Cheruiyot Out of Boston Marathon

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JOHN HANCOCK: HIP INJURY
TO TAKE ROBERT KIPKOECH CHERUIYOT OUT OF 2010 BOSTON MARATHON FIELD

åá     
Recent Injury Leaves Four-Time Champion Unable To
Train Properly In Time To Compete In This Year’s Race

 

BOSTON, MA (March 26, 2010)‰ÛÓJohn Hancock Financial today said that Robert Kipkoech
Cheruiyot has withdrawn from the114th running of the Boston Marathon
on April 19.

Cheruiyot,
a four-time champion of the race, injured his right hip a few weeks ago and has
been unable to conduct his usual training for the race.

An
updated field list follows.

 

114th Boston Marathon John
Hancock’s 2010 Elite Athlete Field

Men’s Open Field

Personal Best

Deriba
Merga, Ethiopia

2:06:38
(London, 2008)

Ryan
Hall, USA

2:06:17
(London, 2008)

Abderrahim
Goumri, Morocco

2:05:30
(London, 2008)

Gilbert
Yegon, Kenya

2:06:18
(Amsterdam, 2009)

Robert
Kiprono Cheruiyot, Kenya

2:06:23
(Frankfurt, 2009)

Evans
Cheruiyot, Kenya

2:06:25
(Chicago, 2008)

Chala
Dechase, Ethiopia

2:06:33
(Dubai, 2010)

Elijah
Keitany, Kenya

2:06:41
(Amsterdam, 2009)

David
Kipkorir Mandago, Kenya

2:06:53
(Paris, 2009)

Benjamin
Maiyo, Kenya

2:07:09
(Chicago, 2005)

Tekeste
Kebede, Ethiopia

2:07:52
(Fukuoka, 2009)

Gashaw
Asfaw, Ethiopia

2:08:03
(Paris, 2006)

John
Kipkorir Komen, Kenya

2:08:06
(Reims, 2008)

Samuel
Mugo, Kenya

2:08:20
(Beijing, 2009)

Stephen
Kiogora, Kenya

2:08:24
(Frankfurt, 2008)

Mebrahtom
Keflezighi, USA

2:09:15
(New York City, 2009)

Moses
Kipkosgei Kigen, Kenya

2:10:12 (Nairobi, 2009)

Abdellah
Falil, Morocco

2:12:37
(Turin, 2009)

Jason
Lehmkuhle, USA

2:12:54
(New York City, 2007)

Cutbert
Nyasango, Zimbabwe

2:13:19
(Berlin, 2009)

Alejandro
Suarez, Mexico

2:13:33
(Torreon, 2009)

Josh
Rohatinsky, USA

2:14:23
(New York City, 2008)

Antonio
Vega, USA

2:15:45
(Minneapolis/St.Paul, 2009)

Mohammed
Amyn, Morocco

Debut

-more-

-2-

 

Women’s Open Field

Personal Best

Salina
Kosgei, Kenya

2:23:22
(Berlin, 2006)

Catherine
Ndereba, Kenya

2:18:47
(Chicago, 2001) NR

Madai
Perez, Mexico

2:22:59
(Chicago, 2006) NR

Teyba
Erkesso, Ethiopia

2:23:53
(Houston, 2010)

Dire
Tune, Ethiopia

2:24:40
(Houston, 2008)

Lidiya
Grigoryeva, Russia

2:25:10
(Los Angeles, 2006)

Weiwei
Sun, China

2:25:15
(Beijing, 2002)

Bruna
Genovese, Italy

2:25:28
(Boston, 2006)

Albina
Mayorova-Ivanova, Russia

2:25:35
(Chicago, 2003)

Yurika
Nakamura, Japan

2:25:51
(Nagoya, 2008)

Agnes
Kiprop, Kenya

2:26:22
(Turin, 2009)

Nailya
Yulamanova, Russia

2:26:30
(Rotterdam, 2009)

Koren
Jelela Yal, Ethiopia

2:28:41
(Venice, 2009)

Waynishet
Girma, Ethiopia

2:29:50
(Amsterdam, 2009)

Tatyana
Pushkareva, Russia

2:30:30
(San Antonio, 2009)

Meseret
Legese, Ethiopia

2:31:37
(Padova, 2009)

Michelle
Frey, USA

2:35:51
(Minneapolis/St. Paul, 2006)

Mestewat
Tufa, Ethiopia

Debut

Chaofeng
Jia, China

Debut

 

About
John Hancock Financial and Manulife Financial Corporation

John
Hancock Financial is a unit of Manulife Financial Corporation, a leading
Canadian-based financial services group serving millions of customers in 22
countries and territories worldwide. Operating as Manulife Financial in Canada
and in most of Asia, and primarily as John Hancock in the United States,
Manulife Financial Corporation offers clients a diverse range of financial
protection products and wealth management services through its extensive
network of employees, agents and distribution partners. Funds under management
by Manulife Financial and its subsidiaries were $440
billion (US$420 billion) as at December 31, 2009.

Manulife
Financial Corporation trades as ‰Û¢MFC’ on the TSX, NYSE and PSE, and under ‰Û¢945′
on the SEHK. Manulife Financial can be found on the Internet at www.manulife.com.

The
John Hancock unit, through its insurance companies, comprises one of the
largest life insurers in the United States. John Hancock offers a broad range of
financial products and services, including life insurance,
fixed and variable annuities, fixed products,
mutual funds, 401(k) plans, long-term care insurance, college savings,
and other forms of business insurance. Additional information about John
Hancock may be found at www.johnhancock.com.

Registration for 2011 B.A.A. Boston Marathon Opens Monday, Oct. 18

B.A.A. anticipates unprecedented interest in 115th running;
field is expected to fill quickly.

 

BOSTON, Mass. ‰ÛÓ Registration for the 2011 Boston
Marathon will open on Monday,
October 18, 2010 at 9:00 a.m. (ET)
and will be conducted online at www.baa.org. The
115th running of the Boston Marathon will be on Monday, April 18,
2011: Patriots’ Day in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

 

Entrants qualify for the Boston
Marathon by meeting the B.A.A.’s time standards which correspond to age and
gender, and the qualifying standards for the 2011 race remain unchanged from
recent years. Qualifying standards for the 2011 Boston Marathon must be met on
or after September 20, 2009 at a marathon certified by USA Track & Field,
the national governing body for the sport (or foreign equivalent). Also, the
registration fee will remain at $130 USD for residents of the
USA.

