U.S. Olympic medalists Galen Rupp and Molly Seidel, along with American half-marathon record holder Sara Hall, to lead open division; Past TCS New York City Marathon champions and U.S. Paralympic medalists Tatyana McFadden and Daniel Romanchuk aim to defend titles in wheelchair division

New York, February 22, 2022 – The 2022 United Airlines NYC Half on Sunday, March 20 will feature the best professional athlete field in event history, with 24 Olympians, eight Paralympians, and six open division athletes who hold half marathon national records in their respective countries.

 

The open division will include U.S. Olympic medalists Galen Rupp and Molly Seidel, along with American half-marathon record holder Sara Hall, while TCS New York City Marathon champions and U.S. Paralympic medalists Tatyana McFadden and Daniel Romanchuk will aim to defend their titles in the wheelchair division.  

 

The United Airlines NYC Half is one of New York Road Runners’ signature races, taking runners from Brooklyn’s Prospect Park to Manhattan’s Central Park, and passing historic landmarks and diverse neighborhoods and sweeping views of the city along the way before ending near the iconic TCS New York City Marathon finish line.

 

After being canceled in 2020 and not held in 2021 due to the pandemic, the United Airlines NYC Half will return at full scale this year with an expected field of 25,000 runners – marking the first NYRR race to return to its traditional field size. All professional athletes in the field will be required to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

 

Men’s Open Division
Rupp, the American record-holder in the 10,000 meters who won silver in the distance at the London 2012 Olympics and bronze in the marathon at the Rio 2016 Olympics, will race the event for the second time, having previously finished third in 2011 on the event’s old course.

 

“The United Airlines NYC Half was my debut at the distance, and was only the second road race of my professional career,” Rupp said. “I can’t believe that more than a decade has passed since then. It’s wild that the race will be more than double the size it was when I ran in 2011, and I’ve heard the Brooklyn-to-Manhattan course is challenging, but a great tour of the Big Apple. With the World Championships taking place in my home state of Oregon later this summer, I’m looking for the race to be a great stepping stone to everything else I want to achieve in 2022.”

 

Challenging Rupp will be the 10K world record-holder Rhonex Kipruto from Kenya, and the American 5K record-holder Ben True, who in 2018 became the first American man to win the race in the open division. Five-time U.S. Olympian Abdi Abdirahman will make his 10th appearance in the event – his best finish was second place in 2007 – while U.S. Army officer Elkanah Kibet will make his debut after finishing as the top American in fourth place overall at the 2021 TCS New York City Marathon. Two-time NCAA cross-country champion and reigning U.S. half marathon champion Conner Mantz will make his New York City road racing debut.

 

Women’s Open Division
Eight-time national champion Hall, no stranger to New York as the two-time defending champion of the Mastercard New York Mini 10K, will enter the event as the fastest American in the distance, having broken the national half marathon record in Houston in January with a time of 1:07:15. She did so on the same course where her husband and coach, Ryan Hall, broke the men’s record 15 years ago.

 

“My NYC racing career started with my win at the Fifth Avenue Mile way back in 2006, and along the way I’ve broken the tape at the Dash to the Finish Line 5K on TCS New York City Marathon weekend and twice won the New York Mini 10K in Central Park,” Hall said. “Until now, though, I’ve never stepped to the line at the United Airlines NYC Half. Setting the American record over that distance last month gives me a ton of confidence as I train for this new challenge.”

 

Seidel will look to star in her first appearance in the race coming off a 2021 that included a bronze medal in the Tokyo Olympic marathon and an American course record and fourth-place finish at the TCS New York City Marathon.

 

The deep U.S. women’s contingent also includes two-time Olympian and 2018 Boston Marathon champion Des Linden, 2021 Chicago Marathon runner-up Emma Bates, 2021 TCS New York City Marathon seventh-place finisher Annie Frisbie, two-time Olympian Kim Conley, and reigning U.S. national champions Erika Kemp and Makena Morley.

 

The Americans will face a stacked group of international women that includes two-time World Championships silver medalist Senbere Teferi of Ethiopia, 2021 European Cross-Country Championships gold medalist Karoline Bjerkeli-Grøvdal of Norway, and two-time World Championships gold medalist and former New York, Boston, and London Marathon winner Edna Kiplagat of Kenya.

