Sunday’s Golden Gate Half Marathon brought in runners from all over the country and world, but a San Francisco runner came in first among nonbinary participants.
A Swiss runner won the annual race this year in San Francisco, finishing in 1 hour, 10 minutes and 24 seconds. Christian Mathys flew to the Bay Area from Switzerland and outpaced everyone by pushing through the pain.
“It was a very cool race with some nice spectators,” Mathys said in a statement released by the event’s organizers, Motiv Sports. “I hit my pace exactly the first half. That was easy. Then it got harder and harder with all the hills. My legs were getting tired, but I pushed through.”
Mathys edged out another man named Christian — Torrance resident Christian Moreno, who came in second with 1 hour, 11 minutes and 35 seconds. Third place went to Lupe Palalia from San Jose, who came in at 1 hour, 13 minutes and 35 seconds, beating his own time from the 2022 Golden Gate Half Marathon of 1 hour, 18 minutes and 5 seconds.
The fastest woman on Sunday was Massachusetts runner Anya Cheng, who clocked 1 hour, 29 minutes and 7 seconds.
“I’m dedicating it to the people I ran with,” Cheng said.
“I run this route a lot. I knew the hills were coming. … It’s a challenging course, but I like a challenge.”
JL Odom, San Francisco runner
She was followed by Mackenzie Deeter from Santa Cruz at 1 hour, 32 minutes and 36 seconds, then Danish runner Bernadette Christelle Mortensen with 1 hour, 32 minutes and 46 seconds.
Among nonbinary runners, San Francisco’s JL Odom came in first at 1 hour, 25 minutes and 53 seconds.
“I run this route a lot,” Odom said. “I knew the hills were coming. I try to go fast on the flat parts and the downhill. From there, with the hills, I gave it what I could. It’s a challenging course, but I like a challenge.”
The event brought about 7,500 entrants, organizers said, and was co-sponsored by the American Cancer Society. In all, the run raised more than $85,000 for cancer research.