 

John Hancock Financial is the
principal sponsor of the Boston Marathon for the 26th consecutive
year. During that time, the race has grown from 4,904 entrants in 1986 to 26,790
entrants (22,721 finishers) in 2010. The field size for 2011 will remain the
same as in 2010. The B.A.A. has organized the race since the inaugural Boston
Marathon in 1897 when the field consisted of 15 starters and 10
finishers.

 

For the 2010 Boston Marathon, the
race filled in just over two months. The B.A.A. anticipates the maximum field
size for the 2011 race will be reached faster than last year, and those who have
met the qualifying standards are encouraged to enter early.

 

Full registration information,
including a list of qualifying marathons, and a list of the B.A.A.’s Official
Charities for the Boston Marathon is available at http://www.baa.org/races/boston-marathon.

 

 

QUALIFYING STANDARDS FOR THE 2011
BOSTON MARATHON

 

Age Group                     Men
                            
Women

18-34                           
3hrs 10min                   
3hrs 40min

35-39                           
3hrs 15min                   
3hrs 45min

40-44                           
3hrs 20min                   
3hrs 50min

45-49                           
3hrs 30min                   
4hrs 00min

50-54                           
3hrs 35min                   
4hrs 05min

55-59                           
3hrs 45min                   
4hrs 15min

60-64                           
4hrs 00min                   
4hrs 30min

65-69                           
4hrs 15min                   
4hrs 45min

70-74                           
4hrs 30min                   
5hrs 00min

75-79                           
4hrs 45min                   
5hrs 15min

80 and older                 
5hrs 00min                   
5hrs 30min

 

 

The 2011 Boston Marathon will follow
the historic, 26.2 mile, point-to-point course which begins in the Town of
Hopkinton, includes Ashland, Framingham,
Natick, Wellesley,
Newton, and Brookline, and finishes in Boston’s Back Bay at
Copley
Square.

 

Established
in 1887, the Boston Athletic Association is a non-profit
organization with a mission of managing athletic events and promoting a healthy
lifestyle through sports, especially running. The B.A.A.’s Boston Marathon is the
world’s oldest annual marathon, and the organization manages other local events
and supports comprehensive charity, youth, and year-round running programs.
Since 1986, the principal sponsor of the Boston
Marathon has been John Hancock Financial. The
Boston Marathon is part of the World Marathon
Majors along with the Virgin London Marathon,
real,- Berlin Marathon, Bank of
America Chicago Marathon, and the ING New York
City Marathon.

 

 

Komon Breaks Central Park 10K Record, Nets $45K

Course record bonus will be raised to $30,000 in 2012 

by NYRR 

NEW YORK (May 14, 2011) – Leonard Patrick Komon
of Kenya strengthened his position as the hottest distance runner on
the planet when he defeated one of the finest 10K fields ever assembled
and broke the Central Park 10K record at the UAE Healthy Kidney 10K.  Komon’s time of 27:35 took seven seconds off Ethiopian Gebre Gebremariam’s winning 27:42 from last year and earned him a $20,000-course record

 bonus, which, added to the $25,000
winner’s purse, made Komon’s payday the highest for the winner of any
non-marathon race in the United States.

 

Komon,
23, who set the world road record for 10K at 26:44 last year in the
Netherlands, led wire-to-wire despite the presence of former 10K world
record-holder Micah Kogo of Kenya, 2010 IAAF World Cross Country Champion Joseph Ebuya of Kenya, and Lelisa Desisa
of Ethiopia, who set the course record at the Cherry Blossom 10-Miler
in Washington, DC, last month in his second major road-race victory in
two days.  The four stayed together through a blazing 4:17 first mile;
Kogo and Ebuya hung on through two miles (8:38), but Komon broke away
before the three-mile mark, which he reached in 12:55.  His lead widened
from there to a gap of about 150 meters by the finish line, which Komon
crossed with a wide smile on his face.   

 

Behind
him, Kogo and Ebuya staged a sprint duel for second place, with Kogo
prevailing, 27:55 to 27:56-the fourth- and fifth-fastest times in
Central Park history. Desisa edged Kenya’s Simon Ndirangu for fourth; both men were timed in 28:19. 

 

I’m
very happy,” said Komon afterward.  “Last night I was thinking, ‘How
can I break this course record?’  At the halfway point, I saw that I was
inside the record-that picked me up a little.”

 

The
race is sponsored annually by the Embassy of the United Arab Emirates
to support awareness and treatment of kidney disease. The $20,000 Zayed
Bonus for the course record honors the late Sheikh Zayed, former
president of the UAE, who benefited from American expertise when he was
treated for kidney disease.

UAE Healthy Kidney 10K

New York, NY, Saturday, May 14, 2011

MEN

1) Leonard Patrick Komon (KEN), 27:35 CR*, $45,000  

2) Micah Kogo (KEN), 27:55, $12,500

3) Joseph Ebuya (KEN), 27:56, $8000

4) Lelisa Desisa (ETH), 28:19, $5000

5) Simon Ndirangu (KEN), 28:19, $2500

6) Tesfaye Girma (ETH), 28:25, $2250 

7) Ezkyas Sisay (ETH), 28:47 PB, $1250

8) Bado Worku Merdessa (ETH), 29:06, $750

9) Bobby Curtis (USA), 29:09 PB, $250

10) Derese Deniboba (ETH),  29:10, $300

 

*Zayed Central Park course record bonus; previous 27:42, Gebre Gebremariam (ETH), 2010

WOMEN

1) Buzunesh Deba (ETH), 33:39,  $1000

2) Betsy Burke (USA), 36:13
3) Michaela Laussegger (USA), 37:32
 

Complete results and more at: www.nyrr.org

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Sam Adams Official Beer Sponsor of Boston 116

Samuel Adams Adds Cheer to Patriot‰Ûªs Day In Honor of
the 2012 Boston Marathon

New
Partnership and Limited Release Brew

to
Commemorate Boston‰Ûªs
Rich History

 

February 23, 2012
‰ÛÒThe Boston Beer Company, brewers of Samuel Adams® beers, announced
today that it‰Ûªs helping to celebrate one of Boston‰Ûªs greatest traditions ‰ÛÒ
The Boston Marathon.

