Baltimore Sun Sunday

A first for both Baltimore Marathon winners

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RUNNING, was at before, and he fell away pretty quickly, I think.”

With a little more than three miles to go, Redfern said he contemplat­ed trying to finish the race in less than 2:30.

“There was a little while there around 23 miles when I was thinking maybe I could get under 2:30,” he said in an interview with WBAL Radio. “And I was digging real deep and then I started doing the math, which is very hard to do when you’re that tired. I realized that was not going to happen, but I was safely going to get a PR and not fall to second place. So I eased up the last couple miles and enjoyed it.”

Redfern said he played soccer and ran sprints for the track and field team at Carleton College in Northfield, Minn. He said he first took part in a marathon with a teammate from the soccer team as part of their offseason training. “It just kind of grew from there,” he said. Redfern was embraced at the finish line by his wife, Christina, who is an attorney in Baltimore. His win continued to resonate with her even after the race.

“I was basically shaking,” she said. “Just shaking with excitement. I wasn’t expecting his PR to be that much today.”

Like Redfern, Roman-Duval was familiar with the course because she had run it in the past, and because it is part of her commute to work. The 36-year-old RomanDuval said her initial plan was to run the marathon as preparatio­n for the California Internatio­nal Marathon/USATF national championsh­ip on Dec. 2.

“It was a training workout,” she said. “There was no tape or anything. My legs are still pretty tired from all the training I’ve been doing. Actually, the last two or three miles were a bit rough, but I think for the most part, it felt exactly how I thought it would feel.”

A member of the Howard County Striders, Roman-Duval ran with a teammate for the first six miles before intensifyi­ng her pace.

“The priority was to stick with the plan and not hurt anything because I have a bigger race in December,” she said. “Once we got past mile six, it didn’t take very long to take the lead.”

When Roman-Duval crossed the finish line, her children, Liam, Luca and Clara, held the tape, and they joined husband, Miguel Roman, in celebratin­g her victory.

While the win might have been a surprise, Roman-Duval appreciate­d the unexpected outcome.

“It’s a much more fun way to do a hard workout instead of just doing it by myself in Columbia, I guess,” she siad.

At 36, Roman-Duval is the same age that Silvia Baage was when she claimed last year’s title, and she might be tied for the oldest woman to win the marathon.

Asked how she felt after the race, Roman-Duval said, “Old, but I’ve still got something under my belt. I picked up on it pretty late when I was 31. I can still PR at 36. So I think it’s fine.”

Last year’s men’s winner, Jordan Tropf, and women’s champion, Baage, did not return to try to repeat.

The full results from this year’s marathon can be found at the Baltimore Running Festival’s website, thebaltimo­remarathon.com.

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