 

Men’s Wheelchair Division

Romanchuk, a two-time Paralympic medalist and two-time TCS New York City Marathon winner, will look to defend his title in the event after winning in 2019 in 51:35. In 2018, Romanchuk became the first American and youngest athlete ever to win the men’s wheelchair division at the TCS New York City Marathon, and repeated as champion in 2019. Last year, he won his first set of Paralympic medals, taking 400-meter gold by one hundredth of a second and then winning bronze in the marathon.

 

A trio of University of Illinois freshmen – Evan CorrellPhilip Croft, and Jason Robinson – will line up alongside Romanchuk, as all three make their half marathon debuts.

 

Women’s Wheelchair Division

McFadden will headline the women’s wheelchair division as an NYRR Team for Kids Ambassador, a six-time Paralympian, 20-time Paralympic medalist, and the first-ever winner of the Abbott World Marathon Majors wheelchair series. In her career, she has won five New York City Marathons, including four consecutively, and is now looking for her second consecutive and third overall title in the United Airlines NYC Half.

 

“I love this race. We get to run by all the great NYC iconic spots,” McFadden said. “It’s fun seeing all the kids running in Times Square as we go by; it will be great to be back after so long.”

 

She will be challenged by Switzerland’s Manuela Schär, who won the race in 2018 and 2015. The Swiss powerhouse racer took home five medals from her fifth Paralympic Games in Tokyo last year before going on to win the Berlin, London, and Boston Marathons and finish third in New York. Schär has won three TCS New York City Marathons, with her most recent victory in 2019 marking the second-fastest time ever in New York City Marathon history.

 

The event’s 2017 champion Susannah Scaroni will return to the roads for the first time since she was injured in a car accident last fall while training on the roads. She won a gold and bronze medal at the Tokyo Paralympics last summer and is the three-time defending champion of the Mastercard New York Mini 10K.

 

The 2022 United Airlines NYC Half women’s open and wheelchair division professional athlete fields are presented by Mastercard.

 

Live coverage of the event will be available on ABC New York, Channel 7 in the New York area from 6:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. ET on race day, with a full livestream available nationally and internationally at 7:00 a.m. ET on abcyny.com, ESPN3 and NYRR’s social media platforms.

 

Professional Athlete Field –  Men’s Open Division

Name

Country

Residence

Personal Best

Rhonex Kipruto

KEN

Iten, KEN

57:49 (Valencia, 2020)

Galen Rupp

USA

Portland, OR

59:47 (Ostia, 2018)

Brett Robinson

AUS

Melbourne, AUS

59:57 (Marugame, 2020)

Teshome Mekonen*

ETH

New York, NY

1:00:02 (Valencia, 2018)

Abdi Abdirahman

USA

Tucson, AZ

1:00:29 (NYC Half, 2007)

Stephen Sambu*

KEN

Tucson, AZ

1:00:41 (Houston, 2018 & Boston, 2013)

Kirubel Erassa

USA

Colo. Springs, CO

1:00:44 (Houston, 2022)

Ben Connor

GBR

Manchester, GBR

1:00:55 (Larne, 2020)

Conner Mantz

USA

Provo, UT

1:00:55 (Hardeeville, SC, 2021)

Pat Tiernan

AUS

Raleigh, NC

1:00:55 (Houston, 2022)

Frank Lara

USA

Boulder, CO

1:01:00 (Valencia, 2021)

Biya Simbassa

USA

Flagstaff, AZ

1:01:03 (Houston, 2022)

Sam Chelanga

USA

Colo. Springs, CO

1:01:04 (Boston, 2013)

Rory Linkletter

CAN

Flagstaff, AZ

1:01:08 (Houston, 2022)

Juan Pacheco

MEX

Torreon, MEX

1:01:20 (Gdynia, 2020)

Ed Cheserek

KEN

Flagstaff, AZ

1:01:31 (Newcastle, 2021)

Richard Ringer

GER

Frankfurt, GER

1:01:33 (Dresden, 2021)

