U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials medalists Conner Mantz and Clayton Young, four-time Olympic medalist Kenenisa Bekele, and Paralympic champion Daniel Romanchuk to headline men’s fields; Olympians Jenny Simpson, Des Linden, and Edna Kiplagat, and defending wheelchair division champion Susannah Scaroni to anchor women’s fields
New York, February 22, 2024 – New York Road Runners (NYRR) has announced that the 2024 United Airlines NYC Half, taking place Sunday, March 17, will feature 11 Olympians, seven Paralympians, and several more professional athletes who have their eyes on the Paris 2024 Games this summer.
Conner Mantz and Clayton Young, fresh off finishing first and second, respectively, at the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials, will headline the men’s open division at the United Airlines NYC Half, while two-time U.S. Olympian Hillary Bor will race 13.1 miles for the first time in his career and the world’s most-decorated distance runner, Kenenisa Bekele, will return to New York for his second NYRR event. The women’s open division will be chock-full of established contenders, including Olympians Des Linden, Jenny Simpson, Edna Kiplagat, Karoline Bjerkeli Grøvdal, and Malindi Elmore, in addition to World Championships marathon bronze medalist Fatima Gardadi.
In the wheelchair division Susannah Scaroni will aim to defend her women’s title against past champions Manuela Schär and Tatyana McFadden, while Daniel Romanchuk will race for his third title on the men’s side.
These athletes will lead more than 25,000 runners during the United Airlines NYC Half, the world’s premier half marathon, organized by NYRR, which runs from Brooklyn to Manhattan, passing historic landmarks, diverse neighborhoods, and sweeping views of the city along the way before finishing in Central Park.
Men’s Open Division
Mantz and Young, training partners from Provo, Utah, will line up together at the start in New York less than two months after finishing one-two at the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials in Orlando and qualifying for the Paris 2024 Games. Mantz was fifth in his first United Airlines NYC Half in 2022, and last year became the seventh-fastest American marathoner in history when running 2:07:47 to finish sixth at the Chicago Marathon. Young finished right behind him in seventh in 2:08:00 and will be making his United Airlines NYC Half debut.
“I think I have a lot of room to improve in the halfs,” Mantz said on the latest episode of NYRR Set the Pace, Feb. 22, 2024. “I want to get these halfs in so I can have more confidence heading into Paris. I ran [the United Airlines NYC Half] in 2022…which was probably one of the most special experiences and it was a huge learning [experience]. It was probably my first race where I was competing against a big international field…so it was a really good experience for me, and I think it’s one I want to repeat and take what I’ve learned in the last two years and use it.”
Ethiopia’s Bekele, a four-time Olympic medalist, 16-time world champion, and the third-fastest marathoner in history, will challenge the American duo, racing with NYRR for the second time after finishing sixth at the 2021 TCS New York City Marathon. He will be joined at the starting line by Kenya’s Abel Kipchumba, the reigning champion of the B.A.A. Boston Half Marathon who owns one of the top-10 half-marathon times in history.
Morocco’s Zouhair Talbi will return to the event after taking third in his United Airlines NYC Half debut last year, which he called “the race of his life.” Since then, he finished fifth at the Boston Marathon and broke the Houston Marathon course record in January. Tanzanian Olympian and marathon record-holder Gabriel Geay, who was the runner-up at last year’s Boston Marathon, will race the United Airlines NYC Half for the first time.
An American contender to watch will be Hillary Bor, a two-time U.S. Olympian and five-time national champion who will be making his half-marathon debut. Bor broke the 40-year-old American 10-mile record at the USATF 10 Mile Road Championships last year. Also toeing the line will be Reed Fischer, who has finished in the top 10 at the last two editions of the race and is coming off a top-10 finish at the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials.
Women’s Open Division
Two-time U.S. Olympian and 2018 Boston Marathon champion Linden will return as the top American finisher from last year’s race, having recently finished 11th at the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials. Olympic and World Championships medalist Simpson will make her United Airlines NYC Half debut; but she is no stranger to NYRR races as an eight-time winner of the New Balance 5th Avenue Mile.
