skinnystiks wrote:
Deja vu for Huddle. Remember 2012 XC Champs?
This! Both in marathon training mode, no telling exactly where they are in their training. It was a one second loss, we're splitting hairs here. Huddle will be fine.
skinnystiks wrote:
Deja vu for Huddle. Remember 2012 XC Champs?
This! Both in marathon training mode, no telling exactly where they are in their training. It was a one second loss, we're splitting hairs here. Huddle will be fine.
SDSU Aztec wrote:
Not really a very fast time is it? Paula's marathon pace comes to 51:30. Maybe Huddle was just running it for a workout.
This is a tough course with a very nasty hill (2miles long). Not a London pancake flat course
pronunciation guide wrote:
wejo wrote:
Men's Top Ten Results
1. Shadrack Kipchirchir 46:32
2. Leonard Korir 46:35
3. Stanley Kebenei 46:39
4. Kirubel Erassa 47:23
5. Josef Tessema 47:25
6. Abbabiya Simbassa 47:26
7. Abinet Adraro 47:27
8. Futsum Zienasellassie 47:28
9. Jerrell Mock 47:29
10. Andrew Colley 47:36
US National Championship; be honest, how many of you can correctly pronounce more than four of the top-10 men?
I think I can do six
Hagridore wrote:
pronunciation guide wrote:
US National Championship; be honest, how many of you can correctly pronounce more than four of the top-10 men?
I think I can do six
Verbally (aka out loud) or in your head?
:)
It's The Course wrote:
SDSU Aztec wrote:
Not really a very fast time is it? Paula's marathon pace comes to 51:30. Maybe Huddle was just running it for a workout.
This is a tough course with a very nasty hill (2miles long). Not a London pancake flat course
Still, Hall is nowhere near Huddle's level. Huddle's 5000 PR is 14:42, and I think she could faster, compared to Hall's 15:20. And if Hall had been in the race when Huddle ran 30:13, she probably would have been lapped by Huddle.
Sisson running Reebok 10k in Boston today and Connely DNF
tritimes wrote:
Runnerchx44 wrote:
I was impressed with Emma’s result, too. She has been on an uphill trajectory as well. I hope it continues.
U.S. women are proving to be more of an international force than U.S. men
An "international force" at the US championships?!
It's The Course wrote:
This is a tough course with a very nasty hill (2miles long). Not a London pancake flat course
Where was this hill, during the first half? Admittedly, I ran the marathon, not the 10-mile, but the last 5+ miles are identical. I found miles 20-24 much easier than I had heard they were going to be.
SDSU Aztec wrote:
It's The Course wrote:
This is a tough course with a very nasty hill (2miles long). Not a London pancake flat course
Still, Hall is nowhere near Huddle's level. Huddle's 5000 PR is 14:42, and I think she could faster, compared to Hall's 15:20. And if Hall had been in the race when Huddle ran 30:13, she probably would have been lapped by Huddle.
They are not equal in the marathon distance , Sarah has run faster than Molly for different times in the marathon.
It's as silly as it is ineffectual to try to censor people based on your own views. Taking stuff like that as seriously as you do is just asking for unnecessary stress. Do you really think people are going to stop saying "God damn!" as an expression of surprise and delight because you ask them not to? Do you think that the word "God" is the exclusive property of Christians, or that Scorpion_runner was asking someone's god to damn something? Approximately one-third of all exclamations like that are religion-based: "Jesus!" "Hell!" "Heavens to Betsy!" And, to quote James Comey recently, "Lordy!" (The other two-thirds are scatological and sexual.) Would you prefer a euphemism for "God damn," like "gosh darn," "goddam," "gol dang," "dad gum," "dad burn," "gadzooks," or "golly"? A little less hypersensitivity, for Chrissakes!
Sara Hall has been on an absolute tear in the past year. It seems like she is overachieving in every race she enters... at age 35! I would love to read an in-depth story on her success. Maybe Ryan’s retirement has allowed the Hall family to focus entirely on Sara? She is definitely no longer just Ryan’s wife around these parts. She is well on her way to being a favorite to make the 2020 Olympic marathon team and even place well at the games. A great story, and congrats to Sara Hall!
round and round wrote:
tritimes wrote:
U.S. women are proving to be more of an international force than U.S. men
An "international force" at the US championships?!
lol
pronunciation guide wrote:
wejo wrote:
Men's Top Ten Results
1. Shadrack Kipchirchir 46:32
2. Leonard Korir 46:35
3. Stanley Kebenei 46:39
4. Kirubel Erassa 47:23
5. Josef Tessema 47:25
6. Abbabiya Simbassa 47:26
7. Abinet Adraro 47:27
8. Futsum Zienasellassie 47:28
9. Jerrell Mock 47:29
10. Andrew Colley 47:36
US National Championship; be honest, how many of you can correctly pronounce more than four of the top-10 men?
Honestly, I'm not even sure I could do four; I'd be guessing at Kipchirchir's.
goodone wrote:
pronunciation guide wrote:
US National Championship; be honest, how many of you can correctly pronounce more than four of the top-10 men?
Honestly, I'm not even sure I could do four; I'd be guessing at Kipchirchir's.
That’s a bigger condemnation of our education system than our immigration policies.
Conley finish at the hospital.
Finished *
No so slow wrote:
SDSU Aztec wrote:
Still, Hall is nowhere near Huddle's level. Huddle's 5000 PR is 14:42, and I think she could faster, compared to Hall's 15:20. And if Hall had been in the race when Huddle ran 30:13, she probably would have been lapped by Huddle.
They are not equal in the marathon distance , Sarah has run faster than Molly for different times in the marathon.
I don't know what happened in those races, but Molly's 10K time projects to sub 2:20 compared to Halls PR of 2:26. I doubt if there is some odd quirk in Huddle' s physiology that makes Hall better at the marathon.
In any scenario, Huddle should blow Hall's doors off in a 10-mile
Peanut butter wrote:
Conley finish at the hospital.
what happened to her?
SDSU Aztec wrote:
No so slow wrote:
They are not equal in the marathon distance , Sarah has run faster than Molly for different times in the marathon.
I don't know what happened in those races, but Molly's 10K time projects to sub 2:20 compared to Halls PR of 2:26. I doubt if there is some odd quirk in Huddle' s physiology that makes Hall better at the marathon.
In any scenario, Huddle should blow Hall's doors off in a 10-mile
Do we know where these ladies were in their respective training cycles?
They came within a second, off season. Great race/great finish. Not sure we should be extracting much unless this was a championship race no?
turning trees wrote:
Peanut butter wrote:
Conley finish at the hospital.
what happened to her?
Twisted her ankle I believe.