Just finished this race. It was an absolute slaughterhouse. People were dropping, half the runners were walking on the bridge, and i saw at least 4 people being wheeled away by medics. So kudos to these pros with their absolute iron grit.
I volunteered at the Mile 12 aid station in Brooklyn! We all saw Do Nascimiento pass by around 54 minutes and then it felt like ages passed before the rest of the mens elite field came around. Really exciting race - I felt so bad for him after reading the final race results though. But he's 24 so he has years to crush his future marathons and perfect his pacing strategy!
No reason to feel bad for him. He isn't hurt. Everyone is talking about him. He knew perfectly well how it works. There were better runners that him, and they deserved to overtake him.
I don't think it had anything to do with him dropping out but there was a crazy looking cyclist yelling at him and riding right up behind him on the 59th street bridge. I don't think it was welcome as I saw him trying to waive the guy off. Not sure why someone didn't step in and get rid of that guy, must have been really distracting for him as that was about the point where he really started hurting I think.
Do Nascimento blew up about the same distance he did last year in the Olympics, also in extremely warm conditions. He keeps gaining experience, and since he is quite young Im sure he will be a big name in the sport in the near future to come.
@@jordanbabcock9349 It's called taking risks, sometimes it works sometimes it doesn't, it will eventually pay off for him. I give him way more credit than people that always stay in their comfort zone. I know a lot of runners pride themselves for being conservative in their running, but that means nothing to me, personally.
lmao anyone that understands marathon knows that he has over 10 years of running ahead of him yet he is already at the top level, despite not having even reached his peak. So yes I believe in him.
@@jordanbabcock9349 Say someone wants to win rather than taking a safe top 10 finish, he would have to risk not finishing at all. Nascimento took a risky strategy back in Tokyo, it didn't work. Maybe he needed to improve some, maybe it was just bad luck. He tried what appears to be the same strategy today although it's different already. It's not as hot in NYC today as in Tokyo, and he is not against the best marathon runner of all time. And he probably got stronger comparing to himself from an year ago. Sure again it didn't work. It doesn't mean he is a bad runner or he hasn't learnt. Even Michael Jordan had to try more than several times to figure out how to win a championship. MJ got smashed by Bird's Celtics a few years in a row, then by Detriot a few years in a row. I bet someone back then was saying that 'this Jordan kid just doesn't know what he is doing' too.
I ran on Sunday and this was my first marathon. Absolutely brutal, horrible cramping. There were dozens of people in oxygen masks, on stretchers, ambulances, vomiting, etc. I'm thrilled to just have finished and stay healthy.
I always wondered why some runners don't outpace the others in the beginning to separate the distance, now I see it doesn't work in marathons. It was a gutsy of Daniel to try it. I'm still rooting for him.
It is actually unusual for seasoned runners especially. He was running like a pacer. I'm sure he learned a lot from this race. It is a little surprising that he ended up with cramps and heat exhaustion being that he is from Brazil. If he could maintained that pace he could have won in close to his pr. He simply misjudged his ability for the conditions.
As one commentator famously said, "At some point, someone is going to hand him a piano to carry." In the marathon, when things start to go bad, they go bad quickly!
@Michael Deierhoi yesterday was insane. I’m also from Brazil, to avoid the heat we usually train at 6am, I was doing my long runs (18-20 miles) at a 9:00 pace, was really excited to run in the cold, but yesterday couldn’t event keep it at 10:00 in the first 10kms, crazy and brutal weather. But happy to have finished my first marathon in one piece.
I'm have the feeling if the race was in the 40/50 degrees Daniel would have sustained that pace through the end. His pace is just violent!!! What a runner!!!
@@W.C. You can actually hit the wall when your body temperature raises too high. When it's colder you can delay hitting the wall. So in this case he might have finished the marathon if it was colder.
@@W.C. lol you have no idea what you're talking about buddy. The wall is very much about the weather too, just like it is about what shoes you run in and dozens of other factors.
@@W.C. Well I agree with everything you said here. I just pointed out that weather does play a role, in fact, a pretty significant one, as to when exactly you hit the wall.
As someone who ran it today, those conditions were brutal. 70°F+ pretty much the whole race with the sun shining through really made it tough to run a good time! (For me, I was aiming for >2:45:00 and ended up running 3:09:44 😬)
I ran the Portland Marathon this year (Oct. 2nd) and we also experienced record-breaking temps. By the time I was finishing the race, it was well over 90 degrees. I was sucking down electrolytes like crazy and had a layer of salt crystals on my forehead 😅😅. I don't think people were prepared for the heat and sun in a city known for being cool and cloudy.
