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In a landmark decision shaped by both circumstance and principle, USA Track & Field (USATF) has confirmed that World Athletics has granted the United States an exceptional expansion of its women’s half marathon squad for the World Athletics Road Running Championships set for September in Copenhagen.
The ruling follows a controversial episode at the USATF Half Marathon Championships, where leading contenders Jessica McClain, Emma Grace Hurley, and Ednah Kurgat were mistakenly directed off course during the race—an error that significantly altered the competitive outcome. In response, USATF lodged a formal appeal, advocating for fair recognition of the affected athletes.
World Athletics’ decision to allow a one-time expansion reflects a rare but decisive intervention aimed at preserving competitive integrity on the global stage. The revised Team USA roster now features a blend of those impacted by the incident and the top performers from the national championships.
Joining McClain, Hurley, and Kurgat are Molly Born, Carrie Ellwood, and Annie Rodenfels, all of whom secured their places through their championship results. A seventh and final spot will be awarded based on world rankings as of May 5, completing a uniquely expanded lineup.
While the United States will field seven athletes in the women’s half marathon, only four will be eligible to contribute to the official team standings in Copenhagen, with the remaining three competing in non-scoring roles. Nonetheless, every athlete on the start line will have the opportunity to gain valuable World Athletics ranking points, adding further competitive significance to the race.
Beyond its immediate impact, this decision sends a powerful message about fairness and athlete protection in elite sport. It not only restores opportunity to those affected but also strengthens Team USA’s competitive depth heading into one of the year’s premier road running events.
As the championships approach, the United States will arrive in Copenhagen with more than just an expanded roster—it will carry a renewed sense of purpose, determined to turn an unfortunate setback into a defining moment on the world stage.
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The course starts and finishes just outside of Turner Field. The 13.1 mile course gives participants a taste of Atlanta, running past sites such as Centennial Olympic Park, Atlantic Station, Piedmont Park, Oakland Cemetery and of course the Olympic Rings. The Atlanta Halloween Half Marathon & 5K features 13.1 & 3.1 miles of costume fun! This event is more about...
more...What happened at the USA Track & Field Half Marathon Championships in Atlanta earlier this month was unprecedented—and the solution announced Wednesday is just as unusual.
After three leading athletes were directed off course by a lead vehicle, World Athletics has approved expanding the U.S. team for the World Road Running Championships in Copenhagen this September from four to seven athletes.
Jessica McClain, Emma Grace Hurley, and Ednah Kurgat—who had clearly separated themselves from the field before the error—will now be allowed to compete. They join race winner Molly Born, along with Carrie Ellwood and Annie Rodenfels, while a seventh athlete will be selected based on world rankings in May.
But the decision comes with significant limitations.
USATF confirmed that four athletes will be designated as “scoring” team members, while the remaining three will compete as “non-scoring” entrants. Those non-scoring athletes are expected to include McClain, Hurley, and Kurgat—the very runners who were in position to win before being led off course.
Under the rules, non-scoring athletes:
• will wear a distinct team kit
• will not factor into team scoring
• may not form a pack with scoring athletes during the race
USATF said it will fund prize money for the non-scoring athletes, but they will not be eligible to compete for official team results or podium honors.
“From the moment this happened, our focus was on doing right by the athletes,” said USATF CEO Max Siegel. “Jessica, Emma Grace, and Ednah had clearly separated themselves in the race and we are sorry they did not get to celebrate their accomplishment by breaking the tape. On behalf of everyone at USA Track & Field, I want to thank World Athletics. Their council and leadership are committed to a fair and athlete-centered solution that preserves the integrity of competition while recognizing the reality of what occurred in Atlanta.”
The events in Atlanta unfolded amid confusion on the course, including an incident involving an injured police officer. Veteran commentator Tim Hutchings noted that under those circumstances, it was understandable that the athletes followed the lead vehicle without realizing they had been taken off course.
The expanded team gives the three athletes a path to the world stage—but not the one they earned on race day.
Instead of lining up as full members of Team USA, they will compete under restrictions, separated from scoring teammates and removed from official results. It is a solution that acknowledges the mistake, but stops short of fully restoring what was lost.
The Atlanta race will not be remembered for who won—but for how three athletes at the front of a national championship were denied their moment, and how even an expanded team could not completely make it right.
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The closing moments of the Los Angeles Marathon 2026 delivered one of the most dramatic and controversial finishes the race has seen in recent years, leaving the global running community debating whether outside interference may have altered the outcome of the race.
With only a few hundred meters remaining, Kenya’s Michael Kimani Kamau appeared firmly in control of the race. After leading through the final stretch, victory seemed all but secured as he pushed toward the finishing straight in downtown Los Angeles.
Then, in a split second, the race took an unexpected turn.
A spectator waving a Kenyan flag suddenly ran onto the course and moved directly in front of Kamau near a split in the road. For several crucial seconds, the fan ran ahead of the leader, creating confusion about the correct racing line at a decisive point of the course.
In the momentary uncertainty, Kamau drifted toward the wrong lane and briefly followed the lead vehicle and police escort off the correct route. Realizing the mistake, he quickly corrected his direction and returned to the proper course—but the costly hesitation had already reshaped the race.
Behind him, American marathoner Nathan Martin had been steadily closing the gap. The unexpected disruption gave Martin the opportunity he needed, setting up a frantic sprint over the final meters.
What followed was a breathtaking dash to the finish line.
