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Press Release - Palm Beaches Marathon Festival - 12/5/15

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

                       SHARKEY ROUTES THE FIELD AT
                   EAU PALM BEACH MARATHON & RUN FEST
				  
WEST PALM BEACH -- Bryan Sharkey took off from the start line of the EAU 
Palm Beach Marathon & Run Fest like a rocket, and no one ever had a shot at 
him.
 
The 28-year-old former Miami Gulliver and Princeton star, now an executive 
with Carnival Cruise lines, won his second Palm Beach Marathon (2:43:28) - 
improving on his 2013 winning time by 19 seconds along the way.
 
Sharkey then repeated the same routine he followed after his 2013 title -he 
bent down, kissed the ground, and began to wobble.  He jumped into a wheel 
chair and went to the medical tent to replenish his body with fluids.
 
"He took four liters of fluids two years ago," said his mother, Marcy, 
"but this time it was only one."
 
Twenty-mile-an-hour winds were the only adversary to Sharkey and all the 
runners in Sunday's 12th annual event in Downtown West Palm Beach that 
included a Marathon, Half-Marathon and 5K race. 
 
Amanda Jacobs, 25, of Kinston Springs, TN won the women's Marathon 
(3:20:56) with Laura Lunardi, 40, of West Chester, PA placing second 
(3:27:19).
 
Orlando's Rickie Alcime, 32, recorded a personal best in the Half Marathon 
(1:20:04), and outkicked longtime Jupiter racer John Reback, 45, to the 
finish line (1:20:26).
 
Ft. Lauderdale's Florencia Morales celebrated an early birthday present 
with a wire-to-wire Half Marathon win in her first time running in the Palm 
Beach event.
 
There were subtle changes to the Marathon course, but runners still were 
treated to miles of waterfront views and the race's unique features that 
included Relay teams and the popular Wacky Water Stations.
 
With the Florida sun creeping through the clouds to the east, runners left 
the Waterfront Commons start line at 6:30 am, and headed north on Flagler 
Drive past the freshly-built 600-ton, 35-ft holiday sand-tree and the 40-ft 
palm trees that lined the Intracoastal Waterway.
 
Much of the 26.2-mile race wound through picturesque waterfront 
streetscapes and historic neighborhoods of West Palm Beach before turning 
south to Lake Worth. The race looped back north before ending in front of 
the Meyer Amphitheatre.
 
Sharkey was the Palm Beach Marathon's third multiple winner, joining 
two-time Olympian Ronnie Holassie (2008, 2009 & 2010 ) and Charles Kiplogat 
(2004 & 2006) in the record books.
 
With his parents, both sets of grandparents and former girlfriend holding 
up  "Go Bryan" signs along the course, Sharkey hung in when he first 
started feeling light-headed at the eight-mile mark. He had gone out hard, 
covering the first 5K in 17:07.
 
"I went out at six-minute pace for the first half, " said Sharkey, who was 
able to sneak in 15-mile days of road training for this race after mostly 
cruise ship treadmill training led up to his mid-November win in the Fort 
Lauderdale 13.1 Half Marathon.  "My goal was just to break 2:40, but also 
get a solid run in and establish a lead so I could just try to maintain it. 
It was very painful, especially those last six miles."
 
Sharkey, who ran a 2:28 personal-best at the Chicago Marathon in October, 
conceded that two months between marathons was not enough.  But after 
tearing a hamstring in the New York Marathon in 2014 and not being able to 
defend his Palm Beach title, he wanted to return to the site of his first 
marathon win.
 
"I definitely was not recovered from Chicago," he said. "It was tough, it 
was really tough. The wind really took a lot of me, I had to work extra 
hard the whole time. It really affected me. But this marathon means a lot 
to me. It was my first ever victory two years ago - it got me into New 
York, then eventually into Boston and Chicago. So it means a lot to me."
 
Defending EAU Palm Beach Marathon champion Adam Lazarus beat his 2014 
winning time by seven minutes-but lost to Sharkey by nine minutes. "I lost 
contact with him pretty early," the 25-year-old computer scientist from 
Silver Spring, Maryland admitted.
 