Not your day but I’ll never forget your kick off returns for Alabama or the time you traversed the country multiple times in one push. Still proud of you bro 👍
I ran NYC in 1993, and expected a sub 3-hour time. The temperature was 73F at race time and it was humid. I crossed the Verrazano-Narrows bridge, (2 miles), and knew I was doomed. My legs felt like jelly. I ran 4:01 -- very disappointed after all the work I put in.
forgot about humidity. I was wondering why 70 is warm. Im from California and did XC a few years back in 80-90 F, sometimes up to 98/99F. Still brutal but its dry.
@@zeffery101 The month before I ran it was unseasonable cool -- temps in 40s and 50s. I've never been a hot-weather runner. I've run sub 3 hours before but it wasn't in the cards that day. I cramped up bad after the race but finished.
shot out also to the Morrocan El Aaraby also he has a PR of 2:06 and was NYC marathon runner-up last year. He finished 4 this year, unfortunately. But he deserves your appreciation for sure.
Kenyans are the best marathoners in the world. I don't know why the Ethiopians have not yet mastered the marathon. Out of the 6 masters marathon majors, Kenya has won almost all of them on both the men and women's side.
I am from Brazil, and I was cheering for Daniel in this race. Unfortunately, he could not complete it, but he is still young! For sure a lot of awesome races will come 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
He didn't run a smart race but if he conditions himself he'll definitely be able to run at this pace in the near future for the full 26.2 miles. At 70 plus degrees he ran a furious record beating pace through 21 miles so he definitely needs more conditioning more training but I think this guy can break records. I'd bet on him in the future
@@2011hwalker I hear what you're saying but he kept up an incredible pace for 80% of the race. He's going to improve. Better coaching better training better conditioning
That's wild, never knew it used to be on during the summer. I volunteered today in the starting village and I could sense how anxious some people were about the heat. I would have decimated my time had I been running today. I love entering the winter half marathons in December-February for this reason. I really hope today's temps don't become standard for the NYC marathon.
Not a pro. I ran it three times, and it's the most challenging marathon together with Madrid I’ve run. Those bridges, and the hill from 110th to the entrance to central park always killed me.
Jose , i am with you, I ran Madrid and I thought it was very difficult. Why ? Because Madrid lies on a 600 meter plateau ( 2000 feet) and the last 8 km ( 5 miles) is a slow climb . Very tough
hey channel people, your videos are amazing, great dialogs, wonderful clips, great info. I'm not a runner at all but now i know abby steiner and mathew boland. keep the videos coming.
My coworker and her brother competed in this year‘s marathon. He represented the US while he represented Mexico. I have never been interested in the New York marathon until she told me she was participating. I even uploaded the app to follow both of them to the finish line.
I don't know why anyone would drop a 4:20 mile so early in the race on a hot day and very hilly course, Do Nascimento got his race plan completely wrong
@@joshuasmith1215 To the average person, but speaking from experience when you are running long distance at 70 especially if it's even a little humid you really start to notice it after a while.
@@aprenderlife Same guy I was thinking of. What always stands out in my memory is one of the race commentators saying "Somebody is going to hand this gentleman a piano to carry." and that has always been my mantra as a runner; to not have to carry the piano. th-cam.com/video/BE6nuOcbMck/w-d-xo.html
Daniel's got a massive career yet, ran the marathon from the back and that was BRUTAL conditions. Was fun to watch the first 20 from the starting village!
A bit off topic but why can’t all of the flags at the finish line break away like that? There’s much less of a chance for injury when they break away in the middle versus when they have to try not to trip over traditional ones
Running in this weather is no joke. Running in Houston is often like this in the fall & winter, and there is no real getting used to it-at least not for me
It's always crazy to fathom running a 5 min mile........once. Let alone 26 times consecutively. The human body/mind is amazing. I remember cross-country in college I could barely do 10K races w/ a 7-7.5 min avg. And that's me training REALLY hard. Haha
I just don't understand how that dude thought it was a good idea to push that hard that early...then continue to push. I would think he has coaches who could teach him these things BEFORE the race.
If you've ever pushed that hard (especially in this heat) for that long you know that you just fall off a cliff. Suddenly your body says "no more, that's it" and no matter how good you felt 5 minutes ago you're absolutely done.
The people that only listen to their coaches and never think outside the box are never going to be world record holders. The exception being if their coach is a record holder.
I ran this yesterday and am still in pain unable to barely move. The heat and humidity was crazy for NYC in in November. My time was terrible 5:54. This was my third full marathon, but first NYC, or first race in any distance outside the City of Detroit. My previous 2 Detroit Freeps were 5:00 and 5:21. I saw 10x as many people seek medical care as in any of the 4 Detroit Free Press Marathon events(full & half combined). I guess you can say for the most part the elites showed why they are elite. Other than Daniel Do Nascimento the rest finished world class times pushing records.
