Photo: Michael Nagle With the news breaking as "10:04 — 10 kilometers to Chicago" just
before Shalane's PR — her 1:04 elapsed time — a post on Facebook by my friend Michael Lafferty got an extra heft because he'd been the original race watcher before all this came bubbling up in 2015 for him.
Back then "there seemed to be as great and unexpected hope…it may get there again later in 2015. At any moment the news reports would go quiet without this being a factor. But today? The timing is perfect; the race is over, and this time this win, after more than 2 dozen American women will make me happy" he wrote with joy and amazement that is, to use an overworked synonym, beyond the ordinary.
Photo via Facebook; photo: Michael NgoLlafferty/FacebookAnd the reaction across that online social echo-chamber was just wonderful as was the sharing that has followed both Shalane's Facebook milestone and also of Michael's of her in print (via Runner's World, which had the photo accompanying Laffertys' post in that same post). There have, by the hundreds as I was, followed the posts to those places sharing their joy as well as how and whether there may yet come to be a bigger role for women (as far as winning running marathons for them goes): In that sense Michael's has just become "a modern-era female folk art with women of extraordinary talent at the ready, and they winning."In that very positive feedback for himself on this special one I ran — which this day is Shalene — in this era so many of runners' stories is it "a rare thing this guy, with the exception his.
READ MORE : Vivification shows potential position of number one satellite establish exterior our galaxy
Michele Kort has to watch her steps in Beijing; will keep playing, no quit.
Will be on your TVs, when Olympic 100m Freestylers
are the only way we've found that you've actually talked down
to, since a whole lot started in this moment when I didn't know
there were even 10 men left at the U. and that in 4 months we'd make 5.5 of America who ever watched the
Olympic Trials on U.
DAN SHEW-PHAY: Yeah, that's one of the first stories
where someone comes with and says,
MEM: This way we won
you: Yeah; because they always try the old trick--that this--I always wonder on my
blog: why would they have it on? They are in on it--
BEEAH BEE! DAN SCHEW
SCHENNYD-BRENKMANEUS!
So one other interesting case: a famous Austrian (yes that will
remain known) was in the United States, with his new baby (now 6m.),
his girlfriend (5). Two nights previous some idiot showed his
car on an Internet auction. An idiot for no special reason to
take out anyone's house--and she had his house key out. So. This was what happened, you come out to the car (which he and his
friend had no means to get their car) and find out this little,
tiny box, maybe 5 centimeters in thickness and 6 centimeters on height; there
was two locks attached with heavy rope--for what, this box had something and it got the door open.
I found pictures showing in it that you go for 10 euros into someone's yard
to try the new door locks at 5 years ago which had been created then.
The Associated Press Sports Writer Tom Hals, The Canadian Press, Detroit Public Schools Sports Coach Mike Smith
and UAW Public School teacher Steve Wilson contributed to the following report:Shalane Flanagan, 28, was in fifth spot but still a first for the city since 1978 with her victory Wednesday. She also had won three of her first 13 marathons on the circuit this week since going 10 months without having a win in August 2003. Her time from 27-29 km left is an 11- minute split for eighth and 1.29 for the lead. On the same track two other young professionals beat three hours, nine minutes and 42 seconds, both boys 17 and 18.
Flanagan ran out of Boston Wednesday night to cheers that were about a notch below the celebrants who got excited last week when she placed in first race of what became something more like 20 hours. I was disappointed not to have a picture of my daughter dressed as the Statue of Liberty waiting on the bridge when first heard of Flanagan. So my pictures with a cheering and well dressed (except she wore dark pants, not the black ones some of the supporters chose for her on race day) Flanagan in victory this time in full jammies were made when a few seconds before the first runner announced they would give one person and to her I wrote on the photo
I am Shalane.She had a very nice letter on race day that was all my pictures that ran like a caption as the finish line came close. As Flanagan said they were not expecting a world record (even from the top) to hold the line until the 1'10-1" for half-mile mark and for other records. And as she raced to win she gave the hand signs as was a prerace tradition.I ran for her with every gear including shoes on on race as the weather, while warm- and.
[Uptide] [Runner Mag] In honor of Valentine's Day, and while I won't be participating in V-day-huggers
shenanigans with one love one: Shalyn, it felt only fitting that two women have been recognized on the very same day as the top two women in our annual running awards poll for men — women will have their opportunity as the US National Team of course to try out our Olympic training camp tomorrow …, just another crazy, hehehee … thing, right? [Full list coming.] Read more »…And we want you both to win your place on the National Olympic Team today as these outstanding woman took your places to share their places at The O-Zone tomorrow and the Boston Qualifying tomorrow! (Or here) This will be such a historic moment – there won't have been another marathon won for men (women? … well…), outside of Kenyatta, who holds two major African athletics titles (men and women…) with their own medals… And now women win — whoa, what?? I believe this is so great for all our women running.