Martin surged alongside Kamau in the final steps and edged ahead in one of the closest finishes in the history of the race. The official timing showed Martin crossing the line just 0.01 seconds ahead, both athletes recording times around 2:11:16.
While the result stands, the finish has quickly become a major topic of discussion across the running world. Many observers are questioning whether the fan’s presence on the course played a decisive role in determining the outcome of the race.
The controversy is heightened by the timing of the incident. Just days earlier, another race-direction issue occurred at the U.S. Half Marathon Championships in New York City, where leading runners including Jess McClain, Ednah Kurgat, and Emma Hurley were misdirected off course after police officers left their assigned positions along the route.
Incidents like these highlight how vulnerable road races can be to unexpected disruptions, even in the final moments when every second—and every step—matters.
For elite athletes, these competitions represent far more than a race. They carry significant consequences tied to sponsorship agreements, world rankings, appearance fees, and prize money that can change careers and lives.
As discussions continue, one difficult question lingers over the dramatic finish in Los Angeles: when outside interference disrupts a race, should the results simply stand—or should the sport reconsider how such moments are judged?
At the 2026 Los Angeles Marathon, the margin between triumph and heartbreak was just one hundredth of a second, a reminder of how fragile victory can be when chaos enters the course at the worst possible moment.
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In one of the most unusual moments in recent U.S. road racing history, three athletes who were leading the women’s race at the US Half Marathon Championships in Atlanta were mistakenly directed off the course, costing them the chance to compete for the national title. Days later, organizers moved to address the situation by awarding the athletes prize money equivalent to the podium positions they were holding before the error occurred.
Jess McClain, Ednah Kurgat, and Emma Grace Hurley were running at the front of the race when confusion involving the lead vehicle and police escorts caused them to leave the official course. By the time they returned to the route, their hopes for a podium finish were gone.
The incident occurred near Mile 11 of the 13.1-mile race, with less than two miles remaining. At that point McClain had opened a comfortable lead, with Kurgat and Hurley running close behind. The three athletes followed the lead vehicle and a police motorcycle that appeared to be guiding the race but instead turned onto the wrong path.
After running several hundred meters off course and realizing the mistake, the athletes turned around and rejoined the race, but by then the chase pack had already passed them. McClain eventually finished ninth, Hurley 12th, and Kurgat 13th.
The race was officially won by Molly Born, who had been more than a minute behind the leaders before the incident. Carrie Ellwood finished second and Annie Rodenfels placed third.
Following the race, the Atlanta Track Club acknowledged responsibility for the error and announced that it would compensate the affected athletes financially. McClain will receive first-place prize money of $20,000, while Hurley and Kurgat will split the combined second- and third-place prize money totaling $19,500.
Importantly, the official race results remain unchanged, meaning Born, Ellwood, and Rodenfels still received their prize money and podium recognition. In effect, organizers paid the top prize money twice, adding nearly $40,000 in additional compensation to address the mistake.
“We are responsible for the integrity of these championships,” the Atlanta Track Club said in a statement. “We regret that Jess McClain, Emma Grace Hurley and Ednah Kurgat were impacted by this incident and were unable to be recognised as the top three finishers reflective of their performance on the course.”
Race officials explained that the confusion began when police assigned to help guide the race route were called away to respond to an emergency involving an “officer down.” Replacement officers were unfamiliar with the race route, which included a section crossing a footbridge not normally used by vehicles. The lead vehicle driver then followed a police motorcycle, believing the race had been rerouted.
The stakes were particularly high because the race also served as a qualifier for the World Road Running Championships scheduled for September in Copenhagen, Denmark. Typically, the top finishers at the national championships are strong candidates for selection to the U.S. team.
USA Track & Field acknowledged that the course was inadequately marked but denied an appeal to change the official results. However, USATF confirmed that team selection for Copenhagen remains open, meaning the performances of McClain, Hurley, and Kurgat may still be considered during the final selection process.
While the financial compensation helps address the situation, the incident serves as a reminder of how critical course direction and race management are at championship events where national titles, international team spots, and significant prize money are at stake.
For McClain, Hurley, and Kurgat, the additional prize money recognizes where they were in the race when the error occurred—but it cannot fully replace the lost opportunity to compete for a national championship finish after more than 11 miles of strong racing.
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The 2026 USATF Half Marathon Championships were meant to be a celebration of excellence — a showcase of grit, precision, and the relentless pursuit of greatness on one of America’s most competitive stages. Hosted once again as part of the Atlanta Marathon Weekend, the event drew some of the finest distance runners in the nation, each chasing glory over 13.1 unforgiving miles. The atmosphere was electric, the performances world-class, and the men’s race delivered the kind of dramatic finish worthy of a national championship.
Yet in the women’s race, what should have been a defining sporting spectacle turned into a moment of confusion and controversy.
As the leading pack surged past Mile 11, locked in a fierce battle for supremacy, the pace vehicle guiding the athletes veered off the official course. In the split second that followed, the front runners were forced into an impossible decision: trust the escort ahead of them or rely on their instinct and course markings under intense physical and mental strain. At championship pace, hesitation is costly. Doubt is disruptive. And clarity is everything.
Among those affected were Jess McClain, Emma Grace Hurley, and Ednah Kurgat — elite competitors who had committed months of disciplined preparation to that very moment. Instead of a pure test of endurance and strategy, they found themselves navigating uncertainty in the closing miles of a national championship.
