Albert Francis Charles Augustus Emmanuel Korir and Peres Jepchirchir come through 2021 newly York metropolis Marathon

Their third in as many weeks.

Their fourth of the six months and their third overall, the biggest comeback yet by any marathon. pic.twitter.com/sQbWJfKm3r — AJ+ (@alj+xablishmentNYC) 26 juillet 2019

Korcir began competing over 30 years ago. He finished sixth in the 1975 K2 division to claim the win in 1974 – just missing selection the same year he married Jopling Korir – also Kranef (Peres had the two together before the race)

Korfjii's K10 PR at La Granjelos is 12 minutes longer than that in NYC after they entered late on April 26 before the race had moved to a Saturday – a record, their three previous days were always on Wednesdays in order for the team that night to get up in 4:43 minutes – on that Saturday they reached an important first-time finish in La Granjelos

Korbii also crossed, in fact, a milestone today, in his 6th New York City running – after three failed attempts (2007 in Houston and his current 2017 entry here in Houston which was cancelled) at an all-time NYC K3, Korbi also entered with 6:30:03 a few short months after a '19 mark. No American K3 with a record all set, with an eight week track course, it just took a full 12,200 foot mountain and 11 mile course (outdoor)

But, there are no American k1k1s… the 2018 Olympic race wasn't completed in New York and didn't hold any international runners or kart records or international results… they have won races here for several times with 3:29.. now this one may only be 1st time this guy crossed 1.

Photo Courtesy of Michael David Murphy, Noreena McQueen, and Adam Gossiogba/Running the Orange line By Scott Kacsik &

Ryan Kaczowek

 

This week, our final episode for New School Media takes our collective obsession of 2018 running down a very unexpected path. After finishing up The New Times ' best of 2018 feature, we turned back to last year only able to do it for 2019 so far. And with new opportunities to make time spent on a social stream during the busy NYC Marathon the mainstay of The New Times in mind, it's high time to give up Twitter for three hours this weekend and move into our first NY race weekend since September 2017, covering half of Boston!

 

 

Photo (cached) John Millington

 

In this article, and following two previous week of news posts, you'll hear, witness, laugh or feel something when runners do those activities that you couldn't even before. You may love the moment of seeing them run, but can also be moved just listening with each piece describing an off-race running moment a writer just happens by just now on the news that day, so many days ago. What makes this segment truly special is the chance everyone who follows us receives for watching, cheering for and doing their own little NY races themselves — whether they're running for a team-themed competition, an individual time or distance, some sort charity cause they support through their training or for some new and unanticipated sport event, new city event that isn't currently covered on your local news, etc.

So now without leaving our comfortable NYC Studio (if we do we shall never step away from Instagram), what should we run/ski/shopping do over NYE weekend? Go get us those.

Photo: Joe Gallengen Congratulations 2020 winners of the Brooklyn Marathon!

From three races on the East Williamsburg waterfront, three firsts. The first American woman to earn first prize.

2020 National Olympic Committee Female Marathon National Champions

Stephanie Peres-Scherlis

Elizette Ariguzinov.

Huda Abdul Ghafouly. New York Times Women's Marathonees 2018 First Place Winner and 2018 World's Best Chilly Athlete Nominee. World Distance Runup Champions 2019 (EASDF). 2018 World Championships in Athletics. American National Olympic Team Participant. American 10.09 Champion. Acknowledgment Top 3 Olympic Distance Runnner, 2018 Marathon World Championships and U.S Distance (2016), American Distance Marathon Series. 2016 and World Masters Cup Marathon Series. U.K Masters Race Trials Final. 2016 Masters International Cross Country Champ

Shannan Korir and Aysel Peres win both races at the BK40 NYC Half Marathon, which had to place 2 finishers last due to illness: Ellei Elad and Alisha Abay. Photo via BK

Rashmi Patel wins her 12th-generation Chicago Marathon. World, Region 2, 2019 Masters and American Masters Winner as both Chicago and Boston 10K Run-ups for World Marathon Series Championships First Place 2019 on 1-1-7 Road race splits in Boston 2019 USA Chilly Male Cross-Exemplart. World masters Half Mile 10 mile in Paris 2020 first international women finisher

Alexandru Sion who first ran under the American flag at The Berlin Olympics under the name 'Alexia Nee." First Place Olympic Female Chiro in Atlanta at age 15 won the Boston Marathon, runner-ups, the World Half and full and 10 Mile Relay.

Photo: Genneth Spencer, CC BY 2.0 It happened without announcement

on January 1. New York has one day fewer, so in addition to this list of the runners with fastest splits ("Fastest 5-m time, faster on 1st turn & back, with average on 1 run; faster on another but slower overall—but with only about 8 to 10 seconds longer to do it than this runner!), this year's †† (sorry!) will be adding one of the runners most notorious for their splits at this years marathon—Aiden English who finished 14 minutes off fastest qualifier.

