13-03-2012, 08:33 PM
Former NCAA champion and U.S. Olympic 10,000 meter hopeful Bobby Curtis and 2011 NYRR Dash to the Finish Line 5K champion and British Olympic hopeful Chris Thompson lead a talented group of additions to the professional field for the NYC Half on Sunday, March 18, it was announced by New York Road Runners officials.
Two-time World Marathon Majors series champion Liliya Shobukhova of Russia was forced to withdraw from the race due to a hamstring injury. Shobukhova, an early favorite for the Olympic Marathon in London this summer, was set to open her 2012 season at the NYC Half.
Curtis, 27, of Ardmore, PA, became the 7th fastest American of all-time at 10,000 meters when he ran 27:24.67 to finish second at the Stanford Payton Jordan Cardinal Invitational in April 2011. He is a two-time Team USA member for the IAAF World Cross Country Championships and won the 2008 NCAA Championship at 5000 meters in 13:33.93. Curtis made his marathon debut at the ING New York City Marathon 2011, finishing 15th in a time of 2:16:44. He has a half-marathon best of 1:01:52, set in September 2011.
Thompson, 30, of Great Britain, was the 10,000m silver medalist at the 2010 European Athletics Championships in Barcelona. At the 2011 Stanford Payton Jordan Cardinal Invitational, he ran 27:27.36 for 10,000 meters, the third-fastest time in British history. Thompson won the 2011 NYRR Dash to the Finish Line 5K during ING New York City Marathon weekend. The NYC Half will be his debut at the distance.
Additional athletes on the men's side include:
Collis Birmingham, 27, of Australia, a former Australian 10,000m record-holder and 2012 London Olympics hopeful. The NYC Half will be his half-marathon debut.
Ben St. Lawrence, 30, the Australian 10,000m record-holder and a recently announced member of his nation's 2012 Olympic team. Like his training partner Birmingham, he will be making his half-marathon debut.
Michael Shelley, 28, of Australia, the 2010 Commonwealth Games marathon silver medalist
Additional athletes in the women's field include:
Freya Murray, 28, of Great Britain, who is currently vying for the third and last spot on the British Olympic women's marathon team.
Diane Nukuri-Johnson, 28, of Burundi, a 2000 Olympian and holder of several national records. She was a star runner at the University of Iowa.
Irvette Van Blerk, 24, of South Africa, who finished ninth at the NYC Half 2011 in a personal best time of 1:10:56.
Karolina Jarzynska, 30, Poland's best women's distance runner and a likely member of her country's Olympic marathon team
Lisa Weightman, 33, of Australia, a 2008 Olympian and the 2010 Commonwealth Games bronze medalist in the marathon
NYRR's flagship half-marathon, in its seventh running, will feature a race-record field of 15,000 runners and a thrilling new course. Also new this year, WABC-TV will be airing the NYC Half live, beginning at 7:00am, as part of NYRR's recently announced comprehensive television agreement with ESPN / WABC-TV. The race will also be broadcast live on the New York Road Runners website. Viewers can tune in at 7:00-9:00am EDT on Sunday, March 18 to tv.nyrr.org to watch the race coverage. The NYC Half will again offer a prize purse of $100,000 - the largest half-marathon purse in the United States. The men's and women's champions will each earn $20,000. The race continues to attract prominent professional athletes and recreational runners from around the world.
The previously announced men's field includes three world class Americans: 2012 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials champion Meb Keflezighi, two-time Olympian Dathan Ritzenhein, and 2011 World Championships 10,000m runner Scott Bauhs. Also announced were Moroccan Olympian Abderrahime Bouramdane; Kenyan Peter Kirui, who competed in the 10,000 meters at the 2011 IAAF World Championships in Daegu, South Korea; Canadian Olympian Eric Gillis; Kenyan Wesley Korir, runner-up at the 2011 Bank of American Chicago Marathon; Ethiopian Olympian Deriba Merga, the 2009 Boston Marathon champion, and Kenyan Samuel Chelanga, the NCAA 10,000m record-holder.
The women's pro field includes previously announced top American runners Kara Goucher and Desiree Davila (both members of this year's U.S. Olympic Marathon team), Janet Cherobon-Bawcom, Julie Culley, Jeannette Faber and Stephanie Pezzullo. Molly Pritz, the top American female finisher in the ING New York City Marathon 2011, was forced to withdraw from the race due to illness. Also announced were Mexican Olympian Mada Pérez, British Olympian Jo Pavey, Dutch Olympian Hilda Kibet and Claire Hallissey, a contender for the British Olympic marathon team.
The NYC Half will offer runners a spectacular tour of Manhattan as they race through Central Park, Times Square, the Hudson River waterfront, and lower Manhattan, en route to the scenic South Street Seaport finish line. At the Post-Race Festival Presented by Poland Spring, there will be refreshments, entertainment by Irish rockers Black 47 and the Shinbone Alley Stilt Band, treatments supplied by the Swedish Institute of Massage, and much more. The Festival is free and open to the public.
