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D’AMATO EYES VICTORY, AMERICAN RECORD AT BMW BERLIN MARATHON

D'AMATO EYES VICTORY, AMERICAN RECORD AT BMW BERLIN MARATHON

D’AMATO EYES VICTORY, AMERICAN RECORD AT BMW BERLIN MARATHON
By David Monti, @d9monti
(c) 2022 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved, used with permission. 

 

(22-Sep) — Keira D’Amato, the 37-year-old licensed real estate agent from Virginia who set the North American marathon record of 2:19:12 in Houston last January, is the fastest woman entered in Sunday’s BMW Berlin Marathon. She hopes to get faster and possibly become the first USA athlete –male or female– to win in Berlin. The Nike-sponsored athlete passed up what would surely have been larger appearance fees from either Chicago or New York to take advantage of Berlin’s super-fast course, where multiple world records have been set.

Keira D’Amato celebrating her new AR in the marathon 2:19.12 (unofficial), photo by Flynn Sports Management

“I’d love to run faster than that in Berlin,” D’Amato said of her American record at this morning’s press conference. “To win a great race such as Berlin would be a dream and a great career ambition.”

D’Amato’s unusual path to marathon stardom has been well-chronicled, including some seven years away from competition to build her “regular” career and raise a family (she has two children with her husband, Anthony). But her path to Berlin has been just as unusual. After her record in Houston and some time to recover, D’Amato returned to the roads in March and marched ahead with her regular road racing season. She took second at the USATF 25-K Championships in May, won the USATF 6-K Championships in June, then ran an excellent 31:03 at the Mastercard Mini 10-K in New York a week later. Everything was going according to plan, and D’Amato was excited about her summer.

Keira D’Amato takes New Haven 20k, USATF 20k Champs, sponsored by Faxon Law Group, photo by Jane Monti/ Race Results Weekly, used with permission

“It was incredible,” D’Amato said of the atmosphere at the Mini. “New York shows up, and puts on just an incredible event.”

Two weeks after the Mini, D’Amato hoped to crack Shalane Flanagan’s North American 10-K record of 30:52 at the B.A.A. 10-K. She came up short but won the race in 31:17.

But then things took an unexpected turn. Olympic Marathon bronze medalist Molly Seidel was forced to withdraw with an injury from the national marathon team training for the World Athletics Championships in Eugene, Oregon. On July 1, D’Amato got the call-up from USA Track & Field to…

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