We've Still Got A Case Of The Marathon Mondays ⏱️
Lap 269: Sponsored by VELOUS
Sponsored by VELOUS
Recover Smarter with VELOUS! Whether you just finished an intense track workout, a long run, or a weekend race, your feet have earned some recovery time.
VELOUS makes recovery footwear designed to help runners bounce back faster between sessions. Their sandals feature Tri-Motion™ Technology a technical three-density foam system and contoured footbed engineered to cushion impact, support your arches, and help your toes stretch and relax on every step. They keep your feet and legs properly aligned after you put in all of those weekly miles.
Fan favorite Hoya Adjustable Slides are built of course for easy post-run comfort but even better for all day comfort. This season VELOUS introduces the Active Two Strap a new adjustable style designed for a more dialed-in fit and all-day recovery. Plus, fresh spring colorways just dropped in all of their most popular styles. From the track to the coffee shop, VELOUS helps runners recover better so you’re ready for your next run or workout.
Run. Recover. Repeat. with VELOUS! Get 20% off your VELOUS order with code CITIUSMAG20 at checkout and includes FREE Shipping!
Compiled by Chris Chavez, David Melly, Kyle Merber, Scott Fauble, & Paul Snyder
After Boston 2026, Who’s In The Driver’s Seat For 2028?
The 2028 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials may be less than two years away, but the American marathon landscape is still in flux. The Boston results have only further complicated the question: who are the best American marathoners right now?
The answer comes in the form of our first 2028 U.S. Marathon Power Rankings: a comprehensive early look at who will be in the mix for the LA Olympic team.
Ranking marathon potential two years out is no easy task. How do you measure a proven star against a promising debutant? Do you reward consistency over upside? Recent form over peak performance? What do you do with the runners who’ve shown flashes of brilliance but can’t stay healthy? How much does age on race day factor in?
The list that follows spans Olympians, World Championship team members, and a few track stars who could quickly become a factor over 26.2. Does your favorite make the cut?
Men’s Rankings
15. Emad Bashir-Mohammed – 2:11:24 PB from the 2026 Riyadh Marathon
We had to include at least one name that most readers won’t know. Bashir-Mohammed ran at the University of St. Mary, an NAIA school in Kansas, graduating and debuting in the marathon in 2023 at Chicago (2:17:33). The 23-year-old has since dropped his PB to 2:11:24, finished 10 seconds behind Zouhair Talbi at the 2025 Chicago Half Marathon last summer, and just ran a solid 46:42 at the Cherry Blossom 10 Miler.
14. Daniel Mesfun – 2:08:24 PB from the 2026 Sevilla Marathon
The past two years have seen a career resurrection for Mesfun. He ran 2:10 in 2018 and then didn’t break 2:13 again until going 2:10:56 in Houston last January, then winning the Dublin Marathon in 2:08:51. He also got a slight PR at the Sevilla Marathon in February with a 2:08:24. He’ll be 40 at the Trials, so he’ll be looking to ride the Meb or Abdi trajectory to the team.
13. Haftu Knight – 2:07:38 PB from the 2026 Boston Marathon
The former Texas Longhorn has shown the exact sort of progression you look for in a hopeful U.S. team member, which included a 2:09:38 and 2:11:39 in 2025 before finishing as the sixth American in Boston this weekend. He’ll be 29 at the Trials, entering his marathoning prime at the right time.
12. Wesley Kiptoo – 2:07:55 PB from the 2026 Boston Marathon
Monday’s race was a personal best but not quite aligned with what his ceiling may be as a marathoner, considering that he is in the training group at NAZ Elite that includes Alex Masai (fourth at the 2025 Chicago Marathon) and Mercy Chelangat (fourth at the 2026 Boston Marathon). When he hits it, it could be really good.
11. Hillary Bor – 2:08:40 PB from the 2026 Rotterdam Marathon
Bor had really good fitness heading into his debut at the New York City Marathon last fall but maybe got carried away just after halfway and paid the price as he fell to 12th place in 2:10:47. He just put together a 2:08:40 for 10th place in Rotterdam but was on sub-2:06 pace for a chunk of the race. Though he’ll be 38 on race day, he’s still learning the event.