Two-time World Marathon Majors series champion Liliya Shobukhova of Russia was forced to withdraw from the race due to a hamstring injury. Shobukhova, an early favorite for the Olympic Marathon in London this summer, was set to open her 2012 season at the NYC Half.
Curtis, 27, of Ardmore, PA, became the 7th fastest American of all-time at 10,000 meters when he ran 27:24.67 to finish second at the Stanford Payton Jordan Cardinal Invitational in April 2011. He is a two-time Team USA member for the IAAF World Cross Country Championships and won the 2008 NCAA Championship at 5000 meters in 13:33.93. Curtis made his marathon debut at the ING New York City Marathon 2011, finishing 15th in a time of 2:16:44. He has a half-marathon best of 1:01:52, set in September 2011.
Thompson, 30, of Great Britain, was the 10,000m silver medalist at the 2010 European Athletics Championships in Barcelona. At the 2011 Stanford Payton Jordan Cardinal Invitational, he ran 27:27.36 for 10,000 meters, the third-fastest time in British history. Thompson won the 2011 NYRR Dash to the Finish Line 5K during ING New York City Marathon weekend. The NYC Half will be his debut at the distance.
Additional athletes on the men's side include:
Collis Birmingham, 27, of Australia, a former Australian 10,000m record-holder and 2012 London Olympics hopeful. The NYC Half will be his half-marathon debut.
Ben St. Lawrence, 30, the Australian 10,000m record-holder and a recently announced member of his nation's 2012 Olympic team. Like his training partner Birmingham, he will be making his half-marathon debut.
Michael Shelley, 28, of Australia, the 2010 Commonwealth Games marathon silver medalist
Additional athletes in the women's field include:
Freya Murray, 28, of Great Britain, who is currently vying for the third and last spot on the British Olympic women's marathon team.
Diane Nukuri-Johnson, 28, of Burundi, a 2000 Olympian and holder of several national records. She was a star runner at the University of Iowa.
Irvette Van Blerk, 24, of South Africa, who finished ninth at the NYC Half 2011 in a personal best time of 1:10:56.
Karolina Jarzynska, 30, Poland's best women's distance runner and a likely member of her country's Olympic marathon team
Lisa Weightman, 33, of Australia, a 2008 Olympian and the 2010 Commonwealth Games bronze medalist in the marathon
NYRR's flagship half-marathon, in its seventh running, will feature a race-record field of 15,000 runners and a thrilling new course. Also new this year, WABC-TV will be airing the NYC Half live, beginning at 7:00am, as part of NYRR's recently announced comprehensive television agreement with ESPN / WABC-TV. The race will also be broadcast live on the New York Road Runners website. Viewers can tune in at 7:00-9:00am EDT on Sunday, March 18 to tv.nyrr.org to watch the race coverage. The NYC Half will again offer a prize purse of $100,000 - the largest half-marathon purse in the United States. The men's and women's champions will each earn $20,000. The race continues to attract prominent professional athletes and recreational runners from around the world.
The previously announced men's field includes three world class Americans: 2012 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials champion Meb Keflezighi, two-time Olympian Dathan Ritzenhein, and 2011 World Championships 10,000m runner Scott Bauhs. Also announced were Moroccan Olympian Abderrahime Bouramdane; Kenyan Peter Kirui, who competed in the 10,000 meters at the 2011 IAAF World Championships in Daegu, South Korea; Canadian Olympian Eric Gillis; Kenyan Wesley Korir, runner-up at the 2011 Bank of American Chicago Marathon; Ethiopian Olympian Deriba Merga, the 2009 Boston Marathon champion, and Kenyan Samuel Chelanga, the NCAA 10,000m record-holder.
The women's pro field includes previously announced top American runners Kara Goucher and Desiree Davila (both members of this year's U.S. Olympic Marathon team), Janet Cherobon-Bawcom, Julie Culley, Jeannette Faber and Stephanie Pezzullo. Molly Pritz, the top American female finisher in the ING New York City Marathon 2011, was forced to withdraw from the race due to illness. Also announced were Mexican Olympian Mada Pérez, British Olympian Jo Pavey, Dutch Olympian Hilda Kibet and Claire Hallissey, a contender for the British Olympic marathon team.
The NYC Half will offer runners a spectacular tour of Manhattan as they race through Central Park, Times Square, the Hudson River waterfront, and lower Manhattan, en route to the scenic South Street Seaport finish line. At the Post-Race Festival Presented by Poland Spring, there will be refreshments, entertainment by Irish rockers Black 47 and the Shinbone Alley Stilt Band, treatments supplied by the Swedish Institute of Massage, and much more. The Festival is free and open to the public.