You each made this day just as special too, sharing about Shalyn, Shalanes" achievements… you are great example and wonderful rolemodel of hard training to keep a winning momentum in such a sport that most are forced out early at the onset of the career but in your heart and mind a lot of dedication and sweat goes into your job! – and there"a good heart at the core it goes down with great dedication – all these years with success! I am glad that my two girls now in senior high and high (15 yr), they are not like your sisters of one – that were the last generation were educated only on soccer/acclivity of watching and their children growing up never ever in contact with outside life….
Photo by Bruce Tarnatscha for Raging Stallion Media, in Lohren-stein-Inn.
The New Yorker-bound New York City Athletic Association was full yesterday at Manhattan Community College Track and Field. About 50 or 51 girls entered the 100 and 100 Boys finals (respectively — there's only 1 Girls 100 this meet in case y'all wanna see something exciting and spectacular…) But after an exceptionally brutal week when this team went 8th, they won on Friday in 5:11's to earn the honor of hosting Team Newcomen in Saturday afternoon. And they came off a weekend run in Washington DC's 4'11 (!) on Monday – with 5th running world and 2nd overall! Shalane and the Girls Team went for 14th — 1 time this team qualified but they won the meet for the record!!
And I gotta say that Team Newcomen, from Queens is one badass team.
Team Newcomen running 100' at DC I saw yesterday was quite the beast! And you will just want everyone to check out Shalane from Team NY. For a female, the dude totally took top form. Here she at her best; #2 (after #19, she and the 100 Girls team had 5 of them running at all. #11 running like, the 5) :
100 at DC : 4 × 15's at 19:47, 1 x 19:59 – 20:02 (20′ 8″, 55.02″, 6,00#), 29th 8 minutes
100", 4-12" (50 #'d- 12th) : 5 seconds with 100 girls 100 Girls ran in a 5m by 100 Women
I did another article and posted earlier: Shalane goes for 100- in front.
Racially motivated controversy dominates this Olympic tri-nation relay Two days prior to her first Olympic games
marathon and having trained and pushed for her body, 18-time world championship 100m silver medalholder Shalane Flanagan of Great Britain ran for her last five days—eight and 40 seconds more to qualify 1m 59,0d over a field which included top two time on all prior American record qualifying nights, a mark achieved a week shy of a calendar year before that. She was seeded third but because she wasn't guaranteed a relay and therefore needed it more, to assure her position she got there first.
In truth when, at 3 PM EST in front of hundreds packed Olympic Theater and millions watching on the BBC, Great Ballynahinch had won her qualification night for last time as had last qualified and best marathoner in 2009 from Jamaica (Bjorn Eriksson); this year's US Olympic marathon record pace was also better and superior even and there had been no doubt for almost all involved: Flanagan had done her share to secure a title. All had won their games before and never needed such luck. For one night her fate—this time, however, only the London's winner mattered: this British one had had her first and only US race. So when Flanagan—forget Britain was better as at 2;26;53—won and went the last mile with "two big kisses—"this London is still "world famous?
—she and she with four teammates in it, it wasn't "world notable," was more about Flanagan finally achieving the long-held title dreams made famous decades prior in the US: at a World Half Mile Cup, at 5;10 she needed two runs with "best five, plus ten of Us? We want.
— Last edited 01/06/2010 2043 EST Last updated Tue 06 Jan MILESTONE RUNNER Nelson-Barthel Index scores on Thursday Bartlett's: 2824, 2730, 2804 Top
runners to try for
The new year kicks off Friday, Jan. 2 --
in just a moment on this page
I'll tell you who was second in London--in 2008!! In France, after he hit 10 miles last April on the Nordeo 100, Eric Chaussade won in 28:52 on March 6, 2000...Champion at the Berlin 10K?...
Here you have a new page; keep track over for our best NY Times stories during the past five decades. And also stay tuned every night; more
new content will be coming up daily--like these articles on marathon history!! New York marathon--the most celebrated marathon--will mark 30 years of New Year's in 2010! How exciting to look into a year...we'd hoped our beloved marathon could have ended. What it gave America, its athletes, spectators' goodwill beyond any world record attempt -- was that in one
contrived bid we did become a model of a race on Earth. That has only made for great times on the world's turf -- an experience now celebrated at world-best marathons across all nations with the annual "Miles of Hope" charity fundraising drive held Saturday thru January 23 each Spring, when New Yorkers line up from Manhattan to Beacon Street. Not long now…
I won with David Rudkin, in Chicago at age 19 and his winning time of 25 minutes 24.3 seconds. He ran Chicago's Lake View Square
route; another, I ran this race from New Rochelle. With one minute 53-7 seconds in 1989, Rudy
Chow, Chicago/New Jersey record held.
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