In the aftermath, Atlanta Track Club CEO Rich Kenah issued a public statement acknowledging the error. He accepted full responsibility for the incident, emphasizing that no athlete should ever have to make a split-second judgment between following a lead vehicle and adhering to the designated course. His remarks underscored both the gravity of the situation and the organization’s commitment to accountability.
A comprehensive review is now underway to determine precisely how and why the pace vehicle departed from the course. Organizers have pledged to strengthen safeguards to prevent a recurrence and to ensure that championship environments remain worthy of the athletes who dedicate their lives to the sport. The club also affirmed its intention to make every effort to restore fairness to the competitors whose races were compromised.
For the broader athletics community, the incident serves as a sobering reminder that elite performance depends not only on athletes’ preparation, but also on flawless execution behind the scenes. Road racing at the highest level demands coordination, clarity, and absolute attention to detail. When any link in that chain falters, the consequences ripple outward.
Despite the controversy, the 2026 championships still reflected the extraordinary depth and determination present in American distance running. The athletes delivered courage and competitiveness in abundance. And while the women’s race may now be remembered as much for its disruption as for its talent, it also highlighted the integrity of a sport willing to confront its missteps openly.
In the end, championships are defined not only by medals awarded, but by the standards upheld. Atlanta’s organizers have acknowledged the error. The responsibility now lies in ensuring that future races honor the unwavering commitment of the athletes who step to the starting line expecting nothing less than fairness, clarity, and the chance to decide their fate purely on the road ahead.
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Weini Kelati, Courtney Frerichs, Keira D’Amato, Woody Kincaid, and Zach Panning to race for world’s largest 5K prize purse; Nearly 10,000 runners to follow in footsteps of pros by racing Abbott Dash to the Finish Line 5K.
Five Olympians, one Paralympian, and four athletes who competed at this year’s World Athletics Championships will race in the 2023 USA Track & Field (USATF) 5K Championships at the Abbott Dash to the Finish Line 5K on Saturday, November 4. The event will take place in Midtown Manhattan the day prior to the TCS New York City Marathon and will be broadcast live on USATF.TV. Abbott will return as the title partner of the event which features a $79,500 prize purse – the largest of any 5K race in the world.
In the women’s race, two-time NCAA champion Weini Kelati will return in search of her third consecutive title in the event. Each of the last two years she has smashed the event record, taking the tape in 15:18 in 2021 and 15:15 in 2022. She will be challenged for the top spot on the podium this year by three-time national champion Keira D’Amato, 2023 U.S. cross-country champion Ednah Kurgat, and U.S. Olympians Abbey Cooper, Courtney Frerichs, Colleen Quigley, and Rachel Smith.
“Doing the Abbott Dash 5K is becoming a little bit of a early season tradition for me,” Kelati said. “Although my fall season looked a little bit different this year because of the opportunity I had to represent Team USA at the World Road Running Championships in Latvia, I’m really happy I get to come back to New York to try for my third straight 5K national title.”
Woody Kincaid, the U.S. 10,000-meter champion and American record-holder in the indoor 5,000 meters, will lead the men’s field. Lining up against him will be Olympic champion Matthew Centrowitz, the top American finisher at the World Athletics Championships marathon this year Zach Panning, 2023 B.A.A. 5K champion Morgan Beadlescomb, and last year’s fourth through sixth-place finishers in New York, Ahmed Muhumed, Alec Basten, and Brian Barraza.
“I still see my career being mostly on the track for the next few years, but I like the idea of throwing in some more road races when it makes sense,” Kincaid said. “As I look towards the Paris Games, the Abbott Dash will be a nice jump-start to my 2024 training, and it will be cool to be in the middle of the big city marathon hoopla without having to go the full 26.2.”
Following in the footsteps of the professional athletes, nearly 10,000 runners will participate in the Abbott Dash to the Finish Line 5K, including top local athletes and many runners in the marathon on November 5.
Abbott, the title sponsor of the Abbott World Marathon Majors, is the sponsor of the Abbott Dash to the Finish Line 5K for the seventh time. Abbott, a global healthcare leader, helps people live more fully with life-changing technology and celebrate what’s possible with good health.
The Abbott Dash to the Finish Line 5K annually provides TCS New York City Marathon supporters, friends, and families the opportunity to join in on the thrill of marathon race week. The course begins on Manhattan’s east side by the United Nations, then takes runners along 42nd Street past historic Grand Central Terminal and up the world-famous Avenue of the Americas past Radio City Music Hall. It then passes through the rolling hills of Central Park before finishing at the iconic TCS New York City Marathon finish line.
The Abbott Dash to the Finish Line 5K and USATF 5K Championships will be broadcast live via USATF.TV. The broadcast is scheduled to begin at 8:20 a.m. ET with the first race starting at 8:30 a.m. ET.
About New York Road Runners (NYRR)
NYRR’s mission is to help and inspire people through running. Since 1958, New York Road Runners has grown from a local running club to the world’s premier community running organization. NYRR’s commitment to New York City’s five boroughs features races, virtual races, community events, free youth running initiatives and school programs, the NYRR RUNCENTER featuring the New Balance Run Hub, and training resources that provide hundreds of thousands of people each year with the motivation, know-how, and opportunity to Run for Life. NYRR’s premier event is the TCS New York City Marathon. Held annually on the first Sunday in November, the race features a wide population of runners, from the world’s top professional athletes to a vast range of competitive, recreational, and charity runners. To learn more, visit www.nyrr.org.