@@Zeno_334 I'm 48 male(don't know of very many women named "Jeff"). I'm not sure how long you could consider me to be "training", but my first full marathon(and half-marathon for that matter) was in 2014, and I've now done 3. Both the other 2 were for the Detroit Free Press Marathon.
Man's got to learn some pacing strategy first. Tremendous talent but hard to understand how he misjudged his pacing that badly. A 4:20 and 1:01 on that course in those conditions? There's Brave and then there's just stupid...
Times like what? The winner ran 2:08. We are not close to a sub 2 marathon. No body besides Kipchoge is remotely close and Kipchoge has probably ran his fastest race. Nobody currently running marathons will do it. There's a couple of quick guys on the track with the potential but potential has no value until its realised.
@@mathieudube6907 are you the running wizard or something I see you everywhere downgrading everybody’s opinion bro get a life. Yes kipchoge is the goat of the marathon we all know but surely he won’t be the “Goat” forever when you have a 24 year old casually (no emotions expressed) running like this you have to wonder it will be only a matter of time.
@@shuaibb8992 no doubt someone will break 2 hours at some point. Im simply giving my opinion based on facts not feelings. The guy we are talking about has a lifetime marathon pb of 2"04 high. There are many current runners of the same age with better times and are more consistent. Who ever does break 2 hours it it very unlikely to be this guy.
@@mathieudube6907 actually it’s not unlikely at all this guy was running wr pace at New York marathon not even kipchoge would do something like that on top of that the course is hilly and it was a very humid day too. If he were to try it this on the Berlin course I could see him running 2h 2m all he needs is to keep training and a good coach he has potential to be a marathon great. (Although he’s from South America he has been training in Kenya)
I am not sure how to be humble as a Kenyan at this point. We just dont know how to NOT take these titles. we are the business! Now we just need to learn how to celebrate because when our heroes come home, it business as usual ;) That said, when the Brazillian fell down, I felt like running to him (the mom in me wanted to nurse him...dont die in the field, its a sport, live to play another day!!!) oh, and please come and run in kenya. my mom has a travel company that can organize for you to run and train in the same places as these GOATS...come!!! karibu!
Boy must have mistook his name for Kipchoge lol wasn't this the same dude that fist pumped Eliud Kipchoge in the Tokyo Olympics only to completely blow out 10 minutes later in fairness it was also very hot (and Humid) that day maybe the heat doesn't agree with him best of luck to him in the next one
As a twenty-something I ran in the NYC Marathon in 1978. It was an experience. I think there were only about 15,000 runners that year. No, I didn't win. Best place to view the marathon was my neighborhood along 4th Avenue in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn.
Yes, but the worst marathon in more modern era was a race in Deadwood marathon where it got to be 105 F as we were leaving the 1/2 marathon and as I was finishing just over 2 hours for the 1/2 Marathon I had trained to do 1 hour 30 minutes to 1 hour 45 minutes they had called over the PA to shut down the Marathon by that point. Also did not help it was 10% humidity so people could not stay hydrated well enough to finish so only one Women and 9--10 men finished including a guy who needed to run a correctly mesured trail/unpaved marathon (gravel former railway) to do a famous 50K, no other distance was allowed for the famous 50K only a trail Marathon, could not use a 50k or longer trail event for a qualifier, reason is there are so few unpaved trail Marathons in the USA/world that qualify for this event as unpaved and actually measured correctly not off as a 26 mile or a 27 mile event due to trail length.
I'm even a bit surprised that such attacks as De Nascimento happen so rarely. One would think that on such a big stage, more legit runners who are not legit enough to win, will try to shine for a moment on the biggest stage, and deliberately run a half maraton instead of a maraton.
Way back in the day as a high school miler (1600m), I just barely missed the state championship meet (where I would have been last) by running a 4:34 mile. Do Nascimento AVERAGED 4:40 for the first half of the race, even doing 4:20 for one of them! That's the difference between amateurs and the big boys and girls. What dedication, and natural talent from God, it must take to get like that.
They had us running the 1500m in the early '80's. Ran my PR of 4:17 (which converts to your time). I cannot imagine carrying that pace for twice that distance let alone a marathon. Absolutely stunning! (Congrats on a very respectable time and dedication of training. Now that I'm "old" can I appreciate youthfulness and desire to its fullest!)
@@Blittsplitt5 You're most certainly welcome, and God bless you, you bright ray of sunshine, bringing that positive energy to all. Hopefully, you ain't against "dedication" and "natural talent", too (Not like I actually give a flying duck).
