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National Distance Running Hall of Fame Inducts Burfoot, Welch, and Hayes
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National Distance Running Hall of Fame
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July 12, 2008 (Utica, N.Y.) – The National Distance Running Hall of Fame Induction Class of 2008 included: Amby Burfoot, Priscilla Welch and Johnny Hayes.
The Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony was held on Saturday, July 12 at the Auditorium on the grounds of the Masonic Care Community in Utica, New York. The Induction Ceremony was part of the festivities taking place during National Distance Running Hall of Fame Weekend featuring The Boilermaker Road Race.
The Hall of Fame voting committee, which consists of national leaders in the running community, as well as members of each induction class, selected this year’s inductees. Current Hall of Famers include: Bill Rodgers, Joan Benoit Samuelson, Frank Shorter, Kathrine Switzer, John J. Kelley, Nina Kuscsik, Billy Mills, Alberto Salazar, and Grete Waitz.
Amby Burfoot Burfoot finished 15 Boston Marathons including a win in 1968 with a time of 2:22:17. He was the first American to win the Boston Marathon since 1957. Burfoot is the executive editor of Runner’s World Magazine. He has written several books on running, including Runner’s World Complete Book of Running.
Priscilla Welch Welch holds several masters’ women’s records at a variety of distances including the women’s masters’ marathon with a time of 2:26:51. Some of Welch’s awards include Runner’s World Magazine’s 1986 Masters Woman Runner of the Year, 1991 Masters’ Runner of the Quarter Century and Best Female Masters Road Runner in the 1996 Runner’s World “100 Years of Running” issue.
Johnny Hayes Hayes won the 1908 Olympic Marathon, beating Dorando Pietri. This marathon was significant because it was the first marathon held at the now standard distance of 26 miles, 385 yards. It was also the first time an American won the Olympic Marathon against a truly international field. Hayes also won the first Yonkers Marathon in 1907, and placed 2nd (1908), 3rd (1907), and 5th (1906) at the Boston Marathon. Hayes kicked off a period of intense competition in the marathon after he turned pro shortly after his Olympic victory.
The National Distance Running Hall of Fame is located in Utica, New York, along a stretch of the New York State Thruway that could be called “Hall of Fame Corridor.” Established in 1998, it currently has 30 members, including Bill Rodgers, Frank Shorter, Alberto Salazar, Grete Waitz, Kathrine Switzer, Joan Benoit Samuelson and the late Steve Prefontaine. The Hall is dedicated to honoring the sport of distance running and the athletes who have made contributions to the sport, from top runners and the most decorated athletes, to those who pushed the sport’s barriers and eventually broke them. The Hall is housed in a three-story brownstone building and honors these athletes’ talents, initiative and drive through the pictures, memorabilia and awards that decorate the exhibit rooms and pull the visitor into the runner’s world, a place often inhabited by the runner alone as she/he challenges the limits of the human spirit. The Hall’s induction is celebrated at an annual ceremony held in conjunction with the Boilermaker Road Race during Hall of Fame Weekend, the second weekend each July, in Utica, New York. The Hall of Fame offers membership opportunities for road races, clubs, organizations and individuals, at a variety of levels.
For more information, contact Mary MacEnroe at the National Distance Running Hall of Fame in Utica, New York at (315) 724-4525 office or (315) 796-4524 cell.
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