Ryan Hall To Run 2011 Boston Marathon
By David Monti
December 1, 2010
(c) 2010 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved
(01-Dec) -- The fastest American ever at the Boston Marathon, Ryan Hall,
has decided to restart his marathon career at that historic race next
April, organizers announced today. His appearance will mark the third
consecutive year that Hall, 28, will run America's oldest marathon, one
of the five commercial races of the World Marathon Majors.
"I am excited to be part of the John Hancock elite team for the third
year in a row," Hall said in a prepared statement referring to John
Hancock Financial, the Boston-based insurance giant which provides the
funding for the race's elite fields. "I can't wait to be back in
Hopkinton in April ready to test myself over the most historic marathon
course in America. I love the Boston Marathon and hope that both my
experience training on and racing in the Boston Marathon will lead to
something very special in the 2011 race."
Boston will be the first marathon Hall will contest without the coaching
of Terrence Mahon of the Mammoth Track Club. Hall left Mahon's group
to coach himself after withdrawing from the Bank of America Chicago
Marathon last October citing fatigue and over-training. Under Mahon's
coaching, Hall broke the American record for the half-marathon in 2007
(59:43), set a USA marathon debut record of 2:08:24 in London in 2007,
won the USA Olympic Trials marathon later that year in a championships
record of 2:09:02, then became the first-ever American-born athlete to
break the 2:07 barrier, clocking a 2:06:17 personal best at London in
2008. Hall, who also finished 10th at the Olympic Games marathon in
Beijing, and remains the second-fastest American ever behind former
world record holder Khalid Khannouchi.
At Boston, Hall has enjoyed qualified successes. In his first attempt
on the hilly course from Hopkinton to Boston's Back Bay in 2009, the
Stanford graduate did much of the leading in the first half of the race,
fell all the way back to 9th place in the race's middle stages, but
battled back in the hills of Newton to finish third in 2:09:40. In
2010, Hall was again up front early, fell back, but rallied to finish
fourth in 2:08:41, the best time ever run by an American in Boston. He
was, however, well behind the winners Deriba Merga of Ethiopia (2009)
and Robert Kiprono Cheruiyot (2001) both years.
An American man has not won the Boston Marathon since 1983 when Greg
Meyer prevailed in 2:09:01. But the resurgence in USA marathon running
in the last ten years has at least put Americans in contention again.
American men have cracked the top-5 in three of the last five editions
of the race (two in 2010, one in 2009 and three in 2006). Hall has done
it twice, and clearly finds Boston's traditions alluring.
"Regardless of the day's results, all of us who take on the unique
journey of covering the 26.2 trying miles to Boylston Street can all say
we partook in history," Hall concluded. "I am training with eager
anticipation for the opportunity that the Boston Marathon offers,
believing that all things are possible. What better place to break
through than in Boston?"
Discuss: Ryan Hall Running Boston
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