Yeah, this marathon took place on the one weekend where the temperature popped back up. The previous weeks had been in the 50s and low 60s at peak hours. That's just plain unlucky for marathoners and lucky for everyone else. On a side note, I am doubtful that Galen Rupp will ever PR again, sadly.
can you take a look at the Ontario high school championships (OFSSAA) there were a lot of fast times and a lot of very competitive high school runners. The event was sponsored by Nike Gatorade and other large brands.
Just finished this race. It was an absolute slaughterhouse. People were dropping, half the runners were walking on the bridge, and i saw at least 4 people being wheeled away by medics. So kudos to these pros with their absolute iron grit.
Lol im sure everyone would disagree with you on that.
Just weak. The temperature at Stockholm Marathon in 2018 was at 32C. This is nothing.
@@Schlain666 since were talking about who has the bigger dick here-i bet i still run faster than you in that heat.
I’ll say ! I was about 35 mins behind my own marathon average !
@@louklein7143 everyone had a bad day. Buts its all good and congrats on finishing!
Imma stick to the mile
İma stick to the 60 meter.
I only run a 4:55. I don't understand how they keep a faster pace for soo long
Best comment. LMFAO
@@hyrumsmartt4331 crazy stuff 😂
@@hyrumsmartt4331 4:55? I haven’t even broken 5 yet lol
I volunteered at the Mile 12 aid station in Brooklyn! We all saw Do Nascimiento pass by around 54 minutes and then it felt like ages passed before the rest of the mens elite field came around. Really exciting race - I felt so bad for him after reading the final race results though. But he's 24 so he has years to crush his future marathons and perfect his pacing strategy!
No reason to feel bad for him. He isn't hurt. Everyone is talking about him. He knew perfectly well how it works. There were better runners that him, and they deserved to overtake him.
I don't think it had anything to do with him dropping out but there was a crazy looking cyclist yelling at him and riding right up behind him on the 59th street bridge. I don't think it was welcome as I saw him trying to waive the guy off. Not sure why someone didn't step in and get rid of that guy, must have been really distracting for him as that was about the point where he really started hurting I think.
Did you remember seeing a guy in a bright yellow shirt with black block lettering that said "RUNTHISTOWN DETROIT"? That was me.
Thank you for volunteering! Appreciated you ❤
there is fast, and there is really fast! ahahaha
Do Nascimento blew up about the same distance he did last year in the Olympics, also in extremely warm conditions. He keeps gaining experience, and since he is quite young Im sure he will be a big name in the sport in the near future to come.
He made the same mistake yet you bet your money on him learning? Okay haha 😆
@@jordanbabcock9349 It's called taking risks, sometimes it works sometimes it doesn't, it will eventually pay off for him. I give him way more credit than people that always stay in their comfort zone. I know a lot of runners pride themselves for being conservative in their running, but that means nothing to me, personally.
lmao anyone that understands marathon knows that he has over 10 years of running ahead of him yet he is already at the top level, despite not having even reached his peak. So yes I believe in him.
@@jordanbabcock9349 the dude is already the best non african marathoner on the planet. You shouldn't sleep on him
@@jordanbabcock9349 Say someone wants to win rather than taking a safe top 10 finish, he would have to risk not finishing at all. Nascimento took a risky strategy back in Tokyo, it didn't work. Maybe he needed to improve some, maybe it was just bad luck. He tried what appears to be the same strategy today although it's different already. It's not as hot in NYC today as in Tokyo, and he is not against the best marathon runner of all time. And he probably got stronger comparing to himself from an year ago. Sure again it didn't work. It doesn't mean he is a bad runner or he hasn't learnt. Even Michael Jordan had to try more than several times to figure out how to win a championship. MJ got smashed by Bird's Celtics a few years in a row, then by Detriot a few years in a row. I bet someone back then was saying that 'this Jordan kid just doesn't know what he is doing' too.
I ran on Sunday and this was my first marathon. Absolutely brutal, horrible cramping. There were dozens of people in oxygen masks, on stretchers, ambulances, vomiting, etc. I'm thrilled to just have finished and stay healthy.
Nice
You finished your first marathon with terrible conditions, you legend
Well done. I hope to do this race one day.
I always wondered why some runners don't outpace the others in the beginning to separate the distance, now I see it doesn't work in marathons. It was a gutsy of Daniel to try it. I'm still rooting for him.
It is actually unusual for seasoned runners especially. He was running like a pacer. I'm sure he learned a lot from this race. It is a little surprising that he ended up with cramps and heat exhaustion being that he is from Brazil. If he could maintained that pace he could have won in close to his pr. He simply misjudged his ability for the conditions.
