Ryan Hall (runner)
Ryan Hall at the 2007 London Marathon |
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| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | October 14, 1982 Kirkland, Washington |
| Height | 1.78 metres (5 ft 10 in) |
| Weight | 130 pounds (59 kg) |
| Sport | |
| Country | |
| Event(s) | Cross Country, Marathon |
| Club | Team Running USA |
| Team | Stanford Cardinal (2001-2005) |
| Achievements and titles | |
| Olympic finals | 2008, Marathon, 10th |
Ryan Hall (born October 14, 1982 in Big Bear Lake, California) is an American long distance runner. He won the marathon at the 2008 United States Olympic Trials and placed tenth in the Olympic marathon in Beijing. He holds the U.S. record in the half marathon (59:43). With his half marathon record time, he became the first U.S. runner to break the one hour barrier in the event.[1]
Contents |
[edit] High school
Hall came on to the running scene as a high school junior. He graduated from high school in the same year as Dathan Ritzenhein and Alan Webb, behind whom he finished in the 2000 Foot Locker Cross Country Championships.
Hall was the California state cross country champion during his junior and senior seasons at Big Bear High School. He finished third at the Foot Locker Nationals in Orlando during his senior season, also set the Mt. SAC course record in 2000.[3] In track, he was the National Scholastic mile champion in his junior season at 4:06.15,[4] and was the CIF California State Meet champion in the 1600 meters during his senior season with a state record time of 4:02.62,[5] and won the state title during his junior season in the two-mile at 8:55.12. [6] Hall competed at the Peregrine Systems U.S. Open at Stanford in the 1500 meters, running 3:42.70, and at the 2001 USA Outdoor Track & Field Championships.
[edit] College
Ryan Hall's college career at Stanford University started with injuries that held him back from the promise he showed in high school. In 2001, Hall won the Murray Keating Invitational in his college debut and finished 76th at the NCAA Men's Cross Country Championships. He red-shirted the 2002 track season. In his sophomore year of cross country, he won the Stanford Invitational and the Notre Dame Invitational. He was named first team all Pac-10 and earned All-American honors with his 37th place finish at the NCAA Championships. He followed this up with a 3:43.37 1500m best his freshman year of track in 2003. The highlight of his collegiate cross country career came in his junior year in 2003. He was named the Pac-10 Cross Country Athlete of the Year after leading Stanford to the NCAA Championship by finishing 2nd to Colorado's Dathan Ritzenhein. His 2004 track season was cut short due to injury but he did record a best of 13:45 in the 5000, which began Hall's change in distance from the 1500. He came back from injury to finish 26th at the NCAA Championships in 2004 to once again earn All-American status. The breakout that everybody expected from Hall since high school took place in the 2005 track season. He earned his first ever individual NCAA Championship by winning the 5000 meters in 13:22.32, finishing less than a second ahead of his teammate Ian Dobson in a race where those two runners dominated the race. He graduated from Stanford with a BA in Sociology.
[edit] Professional
Hall has been sponsored by Asics since 2005.[2] His coach at the time was Terrence Mahon, a former runner at Villanova University.[3] In 2006 he won his first national title in the 12K cross-country championships, winning by 27 seconds.
On September 16, 2006, Hall won the Great Cow Harbor 10K in Northport, New York, setting a new course record of 28:22.[4] Hall's road-running success continued when he broke the U.S. 20k record on October 8, 2006, running 57:54, 48 seconds faster than the previous record run by Abdi Abdirahman in 2005.[5]
On January 14, 2007, Hall won the Aramco Houston Half-Marathon in a time of 59:43,[6] which makes him the 38th fastest half marathoner in history as of September 2011. The performance also broke the previous North American record of 1:00:55, set by Mark Curp on September 15, 1985, in Philadelphia.
On April 22, 2007, Hall placed 7th in the Flora London Marathon. His time of 2:08:24 was the fastest marathon debut by any American, and the fastest marathon ever run by a U.S.-born citizen.[7]
On November 3, 2007, Hall won the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team Trials Marathon in a Trials-record 2:09:02[8] in New York City, New York. With this win, he, Dathan Ritzenhein, and Brian Sell qualified to run the marathon at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China.[9]
On April 13, 2008, Hall placed 5th in the Flora London Marathon. Hall, 25, competing in only his third marathon, finished in 2:06:17.[10] The only American to run faster is Morocco-born Khalid Khannouchi, who in 2002 ran 2:05:38 in London and 2:05:56 in Chicago.[11]
Hall was featured on the cover of the September 2008 Runner's World magazine and talks about his "run for glory" in the marathon in the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.[12] On August 24, 2008, Hall was the second American to cross the finish line the 2008 Men's Olympic Marathon, placing 10th with a time of 2:12:33. He ran at a much more conservative pace than the lead pack did, and gradually moved from 21st place at the 15k mark up to 10th at the 40 km mark. His teammates Dathan Ritzenhein and Brian Sell finished 9th and 22nd, respectively.