 

The brewery will be the official beer sponsor of the 2012 Boston
Marathon, one of the most revered and challenging races in the world.  To
celebrate, the Samuel Adams brewers are developing a special commemorative beer
to mark the heralded event.  This is the first time Samuel Adams has
partnered with the Boston Athletic Association for the Marathon.

 

‰ÛÏOur partnership is a perfect fit because of our shared
history‰ÛÒ a Boston-born brewery joining the biggest of Boston traditions,‰Û said Jim Koch,
founder and brewer of Samuel Adams. ‰ÛÏI released my first batch of Samuel
Adams Boston Lager to the public on Patriots Day in 1985, the day of the
Marathon right here in Boston. 
I faced a lot of challenges getting that first brew packaged and distributed in
time, but I had set Patriots‰Ûª Day as my deadline.  About half of our
first 25 accounts were within three blocks of the finish line.  So, the Marathon‰Ûªs finish line was my starting line,‰Û
added Koch.

 

The brewers of Samuel Adams beers
have been working hard to develop ‰ÛÏSamuel Adams® Boston 26.2 Brew,‰Û
a special beer which will be available at race-related events, as well as pubs
and restaurants along the Marathon route and around Boston. 

 

“We at the B.A.A. are very pleased to be partnering with another Boston institution,”
said Joann E. Flaminio, B.A.A. President. “The Boston Marathon is all
about Boston
and all about competitive success in a challenging environment. The same is
true of the folks at The Boston Beer Company and Samuel Adams. They are our
neighbors here in town, and they have gotten where they are through the same
hard work that we see from all of the athletes from around the world who work
hard to qualify to run the Boston Marathon each year. We are delighted to join
with Jim Koch and all of his colleagues in saying to 27,000 competitors from
around the globe, ‘Welcome to Boston’,
‘welcome to our home town.’ We’re proud to have you here and to enjoy what we
have to offer.”

 

Since the Boston Marathon‰Ûªs first run in 1897, the event has been
held every year in April on Patriot‰Ûªs Day.

 

 

About The Boston Beer Company

 

The Boston Beer
Company began in 1984 with a generations-old family recipe that Founder and
Brewer Jim Koch uncovered in his father‰Ûªs attic. Inspired and unafraid to
challenge conventional thinking about beer, Jim brought the recipe to life in
his kitchen.  Pleased with the results of his work, Jim decided to sample
his beer with bars in Boston in the hopes that
drinkers would appreciate the complex, full-flavored beer he brewed fresh in America.
 That beer was aptly named Samuel Adams Boston Lager®, in recognition
of one of our nation’s great founding fathers, a man of independent mind and
spirit.  Little did Jim know at the time, Samuel
Adams Boston Lager
soon became a catalyst of the American craft beer
revolution.

 

Today, The
Boston Beer Company brews more than 30 styles of beer.  It relentlessly
pursues the development of new styles and the perfection of classic beers by
searching the world for the finest ingredients.  Using the traditional
four vessel brewing process, the Company often takes extra steps like
dry-hopping, barrel-aging and a secondary fermentation known as krausening.
 The Company has also pioneered another revolution, the ‘extreme beer’
movement, where it seeks to challenge drinker’s perceptions of what beer can
be. The Boston Beer Company has been committed to elevating the image of
American craft beer by entering festivals and competitions around the globe,
and in the past five years has won more awards in international beer
competitions than any other brewery in the world. As an independent company,
brewing quality beer remains its single focus. Although Samuel Adams® beer
is America’s largest-selling
craft beer, it accounts for only one percent of the U.S. beer market.  The Boston
Beer Company will continue its independently-minded quest to brew great beer
and to advocate for the growth of craft beer across America. For more information,
please visit
www.samueladams.com.

 

 

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NYC Marathon Reverses Itself On “No Bag Policy”

NOTE ON THE NEWS - NYCM CHANGES POLICY AND OFFERS BAG CHECK

In response to strong feedback from runners, the New York Road Runners have changed their recently announced
no-baggage policy for the ING New York City Marathon to allow runners a choice of either checking a bag,
or taking a quicker exit from Central Park for those who do not. You can read coverage here:

Wall Street Journal:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444273704577635843579930360.html?mod=wsj_share_tweet

New York Times:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/07/sports/in-reversal-new-york-city-marathon-will-transport-bags.html

BusinessWeek:
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-09-06/nyc-marathon-reinstates-baggage-policy-after-runner-complaints

ING NYC Marathon Facebook Page (to see comments):
http://www.facebook.com/ingnycm

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NER Pub Series Men’s Standings After 2 of 6 Races

Men’s Standings After Race No. 2 of 6
‰ÛÓ James Joyce Ramble 10K, April 28, 2013

 

Men Open (Top 50 Score)

 

1. Jacob Barnett                     
                    97

2. Michael Quintal                    
                 93

3. TJ Unger                  
                              90

4. Joseph Navas           
                              85

5. Gregory Picklesimer                              
84

6. Lee Danforth                               
           78

7. Christopher Klucznik                             
71 

8. Justin Renz             
                                62 

9. Andrew Holmes                                      59

10. Michael Merrill                                     48

11. Owen Kendall        
                              45

12. Terry McNatt                                        43

12. Corey Fehnel                                        43

14. Doug Martyn                                        
39 

15. Scott Anderson           
                          38 

16. Andrew Wommack                              
37 

17. Mark Reeder                                        
35 

18. Kevin Delaney                                     
33

19. Paul Hammond                                  
  32

20. Macdara Nash                                      
31

20. John Barbour                                        31

22. Chris Canning                                      
29

23. Chris Forti                                           
28

24. Brian Cronin                                        
27

25. Tomas Bok                                          
26

26. Michael McGrane                                
25

27. Christopher
Lundeen                           
24

28. John Goodwin                  
                   23

29. Andy MacDonald                                
22 

30. Tim Morin                                           
21

31. Michaael
Mezejedwski                       
20

32. Jimmy Fallon                                      
19

33. Jason Cakouros                                   
18

33. Mark Knapp                                        
18

34. Tom Dmukauskas                               
17

34. Joe O’Leary                                        
16 

35. Andrew Goldthorp                               16

36. Shaun Merrill                                      
15

37. Michael McDonald                             
14

38. Jim Rhoades                                        
13 

39. Charles Anderson                                
12

40. Chris
Bauernfeind                                
11 

41. Stephen Bausemur                               
10

42. Robert Jackman                                    

43. Ken Warren                                          
8

44. Joe Ciavattone                                       7

45. Craig Anzlovar                                     

46 .Jason Newton                                       
5

Course Records Fall at WMM Tokyo Marathon

Course Records Fall at 2014 Tokyo
Marathon

 

