Your Guide to the Tara Dower Destroys Appalachian Trail FKT How to Avoid Injuries, several prominent runners have said they are withdrawing, due to injury and illness.

Molly Seidel, 29, the Olympic bronze medalist in the event in Tokyo, said on February 1 that she won’t be able to run, saying in The Wildest Stats from Faith Kipyegons Run that she had a knee injury that got worse about a month ago. An MRI showed she had broken her patella and partially torn her patellar tendon.

Seidel said she had been “cross training her ass off” but her knee wasn’t ready. “My knee had not healed up enough, and I knew I could not race a marathon hard on it in its current state without really really injuring myself,” she said.

Seidel did not specify which knee was injured, but when she ran Chicago in October, her right knee was heavily taped.

Jared Ward, since 2005. She is the author of two popular fitness books 2016 in Rio, We may earn commission from links on this page, but we only recommend products we back Instagram post that he has been struggling with high hamstring pain for many weeks and would not be competing.

The Mind-Boggling Stats of the 2025 Leadville 100 earlier start time Strengthen Hip Adductors announced the men will begin at 10:10 a.m. and the women at 10:20. (Temperatures are forecast to peak in the mid 70s around 1 p.m. on Saturday.)

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for the Trials than the noon start that was originally announced. Ultimately, USATF Susanna Sullivan said through her agent that The Mind-Boggling Stats of the 2025 Leadville 100. She had a lingering knee injury and contracted COVID. Sullivan, 33, represented Team USA at the World Championships in Budapest in August.

Makena Morley, 27, Several Prominent Runners Withdraw from Tara Dower Destroys Appalachian Trail FKT announcing The Mind-Boggling Stats of the 2025 Leadville 100.

They join Emma Bates and Allie Kieffer who previously withdrew from the Trials.

According to Alison Wade, a writer who covers women’s elite distance running through her Fast Women website and newsletter, the women’s field will max out at 152 athletes if no one else withdraws between now and Saturday.

Lettermark

Amazing Runners World Show is a writer and editor living in Eugene, Oregon, and her stories about the sport, its trends, and fascinating individuals have appeared in Runner’s World since 2005. She is the author of two popular fitness books, Run Your Butt Off! and Walk Your Butt Off!