@@michaeldeierhoi4096 Daniel has lived in Kenya for the past few years
@@promarcelo Thanks for that tip. I'll bet he learned a lot from the Kenyans.
As one commentator famously said, "At some point, someone is going to hand him a piano to carry." In the marathon, when things start to go bad, they go bad quickly!
@Michael Deierhoi yesterday was insane. I’m also from Brazil, to avoid the heat we usually train at 6am, I was doing my long runs (18-20 miles) at a 9:00 pace, was really excited to run in the cold, but yesterday couldn’t event keep it at 10:00 in the first 10kms, crazy and brutal weather. But happy to have finished my first marathon in one piece.
Talk about an all-star effort to have all this footage edited and voiced over to have a video up so fast!
I'm have the feeling if the race was in the 40/50 degrees Daniel would have sustained that pace through the end. His pace is just violent!!! What a runner!!!
@@W.C. You can actually hit the wall when your body temperature raises too high. When it's colder you can delay hitting the wall. So in this case he might have finished the marathon if it was colder.
@@W.C. lol you have no idea what you're talking about buddy. The wall is very much about the weather too, just like it is about what shoes you run in and dozens of other factors.
@@W.C. Well I agree with everything you said here. I just pointed out that weather does play a role, in fact, a pretty significant one, as to when exactly you hit the wall.
As someone who ran it today, those conditions were brutal. 70°F+ pretty much the whole race with the sun shining through really made it tough to run a good time! (For me, I was aiming for >2:45:00 and ended up running 3:09:44 😬)
I ran the Portland Marathon this year (Oct. 2nd) and we also experienced record-breaking temps. By the time I was finishing the race, it was well over 90 degrees. I was sucking down electrolytes like crazy and had a layer of salt crystals on my forehead 😅😅. I don't think people were prepared for the heat and sun in a city known for being cool and cloudy.
It’s crazy how different people are. 50-55 slows me way tf down and I do much better in 75-80 degrees.
waaaa waaaa try running a marathon in 100 degrees and humidity before complaining lol
Run Forrest Run (obligatory)
Not your day but I’ll never forget your kick off returns for Alabama or the time you traversed the country multiple times in one push. Still proud of you bro 👍
I ran NYC in 1993, and expected a sub 3-hour time. The temperature was 73F at race time and it was humid. I crossed the Verrazano-Narrows bridge, (2 miles), and knew I was doomed. My legs felt like jelly. I ran 4:01 -- very disappointed after all the work I put in.
forgot about humidity. I was wondering why 70 is warm. Im from California and did XC a few years back in 80-90 F, sometimes up to 98/99F. Still brutal but its dry.
@@zeffery101 The month before I ran it was unseasonable cool -- temps in 40s and 50s. I've never been a hot-weather runner. I've run sub 3 hours before but it wasn't in the cards that day. I cramped up bad after the race but finished.
By the time you reached the finishing line,The Kenya pro runners were in their flight back to Kenya
@@zeffery101 mostly due to people training in lower temps and having to run the race outside of what their body is used too
amazing!
Thanks for this recap, and I appreciate the km pace conversions!
shot out also to the Morrocan El Aaraby also he has a PR of 2:06 and was NYC marathon runner-up last year. He finished 4 this year, unfortunately. But he deserves your appreciation for sure.
With conditions this bad he absolutely crushed it whatever the place. I'm sure his next race will be even better.
He literally ignored his existence for the whole video 😅
Kenyans are the best marathoners in the world. I don't know why the Ethiopians have not yet mastered the marathon. Out of the 6 masters marathon majors, Kenya has won almost all of them on both the men and women's side.
I am from Brazil, and I was cheering for Daniel in this race. Unfortunately, he could not complete it, but he is still young! For sure a lot of awesome races will come 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
Very competitive race from both sides 💯💯
It's amazing
What a race, what a recap!
He didn't run a smart race but if he conditions himself he'll definitely be able to run at this pace in the near future for the full 26.2 miles. At 70 plus degrees he ran a furious record beating pace through 21 miles so he definitely needs more conditioning more training but I think this guy can break records. I'd bet on him in the future
He doesnt run smart at all. He ran with Kipchoge in the Olympics until he detonated.
He may need to restrict himself to cooler or colder races.
@@2011hwalker I hear what you're saying but he kept up an incredible pace for 80% of the race. He's going to improve. Better coaching better training better conditioning
@@HB-ix9hl I still think its a long bow to draw that He's a 2:02 runner when there's only a few of them in the world.
@@mathieudube6907 if I could run half as good as him I'd be happy.
I ran the NYC Marathon in 1984 when the temps were in the 80’s with high humidity. After that, they changed the start date to November.