Hall was chosen as the 2008 Road Runner of the Year in the Open Male division by the Road Runners Club of America.[13]
On April 20, 2009, Hall participated in the 2009 Boston Marathon, finishing third overall in 2:09:40 behind Deriba Merga of Ethiopia and Daniel Rono of Kenya. Merga and Rono finished with times of 2:08:42 and 2:09:32, respectively.[14] He returned to the race in 2010, but only managed fourth place, although his time of 2:08:41 was the fastest ever by an American at Boston.[15]
In 2010, Hall finished fourth in the Boston Marathon, and fourteenth in the Philadelphia Distance Run half marathon. Due to fatigue, he withdrew from the Chicago Marathon. In October, Hall left his coach Terrence Mahon, and the Mammoth Track Club.[16] He won at the 2010 USA 7 Mile Championships.[17]
[edit] Sub-2:05:00 at the 2011 Boston Marathon
On December 16, 2010, Hall announced that he would be running the 2011 Boston Marathon, marking his third consecutive appearance in the race. On April 18, 2011, Hall ran the fastest marathon ever by an American, 2:04:58, to finish fourth. Kenya's Geoffrey Mutai ran 57 seconds under the recognized world record in winning in 2:03:02, and credited Hall with setting - and maintaining - a fast early pace.[18] However, this was not an American record, since the Boston course is not eligible for records owing to its point-to-point layout and its elevation drop of greater than 1 m/km; a strong net tailwind (15-20 miles/hr) contributed to the runners' remarkable 2011 times.[19]
[edit] Personal Bests
| Event | Time | Place | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1500 m | 3:42.70 | Stanford, California, U.S. | June 9, 2001 |
| 5,000 m | 13:16.03 | Carson, California, U.S. | June 24, 2005 |
| 10,000 m | 28:07.93 | Palo Alto, California, U.S. | March 31, 2007 |
| Half Marathon | 59:43 NR | Houston, Texas, U.S. | January 14, 2007 |
| Marathon* | 2:04:58 | Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. | April 18, 2011 |
| Marathon | 2:06:17 | London, United Kingdom | April 13, 2008 |
(*) Downhill and point-to-point course
- All information taken from IAAF profile.
[edit] Achievement chronology
- 2000 - 3rd place at Foot Locker National High School Cross Country Championships
- 2003 - 2nd-place at NCAA Cross-Country Championships
- 2005 - NCAA Men's Outdoor Track and Field Championship 5000m
- 2005 - 3rd-place at the USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in the 5000m
- 2006 - 1st place at the USA Cross Country Championships (12K)
- 2006 - U.S. Half Marathon Champion
- 2006 - 1st place, Great Cow Harbor 10K (Northport, NY); course-record time of 28:22 shattered previous mark of 28:44 set by Jeff Jacobs in 1991
- 2006 - U.S. 20K Record Holder (57:54). Inaugural IAAF World Road Running Championships in Debrecen, Hungary.
- 2007 - U.S. Half Marathon Record Holder (59:43). Aramco Houston Half Marathon in Houston, Texas.
- 2007 - 2:08:24 at the London Marathon in London, United Kingdom.
- 2007 - 1st Place, 2008 U.S. Olympic Team Trials Marathon (2:09:02) in New York City, United States
- 2008 - 5th Place. 2008 Flora London Marathon (2:06:17) in London, United Kingdom
- 2008 - 10th Place. 2008 Marathon - Summer Olympics (2:12:33) in Beijing, China
- 2009 - 1st Place. 2009 15K - Publix Super Markets Gasparilla Distance Classics Race (43:26) in Tampa Bay, United States
- 2009 - 3rd Place. 2009 Boston Marathon (2:09:40) in Boston, United States
- 2009 - 3rd Place. 2009 NYC Half-Marathon (1:02:35) in New York City, United States
- 2009 - 1st Place. 2009 ING Philadelphia Distance Run Half-Marathon (1:01:52) in Philadelphia, United States
- 2009 - 4th Place. 2009 ING NYC Marathon (2:10:36)
- 2010 - 4th Place. 2010 Boston Marathon (2:08:40)
- 2010 - 1st Place. 2010 Bix 7 (32:55) (a USA 7 Mile Championship event)
- 2011 - 2nd Place. 2011 USA Half Marathon Championship (1:02:20)[20]
- 2011 - 4th Place. 2011 Boston Marathon (2:04:58)
- 2011 - 5th Place. 2011 Chicago Marathon (2:08:04)
- 2012 - 2nd Place. 2012 Olympic Marathon Trials at Houston (2:09:30)
[edit] Personal life
Hall married his college girlfriend Sara Bei, also a professional runner, in September 2005.
Hall's younger brother Chad won the 2006 Foot Locker National Cross Country Championships, the de facto national championship for high school cross country individual runners. Chad was following in his sister-in-law's footsteps, as Sara Hall (née Bei) won the girl's championships in 2000. Chad attended the University of Oregon. In 2008, Chad transferred to University of California, Riverside.
In 2009, Ryan and his wife Sara formed the Hall Steps Foundation to empower the running community to use the energy and resources that fuel runners’ athletic achievements for social justice efforts.
