The Queens 10k has changed quite a lot in the past 25 years, adjusting its date and distance frequently. For one, it wasn’t a 10k for most of it’s existence. The race that has become the Queens 10k, began in 1994 as a Half Marathon in April (Brooklyn was in March at the time) on a course in College Pointe. If anyone knows the exact route from back then, let me know, but I did find a description of the Half course from the 2011 event here. The race moved to May for the 2003-2005 editions before switching to September in 2007 and to July (that must’ve been fun in the heat) in 2010. After 18 years as a Half Marathon, the race switched to a 10k event in 2012. In 2014, the race moved to it’s current timing in June and although a 5k event was added for one year in 2016, the event has remained a 10k that loops around Flushing Meadows Corona Park and I would be surprised if that changed much in the foreseeable future.

With the distance and time of year moving about so much (along with it not being a Club points race until recently), CPTC did not have large numbers at the race until the last three years which had over 60 CPTC’er racing each year. I ran the race for the first (and so far only time) in 2018. I really enjoyed the course which offers a much flatter (and a bit more winding) alternative to the common Central Park loop. The largest “hills” are really just overpasses that loop over some of the roads and there are nice long stretches where you can really open up your stride (or fall asleep if you’re are not careful). Living in Manhattan in 2018, non-Central Park or Manhattan races provided a great opportunity for me to explore some areas of the city that I did not get to as frequently. Corona Park is really a lovely place to run with crisscrossing paths and flat open terrain. The one caveat keeping Queens 10k from being a blazing fast race, is that it is often run in blazing heat or humidity towards the end of June. Additionally, the timing of the race often comes when runners are not at peak fitness. Many year round runners have had a spring season with a peak race in April or May and haven’t necessarily ramped back up to 100%. The upside of the timing is if you had a rough spring or are looking to extend your fitness into the summer, Queens offers an opportunity to finisher higher place-wise than you might in other races (as long as you can handle the heat). Although that is becoming less of the case as the race rises in popularity.

Even with the less than ideal timing, the race has grown dramatically since becoming a 10k in 2012. That year 5,460 runners completed the race and by 2019 that had more than doubled to 11,853. And while this year there were zero participants due to COVID-19, I would not be surprised to see the event grow larger since the open space and roadways of Flushing Meadows and Corona Park should be able to hold more participants. The race itself has gotten faster as it has expanded. In 2017, the race replaced two other June races (Retro 4M and LGBT Pride 5M) in the NYRR Club Series and times at the front of the race have dropped quickly since that shift. The 100th place finisher in 2012 ran 41:38 and in 2019 that had dropped to 36:11. That 36:11 would have placed you in the top 20 each year from 2012-2015, so the Club points are definitely creating a much more competitive race at the front.

While the race has only counted for points recently, CPTC has had solid showings at the race this decade. NYRR only scored three teams (and no age-based teams) pre 2016 (since it wasn’t a Club race). The Women’s Open team did not crack the top three until 2018 when they took 2nd, but followed that up with a 3rd place finish in 2019. The Men’s Open team has finished either 2nd or 3rd in 2012-2015 & 2017-2018, but neither team has broken through with a win. The Master’s teams have been more successful with the Women’s 40+ and 70+ winning in 2019 and the Men’s 50+ team winning in both 2018 & 2019.

Top 5 Open Team results during three years when race has counted for Club points. The CPTC Masters teams have also fared well with wins in 2018 (Men 50+) and 2019 (Men 50+, Women 40+, Women 70+).

During its early years as a Half, the Queens race had some reasonably quick times often requiring sub 70 minute mens and sub 80 minute womens times to be competing for a win. The fastest winning time was in 2001, when Paul Mwangi went 66:32. But the times slowly crept upwards as years went by and once the race moved into the heat of the summer, the paces really slowed with only 7 runners under the 80 minute threshold in each year (2010 and 2011). To be fair the weather for the 2011 race was 77 degrees with 60% humidity and in 2010 was 85(!) degrees with 63% humidity. In my opinion the NYRR made the right call moving to a 10k. I love a good half marathon, but save the longer distances for the fall and spring. One other interesting tidbit from the winning times over the years is that for three straight years (2005, 2006, and 2007) the race was won with the exact same time 69:29.

After steady attendance in the 30 participant range for Central Park during the race’s early 2000’s editions, the numbers trailed off as the times slowed and the race moved into the the heart of summer. CPTC racers always looking for opportunities to run fast only sent 4 racers in 2009, 10 in 2010, and 15 2011 as runners focused on races that would provide them with an oppurtunity to run faster and in more competative fields. But racers returned once the race became a more palatable 10k and especially after it became a points race. Since the 10k is less than a decade old and has only drawn out the fastest fields in the last couple of years, the CPTC leaderboard is not as deep as some other NYRR races, but I suspect that fast times will continue to be added in the near future. For now, we still have some great times at the very top, Veronica Jackson’s 35:56 (2018) and Ben Toomer’s 30:59 from last year are the top CPTC 10k times at the race. Check out the Top 10 all time leaderboard in the charts below and dig into more of the individual CPTC team results at this event in the Dashboard.

Top 10k times at Queens 10k

Women Men
First Last Time Year First Last Time Year
Veronica Jackson 0:35:56 2018 Benjamin Toomer 0:30:59 2019
Alexandra Bernardi 0:36:23 2019 Matt Rand 0:31:19 2018
Anisa Arsenault 0:36:51 2019 Matt Rand 0:31:51 2019
Andrea Bradshaw 0:37:14 2018 Matthew Lawder 0:33:02 2018
Elena Barham 0:37:16 2019 Daniel Lewis 0:33:06 2019
Alysia Dusseau 0:37:36 2018 Phillip Falk 0:33:23 2018
Alysia Dusseau 0:37:56 2019 Phillip Falk 0:33:25 2017
Jacy Kruzel 0:38:18 2017 Asher Fusco 0:33:26 2017
Caroline Willian 0:38:19 2019 Greg Cass 0:33:54 2019
Nicole Falcaro 0:38:19 2019 Jeff Ares 0:33:57 2017

Top Half Marathon times at Queens

Women Men
First Last Time Year First Last Time Year
Andrea Costella 1:26:14 2006 Toby Tanser 1:10:37 2001
Liz Colville 1:27:58 2006 Thom Little 1:11:45 2006
Yumi Ogita 1:28:07 2003 Joseph Voyticky 1:12:42 1995
Nicole Sinquee 1:28:41 2006 Thomas McCarney 1:13:20 2006
Eudair Palman 1:29:24 1995 Stuart Calderwood 1:14:56 1999
Stephanie Gould 1:29:46 1998 Toby Tanser 1:15:02 2002
Sarah Gross 1:31:25 1998 Paul C. Stuart-Smith 1:15:18 2000
Stacy Creamer 1:32:05 1998 Sean Fortune 1:15:18 2006
Nicole Sinquee 1:33:09 2005 Kevan Huston 1:15:20 2002
Susan Strazza 1:33:14 2005 Jacob Cooper 1:15:21 2007

A version of this post was first published at http://www.stlannex.com/blog_cptc_results. All results from https://results.nyrr.org/home.

Please let me know if you find any error in the data or statistics shown. I’ve tried to clean the results as much as possible, but there may be some results errors.