That's wild, never knew it used to be on during the summer. I volunteered today in the starting village and I could sense how anxious some people were about the heat. I would have decimated my time had I been running today. I love entering the winter half marathons in December-February for this reason. I really hope today's temps don't become standard for the NYC marathon.
When was the start date in 1984?
End of October. Then a few years later, it was changed to beginning of November.
@@thru_and_thru Wasn’t in the summer-just end of October. But it was brutal.
Great recap, exactly the kind of highlight reel I wanted to see. subscribed.
I’m excited to see more of the young Brazilian marathoner. If the conditions weren’t so hot, he may have been able to stay in there. That was amazing.
Lokedi with that ultra-professional double-arm break the tape and stop the watch at the same time maneuver 😂😂
Do Nascimento was amazing. He could be a pacemaker for Kipchoge, I hear there are a few vacancies.
😂 yes I heard about these "vacancies" lol
Looks like he could have won the race if he hadn't taken it.
I feel bad for Do Nascimento, congrats to Chebet though!
Not a pro. I ran it three times, and it's the most challenging marathon together with Madrid I’ve run. Those bridges, and the hill from 110th to the entrance to central park always killed me.
The downhill maybe the worst, as you sustain more force going downhill.
Jose , i am with you, I ran Madrid and I thought it was very difficult. Why ?
Because Madrid lies on a 600 meter plateau ( 2000 feet) and the last 8 km ( 5 miles) is a slow climb . Very tough
hey channel people, your videos are amazing, great dialogs, wonderful clips, great info. I'm not a runner at all but now i know abby steiner and mathew boland. keep the videos coming.
I think you mean Matthew Boling.
I used to run. I can’t watch anything like this without crying. It gets me emotional every time.
You can pick it back up.
My coworker and her brother competed in this year‘s marathon. He represented the US while he represented Mexico. I have never been interested in the New York marathon until she told me she was participating. I even uploaded the app to follow both of them to the finish line.
Thank you for doing this, was interesting to watch after doing it myself
Thanks TRP. Yet another top quality video report. Cheers.
Frack everything else. The video editing and commentary is just fantastic!
Really enjoyed this recap.
I know absolutely nothing about sports but I’ve watched so many of this channels videos as the commentary is top!
Thanks so much! I hadn't prepared in advance and couldn't get it on my TV.
Boyy went down hard 😂
I don't know why anyone would drop a 4:20 mile so early in the race on a hot day and very hilly course, Do Nascimento got his race plan completely wrong
He seems to have misjudged his ability based on the conditions. Notice that none of the other top runners ran anywhere near their best times.
So funny hearing 70 degrees called hot
@@joshuasmith1215 To the average person, but speaking from experience when you are running long distance at 70 especially if it's even a little humid you really start to notice it after a while.
Another cool thing is that Miss Universe 2015 Pia Wurtzbach-Jauncey from the Philippines participated in her first ever marathon 🙂
Thanks for the exciting narration.
I've never seen anyone bolt out to the front and have it pay off.
Yuki kawauchi
You must not have heard of Eliud Kipchoge then!
You mean except for EK?
@@aprenderlife Same guy I was thinking of. What always stands out in my memory is one of the race commentators saying "Somebody is going to hand this gentleman a piano to carry." and that has always been my mantra as a runner; to not have to carry the piano.
th-cam.com/video/BE6nuOcbMck/w-d-xo.html
Sammy Wanjiru in the 2008 Olympics
Its the new medical thing they put in our arms
Thank You. This was done really well.
Nascimento just broke my heart. Am Kenyan and I looked up to him to finish the race at least.
Daniel's got a massive career yet, ran the marathon from the back and that was BRUTAL conditions. Was fun to watch the first 20 from the starting village!
A bit off topic but why can’t all of the flags at the finish line break away like that? There’s much less of a chance for injury when they break away in the middle versus when they have to try not to trip over traditional ones
Running in this weather is no joke. Running in Houston is often like this in the fall & winter, and there is no real getting used to it-at least not for me
HOLY WOW! 4:20 split in a marathon, guy was out of his mind! Absolute beast! I was hoping he could pull it off for mankind haha
It's always crazy to fathom running a 5 min mile........once. Let alone 26 times consecutively. The human body/mind is amazing. I remember cross-country in college I could barely do 10K races w/ a 7-7.5 min avg. And that's me training REALLY hard. Haha
Erro de estratégia do Daniel Nascimento. Lhe custou a quebra na Marathon. Saúde e paz pra todos.
Daniel is a future big name in this sport. I believe in his abilities!
"Danielzinho" will make history one day! Write this down..