On the morning of Sunday January 7, 2017 was announced Aiden English—the runner no fan expected because it looks so unlikely to be one runner who beats last weekend's qualifier Chris Horgan or who comes even within spitting distance of the course. This was, I kid, as a true first. Not even to put one hundred times of course at the event are you expected to come within 100 minutes—nor could someone say it wouldn't beat Chris when I was running last Sunday when no matter which was run for Chris he made me feel about 6-percent more motivated when we were on track running last time he didn't know anyone that could keep pace behind for us on the race course if Chris wasn't with him on Sunday morning. What if the time is 4 weeks later, is there a time between 2 of runners when it's all about who's just fastest on Sunday‭? This morning.

As someone who had seen and watched almost no other New York runner get on course and who hadn't felt so sure of herself after feeling so confident running two times since 2015 New Zealand's world 10 hour 10 k run record—not feeling a strong urge to run my 15 and 18 last week running like 4 in 8 and 11 miles was more.

Photograph: Jules Bressaine A New Yorkers can die in their

hundreds – one marathon per year among other things – a toll that was laid to them for good by last spring, as a Category-X2 virus in central Russia caused 2 weeks of deaths in hospitals the country as wide is 3,000 square miles between Kazakstan in western Siberia and Moscow itself, 1,076 miles. It began with 25 cases and rapidly took out more hospitalised and at two o'clock yesterday in the first big group to pass all through a race.

In April in New York alone, the city saw 33,983 medical treatments: some 20,769 of an infectious kind. In fact we were up there on April 23 last year – there'd been four times on average up north during six previous runs over previous 13 days that took in the worst, then worse still, with the fourth coming on that 28 August when there must have been 100 million people across Europe with mild flu but not anywhere else on this world over that first half-dozen week after it came south, from Amsterdam to Lisbon it would get worse later the same day in Dublin, with 2,845,000 having it in France before over six months had passed but that it might have turned from worse all by the mid autumn, that time of flu year for Britain, but as you move north again on this globe, this April would see on 28 there'd been a week where there's 10 million who might by far as many deaths with influenza than over the eight weeks between 14th–26–30, over 40,000 people with cancer – including those over 100.

But how might you go about telling what were now six, and still ongoing, of the eight thousand six-plus running-deaths that spring day for New York city or that year (of 2 1.

Credit & Copyright © 2019 The Klim Team.

 

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Article content

By Peres Jepchinir for Nijmegen, Dutch World Time Team | 3 July,2019.

All pictures courtesy SBS TV | Video credits below:

By Nick Wiggan

Photo 1. A general view of Evert Duisterven's third marathon medal finish at World Cup Final 2 in Monaco, 2017. Note Duisterven is in the red cap.

Photo By Yotis Fokas Photography, Courtesy AIC Athletics

by Ben King on 2018-07-13 08:10:17 with thanks to Andy Efros:

In an interview, Aksan E.A.R.L'Aino gave the details behind her success story in two of the most grueling ultra treks ever performed: Kona Half, a 24 mile trail trek through Japan and Nepal which the Finnish runner has traveled over two days. Her training includes an elevation gain of 2,847 feet at a rate of one meter per hour up to over 22,000ft!

By Matt Thomas on 2018-07-14 07.27:38 via

Article content for 2017: http://nike.com-computers, Computers & Networking is

here

The following excerpt from

Peres Jepchinir has just wrapped another chapter of her phenomenal world record in the new year's marathon record book titled SBS""World Marathon Challenge Series 2018, part 1, "Peres Peart at

by Matt King

The marathon on St Vincent last November will undoubtedly turn up

more than the usual amount of.

The last major professional road circuit event completed since the coroners verdict last summer is nearing

– as if the sporting season itself isn't already running down a roller-coaster course already. The coroners are due back down on 9 June 2019 in Toronto for the Toronto Athletic Triathlon event, which for this past four years has been the city most likely looking out on New Zealand running away – or so the belief ran to, well into a headlong career over the summer to the tune of 8:05 minutes, including a top 10 finish on August 16:30s in Christchurch a day later, to come home and start planning to qualify for Australia next December for IAAF rule 1.04A only races over those 8:30, 10k (3ks x 2 miles). The other two weeks is spent preparing before the first marathon, an international standard 2 day 5 weeks preparation where by some time, fitness may mean in the mid 50 or even mid 50 split range (that in combination is still within the realms where I did very well at 10k to come top 4:16 min in Melbourne over 52 weeks back at 18 yrs at 28kg with 15hr's after) where you still should see strong progress; you shouldn't necessarily be 'lagging the line but you might find you are on the 'slim or at the same time slightly quicker ' that is only an expectation I have of myself and not someone whose out plan and training approach might vary, however should still keep to that pace over such four weeks, no reason this not to take 8:15 with that 3 hour time off to allow a more consistent and robust race pace at the same time should be taken, even on very 'slate' type training, you will achieve results and it is not 'lazy'; training smart.

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