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Be a part of the world-famous TCS New York City Marathon excitement, run through the streets of Manhattan, and finish at the famed Marathon finish line in Central Park—without running 26.2 miles! On TCS New York City Marathon Saturday, our NYRR Dash to the Finish Line 5K (3.1 miles) will take place for all runners who want to join in...
more...The latest results from the 2023 Wharf to Wharf 6 Mile race, which took place on Sunday, 23 July, in the City of Capitola. This year was the 49th edition of the event, and the races were won by Ethiopia’s Tigist Ketema, who set a course record to win the women’s contest, and USA’s Diego Estrada, the winner of the men’s race.
Highlighting the 2023 Wharf to Wharf 6 Mile competition, which took place in California, was the record-breaking performance by Tigist Ketema, who clocked an impressive 29:51 to secure the victory. Her time was a new women’s course record, and she pocketed USD $4000 for her effort.
The previous Wharf to Wharf 6 Mile course record of 29:59 was set by Kenya’s Caroline Rotich in 2018.
Kenya’s Sarah Naibei ran a time of 30:13 to take second place behind Ketema to collect USD $3000, with third place going to Ethiopia’s Werkuha Getachew, who clocked 30:37 and earned USD $2000.
Meanwhile, USA’s defending champion Ednah Kurgat, who clocked 30:29 to win last year’s race, was only fourth this year in 30:38.
Diego Estrada Dominates Men’s Race
In the 2023 Wharf to Wharf 6 Mile men’s race, experienced runner Diego Estrada returned from his second-place finish to Emmanuel Bor last to clock 27:14 to run away with the title this year and earned USD $4000, plus an additional USD $1000 in bonus money.
Kenya’s Josphat Kipchirchir clocked in at 27:48 for second place, with his fellow countryman, Shadrack Keter, following home closely at 27:50 in third place. USA’s Colin Bennie (27:56) and Ben Blankenship (28:02) rounded out the top five men’s finishers.
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Each year, on the fourth Sunday in July, thousands of runners from across America and around the globe return to Santa Cruz, California for the annual six-mile race to Capitola-by-the-Sea. First run in 1973 by a handful of locals, the Wharf to Wharf Race today enjoys a gourmet reputation in running circles worldwide. Its scenic, seaside setting, perfect weather, and...
more...The lineup of elite talent will be deep and the storylines numerous when runners of all ages and skill levels line up for the start of the 51st Wharf to Wharf race Sunday morning.
The excitement and anticipation will be palpable. For some, the goal is to complete the annual six-mile race to Capitola. Others will be costumed, poised to update their social media apps with colorful photos, full of smiling faces.
There will also be a more competitive bunch of runners who look to reach the Capitola Wharf in personal-record time, or post a top-100 finish in their gender division to claim elite Wharf to Wharf apparel.
And there will be a select few looking to take first, well ahead of the sea of runners, which has been capped at 15,000.
Among them is defending women’s champion Ednah Kurgat of Colorado Springs, who looks to again secure the Mayor’s Cup and $4,000 prize awarded to the winners.
Repeating as champ won’t be easy. “The women’s field is arguably the strongest in the event’s history,” said Dane Gradone, the event’s elite athlete coordinator. “It’s completely (awesome).”
Kurgat’s solid ’23 season includes a win at the USATF Cross Country Championships in January and a sixth-place finish in the 10,000-meter race at the USATF Outdoor Championships earlier this month.
Everlyn Kemboi, the ’23 NCAA champion in the 10,000 and runner-up in the 5,000, should contend for supremacy. Also entered are Kenyan Mary Munanu, last year’s Wharf to Wharf runner-up, Ethiopian Werkuha Getachew, the runner-up at last year’s World Championships in the steeplechase, and fellow Ethiopians Tigist Ketema and Weynshet Ansa, both multiple-time national champions. Kenyan Sarah Naibei is a world-class runner on the roads, and a 52-minute 10 miler. Annamaria Kostarellis is a freshly minted NCAA All-American.
The local contingent is equally impressive. It includes former Santa Cruz High and Oregon State University standout Mari Friedman, the top female local finisher in ’22.
“I’m super excited,” Friedman said. “It’s one of my favorite races. It’s a holiday for me.”
Friedman’s goal? “To race happy and have fun,” she said, noting her best results come when she follows that plan.
Back in the field for the first time since 2014 is Nike runner Vanessa Fraser, a Scotts Valley High and Stanford University alumna. She’s coming off a 12th place finish in the 10,000 at the USATF Outdoor Championships.
Fraser, who lives in San Francisco, is in the process of transitioning to more road races. She returns to the one that got it all started for her.
“I’m excited to mix it up and see how I can finish and be competitive,” said Fraser, who has qualified for the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Trials on Feb. 3. “Top 10, that’s a good goal. Anything higher would be great.”
Ashlyn Boothby, an incoming senior who has broken most of Fraser’s records at Scotts Valley, will compete in the race for the first time. She’ has been at camp with the Falcons in Truckee, doing altitude training and bonding with teammates.
“This is super special to be in the same race as Vanessa Fraser,” Boothby said. “She’s my idol. I don’t know if I’ll be able to keep up with her.”
The men’s field is primed to produce another exhilarating finish.
Salinas’ Diego Estrada, an Alisal High alum and former Olympian in the 10,000, finished second in the ’22 Wharf to Wharf and expects himself to be in title contention again after upping his training. He finished in 27 minutes, 18 seconds last year, two seconds behind champion Emmanuel Bor.
