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