10. Ethan Shuley – 2:07:14 PB from the 2026 Osaka Marathon
Had we published this list a week ago, Shuley maybe would’ve been higher after his 2:07:14 at the Osaka Marathon took everyone by surprise. Given his injury history, another solid outing in the 2:07 ballpack would do wonders for his prospects.
9. Casey Clinger – 2:08:43 PB from the 2026 Tokyo Marathon
Clinger maybe gets a little bit of a benefit from the company he keeps as a member of the Ed Eyestone training group. Whereas some of the names ahead of him could be looking to hold onto their spots, he’s one with good potential to jump upward soon. Unlike his 2:16:05 debut in Chicago last fall, his 2:08:43 feels more indicative of his potential.
8. Grant Fisher – Never run a marathon
We didn’t place any other track runners who could test the marathon in the coming two years, but the double Olympic bronze medalist has earned a nod. A 1:00:53 half marathon debut in New York was not good by Fisher’s standards. But if it wasn’t enough to delay his marathon curiosity, based on his talent, it would be silly not to put him in the conversation for the Trials. We’ll surely take flak for not putting him higher.
7. Alex Maier – 2:08:33 PB from Düsseldorf 2025
Once Mantz pulled out of the Boston Marathon, Maier was a popular pick for top American. He scared the American record in the half marathon with a 59:23 in Houston and then finished fourth at the NYC Half in 59:51. The DNF in Boston hurts his ranking here but if he can prove he can race well against the top American marathoners in his next one, he can move back up.
6. Joe Klecker – 2:05:56 from Boston 2026
Boston was a big step forward for Klecker in Boston, closing his final mile around 4:39 to break 2:06. He’s yet to realize the world-beating potential some saw in him early, but he’s making progress at a distance many assume will be his best.
5. Ryan Ford – 2:05:46 PB from Boston 2026
It’s a tough call to pick OAC’s best male marathoner, but the current edge may go to the University of Tennessee at Martin alum over the 10,000m Olympian. We’ll weigh Ford’s 2:08:00 in Boston 2025, 2:09:37 in Chicago, and 2:05:46 in Boston a little higher than Klecker’s resume. Boston was the first time the two teammates went head-to-head and Ford got the better of Klecker by 10 seconds.
4. Clayton Young –2:05:41 PB from Boston 2026
11th place overall on paper looks like Young’s worst finish at a World Major since 2022 but he nevertheless got a big PR and finished third American in a deep field. This also came on a shortened build as a result of the worst injury of Young’s career, which forced him to take 16 weeks off. Maintaining healthy training will be key, but over the last three years, Young has been consistently among the top three Americans in each of his marathons and thrives in a championship setting.
3. Charles Hicks – 2:04:35 PB from Boston 2026
Across two marathons, Hicks has gone 2:09:59 for seventh (second American) in New York and 2:04:35, also seventh, also second American, in Boston. One peek at his Strava and you can tell he can handle the training demands to run fast and hold up for the marathon. The former NCAA cross country champion was maybe overlooked coming into Boston but there’s no hiding anymore. At 24 years old, the sky is the limit.
2. Zouhair Talbi – 2:03:45 PB from Boston 2026
Talbi becomes eligible to represent the United States internationally in August 2027 and could be the American record holder by the time the 2028 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials roll around. 2:03:45 is the fastest marathon ever run by an American citizen and his 2:05:45 to win Houston in January was just as impressive. In Boston, Talbi was unafraid to cover the surges by the East Africans and was rewarded mightily for his bravery.
1. Conner Mantz – 2:04:43 PB, AR from Chicago 2024
No one probably had more FOMO from watching Boston unfold than Mantz. Last year, he parlayed Olympic momentum into an American record in the half marathon (after quickly recovering from injury) in 59:17. He ran two seconds faster at the NYC Half just two months later, finished fourth in Boston in 2:05:08, and broke the American record in 2:04:43 in Chicago. Mantz’s 85% is better than a good chunk of this list, but getting to the start line healthy could be the biggest challenge. To make another team in 2028, he’ll also have to face all the newcomers rising behind him. In their three head-to-head marathon battles, Mantz has the career edge on Talbi 2–1, but the latest version of Talbi that we’re seeing appears to have leveled up. Still, Mantz holds the top spot for now until someone knocks him off.
Just outside the top 15: Galen Rupp, Joel Reichow, Nathan Martin, Biya Simbassa, Andrew Colley, CJ Albertson, and Paul Chelimo.