2014
World Marathon Majors competition picked up where it left off last year, with
two more course records falling at today’s 8th annual Tokyo
Marathon. Kenya’s Dickson Chumba and Ethiopia’s Tirfi Tsegaye won their first
WMM event titles in style, posting course records of 2:05:42 and 2:22:23,
respectively. Chumba’s victory placed him in a four-way tie for sixth place in
the 2013-2014 WMM series, while Tsegaye catapulted from 24th to
fourth in the 2013-2014 rankings.

 

In
Tokyo’s second year as a World Marathon Major, more than 36,000 athletes
crossed the start line on a cool, overcast day in Japan’s capital city. The
conditions proved to be perfect for marathon racing, as Chumba bettered the
men’s course record by more than a minute (previously 2:06:50 set by Kenya’s
Dennis Kimetto last year), and Tsegaye carved more than three minutes off the women’s
course record (previously 2:25:28 set by Ethiopia’s Atsede Habtamu in 2012).

 

Despite
arriving with a sub 2:06 personal best, Chumba was not favored as a likely
winner, as his previous WMM best was a seventh place showing at the Boston
Marathon last spring. He also started but did not finish the 2012 Boston and
2011 Chicago marathons. With the lead pack still 12-strong through 30K, it was
Chumba who produced the surge that dropped the race favorite Abel Kirui of
Kenya, the two-time world champion. By 35K, the pack was down to six, and 5K
later, with Chumba in charge, the only athlete hanging on was world
championship bronze medalist Tadese Tola of Ethiopia. Chumba broke the finish
tape in 2:05:42, a personal best by four seconds, and Tola followed 15 seconds
later in second. In total, three athletes were under the previous course record,
as Kenya’s Sammy Kitwara was third in 2:06:30. The top five was rounded out by
Kenyans Michael Kipyego (2:06:58), the 2012 Tokyo winner, and first-time WMM
point-scorer Peter Some (2:07:05). Kirui was 10th in 2:09:04.

 

Tsegaye
won a hard-earned victory over fellow Ethiopian Birhane Dibaba. Like Chumba in
the men’s race, Tsegaye was the aggressor, moving to the front near 30K and
dropping race favoite Lucy Kabuu of Kenya by 35K. With one kilometer to go, Tsegaye
appeared spent and Dibaba seemed on her way to victory. But the 2012 Berlin Marathon
runner-up fought back with half a kilometer to go, crossing the finish line
seven seconds ahead of Dibaba. Kabuu was third in 2:24:16, and Caroline Rotich
of Kenya was fourth in 2:24:35, putting the top four under the previous course
record. Fifth place went to WMM rookie Janet Rono of Kenya with a personal best
2:26:03.

 

The
top Japanese athletes were Kohei Matsumura, eighth in the men’s race in a
personal best 2:08:09, and Mai Ito, seventh in the women’s race in 2:28:36.

 

WMM
competition resumes in April with the Virgin Money London Marathon (April 13)
and the B.A.A. Boston Marathon (April 21).

 

2013-2014
WMM Series Leaderboard

 

Top
10 Men

1            Dennis
Kimetto (KEN)            50
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in Boston

2            Tsegaye
Kebede (ETH)            45
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in London

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3            Lelisa
Desisa (ETH)                        40
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in Boston

4            Emmanuel
Mutai (KEN)            30
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in London

5            Wilson
Kipsang (KEN)            26
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in London

6            Dickson
Chumba (KEN)            25
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competed in Tokyo

6            Stephen
Kiprotich (UGA)            25
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in London

6            Geoffrey
Mutai (KEN)            25
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in London

6            Tadese
Tola (ETH)                        25
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competed in Tokyo

10            Michael
Kipyego (KEN)            20
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competed in Tokyo

10            Sammy
Kitwara (KEN)            20
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competed in Tokyo

10            Micah
Kogo (KEN)                        20
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in Boston

 

Top
10 Women

1            Priscah
Jeptoo (KEN)            50
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in London

1            Rita
Jeptoo (KEN)                        50
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in Boston

3            Edna
Kiplagat (KEN)            40
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in London

4            Tirfi
Tsegaye (ETH)                        26
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competed in Tokyo

5            Sharon
Cherop (KEN)            25
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in Boston

5            Aberu
Kebede (ETH)            25
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in London

5            Florence
Kiplagat (KEN)            25
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in London

8            Irina
Mikitenko (GER)            20
pts.

9            Valeria
Straneo (ITA)            16
pts.

10            Buzunesh
Deba (ETH)            15
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in Boston

10            Jemima
Sumgong (KEN)            15
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in Boston

10            Meseret
Hailu (ETH)            15
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in Boston

10
            Birhane
Dibaba (ETH)            15
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competed in Tokyo

10            Yeshi
Esayias (ETH)            15
pts. ‰ÛÓ Competing in Boston

 

For
more, go to worldmarathonmajors.com.

London Marathon Announces Elite Women’s Field

LONDON MARATHON WOMEN'S FIELD DOES NOT DISAPPOINT
By David Monti
(c) 2015 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved
(Used with permission)

(14-Jan) -- The elite women's field announced this morning by the Virgin Money London Marathon,
scheduled for Sunday, April 26, is as strong as the men's
 released last week, boasting seven athletes with sub-2:22 personal bests. Previous London champions
 --Kenyans Edna Kiplagat (2:19:50 PB), Mary Keitany
 (2:18:37) and Priscah Jeptoo (2:20:14)-- are the leading ladies.

In addition, marathon world record holder Paula Radcliffe of England will run her farewell marathon in London,
organizers said, but she was not included
 (yet) in the elite field. London officials said she would announce her intentions for the race on January 30.