Jared Ward

USA

Mapleton, UT

1:01:36 (Houston, 2020)

Reed Fischer

USA

Boulder, CO

1:01:37 (Houston, 2020)

Akira Akasaki

JPN

Fukuoka, JPN

1:01:46 (Ageo, 2019)

Haruka Onodera

JPN

Nagoya, JPN

1:02:03 (Ageo, 2019)

Mo Hrezi

LBA

Blue Bell, PA

1:02:08 (Houston, 2022)

Patricio Castillo*

MEX

Mexico City, MEX

1:02:15 (Valley Cottage, NY, 2021)

Elkanah Kibet

USA

Colo. Springs, CO

1:02:29 (Houston, 2018)

Benjamin de Haan

NED

Arnhem, NED

1:02:39 (Newcastle, 2021)

Ben True

USA

West Lebanon, NH

1:02:39 (NYC Half, 2018)

Johannes Motschmann

GER

New Rochelle, NY

1:02:42 (Valley Cottage, NY, 2021)

Tariku Bekele*

ETH

Alexandria, VA

1:02:59 (Lisbon, 2012)

Tristan Woodfine

CAN

Ontario, CAN

1:03:19 (Mission, BC, 2021)

Urgesa Kedir Figa*

ETH

New York, NY

1:03:26 (Brooklyn, 2019)

Birhanu Dare Kemal*

ETH

Aurora, CO

1:03:37 (Brooklyn, 2019)

Nick Hauger

USA

Flagstaff, AZ

1:04:28+ (Grand Rapids, MI, 2021)

Brendan Martin*

USA

New York, NY

1:04:34 (Valley Cottage, NY, 2021)

David Fitzmaurice*

IRL

New York, NY

1:05:55 (Duluth, MN, 2021)

Luis Carlos Rivero*

GUA

Jamaica, NY

1:06:03 (Las Vegas, 2016)

Ben Toomer*

GBR

New York, NY

1:06:35 (Greenville, SC, 2021)

Alberto Mena*

USA

New York, NY

1:07:22 (Philadelphia, 2021)

Edward Mulder*

USA

Boston, MA

1:07:25 (Brooklyn, 2019)

Shadrack Kipchirchir

USA

Colo. Springs, CO

Debut (27:07.55 10,000m PB)

Robert Brandt

USA

Washington DC

Debut (27:39.20 10,000m PB)

Ashenafi Ketema Birhana*

ETH

New York, NY

Debut (2:15:17 Marathon PB)

 

Professional Athlete Field –  Women’s Open Division

Name

Nat.

Residence

Personal Best

Senbere Teferi

ETH

Addis Ababa, ETH

1:05:32 (Valencia, 2019)

Irine Cheptai

KEN

Iten, KEN

1:06:43 (New Delhi, 2020)

Sara Hall

USA

Flagstaff, AZ

1:07:15 (Houston, 2022)

Edna Kiplagat

KEN

Boulder, CO

1:07:41 (Great North Run, 2012)

Charlotte Purdue

GBR

London, GBR

1:08:23 (Marugame, 2020)

Molly Seidel

USA

Flagstaff, AZ

1:08:29 (Atlanta, 2021)

Steph Twell

GBR

Farnham, GBR

1:08:55 (Houston, 2020)

Diane Nukuri

USA

Flagstaff, AZ

1:09:12 (NYC Half, 2013)

Dakotah Lindwurm

USA

Burnsville, MN

1:09:36 (Houston, 2022)

Lindsay Flanagan

USA

Boulder, CO

1:09:37 (Houston, 2020)

Andrea Seccafien

CAN

Portland, OR

1:09:38 (Marugame, 2020)

Karoline Bjerkeli Grøvdal

NOR

Oslo, NOR

1:09:41 (Oslo, 2012)

Sarah Pagano

USA

San Diego, CA

1:09:41 (Henderson, NV, 2021)

Natasha Wodak

CAN

Vancouver, BC

1:09:41  (Houston, 2020)

Emma Bates

USA

Boulder, CO

1:09:44 (Shelby Twp, MI, 2020)

Kim Conley

USA

Flagstaff, AZ

1:09:44 (Houston, 2015)

Lauren Paquette