Women’s Rankings
15. Molly Born – 2:24:10 PB from the 2025 California International Marathon
Her marathoning career started off well with a 2:24:10 debut for the win in Sacramento last December. She was also the winner of the 2026 USATF Half Marathon Championships following the lead car debacle.
14. Emma Bates – 2:22:10 PB from Boston 2023
We’ll hold this spot for Emma Bates until she comes back from maternity leave. In 2025, she put together a pair of 2:25 performances in Boston and Valencia. Getting to the 2028 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials could also be extra special after she was forced to scratch from the 2024 edition with injuries, where she would’ve been a strong contender to make that team.
13. Erika Kemp – 2:22:56 PB from Houston 2025
After her 2:22:56 breakout in Houston, Kemp was rewarded with a spot on Team USA for the 2025 World Championships. It was a good sign of her potential at the distance. The Tokyo heat got to her and she struggled to a 2:50:35 for 52nd place. She was a late scratch from the Boston Marathon this past weekend, citing “a sudden series of unfortunate events” on Instagram, but the 31-year-old will have a few more cycles to hone her marathoning legs.
12. Natosha Rogers – 2:23:28 PB from Chicago 2025
Rogers started coming into her own as a marathoner in 2025. Ignoring her rough debut at the Trials in 2024, she recalibrated under coach Steve Magness and pulled together a 2:23 performance in Nagoya and then another for the top American honors in Chicago. She also unfortunately scratched from Boston and has not indicated if she will run another marathon this spring.
11. Carrie Ellwood – 2:22:53 PB from Boston 2026
Ellwood took her time getting back to the marathon after running 2:37:54 in New York in 2024 and then the nearly nine-minute PB in Boston on Monday. She was the runner-up at the USATF Half Marathon Championships following the lead car debacle. We’ll have to wait and see how she backs this performance up.
10. Emma Grace Hurley – Yet to make her marathon debut
Fans will surely be hoping Emma Grace Hurley makes her marathon debut at a race this fall. For what it’s worth, she was posting on Instagram about having FOMO from the Boston festivities. She’s primed to be good for the marathon after podium* finishes in the last two USATF Half Marathon Championships and a 50:42 U.S. title over 10 miles this month.
9. Susanna Sullivan – 2:21:56 PB from 2024 Chicago
We’re chalking up the 2:28:35 for 19th place as a tough day at the office for Sullivan in her return to Boston. Her fourth place finish at the World Championships in Tokyo and 2:28:34 in New York (fifth American) off a shortened build-up are stronger indicators of what she can do, especially in championship-style racing under tough conditions.
8. Taylor Roe – Yet to make her marathon debut
Roe could be higher on this list a year from now. We know what coaches Alistair and Amy Cragg achieved in Fiona O’Keeffe’s development as a marathoner, and could see Roe taking similarly well to the distance. We’re already seeing signs of her track speed translating to the half, after going 1:06:20 in Houston and then 1:06:52 in Valencia this year.
7. Amanda Vestri – 2:24:49 PB from Boston 2026
At 26 years old, Vestri is committed to the marathon and is chipping away at progress. She debuted in 2:25:40 for ninth (fourth American and 35 seconds back of Emily Sisson) at the New York City Marathon. In Boston, she was only the eighth American and 15th overall but managed to run 2:24:49.
6. Dakotah Popehn – 2:24:04 PB from Boston 2026
This one might feel high to some folks because recent performances maybe haven’t aligned with the fitness she shows on Strava. 2:24:20 in Chicago last fall (second American) is the closest we’ve seen to the athlete that surprised many for the third place spot at the last Trials and then took 11th at the Paris Olympics.
5. Emily Sisson – 2:18:29 PB, AR from Chicago 2022
We’re ready to put the “she’s a rhythm runner who doesn’t do great on hills” narrative to bed after a solid 2:22:39 for ninth place and third American in Boston. If there’s one person hoping Phoenix’s flat course gets selected for the 2028 Trials, however, it’s Sisson, who could also get a hometown edge from it. Making a third Olympic team isn’t a given but she’s far from done.
4. Annie Frisbie – 2:22:00 PB from Boston 2026
Frisbie is quietly stringing together strong finishes against good competition. She’s now gone back-to-back years as the second American in Boston and then also second in New York last fall. She’s a tough competitor on hilly courses so maybe compared to Sisson’s Phoenix edge, she’d go for St. Louis’s bid, which is not expected to be flat.