Kenyans Gladys Chepkurui, the reigning Tokyo Half Marathon champion, and Cynthia Limo, a World Athletics Championships half-marathon medalist, have the two fastest times in the women’s open division. They will be joined by another Kenyan, Kiplagat, who has won the World Athletics Championships marathon, TCS New York City Marathon, Boston Marathon, and London Marathon, and will be in search of her first United Airlines NYC Half title, having finished as the runner-up in 2011. Three-time third-place finisher Grøvdal of Norway, 2023 World Athletics Championships marathon bronze medalist Gardadi of Morocco, and two-time Olympian Elmore of Canada will also toe the line as international podium contenders.
Lindsay Flanagan and Annie Frisbie, both of whom finished in the top 10 at the 2024 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials, will also be ones to watch.
The United Airlines NYC Half women’s open and wheelchair division professional athlete fields are presented by Mastercard.
Men’s Wheelchair Division
Romanchuk, a two-time Paralympic medalist and two-time TCS New York City Marathon winner, will race for his third United Airlines NYC Half title after finishing as the runner-up last year. 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 he repeated as champion in 2019. In 2021, he won his first set of Paralympic medals, taking 400-meter gold by one hundredth of a second and winning bronze in the marathon.
The Netherlands’ Geert Schipper, a Paralympic silver medalist in paratriathlon, will make his NYRR racing debut after winning the Cape Town Marathon in October and finishing in second place at the Paris Marathon last April. Schipper is a two-time Paralympian, having represented the Netherlands at both the Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020 Paralympics.
Last year’s third-place finisher, Evan Correll of the United States, will return; he has finished in the top four at the last two editions of the United Airlines NYC Half and was fourth at the 2022 TCS New York City Marathon. The University of Illinois junior represented Team USA in November at the Parapan American Games in Santiago, Chile, where he won gold in the 5,000 meters and bronze in both the 100 and 400 meters.
Women’s Wheelchair Division
Two-time Paralympic medalist Scaroni will race for her second consecutive and third overall United Airlines NYC Half title as she aims to add to the tremendous success she’s had at NYRR races. She won the 2022 TCS New York City Marathon in a then-course record time, has won all five wheelchair division titles at the Mastercard New York Mini 10K, and won the United Airlines NYC Half in 2023 and 2017.
“This is such a special year for the United Airlines NYC Half as it celebrates its 10th anniversary of the professional wheelchair division. I was fortunate to be at the inaugural race in 2014 and am thrilled to join another strong field in New York this year,” Scaroni said.
Challenging Scaroni will be Switzerland’s eight-time Paralympic medalist and three-time TCS New York City Marathon champion Schär, who won the race in 2022, 2018, and 2015. American McFadden, a 20-time Paralympic medalist and five-time TCS New York City Marathon champion, will race for her third title, having won the event in 2019 and 2016.
Scaroni, Schär, and McFadden have combined to win seven of the eight titles since the wheelchair division was added to the event in 2014.
The United Airlines NYC Half, one of 60 adult and youth races NYRR organizes annually, will be covered locally in the tri-state area by ABC New York, Channel 7 with live news cut-ins between 6:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. Additionally, the four professional fields will be covered by a livestream, distributed internationally from NYRR’s digital channels and abc7ny.com, beginning at 7:00 a.m. ET.