Kiplagat, 35, twice the world marathon champion, became last year's London winner in her fourth run at the race.
She prevailed over compatriot Florence
Kiplagat (no relation) in a sprint finish on The Mall 2:20:21 to to 2:20:24.

"Winning my first London Marathon title on my fourth attempt last year was a special moment for me," Kiplagat said through a statement provided by race
organizers. "Now I have tasted success in London, I am determined to win again."

Keitany, 32, made a noteworthy comeback from maternity leave last fall, winning the TCS New York City Marathon in cold and very windy conditions. The tiny
 athlete from Iten in the Great Rift Valley won London in 2011 and 2012, and her winning time of 2:18:37 in 2012 makes here the second-fastest woman ever
in London behind only Paula Radcliffe.

Jeptoo, 30, was the London winner in 2013, but was forced to drop out of last year's race with a calf injury after tangling with a wheelchair racer at a
fluid station. She had planned to run the TCS New York City Marathon last November (she was the reigning champion), but was forced to withdraw from the
race with injury. She has been building up her fitness by doing a series of shorter races during the fall and winter.

Other athletes from the Kenyan squad include last year's London runner-up Florence Kiplagat (2:19:44 PB), and last year's New York runner-up Jemima Sumgong
 (2:20:41).

Leading the list of Ethiopian entrants is Feyse Tadese (2:20:27 PB), fourth at last year's London race, and Tigist Tufa (2:21:52), who won last year's
Ottawa and Shanghai Marathons.

Race director Hugh Brasher also recruited a strong group of European woman, led by reigning European champion Christelle Daunay of France (2:24:22 PB).
Other Europeans include Portugal's Ana Dulce Félix (2:25:40) and Sara Moreira (2:26:00), Spain's Alessandra Aguilar (2:27:00), Russia's Tatyana Arkhipova
(2:23:29), Ukraine's Tetyana Gamera-Shmyrko (2:23:58) and Poland's Iwona Lewandowska (2:28:32).

In all, seven women in the field have broken 2:22, ten have broken 2:25, and 17 have broken 2:30. The complete field is listed below. A complete list of
 London winners is at this link: http://www.arrs.net/HP_LonMa.htm

The Virgin Money London Marathon is part of the Abbott World Marathon Majors and is an IAAF Gold Label Road Race.

Edna Kiplagat (Kenya) 2:19:50
Mary Keitany (Kenya) 2:18:37
Florence Kiplagat (Kenya) 2:19:44
Priscah Jeptoo (Kenya) 2:20:14
Feyse Tadese (Ethiopia) 2:20:27
Jemima Sumgong (Kenya) 2:20:41
Tigist Tufa (Ethiopia) 2:21:52
Tatyana Arkhipova (Russia) 2:23:29
Tetyana Gamera-Shmyrko (Ukraine) 2:23:58
Christelle Daunay (France) 2:24:22
Ana Dulce Félix (Portugal) 2:25:40
Sara Moreira (Portugal) 2:26:00
Alessandra Aguilar (Spain) 2:27:00
Volha Mazuronak (Belarus) 2:27:33
Rkia El Moukim (Morocco) 2:28:12
Iwona Lewandowska (Poland) 2:28:32
Diane Nukuri (Burundi) 2:29:35
Sonia Samuels (Great Britain & NI) 2:30:56
Emma Stepto (40+/Great Britain & NI) 2:32:40
Rebecca Robinson (Great Britain & NI) 2:37:14

PHOTO: Edna Kiplagat poses in front of Tower Bridge prior to the 2013 Virgin Money London Marathon

Syracuse Men Upset Colorado For NCAA XC Title

SURPRISING SYRACUSE WINS HISTORIC NCAA CROSS COUNTRY TITLE
By Chris Lotsbom, @chris lotsbom and David Monti, @d9monti

(c) 2015 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved
(Used with permission)

LOUISVILLE,
KY (21-Nov) — The fairy tale season for the Orange of Syracuse
University came to a spectacular close here today when Coach Chris
Fox’s squad edged defending champion Colorado by just nine points to
win their first team title at these NCAA Division I Cross Country
Championships in 64 years. On the women’s side, the number one-ranked
Lobos of the University of New Mexico dominated their race, also
winning their first team title here by a whopping 80 points over second
place Colorado. The individual titles were won convincingly by Oregon’s
Edward Cheserek, who became the first man ever to win three in a row,
and Notre Dame’s Molly Seidel, who became the first ever women’s
champion from the Fighting Irish.

SYRACUSE WIN EPIC BOUT WITH COLORADO; CHESEREK GETS TITLE NO. 9

With
the clouds turning a dark gray and rain fast approaching, the men’s
championship race took off and quickly manifested into a storm all its
own. In a state known for dramatic horse racing and close finishes,
this would be a back and forth fight among thoroughbreds, only one
individual and team able to be crowned the winner.

From the
gun, two-time defending champion Edward Cheserek of Oregon and Patrick
Tiernan of Villanova asserted themselves at the front. Tiernan, who
finished 18th at these championships last year, said he’d been thinking
of this moment for the last twelve months, and knew he wanted to go out
very hard. Hitting the mile in 4:29, two miles in 9:03, and three miles
in 13:55, the pair were only joined by Syracuse sophomore Justyn Knight
and UTEP freshman Jonah Koech.

Knight had more than just his
individual race on his mind. Having not won an NCAA Cross Country team
title since 1951, this was Syracuse’s best shot at returning to the top
of the podium. All year Coach Chris Fox had tested and praised his
squad, referring to them as professionals and disciplined young men.
Standing in their way, however, was Colorado, the two-time defending
national champions on the precipice of a triple crown and dynasty.

Ranked
first in the USTFCCCA polls all year long, Colorado had been the
favorite. But Syracuse had momentum and a slew of loyal supporters on
their side. Arriving before dawn this morning, Syracuse alums,
student-athletes, and family members had set up a large tent along the
course complete with tailgating grills, banners, and more. If this was
Syracuse’s day, no one wanted to miss the moment.

Early on,
it looked like the Orange may run away with the team title. As Cheserek
and Tiernan began to gap the field, Syracuse established a fearsome
trio in the top ten. Knight held onto third, with teammates Colin
Bennie and Martin Hehir running steps from one another fewer than 25
seconds back. The only Colorado runner in the mix was senior Pierce
Murphy.