Ryan's home town of Big Bear Lake created the "Move a Million Miles for Ryan Hall" campaign to support Ryan's quest for 2008 Olympic Marathon gold by collectively logging 1,000,000 exercise miles.
[edit] References
- ^ Robbins, Liz. "Running Half a Marathon With Ryan Hall". http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/13/running-half-a-marathon-with-ryan-hall/.
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ [2][dead link]
- ^ "Great Cow Harbor 10K Run: Overall 2006 Results: New Course Record". start2finish.com. 17 September 2006. http://start2finish.com/2006/r091606.htm.
- ^ "Hall sets American 20 km record at IAAF World Road Running Championships". USA Track & Field. 8 October 2006. http://www.usatf.org/news/view.aspx?DUID=USATF_2006_10_08_10_54_24.
- ^ "Ryan Hall sets new North American record for the Half-Marathon (59:43)". TheFinalSprint.com. 14 January 2007. http://www.thefinalsprint.com/2007/01/ryan-hall-sets-new-north-american-record-for-the-half-marathon/.
- ^ "Impressive debut for America’s Ryan Hall in London". TheFinalSprint.com. 23 April 2007. http://www.thefinalsprint.com/2007/04/impressive-debut-for-americas-ryan-hall-in-london/.
- ^ "Ryan Hall Makes History in Olympic Trials Marathon ‘07". TheFinalSprint.com. 3 November 2007. http://www.thefinalsprint.com/2007/11/ryan-hall-makes-history-in-olympic-trials-marathon-07/.
- ^ "Hall puts on stunning display, Wins Olympic Trials in men’s marathon". TheFinalSprint.com. 3 November 2007. http://www.thefinalsprint.com/2007/11/hall-puts-on-stunning-display-wins-olympic-trials-in-mens-marathon/.
- ^ "Ryan Hall Takes Fifth at Flora London Marathon". TheFinalSprint.com. 14 April 2008. http://www.thefinalsprint.com/2008/04/ryan-hall-takes-fifth-at-2008-flora-london-marathon/.
- ^ Patrick, Dick (13 April 2008). "American Hall strides to fifth in London Marathon". Usa Today. http://www.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/2008-04-13-london-hall_N.htm. Retrieved May 23, 2010.
- ^ Perry, Michael (July 23, 2008). "THE POWER AND THE GLORY". Runner's World. http://www.runnersworld.com/article/0,7120,s6-239-473--12789-7-1X2X3X4X5X6-7,00.html. Retrieved 2009-08-30.
- ^ http://www.rrca.org/news/index.php?article=2393
- ^ "Boston Athletic Association". Bostonmarathon.org. http://www.bostonmarathon.org/. Retrieved 2011-10-28.
- ^ Morse, Parker (2010-04-19). Cheruiyot smashes Boston record with 2:05:52 sizzler - Boston Marathon report. Retrieved on 2010-04-25.
- ^ Robbins, Liz (October 21, 2010). "Hall Splits With Coach and Will Leave Mammoth". On the Run (NYTimes.com). http://marathon.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/21/hall-splits-with-coach-and-with-leave-mammoth/. Retrieved 22 October 2010.
- ^ Hall, Koll take USA 7 Mile Championships. USATF (2010-07-24). Retrieved on 2011-01-27.
- ^ "Hope Boston effort becomes a world record: Mutai". The Times Of India. http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-04-23/interviews/29466353_1_timing-geoffrey-mutai-boston-marathon.
- ^ http://www.usatf.org/News/115th-Boston-the-fastest-marathon-in-history;-Davi.aspx
- ^ "Events - 2011 USA Half Marathon Championships". USATF. http://www.usatf.org/events/2011/USAHalfMarathonChampionships/results.asp. Retrieved 2011-10-28.
[edit] External links
- The Hall Steps Foundation
- Ryan Hall's Official Blog
- Ryan Hall's U.S.A. Track & Field Bio
- Ryan Hall at the United States Olympic Committee
- Ryan Hall's Junior Training 'Run with the Best'
- Biographical article from the New Yorker
[edit] Audio interview
- Interview: Ryan Hall Takes on the London Marathon: Part Deux
- Ryan Hall teleconference interview after his record-setting victory at the 2007 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials in NYC
- Interview with Ryan Hall after he crushed the American debut record at the 2007 London Marathon
- TheFinalSprint.com's interview with Ryan Hall; the new American half-marathon record-holder
[edit] Video - Race/Interviews
- Ryan Hall Before the 2009 Boston Marathon
- Ryan Hall, His Coach Terrence Mahon, His Dad, His Grandfather, and Martin Lel Give Their Reaction After His Amazing 2:06:17 at the 2008 Flora London Marathon
- Ryan Hall Breaking the American Record for Half Marathon by Flotrack.org(59.43)
- Track and Field videos of Ryan Hall on Flotrack.org
- Ryan Hall on calls for an Olympic boycott on Fox Business Network's "Cavuto"
- "26.2 for Africa" A short film with Ryan Hall
- The Ryan Hall Story at GodTube