Professional Athlete Field – Men’s Open Division
Name |
Country |
Residence |
Personal Best |
Abel Kipchumba |
KEN |
Iten, KEN |
58:07 (Valencia, 2021) |
Gabriel Geay |
TAN |
Babati, TAN |
59:42 (Houston, 2020) |
Zerei Kbrom |
NOR |
Stavanger, NOR |
1:00:01 (Copenhagen, 2022) |
Kenenisa Bekele |
ETH |
Addis Ababa, ETH |
1:00:22 (London, 2020) |
Conner Mantz |
USA |
Provo, Utah |
1:00:55 (Hardeeville, S.C., 2021) |
Zouhair Talbi |
MAR |
Colorado Springs, Colo. |
1:01:08 (Houston, 2023) |
Tomonori Yamaguchi |
JPN |
Tokyo |
1:01:16 (Ageo, 2023) |
Clayton Young |
USA |
Provo, Utah |
1:01:18 (Hardeeville, S.C., 2021) |
Yemane Haileselassie |
ERI |
Flagstaff, Ariz. |
1:01:24 (Houston, 2024) |
Shadrack Biwott |
USA |
Folsom, Calif. |
1:01:25 (San Diego, 2014) |
Reed Fischer |
USA |
Boulder, Colo. |
1:01:37 (Houston, 2020) |
David Nilsson |
SWE |
Stockholm, SWE |
1:01:40 (Gdynia, POL, 2020) |
Taishi Ito |
JPN |
Tokyo |
1:01:50 (Marugame, JPN, 2023) |
Rei Matsunaga |
JPN |
Tokyo |
1:01:56 (Ageo, 2023) |
Fernando Cabada |
USA |
Boulder, Colo. |
1:02:00 (Houston, 2014) |
Filmon Ande |
ERI |
Flagstaff, Ariz. |
1:02:20 (Philadelphia, 2023) |
Matt Baxter |
NZL |
Flagstaff, Ariz. |
1:02:38 (San Jose, 2021) |
Tristan Woodfine |
CAN |
Ontario, CAN |
1:02:40 (Boston, 2023) |
Yenew Alamirew Getahun |
ETH |
Bronx |
1:03:05 (RBC Brooklyn, 2023) |
Tim McGowan |
USA |
Boston |
1:03:54 (Philadelphia, 2023) |
Eduardo Garcia |
ISV |
Greenville, S.C. |
1:03:59 NR (Houston, 2024) |
Desta Utura Gedo |
ETH |
New York |
1:04:28 (Barcelona, 2023) |
Aaron Breene |
USA |
Wilton, Conn. |
1:08:32 (Valley Cottage, N.Y., 2023) |
Hillary Bor |
USA |
Colorado Springs, Colo. |
Debut |
NR = National Record
Professional Athlete Field – Women’s Open Division
Name |
Country |
Residence |
Personal Best |
Gladys Chepkurui |
KEN |
Iten, KEN |
1:05:46 (Barcelona, 2022) |
Cynthia Limo |
KEN |
Iten, KEN |
1:06:04 (Ras Al-Khaimah, UAE, 2016) |
Karoline Bjerkeli Grøvdal |
NOR |
Oslo, NOR |
1:07:34 (Copenhagen, 2023) |
Edna Kiplagat |
KEN |
Longmont, Colo. |
1:07:52 (Houston, 2024) |
Fabienne Schlumpf |
SUI |
Wetzikon, SUI |
1:08:27 NR (Dresden, 2021) |
Diane Van Es |
NED |
Rotterdam, NED |
1:09:31 (Barcelona, 2024) |
Lindsay Flanagan |
USA |
Boulder, Colo. |
1:09:37 (Houston, 2020) |
Jackie Gaughan |
USA |
Boston |
1:10:01 (Houston, 2024) |
Malindi Elmore |
CAN |
Kelowna, CAN |
1:10:11 (Gifu, JPN, 2023) |
Annie Frisbie |
USA |
Minneapolis, Minn. |
1:10:14 (NYC Half, 2022) |
Fatima Gardadi |
MAR |
Rabat, MAR |
1:10:28 (Tamensa, MAR, 2021) |
Desiree Linden |
USA |
Charlevoix, Mich. |
1:10:34 (Naples, Fla., 2011) |
Jenny Simpson |
USA |
Boulder, Colo. |
1:10:35 (Houston, 2023) |
Fantu Zewude Jifar |
ETH |
New York |
1:13:37 (Krakow, POL, 2019) |
Marie-Ange Brumelot |
FRA |
Shokan, N.Y. |
1:13:46 (RBC Brooklyn, 2022) |
Sarah Ann Sibert |
USA |
New York |
1:13:54 (Valley Cottage, N.Y., 2023) |
Demitu Hawas Lenjiso |
ETH |
New York |
1:14:16 (Hawassa, ETH, 2022) |