3. Weini Kelati – Marathon debut anticipated in 2026
The U.S. half marathon record holder is poised for a good marathon debut potentially this fall. She rarely has a bad day to finish outside the podium against American competition on the roads. If she chooses to make her debut in Chicago, expect a quick time. If she chooses to make her debut in New York, expect her to try and contend with the best to try and mirror something like her former training partner Sharon Lokedi’s 2022 debut there. By 2028, she should have at least two marathons of experience.
2. Jess McClain – 2:20:49 PB from the 2026 Boston Marathon
Right now, she’s stacking consistency as one of the top Americans while racing against her compatriots. In Monday’s race, she threw caution to the [tail]wind and committed to a full send while trying to race the East Africans. It was her best showing against international competition and that’s coming after a seventh-place finish last year in Boston (top American) and then eighth place at the World Championships (second American).
1. Fiona O’Keeffe – 2:22:10 PB from 2024 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials
Yes, the reigning U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials champion is holding onto the top spot at this time despite scratching from this week’s Boston Marathon due to a hamstring tear. When she’s healthy—which is the key factor before any race of hers—we saw just how much better she can be than the other Americans in Orlando and New York last fall.
Just outside the top 15: Lindsay Flanagan, Keira D’Amato, Ednah Kurgat, Sara Hall, Elena Hayday, Kodi Kleven, and Paige Wood
Don’t Change The Guard Just Yet: “Fast Elaine” Is Back 🇯🇲
2026 is already shaping up to be a year where the young guns take center stage. At this (admittedly early) point in the season, the average age of the world leader across 20 track events is just 22 years old.
The five fastest men in the 100m so far this season were all born in 2003 or 2004. In the women’s 100m, youth is an even larger factor—world leader Adaejah Hodge just turned 20 and three of the five fastest runners this year are 21 or younger.
It’s understandable that track and field’s thirty-somethings may be looking at the meet calendar, their driver’s licences, and the nascent LA28 website and coming to the conclusion that load management is the name. Many of track’s longevity-enjoying stars—like Katie Moon and the now-retired Nick Willis—have talked about how including down periods in training is the key to extended careers. The older you get, the smarter you have to be about allocating effort, both in training and in racing. So it’s understandable that anyone thinking they might want to give it one last go 2028 is working backward and thinking that it may not be worth it to leave it all on the track in 2026.
That opens the door for the new guard to take up all the attention, whether it’s Hodge running rampant over NCAA competition or Jordan Anthony claiming World Indoor gold. These youngsters are fresh, they’re hungry, and they have plenty to prove. It’s easy to start looking at someone like 28-year-old Michael Norman as a Rocky Balboa-type old-timer when the competition is 22-year-old Collen Kebinatshipi.
Last weekend featured one glaring exception to the trend, however. In the second heat of the 100m at a relatively low-key meet in Kingston, 33-year-old Elaine Thompson-Herah won her first 100-meter race in over two years in 10.92 looking relaxed and controlled with a minimal tailwind. After contesting a couple 60-meter rust busters and notching a 200m victory earlier in the spring, this was ETH’s first performance that elicited more than a little fanfare—and it’s understandable why.
Normally, an athlete running nearly half a second off their 100-meter PB wouldn’t be much to write home about, but that’s a pretty misleading stat. Most importantly, this was the five-time Olympic champion’s first sub-11 and fastest time since 2023. And her 10.54 isn’t just any personal best; it’s the second-fastest mark in history. ETH did, however, use Velocity Fest #19 to lay down a perfectly solid 100m opener in mid-April after missing an entire calendar year of racing.
Before injuries kept her out of competition all of 2025, they derailed her attempt to defend her 2020 Olympic titles in 2024. We never got the chance to see how her adjusted training setup had been working out—she changed coaches several times in 2023. But Thompson-Herah wasn’t alone in experiencing setbacks during that stretch. Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce and Shericka Jackson were also battling injuries of one kind or another in 2024, and the Paris Olympics was a disappointing one for Jamaican sprinters. Four of the nation’s six medals came from field events—none came from the women’s sprints.
