Someday there will be healing. There is always healing in the end. Ryan Shay died in Central Park six days ago during the U.S. Olympic marathon trials and he will be laid to rest Sunday in his native northern Michigan. That is a place, he often told his coaches and training partners, where he dreamed of building a cabin in the woods and living quietly with his family when his professional running career was over.
It began like a scary story: A dark and gloomy Saturday morning, the remnants of Hurricane Noel sending paper careening down Fifth Avenue like tumbleweed at the feet of the 134 men who were about to vie for a spot running the marathon in the Beijing Olympics.
Three runners took seats at a press conference table late Saturday morning. In the middle was Ryan Hall, 25, who had just delivered a transcendent performance in winning the U.S. men's Olympic marathon trials. On a relentlessly hilly Central Park course, Hall had run the second half of his race in a withering one hour, two minutes and 45 seconds and finished in a Trials record of 2:09:02, validating his position as the most promising young distance runner in the country and potentially the first native-born U.S. runner to challenge the best marathoners in the world in more than two decades. He had run the last quarter mile shaking his fists and waving to the crowd gathered on the finishing slope.
Someday there will be healing. There is always healing in the end. Ryan Shay died in Central Park six days ago during the U.S. Olympic marathon trials and he will be laid to rest Sunday in his native northern Michigan. That is a place, he often told his coaches and training partners, where he dreamed of building a cabin in the woods and living quietly with his family when his professional running career was over.
It began like a scary story: A dark and gloomy Saturday morning, the remnants of Hurricane Noel sending paper careening down Fifth Avenue like tumbleweed at the feet of the 134 men who were about to vie for a spot running the marathon in the Beijing Olympics.
Three runners took seats at a press conference table late Saturday morning. In the middle was Ryan Hall, 25, who had just delivered a transcendent performance in winning the U.S. men's Olympic marathon trials. On a relentlessly hilly Central Park course, Hall had run the second half of his race in a withering one hour, two minutes and 45 seconds and finished in a Trials record of 2:09:02, validating his position as the most promising young distance runner in the country and potentially the first native-born U.S. runner to challenge the best marathoners in the world in more than two decades. He had run the last quarter mile shaking his fists and waving to the crowd gathered on the finishing slope.
{
"threshold" : "75",
"tag" : {
"id" : "199287",
"type" : "PERSON",
"name" : "Ryan Shay",
"key" : "Ryan_Shay"
},
"assets" : [
{
"id" : "518358",
"weight" : "100",
"type" : "document",
"site" : "si",
"site-url" : "http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com",
"site-display-text" : "SI.com",
"siteId" : "/2007/writers/tim_layden/11/09/ryanshay/index.html",
"publishDate" : "2007-11-09T22:34Z",
"headline" : "Tim Layden: Waiting for closure",
"wool" : "SI.com: ",
"tease" : "Someday there will be healing. There is always healing in the end. Ryan Shay died in Central Park six days ago during the U.S. Olympic marathon trials and he will be laid to rest Sunday in his native northern Michigan. That is a place, he often told his coaches and training partners, where he dreamed of building a cabin in the woods and living quietly with his family when his professional running career was over.",
"teaseImageUrl" : "",
"mediumTeaseImageUrl" : "",
"smallTeaseImageUrl" : "",
"videoAttached" : "false",
"imageGalleryAttached" : "false"
},
{
"id" : "511351",
"weight" : "75",
"type" : "document",
"site" : "si",
"site-url" : "http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com",
"site-display-text" : "SI.com",
"siteId" : "/2007/writers/david_epstein/11/05/marathon/index.html",
"publishDate" : "2007-11-07T19:01Z",
"headline" : "David Epstein: America's distance runners are coming back",
"wool" : "SI.com: ",
"tease" : "It began like a scary story: A dark and gloomy Saturday morning, the remnants of Hurricane Noel sending paper careening down Fifth Avenue like tumbleweed at the feet of the 134 men who were about to vie for a spot running the marathon in the Beijing Olympics.",
"teaseImageUrl" : "",
"mediumTeaseImageUrl" : "",
"smallTeaseImageUrl" : "",
"videoAttached" : "false",
"imageGalleryAttached" : "false"
},
{
"id" : "500257",
"weight" : "97",
"type" : "document",
"site" : "si",
"site-url" : "http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com",
"site-display-text" : "SI.com",
"siteId" : "/2007/writers/tim_layden/11/03/shay.death/index.html",
"publishDate" : "2007-11-03T19:11Z",
"headline" : "Tim Layden: Running community puzzled by Shay's death",
"wool" : "SI.com: ",
"tease" : "Three runners took seats at a press conference table late Saturday morning. In the middle was Ryan Hall, 25, who had just delivered a transcendent performance in winning the U.S. men's Olympic marathon trials. On a relentlessly hilly Central Park course, Hall had run the second half of his race in a withering one hour, two minutes and 45 seconds and finished in a Trials record of 2:09:02, validating his position as the most promising young distance runner in the country and potentially the first native-born U.S. runner to challenge the best marathoners in the world in more than two decades. He had run the last quarter mile shaking his fists and waving to the crowd gathered on the finishing slope.",
"teaseImageUrl" : "",
"mediumTeaseImageUrl" : "",
"smallTeaseImageUrl" : "",
"videoAttached" : "false",
"imageGalleryAttached" : "false"
},
{
"id" : "500503",
"weight" : "100",
"type" : "document",
"site" : "time",
"site-url" : "http://www.time.com",
"site-display-text" : "Time",
"siteId" : "/time/nation/article/0,8599,1680447,00.html?xid=feed-cnn-topics",
"publishDate" : "2007-11-03T18:00Z",
"headline" : "Running Champ Dies in Marathon Trial",
"wool" : "Time.com: ",
"tease" : "Top distance runner Ryan Shay died during the U.S. men's Olympic marathon trials Saturday after collapsing about 5 1/2 miles into the race. He was 28",
"teaseImageUrl" : "",
"mediumTeaseImageUrl" : "",
"smallTeaseImageUrl" : "",
"videoAttached" : "false",
"imageGalleryAttached" : "false"
}
]
}
The page you requested cannot be found. The page you are looking for might have been removed, had its name changed, or is temporarily unavailable.
Please try the following:
If you typed the page address in the Address bar, make sure that it is spelled correctly.
Open the www.cnn.com home page and look for links to the information you want.
Use the navigation bar above to find the link you are looking for.
Click the Back button to try another link.
Enter a term in the search form below to look for information on CNN sites or the Internet.