I was training Sunday morning with Sharon's masseur in Kaptagat. When I told him later that day that Sharon held on for the win he was so happy.
Great coverage
I just don't understand how that dude thought it was a good idea to push that hard that early...then continue to push. I would think he has coaches who could teach him these things BEFORE the race.
If you've ever pushed that hard (especially in this heat) for that long you know that you just fall off a cliff. Suddenly your body says "no more, that's it" and no matter how good you felt 5 minutes ago you're absolutely done.
The people that only listen to their coaches and never think outside the box are never going to be world record holders. The exception being if their coach is a record holder.
I ran this yesterday and am still in pain unable to barely move. The heat and humidity was crazy for NYC in in November. My time was terrible 5:54. This was my third full marathon, but first NYC, or first race in any distance outside the City of Detroit. My previous 2 Detroit Freeps were 5:00 and 5:21. I saw 10x as many people seek medical care as in any of the 4 Detroit Free Press Marathon events(full & half combined). I guess you can say for the most part the elites showed why they are elite. Other than Daniel Do Nascimento the rest finished world class times pushing records.
Congratulations!!!
If you don’t mind sharing, how old are you and how long have you been training? And are you male or female?
@@Zeno_334 I'm 48 male(don't know of very many women named "Jeff"). I'm not sure how long you could consider me to be "training", but my first full marathon(and half-marathon for that matter) was in 2014, and I've now done 3. Both the other 2 were for the Detroit Free Press Marathon.
Well done you did it
I just moved here in NYC. I can't believe I missed it! I found out too late. 😢😢😢😢
Daniel do Nascimento will soon be running the marathon in 2h3min. and will win a medal at the Olympics!
Doubt it. Far too many runners ahead of him
Man's got to learn some pacing strategy first. Tremendous talent but hard to understand how he misjudged his pacing that badly. A 4:20 and 1:01 on that course in those conditions? There's Brave and then there's just stupid...
With those tactics no he needs to change I don't know why he did that yet he train with the best runners in Kenya 🇰🇪
@@mathieudube6907 Today he is the non African faster in the marathon in the world and record holder in the Americas, and he is just 24 years old.
@@mathieudube6907 - Most elite runners skip the olympic marathon so he has a shot.
This is the first marathon ive ever watched live
Great video!
So happy and proud for our Lonah 🇮🇱🥈🏆
Tough conditions on an already tough race, great effort all around though!
Abdi Nageeye !!!! 2020 Olympic Silver Medalist. 👏
Finished a local marathon in September. Good luck to all runners!
With times like these, how close are we to an official
Next year
Times like what? The winner ran 2:08. We are not close to a sub 2 marathon. No body besides Kipchoge is remotely close and Kipchoge has probably ran his fastest race. Nobody currently running marathons will do it. There's a couple of quick guys on the track with the potential but potential has no value until its realised.
@@mathieudube6907 are you the running wizard or something I see you everywhere downgrading everybody’s opinion bro get a life. Yes kipchoge is the goat of the marathon we all know but surely he won’t be the “Goat” forever when you have a 24 year old casually (no emotions expressed) running like this you have to wonder it will be only a matter of time.
@@shuaibb8992 no doubt someone will break 2 hours at some point. Im simply giving my opinion based on facts not feelings. The guy we are talking about has a lifetime marathon pb of 2"04 high. There are many current runners of the same age with better times and are more consistent. Who ever does break 2 hours it it very unlikely to be this guy.
@@mathieudube6907 actually it’s not unlikely at all this guy was running wr pace at New York marathon not even kipchoge would do something like that on top of that the course is hilly and it was a very humid day too. If he were to try it this on the Berlin course I could see him running 2h 2m all he needs is to keep training and a good coach he has potential to be a marathon great. (Although he’s from South America he has been training in Kenya)
Even more amazing was the wheelchair racing. 2 new course records there!
Winner mentioned the wind was from behind.......that could account for the course records
Thanks for the recap. I wonder what happened to Des Linden? Did she finish?
She came in 16th.
So happy for Abdi Nageeye! He keeps a very consistent form on major championships.
I am not sure how to be humble as a Kenyan at this point. We just dont know how to NOT take these titles. we are the business! Now we just need to learn how to celebrate because when our heroes come home, it business as usual ;)
That said, when the Brazillian fell down, I felt like running to him (the mom in me wanted to nurse him...dont die in the field, its a sport, live to play another day!!!)
oh, and please come and run in kenya. my mom has a travel company that can organize for you to run and train in the same places as these GOATS...come!!! karibu!
That dude needs run a half marathon
Smartest comment posted.
well done mate🎉
A 4:20 mile? Man, he really trail-blazing
For Notable Contestants, you forgot to mention Ashton Kutcher LOL.