“I’d like to break 27 (minutes),” said Estrada, who is running 90 miles a week. “If I lose and break 27, I’ll be really happy. And if I win and don’t break 27, I’ll be really happy. But there’s so much talent in our area, I don’t know what will happed til we get to the downhill.”
Estrada will be tracked closely by a fair share of challengers and hardened road running veterans.
Fellow Olympian Ben Blankenship, who currently lives and trains in Eugene, Oregon, is also in the field. So is established marathoner Colin Bennie of San Francisco, the top American at the Boston Marathon in 2021. He finished ninth in Capitola last year.
This year’s International contenders include a trio of experienced Kenyans, James Ngandu, Josphat Kipchirchir, and Shadrack Keter, who have all run nearly an hour in the half marathon and racked up numerous racing honors.
Aptos’ Jack Rose is back after finishing as the top local male finisher in ’22, but a handful of young collegians will be gunning to unseat him. Among them are former Scotts Valley star Jeremy Kain, who runs for Duke University; Julian Vargas, a St. Francis alum who runs for Xavier University; Aptos talent Trent Nosky, a recruited walk-on for Colorado State University’s cross country and track programs; and Patrick Goodrich, a former Scotts Valley standout who competes for Cal Poly-SLO’s club team.
Rose, winner of the Ventura Marathon in February in a PR time of 2:21:39, said the quality of his workouts have improved since he finished as top local last year. He excited to hear the bands stationed along the route and hear spectators shout support as he passes them.
Kain is hoping to unseat Rose as top local. He’s increased his miles from 40 a week to 65-70. “I do think I’m in pretty good shape right now,” he said.
Experience is key, and Kain is competing in the race for the first time. “I’m kinda ashamed of myself that it’s my first year,” he said. “It never worked in my training block, but, this year, getting out there and giving it my all is going to be exciting.”
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Each year, on the fourth Sunday in July, thousands of runners from across America and around the globe return to Santa Cruz, California for the annual six-mile race to Capitola-by-the-Sea. First run in 1973 by a handful of locals, the Wharf to Wharf Race today enjoys a gourmet reputation in running circles worldwide. Its scenic, seaside setting, perfect weather, and...
more...Had the World Athletics Cross Country Championships Bathurst 23 gone ahead in 2021 as originally planned, there’s a strong chance that Letesenbet Gidey would already be a world champion at the discipline.
The Ethiopian was in sensational form in 2020 and 2021, setting world records of 14:06.62 for 5000m and 29:01.03 for 10,000m. She had to settle for bronze at the Olympic Games at the longer event, but she prioritized global honors over records in 2022 and was rewarded with her first world title on the track, winning the 10,000m in Oregon in a nail-biting race.
The 24-year-old is now focused on winning her first individual senior world cross-country title. She won back-to-back U20 crowns in 2015 and 2017, joining an elite club of athletes to achieve the feat, alongside Faith Kipyegon and Genzebe Dibaba.
Gidey finished third in the senior women’s race in 2019 and earned gold in the team competition, but this time she heads to Bathurst as one of the big favorites.
If her performance at the Jan Meda Cross Country – Ethiopia’s trial event for the World Cross – is anything to go by, Gidey is certainly in form to challenge for gold in Bathurst. In that race back on 1 January, she bided her time until the last kilometer of the race and then soon opened up a gap of about 20 seconds on a strong domestic field.
It looked as though she was running within herself, too.
As much as individual glory will be Gidey’s biggest goal on Saturday, she will also want to earn gold in the team standings, and Ethiopia will once again be in with a great shout of doing exactly that.
Gete Alemayehu, who has a 1:06:37 half marathon PB, was second in the trial race, just ahead of 30:06.01 10,000m performer Tsigie Gebreselama, bronze medalist in the U20 race in Aarhus in 2019. Fellow Ethiopian Fotyen Tesfaye just missed out on a top-10 placing in Aarhus, so will be keen to improve on that in Bathurst.
But Gidey and her Ethiopian compatriots won’t have an easy ride, as they’ll be up against someone who is undefeated in international cross-country races for more than a year.
Eritrea’s Rahel Daniel has dominated the World Athletics Cross Country Tour and currently tops the season standings thanks to her three victories last month. She won at the prestigious Campaccio meeting in San Giorgio su Legnano, then two days later triumphed in Elgoibar, winning by eight seconds. More recently she won in Hannut, racing in heavy snow, showing she can cope well in any conditions.
Daniel enjoyed a successful 2022 campaign on the track, setting national records for 5000m (14:36.66) and 10,000m (30:12.15), the latter when placing fifth at the World Championships in Oregon.
But the 21-year-old is clearly more at home on cross country, and despite this being her World Cross debut, Daniel will have high hopes for a podium finish.
Beatrice Chebet is just as formidable an opponent, though. The Kenyan took 5000m silver at the World Championships last year and won the U20 women’s title at the 2019 World Cross in Aarhus. She is also the African, Commonwealth and Diamond League 5000m champion, and is a former world U20 champion on the track.
She has raced just twice in cross-country events since the end of the track season, but won both of her races. She won by 13 seconds in Atapuerca in November and by 15 seconds at the Cinque Mulini in January.
In the absence of Chebet at the Kenyan trials, teenager Grace Loibach Nawowuna was a surprising winner of the senior women’s race, beating Olympic semifinalist Edinah Jebitok by four seconds. The Kenyan team also includes two-time world cross-country champion Emily Chebet and Agnes Ngetich.
