91-Year-Old
Woman Breaks Marathon Record
by ALAN GREENBLATT
June
02, 2014 1:38 PM ET
Harriette Thompson meets
the press at the finish line of the Suja Rock 'n' Roll San Diego Marathon on
Sunday
It took Harriette Thompson more than seven hours to run a marathon
Sunday in San Diego. But that was awfully good, considering she's 91 and
recovering from cancer.
In fact, she beat the previous record
for women 90 and up by two hours and 45 minutes. She also became the
second-oldest woman to complete a marathon in U.S. history, according to the running site Competitor.com.
She told the Charlotte Observer before the race that the only
time she feels her age is after running a marathon.
"Lots of times, I see young
girls coming in and limping, hardly able to move," she said, "and I think, 'Well,
that's pretty good that I don't feel that bad.' "
Thompson finished Sunday's race in 7 hours, 7 minutes and 42 seconds. It
was her 15th marathon in 16 years. She started running the San Diego race at
age 76, missing only last year's because of oral cancer.
Thompson has been battling skin cancer recently. She told reporters she
had undergone nine radiation treatments in 11 days, the last one coming just a
month before the race. She wore bandages and tights to cover wounds left by the
treatment.
Thompson runs every year to raise
money for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. Her brother died from lymphoma
in February, Runner's World reports.
"Everybody in my family has died
of cancer," Thompson told member station WFAE last week. "It's sort of in
our genes."
Thompson is a onetime concert pianist. She says the discipline of
playing has helped her running and that she sometimes keeps pace during a race
by replaying pieces in her mind.
"I usually think of Chopin etudes, the ones that are technically
difficult, because usually they're pretty fast, and it stimulates me to go a
little faster, and also helps pass the time," she told WFAE.
Thompson runs, takes yoga and
stretching classes and exercises on an elliptical machine. In her retirement
community, according to the Observer, she's
"one of very few residents who [move] at faster than a strolling
pace."
She told reporters that if she's alive and able to compete, she'll run
the San Diego marathon again next year.
"If I'm still here next year, I
think I'll probably be able to train better and be in better shape,"
Thompson told the Observer. "If
I'm able, I'll try again."
On Monday, she was heading back to
Charlotte to spend her 67th wedding anniversary with her husband, Sydnor.
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