Boy must have mistook his name for Kipchoge lol wasn't this the same dude that fist pumped Eliud Kipchoge in the Tokyo Olympics only to completely blow out 10 minutes later in fairness it was also very hot (and Humid) that day maybe the heat doesn't agree with him best of luck to him in the next one
Same kind of thing’s been happening to a lot of athletes these last couple of years.
Nell Rojas top 10! Wasn’t expecting that
As a twenty-something I ran in the NYC Marathon in 1978. It was an experience. I think there were only about 15,000 runners that year. No, I didn't win. Best place to view the marathon was my neighborhood along 4th Avenue in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn.
Great summary
Interested to hear what happened to Galen
Dropped out just before the 30K mark 😔
Love being Kenyan when watching athletics ❤
Why is no one talking about how Galen Rupp dropped out
Yes, but the worst marathon in more modern era was a race in Deadwood marathon where it got to be 105 F as we were leaving the 1/2 marathon and as I was finishing just over 2 hours for the 1/2 Marathon I had trained to do 1 hour 30 minutes to 1 hour 45 minutes they had called over the PA to shut down the Marathon by that point. Also did not help it was 10% humidity so people could not stay hydrated well enough to finish so only one Women and 9--10 men finished including a guy who needed to run a correctly mesured trail/unpaved marathon (gravel former railway) to do a famous 50K, no other distance was allowed for the famous 50K only a trail Marathon, could not use a 50k or longer trail event for a qualifier, reason is there are so few unpaved trail Marathons in the USA/world that qualify for this event as unpaved and actually measured correctly not off as a 26 mile or a 27 mile event due to trail length.
The joy of a Kenyan double 🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪
Damn 😳 70 degree start no thanks lmao
I feel sorry to the runner who fell down in the last phase of the race. Bad fate occur, he could be the winner.
"...however, this is the marathon..." Oh my!
Amazing running times I was happy with 12 min miles in the military
In marathon number 1 rule don't run out the crowd otherwise your will blow out.
For the record, Korir and Meucci ran 2:13, not 2:31. ;)
You didn't even notice El aaraby, he finished second last year and was doing a very strong race this year too...
Man, Nascimento blew a gasket! 😧
I'm even a bit surprised that such attacks as De Nascimento happen so rarely. One would think that on such a big stage, more legit runners who are not legit enough to win, will try to shine for a moment on the biggest stage, and deliberately run a half maraton instead of a maraton.
Way back in the day as a high school miler (1600m), I just barely missed the state championship meet (where I would have been last) by running a 4:34 mile. Do Nascimento AVERAGED 4:40 for the first half of the race, even doing 4:20 for one of them! That's the difference between amateurs and the big boys and girls. What dedication, and natural talent from God, it must take to get like that.
They had us running the 1500m in the early '80's. Ran my PR of 4:17 (which converts to your time). I cannot imagine carrying that pace for twice that distance let alone a marathon. Absolutely stunning!
(Congrats on a very respectable time and dedication of training. Now that I'm "old" can I appreciate youthfulness and desire to its fullest!)
Stfu about god, thanks
@@Blittsplitt5 You're most certainly welcome, and God bless you, you bright ray of sunshine, bringing that positive energy to all. Hopefully, you ain't against "dedication" and "natural talent", too (Not like I actually give a flying duck).
I’m in a very slow state (Kentucky) where a 4:45 gets you to state and a barely sub 20 team average 5k gets you to state in xc
Congret!! Brian 3.24 🏃♂️🏆✌️
Yeah, this marathon took place on the one weekend where the temperature popped back up. The previous weeks had been in the 50s and low 60s at peak hours. That's just plain unlucky for marathoners and lucky for everyone else. On a side note, I am doubtful that Galen Rupp will ever PR again, sadly.
I work at Lenox Hill Hospital and all I can say was the ER was PACKED that day.
I love do nascimento and fully believe he'll do this in london or something one day and win in 2:03
I actually want to try to run a marathon under 6 minutes per mile someday
I will join you with a 5.59 minute/mile time. You know, to give you something inspiring and attractive to chase.
You are welcome!!
I was considering practicing for the Marathon. OML over 25 miles. 10 blocks is one mile. it is walkable if I can I'll give you guys water.
can you take a look at the Ontario high school championships (OFSSAA) there were a lot of fast times and a lot of very competitive high school runners. The event was sponsored by Nike Gatorade and other large brands.
Excellent video
Running straight for 2hrs 🥴 shiiiiit more power and respect to these ppl
GOD MORNING NEW YORK IM A RUNNER FROM LUKBAN PROVINCE OF QUEZON PHILIPPINES