Burundi’s Francine Niyonsaba missed the peak of the 2022 track season through injury, but still managed to win three races on the Wanda Diamond League circuit, and then triumphed at the Venta de Banos Cross Country in December. In her latest appearance, though, she was a distant fifth in Elgoibar, some 47 seconds behind Daniel.
Stella Chesang, the 2018 Commonwealth 10,000m champion, was a dominant winner of the recent Ugandan Cross Country Championships and is keen to improve on her 21st-place finish from the 2019 World Cross. She is joined on the Ugandan team by world U20 5000m bronze medallist Prisca Chesang.
Olympic finalist Nozomi Tanaka, who holds national records for 1000m, 1500m and 3000m, leads the Japanese team. The 2018 world U20 3000m champion placed 39th at the last World Cross when she was still just 19 years of age, so she’ll be hoping for a higher position this time. Ririka Hironaka, who earned U20 team bronze in 2019, will also be flying the Japanese flag in Bathurst.
Ednah Kurgat and Weini Kelati feature on the US team, while Australia’s Rose Davies and Leanne Pompeani will aim to give the home crowd something to cheer for. Other contenders include Canada’s Regan Yee, Mexico’s Laura Galvan, and Britain’s Abbie Donnelly.
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Athletes from across the globe will descend on Australia for the World Athletics Cross Country Championships Bathurst 2021. Mount Panorama is better known as the home of Australia’s premier endurance motor race, but in one year from now, it will welcome the world’s best endurance runners for what will be Australia’s first World Athletics Series event in...
more...Abbabiya Simbassa ran an incredible final mile on the men’s side, while Stephanie Bruce used a furious kick to the finish in the women’s race, both claiming victory Saturday morning in Northport, New York at the USATF 10 km Road Championships presented by Toyota.
The USATF 10 km Road Championships was the ninth stop on the 2022 USATF Running Circuit presented by Toyota.
As the starting cannon sounded, the men’s field immediately strung out along the streets of Northport, with Jacob Thomson pushing the pace and taking over the early lead. The honest early pace kept the front pack small, with Thomson being joined by Sam Chelanga, Simbassa, and Korir, with a few second gap back to the rest of the field. With the halfway point in sight, Thomson opened a small lead over the rest of the lead quartet, passing through the 5 km mark in 14:21 and earning a half-way bonus.
Chelanga and Simbassa passed through two seconds back in 14:23, with Korir coming through 5 km in 14:27. Thomson would fall off pace shortly after halfway, with Simbassa and Chelanga taking over the pacing duties and pushing the pace over the next mile.
Korir sat just behind in third. With less than two miles to go, Simbassa pushed the pace and opened an immediate gap on Korir and Chelanga. Simbassa continued to push over the next mile, opening a nearly 20-second lead heading into the final mile of the race.
Over the final mile, Simbassa maintained both pace and form, extending his lead ever so slightly, on his way to claiming his third USATF Running Circuit title, crossing the finish line in 28:12, a new course record. Behind Simbassa, Korir and Chelanga waged an epic kick to the finish, with Korir pulling ahead by a step in the final meters to claim second overall in 28:34, while Chelanga placed third in 28:35.
Dillon Maggard, Futsum Zienasellassie, and Tai Dinger ran much of the race together Saturday, but in the end, it was Maggard pulling away in the final mile to claim fourth in 28:45. Zienasellassie earned another top-five finish on the USATF Running Circuit season with his fifth-place effort in 28:55, while Dinger finished a second behind in sixth in 28:56. Geoffrey Kipchumba claimed seventh overall in 29:00. Thomson slid back to eighth overall in 29:19. Ryan Kutch and Brian Barraza rounded out the top ten in 29:28 and 29:34.
With Korir’s runner-up finish, his second of the USATF Running Circuit season, he elevated himself to an even more dominant first-place standing, with a 104 point total. Zienasellassie’s fifth-place effort added another six points to his standings total, giving him 56.5, sitting in second place overall. Chelanga’s third-place finish moved up into third place overall in the standings with 42 points.
Early in the women’s race, a pack of four women pulled away from the field, establishing a pace that no one else could manage. Bruce, Annie Frisbie, Nell Rojas, and Ednah Kurgat formed a tight pack and worked with one another along the streets of Northport.
The quartet came through the halfway point mark in 16:05, all four looking strong and able to handle the fast pace. Little changed among the top four until the final mile and a half, when Kurgat started to dip off the back of the pace, while the other three charged ahead, seemingly only a matter of time before someone made a move to try and break open the race.
Over the final mile, Bruce charged to the lead, ramping up the pace, a move that would prove decisive. Bruce pulled away from Rojas, Frisbie, and Kurgat, and never looked back, raising her arms as she crossed the line while earning her second USATF 10 km Road title and her third USATF Running Circuit victory of her career.
Bruce finished first in 31:52, while also breaking the course record. Rojas was able to break free of Frisbie and Kurgat in the final 800m to place second in 31:56, while Frisbie finished two seconds back in 31:58 and Kurgat seven seconds back in 32:03, as the two placed third and fourth, respectively.
With her runner-up effort, Rojas added 12 more points to her USATF Running Circuit standings total, giving her 33 points overall. That addition moves Rojas up into sole position of third overall, a half point ahead of Aliphine Tuliamuk, but still well behind USATF Running Circuit standings leaders Emily Sisson and Keira D’Amato, who are tied for first with 55.5 points.