Kilometer after kilometer, the plot continued to
thicken. Knight began feeling a cramp and was ultimately passed by
Murphy for third. Colorado’s first, second, fourth, and fifth runners
all moved up through the pack with precision, as they’d done in the
last two years. And at 8-kilometers, the video board showed a tie
score: 99 points a piece.

“I knew it was going to be a close
race and if we wanted to take down the Buffaloes, I needed to give it
all my effort,” said Knight, a sophomore from Canada who placed 143rd
last year.

While the team competition was heating up and
becoming a chess match, the individual title was already being decided.
Entering the course’s final undulating section with 2-K to go, Tiernan
and Cheserek were nearly a minute up on the chasers. Ignoring the
fatigue building in his tall frame, Tiernan kept pushing while Cheserek
ran a foot off his shoulder. It was now or never for the Aussie.

“I
was just thinking ‘keep rolling, keep going.’ And then he broke me just
at the top of the hill [with a mile to go], and he broke me pretty
bad,” said Tiernan, chuckling at the thought of Cheserek’s ability to
surge. “I give credit to him.”

From there, Cheserek coasted
to victory. He celebrated in the homestretch, a la Mo Farah, raising
his hands frequently to pump up the crowd. Cheserek’s time for the 10-K
course was 28:45.8 to Tiernan’s runner-up mark of 29:11.1.

“I
was mentally prepared,” said Cheserek, the first three-time men’s
individual champion in meet history. “[Tiernan] did exactly what I
wanted to do today, actually. Even though it was too quick –the first
mile was 4:27, 4:28. I was like, wow, too quick. So, I hang there until
maybe the last 2-K to go; I made my move.”

While Cheserek’s
history-making race was impressive, it served as the undercard for the
main event: Syracuse vs. Colorado, No. 2 vs. No 1.

The first
blow was served by the Buffaloes’ Murphy, finishing third overall a
spot up on Knight (29:37.0 to 29:46.1). Knight turned back after
crossing the line only to see two Orange teammates –Bennie and Hehir–
finish eighth and ninth.

It would be an agonizing 30 seconds
until the next Orange athlete (Philo Germano) crossed the line in 39th
(29th for scoring athletes). Before Germano, though, Colorado had put
their second through fifth scorers through the chutes: Morgan Pearson
(25th/scoring 20 points); John Dressel (26th/21); Ben Saarel (31st/23);
and Connor Winter (33rd/25). Like a typical Mark Wetmore-coached bunch,
Colorado had moved up and seemed to secure victory with 91 points.

Yet
the Orange’s fifth man — Joel Hubbard– placed 47th to score 35,
capping their point total at 82. For the first time since Harry S.
Truman was in the White House and Nat King Cole topped the charts, the
Syracuse Orange were NCAA Cross Country National Champions.

Minutes
after leaving the athlete recovery area and entering the mixed zone,
the Orange found out their fate and erupted with cheers and hugs. The
aforementioned five scorers were joined by teammates Dan Lennon and Joe
Kush, as well as by Coach Fox.

“Flotrack said we needed a four
and five to go to the market. We got four, five, six and seven. They
need to be more professional. I have the best teammates in the world. I
have the best coaches in the world, and I couldn’t ask for anything
else,” said Syracuse’s Joel Hubbard.

Motivated to leave here
with a trophy, Hehir –the heart and soul of the team as a fifth year
graduate student– said this was the best moment he could have ever
imagined.

“I’m done, this was my last race in a Syracuse
uniform, and I couldn’t be more happier,” said Hehir, unable to stand
still. “This is it! This is it, what we talked about since the day we
got to Syracuse in August. And here we are.”

Showing
commendable sportsmanship despite the loss, Colorado stood feet away as
Syracuse celebrated. The Buffaloes waited for the right moment to shake
their fierce foes hands, congratulating them on the victory. One
Buffalo cried, while the others looked on in disbelief.

“We
always knew we had a shot. This race never goes perfect for anybody,
but I kind of think it went perfect for us today. It couldn’t have gone
any better,” said Fox. “Been since 1951 and I think a million years
since someone on this side of the Mississippi [won].”

Indeed,
it’s the first time a team East of the Mississippi River won the team
title since Villanova did so in 1970. By the time Syracuse’s
celebration left the media tent and joined the hundreds of Orange
faithful in attendance, individual champion Cheserek was already out
and about. His performance today was his ninth individual NCAA title,
tying Arkansas legends Mike Conley and Robert Howard for fourth
all-time.

“It means a lot to me, man,” he said. “You know,
I’ve been trying to follow those famous guys, like Rono and
Prefontaine, Lindgren and all those famous people. I’ve been training
so hard and doing a good job with my coaches and my teammates up there.”

He
continued: “Today was tougher [than the other cross country titles]
because of the weather. My freshman year was really tough, a little
bit. Those boys were really tough, and I was a freshman coming in.”

Cheserek
conserved as much energy as he could in today’s early stages, then
attacked Tiernan with a fierce surge knowing his opponent was
undefeated.

“I was actually like saving my energy. I didn’t
want to go, like, too quick with him,” said Cheserek. “I just relaxed
behind him all the time. I tried to save the energy I can for the last
2-K or mile to go, and just go from there.”

Stanford was the
third place team with 151 points, led by sixth and seventh place
finishers Jim Rosa and Sean McGorty. Highly touted freshman Grant
Fisher was 17th in his debut 10-K cross country race.

Other
notable finishers included Virgina Tech’s Thomas Curtin in 22nd;
Colorado’s Ammar Mousa in 42nd; Oregon’s Matthew Maton in 85th; and
Stanford’s Joe Rosa in 97th.

BIG WIN FOR SEIDEL IN LAST COLLEGIATE CROSS COUNTRY RACE

Reigning
NCAA 10,000m champion Seidel knew that the 6-kilometer distance didn’t
play to her favor. Arkansas’s Dominique Scott and North Dakota State’s
Erin Teschuk, among others, have big kicks, so she didn’t want too many
other women hanging around in the final kilometer. Seidel is a grinder.