2025 was a much happier story, with Jamaica taking 1-2 in the men’s 100m and the handing of the baton (both literally and metaphorically) from Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce to the Clayton twins, Tia and Tina. But ETH was nowhere to be seen all season and it would’ve been understandable to assume she was quietly riding off into the sunset.
This weekend’s 10.92 puts any suggestions of retirement planning or allegations of washed-upness to rest. In 2023, Thompson-Herah’s last full season, she didn’t break 11 seconds in the 100m until September 4th. In 2021, the year she completed the double-double Olympic gold, her season opener was 11.21.
The historic Elaine season that 2026 most resembles so far is 2022, where Thompson-Herah opened up with a handful of 60ms and a 56-second 400m before running 10.89 on April 16th. While it wasn’t quite the dominant campaign of the year prior, Thompson-Herah still earned two medals at Worlds, took double gold at the Commonwealth Games, and finished the year with season’s bests of 10.79 and 21.97. If she can put up a similar championship season run, four years and a series of health battles later, that would be an incredible feat.
This time last year, it would seem nearly impossible that “Fast Elaine” could realistically contend for a third Olympic berth at 36. And with the likes of the Claytons, Shenese Walker, and upstart 18-year-old Shanoya Douglas coming into their primes, there will be no easy path. But just like the tenth-century English peasant of Monty Python lore, she’s not dead yet. Count her out at your own peril!
An intergenerational battle between promising rookies and gritty veterans is a classic sports trope in both fiction and real life for a reason; it gives fans hope for both a future to come and a comeback to celebrate. Thompson-Herah has the whole season ahead of her to reset the narrative for the better, and after a long two years, it seems like her luck has finally begun to turn.
TLC Debates: How Do We Feel About Supershoes In 2026?
With historic road racing times becoming a near-weekly occurrence, TLC contributors Kyle Merber and Scott Fauble decided it was time to check in and unpack just how shoe technology is changing the sport of marathoning—for better or worse.
KM: Your tweet about super shoes ruining elite marathons ignited quite the conversation in my group chats. Are you just being a curmudgeon because everyone ran fast in Boston and in a slightly different universe you’d be a 2:04 guy?
SF: That is very possible. I don’t think I ever had a 2:04 in the tank, except maybe with that tailwind. Although, in a way, this year’s Boston would have been my nightmare—I feasted on carnage. So there is probably some personal bias and some ‘old guy is mad at change’ in there as well.
On the other hand, I might just start slotting myself into seventh place every year and adjust my mental PR accordingly.
KM: If that helps old guys sleep at night then I see no issue! So what about this year’s race reignited the “super shoes = bad” take? I thought we had exhausted this conversation by now. As a fan, how did you enjoy this year’s race vs. previous ones?
SF: As a fan, I liked it less than in previous years. And maybe this year wasn’t the best time to pop off about the lack of blow-ups because of the tailwind. The tailwind is going to help generally, maybe for the sake of my point I should have waited until 10 guys broke 2:08 on a 65-degree day with more normal wind.
I think my general thesis is that road racing is already a relatively “flat” sport compared to ball sports. There’s only so much differentiation we can have between races or racers given the nature of the running. The ongoing optimization of fueling and equipment and bicarb and wave light and lactate testing and data reduces the impact of a lot of the stuff that makes sports fun, which makes me sad.
I think what ignited the take was just watching the second half and knowing that no one was gonna break. Korir surged ahead and that’s awesome. But I didn’t feel like the group as a whole was riding any sort of line where they might be in real trouble and the parachute might really get pulled if they couldn’t hang.
KM: I get that. It’s fun to watch people blow up because it gives you appreciation for those who didn’t. We are still in the middle of redefining what is considered fast in the modern era of marathoning.
On Monday, 28 guys broke 2:10—that was a really competitive time ten years ago. And readers might think this is insulting, but those guys know that’s not good enough to be in the mix for a top international finish anymore. The clock might say it’s a PB, but you’re not contending for a podium or top American honors. All the more reason to focus more on place than time.
SF: Absolutely no disagreement there. I have no problem with people running fast. My issue is that people can now try to run fast with lower risk. I remember how I felt after marathons pre-super shoes (could barely walk) vs. wearing Alphaflys (could’ve run the next day). I want to see more of the internal battle of people having to calculate and deal with the possibility that going out too hard or covering an early move could lead to their legs giving out or bonking.
