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Keira D'Amato reacts to her time as she crosses the line for the Chevron Houston Marathon
Keira D鈥橝mato finished in 2:19:12鈥24 seconds faster than Deena Kastor鈥檚 mark. (Photo: Elizabeth Conley/Houston Chronicle/AP)
In Stride

How Keira D鈥橝mato Ran the Race of Her Life

The unlikely new American record holder in the marathon believes her best racing days are still ahead of her

Published: 
Keira D'Amato reacts to her time as she crosses the line for the Chevron Houston Marathon
(Photo: Elizabeth Conley/Houston Chronicle/AP)

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On a cold, breezy day this past weekend in Houston, 37-year-old Keira D鈥橝mato set a new American record in the marathon. Working with her pacers Calum Neff and Silas Frantz, she finished in 2:19:12鈥24 seconds faster than Deena Kastor鈥檚 mark, which was set at the 2006 London Marathon. Before last Sunday, Kastor was the only American woman to have broken the 2:20 barrier; her benchmark had survived the illustrious careers of athletes like Shalane Flanagan and Kara Goucher and the advent of the 鈥渟uper shoe鈥 era. It was, , 鈥渢he one American record everyone wanted.鈥

Until recently, few people would have picked D鈥橝mato as Kastor鈥檚 likely successor. Although she had been an All-American in college, D鈥橝mato subsequently spent years away from the sport, working full-time as a realtor and raising two kids with her husband Anthony. She only picked up running again in 2016 when she was in her thirties and looking for a physical release from the everyday demands of being a working mother. After running 3:49 in her debut marathon in 2013, she ran 2:44 at Grandma鈥檚 Marathon in 2018 and 2:34:55 at the 2019 Berlin Marathon. Such talent notwithstanding, the notion that D鈥橝mato would progress from 2:35 to 2:19 in a little over two years to break one of the most long-standing records in American distance running was improbable, to say the least. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 wrap my head around the magnitude of it,鈥 D鈥橝mato says, adding that she felt a kind of cognitive dissonance between what her training suggested she was capable of and the absurdity of going after such a lofty goal: 鈥淚 told my husband that I felt really confident that I could run 5:18 pace for 26 miles, but I really couldn鈥檛 wrap my head around the American record part.鈥

For the past couple of years, the most obvious candidate to break Kastor鈥檚 record was Sara Hall, who will turn 39 in April and who has been on a tear since experiencing a late career breakthrough in 2019. Hall also raced in Houston last weekend and set a new U.S. record in the half marathon, running 1:07:15 to break Molly Huddle鈥檚 mark of 1:07:25 from 2018. (She finished second in the race behind Kenya鈥檚 Vicoty Chepngeno, who came home in 1:05:03.) In December 2020, Hall ran 2:20:32 at the Marathon Project in Chandler, Arizona. At the time, it was the second fastest marathon ever by an American woman and a performance that may have overshadowed the fact that D鈥橝mato likewise had a stellar race in the same event, running 2:22:56 for an 11-minute PR.

鈥淲hen I ran 2:22 that felt like a pretty controlled effort,鈥 D鈥橝mato says, recalling her Marathon Project experience. 鈥淚 finished that race thinking that I could run faster since I never really hit a wall. It felt really smooth. And marathons never really feel smooth.鈥

One of the more intriguing counterfactuals about last Sunday in Houston is what might have transpired had Hall and D鈥橝mato been competing in the same race. D鈥橝mato may have beaten her to besting Kastor鈥檚 mark, but Hall clearly looks as well positioned as ever to run her fastest 26.2 miles. It wouldn鈥檛 be surprising if she took another shot at the new-and-improved marathon record before too long, although it will have to wait a bit since Hall is this coming April. (Boston is not a record-eligible course.)

At the end of the day, however, rivalries are more interesting than records, especially when there鈥檚 a storyline as compelling as the fact that the all-time fastest female American half and full marathoners are both mothers in their late thirties. Here鈥檚 to hoping that we will get to see a rematch of D鈥橝mato vs. Hall in the not-too-distant future.

The notion that age is just a number is surely one of our more irresistible clich茅s, all the more so because it is one that is obviously false. For D鈥橝mato, however, one of the benefits of competing at a world-class level at her age is that it gives her a sense of urgency. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not lost on me that I am older than the majority of the people that I compete against, which is why I鈥檝e really seized every opportunity that I can.鈥

But even as she recognizes that she will聽only have so many chances to maximize her potential, D鈥橝mato says there鈥檚 something motivating about not knowing when she will stop improving. This, too, is a kind of useful contradiction: the simultaneous knowledge that your days may be numbered, but your future is unwritten.

鈥淚 think part of what allowed me to accomplish what I did on Sunday is just always looking forward to the future, so there wasn鈥檛 the pressure that this was the end-all-be-all for me,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 have no idea where my running career at this level is going to go and where the story is going to end. Maybe the best is yet to come. It鈥檚 a beautiful and exciting thing to get up every day and see what I can do.鈥

Corrections: (01/21/2022) This story has been updated to correct the date and finishing time of D'Amato's debut marathon. 国产吃瓜黑料 regrets the error.
Lead Photo: Elizabeth Conley/Houston Chronicle/AP

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