“What
I kind of do is just go and try to make it hurt,” Seidel explained.
“You just start squeezing that pace down. Like I said before, I just
don’t want to leave anything to chance on that. When someone’s going to
beat me, I’m going to try to make them bleed to do it.”

Seidel,
her teammate Anna Roher, Arkansas’s Scott, Boise State’s Allie
Ostrander, Providence’s Sarah Collins, Michigan’s Erin Finn, and
Oregon’s Waverly Neer were all in a huge lead pack of about 20 who
passed through the 2-kilometer mark in 6:40. Finn was the first to fall
out of contention when, clipped from behind, she lost both of her shoes
in the third kilometer and was afraid her coach, Mike McGuire, was
going to tell her to drop out.

“The only thing I really heard
was Mike yelling at me to get on the gravel between three and four-K,”
Finn told Race Results Weekly. “Becca (volunteer assistant coach
Rebecca Addison) just whispered to him, ‘She doesn’t have any shoes.’
And then I was really scared he was going to tell me to drop out.”

Up
ahead, early in the fifth kilometer, Seidel broke up the race, taking
Ostrander and Scott with her. She began to think about the end game.

“I
think with 2-K to go we started moving a little bit,” Seidel told
reporters. “We had a nice little group going. But then right after we
got past that motocross area up there (with about a mile to go) I just
knew it was time… to start kicking into that next gear. Just knowing
the amount of talent that both Dom and Allie O. have, I knew that I was
going to have to try and make my move early because you never know what
two girls who have that much talent are going to be able to do on that
final kick.”

Seidel appeared first at the top of the long
finish straight and had about a 10 meter gap on Ostrander, and another
10 meters on Scott. It looked like she had the race sewn up, but Seidel
wasn’t so sure.

“Truth be told, for some reason I always think
there are people right behind me,” Seidel admitted. “That whole final
stretch I was just gunning as fast as I could. Until you cross the
line, you never know. So, you have to push all the way through.”

Seidel
crossed the finish line in 19:28.6, just off the 2012 course and
championships record of 19:27.9 set by Iowa State’s Betsy Saina here in
2012. With her victory, Seidel became the first woman since Sally
Kipyego in 2007 to win the NCAA 10,000m and cross country titles in the
same calendar year. Ostrander, just a freshman, was a clear second
(19:33.6) and Scott, a senior, nabbed third (19:40.9). Seidel said she
was particularly proud to win for Notre Dame especially after Irish
alum Molly Huddle –who had never won at these championships– had won
the overall USA road running title last Sunday in Alexandria, Va.

“It’s
just enormous stepping up to the line in the ‘ND’ monogram,” Seidel
gushed. “It’s just like nothing else. These past four years have been
an amazing experience.”

Finn, who lost the shoes, finished 19th
(14th scoring position), helping Michigan get sixth in the team
standings. She was initially left out of the results because her
scoring chips were still on her missing shoes.

“I guess I just don’t know how to give up,” she told Race Results Weekly.

Behind
the top-3 women, the Lobos of New Mexico finished fourth, fifth, 13th,
15th and 24th, respectively, to take the team title for coach Joe
Franklin. They had been the number one-ranked team all season. Wearing
their special turquoise national championships uniforms (they
traditionally wear all red), they fulfilled their destiny, led by
fifth-year senior Courtney Frerichs.

“It seemed like everyone
played a role,” said Frerichs standing arm-in-arm with her teammates.
“Rhona (Auckland) got to the outside for us which helped us through the
bumps because that was kind of our plan, and that really helped us out.
And Molly (Renfer) and Alice (Wright), everyone, just did an amazing
job. We couldn’t have done it without each other.”

The always
low-key Franklin –who admitted he listened to music by Robin Schulz
through headphones during the race– was clearly pleased for his team.

“This
one will be seared into their memory for the rest of their lives,”
Franklin told reporters. “And that’s what makes sport wonderful.”

Olympians Huddle, Meb, Jared Ward Running NYC Half

NYRR Team for
Kids Ambassadors Molly Huddle, Meb Keflezighi, and Tatyana McFadden to
Lead American Professional Athlete Field at 2017 United Airlines NYC
Half (photo by PhotoRun)

 

Six U.S.
Olympians and seven U.S. Paralympians to highlight star-studded American
contingent at the first event of the 2017 NYRR Five-Borough Series on
Sunday, March 19

 

Race will be
broadcast live in the New York area on WABC-TV, Channel 7, and
internationally via a variety of global broadcast partners
 

New York, February 22, 2017 ‰ÛÓTatyana McFadden and Molly Huddle will go for their second and third consecutive United Airlines NYC Half titles, respectively, on Sunday, March 19, while Meb Keflezighi
will race the event for the sixth time to kick off his final season as a
professional athlete. The three NYRR Team for Kids Ambassadors will
lead an American contingent that features six U.S. Olympians and seven
U.S. Paralympians, including four of the six U.S. Olympic marathoners
who served as Grand Marshals of the 2016 TCS New York City Marathon.

 

“We’re thrilled to have the best group of U.S.
athletes in the race’s history competing in this year’s United Airlines
NYC Half,” said Peter Ciaccia, president of events for New York Road Runners and race director of the TCS New York City Marathon.
“While 20,000 runners take to the streets of Manhattan, and hundreds of
younger runners and youth wheelchair racers participate in the free
NYRR Times Square Youth Run, Molly will go for a three-peat, Tatyana
will look to defend her title and Meb will start his journey through his
final pro season, which will culminate back here in November at the TCS
New York City Marathon. It has all the makings of a historic day on the
streets of New York City.”

 

Huddle, 32, of
Providence, RI, is the two-time United Airlines NYC Half reigning
champion, having defended her title at last year’s race in an
event-record time of 1:07:41. She took the tape one-tenth of a second
ahead of Kenya’s Joyce Chepkirui ‰ÛÓ the smallest margin of victory in
event history. She continued her strong run of form throughout the year,
setting an American record over 10,000 meters at the Rio 2016 Olympics
and taking third place in 2:28:13 in her marathon debut at the TCS New
York City Marathon. Her finish was the highest of any American debut
since Shalane Flanagan’s runner-up finish in 2010.