Lazarus had returned to Palm Beach this week to seek back-to-back titles, 
but quickly discovered that the top local marathoner had entered.
 
"I saw in the paper yesterday how good his times were so I knew it was 
going to be tough to keep up with him," he said.  "So I wasn't so worried 
about it."
 
Next up for Sharkey? He'll run in the Miami Marathon's Half-Marathon race 
in January, and has set his sights on the London Marathon in April.
 
"That will be my last marathon for a long time," said Sharkey.  "I look 
forward to beating my time from Chicago I want to find out how do I stack 
up against the top people in the world."
 
Jacobs had to put her first marathon victory celebration on ice for a 
time-she followed Sharkey into the medical tent and also required a liter 
of fluids to recover.
 
"It was hotter than what I anticipated," said the newly-engaged Ohio State 
grad who works as a dietician.  "I didn't realize it would be as hot. I 
struggled in the last half. I kept getting cramps."
 
Lunardi's second-place finish might have been the most compelling story of 
all as she participated Saturday in a local Spartan race where participants 
"sprinted" up the hills and through an obstacle course on the hills of 
Vista View Park in Davie.
 
The mother of five children under nine-years-of-age said she entered her 
fourth career marathon after "seeing what else was in the area to do." She 
and her husband were also celebrating their 10th anniversary in South 
Florida.
 
Alcime, who works in security for Lockheed Martin, quit running after his 
freshman year in high school, but returned to the sport in 2008. He trains 
with the Hunter Creek Running Club and joined 20 members Sunday in taking 
the two-hour drive south to participate.
 
"West Palm Beach is a nice city and I saw photos and it looked like a 
beautiful place to run," said Alcime.  "We all had a blast."
 
Running his first half-marathon in 17 months, Alcime credited Rebak with 
his personal record.
 
"He pushed me the last three miles," he said.  "We both helped each other. 
It was a fight to the finish. I'm happy he pushed me."
 
"I've been second a ton of times, but never won it here," mused Reback, 
who was also second last year. "I was close until the last 200 meters. He 
outkicked me. I couldn't stay with him. I'm 45 and using what I have left 
to the best of my ability."
 
Morales, an Argentine who turns 37 on Monday, is returning to running after 
a year-and-a-half battle with hypoglycemia, a condition characterized by 
abnormally low blood sugar. She admitted her biggest hurdle to overcome 
Sunday was not another runner or her condition, but the wind.
 
"I was so scared yesterday because I knew it was going to be windy," said 
Morales, who has worked as a Fort Lauderdale beach lifeguard for more than 
a decade. "It wasn't too bad on the way up north and I was running with a 
couple of guys. Sometimes when we didn't have houses or buildings, I could 
feel the wind, but my legs were still fresh.
 
"But the worst part was the last three miles. I was tired, it was windy and 
I was by myself. Miserable!"
 
Frenchman Stefan Massad, 43, won the hand-crank division on Sunday.  
Massad, traveled from St. Peterburg, where he is visiting his 
European-based Carlson Bike handcycle company US headquarters.
 
"Florida is nice and a bunch of Achilles athletes convinced me to compete," 
he said. "The conditions were good, except 20 mph winds is too much."
 
Sunday's 5K winner was Miami resident Naveen Reddy (20:43.27) with 
Jupiter's Atilla Kardas (21:22:96) in second place. Sabah Bobby of West 
Palm Beach (22:13.62) was the first woman to cross the finish line; she was 
three minutes faster than Stefanie Dadddono Of Palm Beach Gardens 
(25:28.69).
 
The EAU Palm Beach Marathon & Run Fest is the second event of the five-race 
Florida Storm Series, which challenges runners to participate in three to 
five racing events in Florida during the 2015/2016 season: next up is the 
Miami Marathon and Half Marathon on January 24, 2016 followed by the 
Michelob ULTRA Miami Beach 13.1 on March 6 and the First Watch Sarasota 
Half Marathon & Relay on March 13.  
 


                            ###

 

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