After the top four women, there was a race for fifth happening over the back half of Saturday’s contest. In the end it was Emma Hurley pulling away from the field in the final mile, racing to a fifth-place finish in 32:49. Hurley finished just ahead of Amy Davis and Molly Grabill, who ran to sixth and seventh place finishes in 32:52 and 32:54. Erika Kemp, who owned the previous course record, placed eighth overall in 32:59. Carrie Verdon took home ninth place in 33:05 and Anne-Marie Blaney earned tenth in 33:21.
Next up on the USATF Running Circuit is the USATF 10 Mile Championships presented by Toyota, which take place on Sunday, October 2 in Minneapolis, hosted by the Medtronic TC 10 Mile.
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EUGENE, Ore. — The spirit of Molly Huddle lives on. Last week, Huddle announced her withdrawal from the 2020 US Olympic Trials, her 36-year-old body no longer able to generate the speed or smoothness that had carried her to five straight US 10,000-meter titles and an American record. But on a sunny Saturday morning at Hayward Field (82 degrees in Eugene at start), Emily Sisson delivered a run her erstwhile training partner would have been proud of, methodically squeezing the life out of the women’s 10,000-meter field to win in a meet-record of 31:03.82 despite 86-degree temperatures.
Actually, we know Huddle was proud of the effort
A Huddle comparison is selling Sisson short, however. This was dominance at a level we are unaccustomed to seeing at an Olympic Trials, particularly in an event in which 13 women in the field entered with the 31:30 Olympic standard. Only seven Americans (including Sisson) have ever run faster than her 31:03.82 today, achieved in the morning sun and without the aid of pacemakers. Her 12.70-second margin of victory left her almost a full straightaway clear of runner-up Karissa Schweizer.
Sisson had sealed the victory by building a 30-meter lead with three laps to go and would only pick it up from there, going 71.47-71.25-69.26 to close out a 15:14.67 final 5k and 4:44.45 final 1600. Schweizer took second in 31:16.52 to make the Olympic team at a second distance (she also made it in the 5k on Monday), while Alicia Monson gave On Athletics Club another Olympian by taking third in 31:18.55.
The top five women in this race will all be running in Tokyo — the top three in the 10k and fourth- and fifth-placers Elise Cranny and Rachel Schneider in the 5k.
Sisson lapped everyone in the field save for the top seven. The last person she lapped — in the final 100 meters — was none other than 2016 Olympian and 2015 world championship bronze medallist Emily Infeld, who stuck with the lead pack for 6k.
The Race
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OsYzi04MOQ4&feature=emb_title
The race had been shifted to a 10 a.m. start to avoid the hot weather (forecast to reach 100 degrees when this race would have originally been run at 6:44 p.m.), though the conditions were still hot and sunny when the gun was fired. Sisson took the lead just before two kilometers, dropping the pace from 78’s and 78’s to consistent 75’s, whittling the pack to 10 by 5k (15:49.15). Sisson would continue tightening the noose all the way home. She dropped the pace to 74’s just after halfway, which was enough to drop former New Mexico teammates and new US citizens Weini Kelati and Ednah Kurgat, as well as 2016 Olympian Infeld by four miles.
By 6800, Schneider, Hall, and 2012 Trials runner-up Natosha Rogers had been dropped as well, leaving a four-woman battle for three spots between Sisson, Cranny, Schweizer and Monson. After running consistent 74’s, Sisson let a 75 slip in for her 18th lap. From there, however, Sisson’s pacing was masterful: each of her final seven laps was faster than the one that preceded it. A 72.58 fifth-to-last lap gave her a 10-meter gap with a mile to go, and with 41 starters, it became hard to keep up with who was where as Sisson had been lapping multiple runners per lap. She would press on to win in dominant fashion, while Schweizer, who trailed Monson by 3.5 seconds at the bell, would use a big last lap (68.81, fastest in the field) to take second, with Monson safe in third, over 16 seconds up on Schweizer.
For the record, Schweizer said she plans on running both the 5k and 10k in Tokyo.
Quick Take: Total masterclass
Sisson has had some great performances in her career (she’s made two Worlds teams at 10k, won two USA road titles, and won two NCAA titles), but she had never had one like this.
Not only did she make her first Olympic team and win her first USATF track title, she put on a wonderful performance. She took the lead after the mile and never gave it up. She started clipping off 75-second laps (5:00/mile) through halfway. That whittled the lead pack down to 10. Then she upped the ante again, lowering the pace to roughly 74s through 8k. That made it a four-woman race for the three Olympic spots. Then she started running 72s or better and it was game over.
Quick Take: Redemption for Sisson, who used the extra year to her advantage
When we spoke to Sisson a month ago, she admitted that had the Trials been held as scheduled in 2020, she likely would not have been in contention to make the team. Her body felt broken after dropping out of the Olympic Marathon Trials on a brutal Atlanta course, and after a stellar 2:23 debut in London in 2019, she struggled to make sense of the result.
“Usually I’m good at moving on from bad races, but I struggled with that one,” Sisson.
It didn’t help that, after COVID postponed the Trials, there was nothing to move on to.
But eventually, Sisson was able to get back on track (she praised her husband, her former Providence College teammate Shane Quinn, for his support) and work back to incredible fitness. In December, she ran 67:26 to miss Huddle’s American record in the half marathon by one second, and she looked strong in her three track 5k’s this spring, running 14:55, 14:53, and 14:59. She had never broken 15 minutes prior to this year. Her plan today was to play to her strength and make it a fast race, as she knew she was in the best shape of her life.