Right now is the easiest time in history to get a “B” or a “C” grade in the marathon. “A”s are still hard, but there’s a much lower chance of getting an “F.” That’s what I’m longing for: races where athletes know that putting themselves in a spot to get an “A” might cause them to end up with an “F.”
Look at the guys in the 10th to 15th range. For them, Monday was a day with a lot of small, manageable positive splits. Now there’s less downside for everyone, which means it requires less bravery individually. That used to be something I really respected: when someone went out over their head and faded, but survived the send. Now I don’t really feel anything about those performances.
KM: It is definitely easier to hang on now, but maybe they just need to go out even harder? I think in future years we’ll eventually view a 62-minute first half in Boston as conservative.
I don’t believe this is a universal experience though, because the Japanese athletes have continued to take huge risks early in races. There might just be a misalignment of incentives at the moment where the performance bar has raised, but the standards and the contract bonuses are lagging slightly behind.
Have we circled all the way back around to needing rabbits to entice folks to dream a little too big?
SF: The Japanese style of racing is the one thing keeping me optimistic that my hunch here is wrong.
But I guess I’m less optimistic that going out faster will change that much. Shoe tech has essentially changed the calculus in decision-making. You probably aren’t gonna suffer that much in the second half, and you probably aren’t going to catch people who miscalculated because they aren’t gonna blow up. So why do anything other than the boring, predictable race plan?
Maybe contracts being realigned would change things, but I think we’ve kinda crossed the rubicon. Short of totally changing the way we incentivize racing, we’re just going to see more and more “B” races and less variation.
As far as rabbits at Boston, you can just shoot me into the sun if that happens. My whole argument is against optimization. I want weirdness.
KM: Okay, pacing lights it is then.
More News From The Track And Field World 📰
– At the Oregon Team Invitational, the meet formerly best known—at least recently—for this, Simeon Birnbaum really redeemed things for Oregon. He won the 1500m by over seven seconds and established a blistering new NCAA record: 3:31.69.
– Olympic and World gold medalist Michael Norman is back! After missing all of 2025, Norman ran a 4x400m leg at the Tom Jones Invitational in Florida, splitting sub-45. Jordan Anthony picked up right where he left off after winning World Indoor gold, running a wind-legal 9.91 100m. San Antonio teen Tate Taylor broke Noah Lyles’s high school record in the 200m, going 20.05 for the win and taking down Alison dos Santos in the process.
– At Mt. SAC, Arizona State’s Jayden Davis broke the 400m facility record, going an NCAA-leading 44.29, while USC’s Madison Whyte (49.64) and Arkansas’s Sanaria Butler (49.86) threw down the NCAA #2 and #3 marks so far this season.
– And of course, at Bryan Clay, we saw the men’s and women’s NCAA 5000m records go down. Habtom Samuel (New Mexico) won the 5000m in 13:03.47 and Jane Hedengren (BYU) went 14:50.50. Though not collegiate records, Colin Sahlman’s (NAU) 1:44.42 and Emmaculate Jemutai’s (Kansas) 1:59.88 800m performances were certainly notable; Louisville’s Geoffry Kirwa went 8:08.10 to win the steeple, and now ranks behind only Henry Rono on the NCAA all-time list.
– U.S. 800m champ and indoor national record-holder Roisin Willis—already a New Balance athlete—has announced she has joined New Balance Boston.
– Iona and Wisconsin coaching legend Mick Byrne has shared that this outdoor season will be his last holding a stopwatch. He led the Badgers to a 2011 NCAA cross country title, and coached seven Olympians during his storied career.
– Gabby Thomas won the 200m at the Addis Ababa Grand Prix in 22.15, and Ferdinand Omanyala took top honors in the 100m, going 9.98.
– Turkey’s attempt to lure a bunch of elite athletes to compete for it internationally has been struck down by World Athletics.
– World heptathlon champ Anna Hall married NFL player Darius Slayton last week on Long Island and got some nice wedding coverage in Vogue Magazine.
– And to close out, you’ve undoubtedly already seen the week’s running clip that hit terminal viral velocity: Joshua Jackon’s wild kick in to sneak past Carson Mello and win the Delaware Marathon.
Interested in reaching 20,000+ dedicated runners and track and field fans? Advertise with us here.