 

“I look
forward to returning for my fourth United Airlines NYC Half to kick off
the 2017 season,” Huddle said. “The race has been a great opportunity to
test the strength built over the winter months and to see how things
stack up against a world-class field. I always love the chance to run
Click Here: Cheap Chiefs Rugby Jersey 2019
with New York Road Runners.”

 

Keflezighi, 41, of
San Diego, CA, is a four-time Olympian who will be racing the United
Airlines NYC Half for the sixth time. His best finish at the event came
in 2006, when he placed second, two years after he won a silver medal in
the Athens Olympic Marathon. Keflezighi, who will race the final
marathon of his professional career at the 2017 TCS New York City
Marathon, was the first American in 27 years to win the New York City
Marathon in 2009, and five years later he was victorious at the Boston
Marathon. Last November, he joined four other members of the U.S.
Olympic Marathon Team as a Grand Marshal for the TCS New York City
Marathon.

 

“I am excited to race the United Airlines NYC Half again this year as a tune-up for the Boston Marathon,” Keflezighi said.
“NYRR races have been a big part of my career, so it is only right that
I will participate in the United Airlines NYC Half this spring and
complete my professional marathon career at the TCS New York City Marathon this fall.” 

 

McFadden, 27, of
Clarksville, MD, will look to defend her United Airlines NYC Half title
in the professional wheelchair division after setting an event record of
52:25 at last year’s race. In November, she won her fourth consecutive
and fifth overall TCS New York City Marathon, and she’s already secured
the first Abbott World Marathon Majors women’s wheelchair title. A
17-time Paralympic medalist who recently donated a racing chair’s NYRR
Youth Wheelchair Training Program, McFadden won six medals at the Rio
2016 Games, including gold medals over 400, 800, 1500 and 5000 meters.

 

“The United Airlines NYC Half is a really
good race to start off the season and just a great setup before the
Boston Marathon,” McFadden said. “This race hits all the marks ‰ÛÓ it has
tough climbs, twists, turns, and a long straightaway that tests your
strength. It’s also really cool running through the heart of New York
City.” 

 

Additional Top Men’s Professional Athletes of Interest:

Abdi Abdirahman, 40, of Tucson, AZ, was the top American finisher
at the 2016 TCS New York City Marathon, finishing third in 2:11.23 to
become the oldest male runner in event history to reach the podium. He
is a four-time Olympian and was the runner-up at the 2007 NYC Half.

Jared Ward, 28, of Kaysville, UT, finished sixth at the Rio 2016
Olympic Marathon and then served as a Grand Marshal of the TCS New York
City Marathon last November. In 2015, he won U.S. titles in the 20K, 25K
and marathon.

Chris Derrick, 26, of Portland, OR, is a three-time winner of the
USATF Cross Country Championships who finished fifth over 10,000 meters
at last summer’s U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials.

Josh George (wheelchair division), 33, of Champaign, IL won the
inaugural professional wheelchair race at the 2014 NYC Half and placed
second the following year. The four-time Paralympian and five-time
Paralympic medalist was the runner-up at the 2015 TCS New York City
Marathon and was third at the 2016 edition of the event.

 

Additional Top Women’s Professional Athletes of Interest:

Amy Cragg, 33, of Portland, OR, will be making her United
Airlines NYC Half debut after placing ninth at the Rio 2016 Olympic
Marathon and serving as a Grand Marshal of the 2016 TCS New York City
Marathon. Cragg qualified for the 2016 Olympics by winning the U.S.
Olympic Marathon Trials last February. The two-time Olympic Trials
champion ran an 83-second half-marathon personal best of 1:08:27 in
February.

Desiree Linden, 33, of Rochester Hills, MI, is a two-time
Olympian who was the fastest American at both the 2014 TCS New York City
Marathon and 2015 Boston Marathon, finishing fifth and fourth in those
races, respectively. As a member of the 2016 U.S. Olympic
Marathon Team, she served as one of the Grand Marshals of the 2016 TCS
New York City Marathon.

Emily Sisson, 25, of Providence, RI, will be making her half
marathon debut after winning the USATF 10K Championship on the roads
last season, in addition to finishing as the runner-up at the 20K
Championships and 5K Championships.

Amanda McGrory (wheelchair division), 30, of Savoy, IL, won
her New York City Marathon debut in 2006 and finished third at last
year’s edition of the event. The seven-time Paralympic medalist won
three medals at the Rio 2016 Games and will be racing the United
Airlines NYC Half for the fourth time.

Top American Men ‰ÛÓ Professional Runners

Name

Personal Best Half-Marathon

Twitter Handle

Abdi Abdirahman

1:00:29

@Abdi_runs

Diego Estrada

1:00:51

@estradadiego

Meb Keflezighi

1:01:00

@runmeb

Shadrack Biwott

1:01:25

@skiptoob

Jared Ward

1:01:42

@jwardy21

Scott MacPherson

1:02:56

@ScottyMacRuns

Mike Morgan

1:02:56

@mikegmorgan

Johnny Crain

1:03:21

@Jacrain27

Noah Droddy

1:03:22

@IBuiltTheArk

Chris Derrick

1:03:41

@CDerrickRun

Luke Humphrey

1:03:57

@LucusHumphrey

Andy Weaver

1:04:27

@weavittome

Brendan Martin

1:04:38

@bmar89

Chris Bendtsen

1:04:43

@chrisbendtsen

 

Top American Women ‰ÛÓ Professional Runners

Name

Personal Best Half-Marathon

Twitter Handle

Molly Huddle

1:07:41

@MollyHuddle

Amy Cragg

1:08:27

@HastyHastings

Desiree Linden

1:10:34

@des_linden

Dot McMahan

1:11:50

 

Liz Costello

1:12:35

 

Danna Herrick

1:12:55

@dkherrick

Emily Sisson

Debut

@Em_Sisson

 

Top American Men ‰ÛÓ Professional Wheelchairs

Name

Personal Best Half-Marathon

Twitter Handle

Josh George

44:00

@jsgeorge

Krige Schabort

45:13

@KSchabort

Daniel Romanchuk

48:09

 

Brian Siemann

49:00

@bsiemann

 

Top American Women ‰ÛÓ Professional Wheelchairs

Name

Personal Best Half-Marathon

Twitter Handle

Amanda McGrory

50:47

@alittlechipped

Kartina Gerhard

51:28

 

Tatyana McFadden

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