“There were some workouts where I had to ask [my coach Ray Treacy] to repeat my splits, like what did I just run?” Sisson said.
QT: Alicia Monson pushed her body to the brink (and to the hospital) to make her first Olympic team
The newly-formed On Athletics Club (editor’s note: On Sponsored the Road to the Trials on LetsRun.com) got its second 10k Olympian at the Trials as Alicia Monson finished 3rd to make the team, joining teammate Joe Klecker who was 3rd in the men’s 10k on the first night of the Trials.
Coach Dathan Ritzenhein had been very bullish on Monson heading into the Trials, but how would she perform on the biggest stage and in the heat? Superbly well. While Monson was overtaken by Karissa Schweizer on the final lap, she was the last athlete to get broken by Sisson.
However, the effort really took its toll.
After the race, Monson did not look well. She eventually was resting in the shade in the bowels of the stadium, and was brought back out for an interview by NBC’s Lewis Johnson, where Schweizer helped support her. Monson said in the interview, “I have never gone to that point in a race before and I’ve always kind of wanted to. I think today was a good time to do that.”
Monson was able to go to the victory stand and do the award ceremony for the top 3, but the heat was still taking its toll.
Later as first reported by Sarah Lorge Butler, it was revealed that Monson collapsed after the medal ceremony and started vomiting and was taken to the hospital.
Ritzenhein told LetsRun he believes Monson will be okay, adding “she is just the toughest person I’ve ever met.” For anyone who remembers Ritzenhein’s all-out racing style, that is high praise indeed. Ritz even said she’d be available for an interview after she left the hospital. That definitely is a LetsRun.com first.
Quick Take: Sisson & Monson’s all-in bets pay off
When USATF switched the schedule to put the women’s 10k after the women’s 5k, athletes who qualified in both had a choice to make. If you thought your best shot to make the team was in the 10k, would you double — and perhaps wear yourself out with a heat and final in the 5k — or give yourself only one shot to make the team and focus on the 10k?
Both Sisson and Monson (and their coaches) felt their best shot was in the 10k and both decided to skip the 5k entirely. That paid off when both made the team today.
But both Schweizer and Cranny decided to attempt the double, and that decision worked out nicely for them as well, as Schweizer made the team in both events and Cranny was the US champ in the 5k. All four women are first-time Olympians.
Quick Take: Sara Hall’s Olympic dream is denied yet again, but she achieved her career-best Olympic Trials finish in 6th
Some great US runners over the years have failed to make an Olympic team. Chris Solinsky, the #2 US man ever at 5,000 and 10,000, never made an Olympic team, and Sara Hall, the 2nd-fastest US women’s marathoner ever at 2:20:32, may also end up with that label. Hall, 38, finished 6th in today’s race in 31:54.50, which was a career-best finish for her at the Olympic Trials.
Sara Hall at the Olympic Trials
2004 – 11th in 5000
2008 – 9th in 1500
2012 – 8th in steeple
2016 – DNF in marathon, 14th in 5000
2020 – DNF in marathon, 6th in 10,000
“I made all the right moves I needed to, I just didn’t have it. You know, those girls are really strong,” said Hall after the race. “Sisson, I’m really happy for her… I’m so happy she made the team, she’s so deserving… I respect all those women so much… I thought I had a shot at this team but at the same time that’s my highest Olympic Trials finish… I’m thankful I was able to do that today.”
Hall said she was rooting for her fellow marathoner Sisson — the US’s 8th fastest marathoner in history at 2:23:08 — to make the team.
“Emily’s run was so impressive, I didn’t doubt that she could do this… living in Phoenix, I’m pretty sure we’re all gonna wish we were living in Phoenix like she is… I was rooting for her so much because of the disappointment in Atlanta that was similar to mine,” said Hall, who said she’ll be announcing a fall marathon soon.
Saying Hall won’t make the team in 2024 may not be wise. The date for the 2024 marathon trials isn’t set yet, but they might be less than 2.5 years away and Hall is running better than ever. Bernard Lagat made an Olympic team at 41 in 2016. Hall will be 40 when the 2024 Olympic Marathon Trials take place. Of course, the difference is Lagat had been on many teams before.
Regardless of whether she makes a team, Hall’s late-career transformation has been incredible. At the 2016 Trials, Hall had pbs of 32:44 for 10k and 2:30:06 for the marathon. Now her pbs are 31:21 and 2:20:32.
Quick Take: Sisson handled the heat like a pro
At the last Trials, Sisson said she was “pretty out of shape and I actually overheated.” She handled the heat with ease today. That may be because she lives in Phoenix, Arizona (although she hasn’t been there since March, spending her buildup in Flagstaff and then Providence).
She wore sunglasses during the race but they weren’t hers. She often runs with glasses in Phoenix but didn’t have any today, so she just borrowed her husband’s pair before the race.
Quick Take: Emily Durgin has a strong run in 9th
The top 8 spots were all filled by people with the Olympic standard of 31:25. The first person without the standard was 9th placer Emily Durgin of Under Armour. No one in today’s race ran a PB, but Durgin came the closest. When her collegiate career at UConn came to an end in 2017, she had pbs of 16:00.93/33:49. Now she’s improved them to 15:24/32:22 and she ran 32:25 for 9th.
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