Alexandra Conway |
USA |
New York |
1:15:05 (Valley Cottage, N.Y., 2023) |
Gabrielle Yatauro |
USA |
New York |
1:15:59 (RBC Brooklyn, 2022) |
Leigh Anne Sharek |
USA |
Brooklyn |
1:16:17 (RBC Brooklyn, 2023) |
Melissa Reed |
USA |
New York |
1:16:22 (Valley Cottage, N.Y., 2023) |
Ana Johnson |
USA |
City Island, N.Y. |
1:17:22 (RBC Brooklyn, 2019) |
Alyssa Salese |
USA |
Huntington, N.Y. |
1:17:26 (RBC Brooklyn, 2022) |
Aileen Barry |
USA |
Manhasset, N.Y. |
1:17:41 (RBC Brooklyn, 2023) |
Madeleine King |
USA |
New York |
1:17:57 (Philadelphia, 2023) |
Leila Mantilla |
USA |
New York |
1:18:20 (Valley Cottage, N.Y., 2023) |
Shannon McCarthy |
USA |
Hoboken, N.J. |
1:18:26 (RBC Brooklyn, 2023) |
Emily Royston |
USA |
New York |
1:18:30 (NYC Half, 2023) |
Alana Levy |
USA |
New York |
1:19:57 (Sacramento, 2023) |
NR = National Record
Professional Athlete Field – Men’s Wheelchair Division
Name |
Country |
Residence |
Personal Best |
Johnboy Smith |
GBR |
West Kingsdown, GBR |
43:34 (Great North Run, 2019) |
Daniel Romanchuk |
USA |
Champaign, Ill. |
43:54 (Chicago, 2023) |
Evan Correll |
USA |
Champaign, Ill. |
44:30 (Chicago, 2023) |
Rafael Botello |
ESP |
Manlleu, Spain |
44:33 (Lisbon, 2014) |
Jason Robinson |
USA |
Champaign, Ill. |
47:58 (Chicago, 2023) |
Brian Siemann |
USA |
Champaign, Ill. |
47:58 (Chicago, 2023) |
Hermin Garic |
USA. |
Utica, N.Y. |
48:15 (Philadelphia, 2023) |
Geert Schipper |
NED |
Spanbroek, NED |
Debut |
Professional Athlete Field – Women’s Wheelchair Division
Name |
Country |
Residence |
Personal Best |
Susannah Scaroni |
USA |
Champaign, Ill. |
46:07 (Chicago, 2022) |
Yen Hoang |
USA |
Champaign, Ill. |
51:26 (Chicago, 2023) |
Hannah Dederick |
USA |
Champaign, Ill. |
52:22 (Chicago, 2022) |
Tatyana McFadden |
USA |
Baltimore, Md. |
52:25 (NYC Half, 2016) |
Manuela Schär |
SUI |
Kriens, SUI |
53:10 (NYC Half, 2016) |
Michelle Wheeler |
USA |
Vincentown, N.J. |
1:00 (Philadelphia, 2022) |
Eva Houston |
USA |
Champaign, Ill. |
1:10 (Indianapolis, 2022) |
April Coughlin |
USA |
New York |
Debut |
# # #
About New York Road Runners (NYRR)
NYRR’s mission is to help and inspire people through running. Since 1958, New York Road Runners has grown from a local running club to the world’s premier community running organization. NYRR’s commitment to New York City’s five boroughs features races, virtual races, community events, free youth running initiatives and school programs, the NYRR RUNCENTER featuring the New Balance Run Hub, and training resources that provide hundreds of thousands of people each year with the motivation, know-how, and opportunity to Run for Life. NYRR’s premier event is the TCS New York City Marathon. Held annually on the first Sunday in November, the race features a wide population of runners, from the world’s top professional athletes to a vast range of competitive, recreational, and charity runners. To learn more, visit www.nyrr.org.