Dad: Runner Who Died Had Enlarged Heart
28-Year-Old Marathoner Collapses During Olympic Marathon Trials
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A May 30, 2001 file photo of Shay, running for Notre Dame, celebrating his 10,000-meter victory during the NCAA track and field championships in Eugene, Ore. (AP Photo/Don Ryan)
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An ambulance carrying marathon runner Ryan Shay makes its way through New York's Central Park, Nov. 3, 2007. Shay died during the U.S. men's Olympic marathon trials after collapsing about 5-1/2 miles into the race. He was 28. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)
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"The thing that made him such a great runner may have killed him," Joe Shay told The Associated Press.
An enlarged heart like Ryan's is most commonly found in drinkers, smokers or people who are overweight, the father said. But it also translated into extra endurance - crucial for a distance runner.
Ryan and other top athletes underwent medical testing in Flagstaff, Ariz., where he trained, last spring, Joe Shay said, and he was cleared for running.
"He said the doctors told him that because your heart rate is so low, when you're older you may need a pacemaker to make adjustments on that," said Joe Shay, adding his son first was diagnosed with a larger than normal heart at age 14.
The 28-year-old Ryan Shay collapsed about 5½ miles into the race.
"I got a call that Ryan had fallen down ... then I got another call that his heart had stopped," Joe Shay said.
The medical examiner's office said an autopsy will be performed Sunday.
What was supposed to be a glorious weekend for the sport became instead a wake. That somber mood is sure to carry over to Sunday's New York City Marathon, in which 38,000 runners will compete.
"It's a big loss for the running community," said 2004 Olympic women's marathon bronze medalist Deena Kastor, who used to train with Shay in California. "It's a day we should be celebrating. It has cast a pall."
Shay and Ryan Hall and their wives had hoped to celebrate together after the trials. Now Hall is dedicating his race at the Olympics to Shay.
Minutes after Hall crossed the finish line first in record time, his arms raised in triumph, he heard the unthinkable news.
Shay was one of Hall's former training partners, and Shay's wife was Hall's teammate at Stanford.
"That just cut me straight to the heart," Hall said. "It makes you forget what you just did."
Organizers had decided to pair the trials with the storied annual marathon, hoping the timing would attract large crowds. The plan worked, as fans fought gusty wind to line the compact 26.2-mile course, which began in Rockefeller Center and traipsed through Times Square before heading to Central Park for five loops.
They witnessed a potentially historic day for American marathon running. Hall, a 25-year-old who had never raced the distance before April, established himself as a contender in Beijing, with a trials record time of 2 hours, 9 minutes, 2 seconds. Joining him in China will be Dathan Ritzenhein (2:11:07) and Brian Sell (2:11:40).
Meb Keflezighi, the 2004 Olympic silver medalist, was hobbled by cramps in both calves and fell back to eighth.
Keflezighi, 32, trained with Shay, reports CBS News correspondent Seth Doane.
"I thought he was going to have a breakthrough race, because he likes it when it's windy and tough conditions, it's him," said Keflezighi. "It's a really, really, really sad day, and I can't believe it. I cannot."
Shay hit the ground near the Central Park boathouse, a popular Manhattan tourist spot.
"He crossed right in front of me and stepped off the course," said runner Marc Jeuland of Chapel Hill, N.C., who did not see Shay collapse. "He nearly tripped me."
A statement from USA Track & Field said Shay immediately received CPR. He was taken to Lenox Hill Hospital, where he was pronounced dead on arrival at 8:46 a.m., according to New York City police.
A recreational runner died during last month's Chicago Marathon, the warmest in that event's history. But the death of an elite athlete during a major competition is a rare and startling occurrence.
On Friday, Hall and his wife, Sara, and Shay and his wife, Alicia, went for a run in Central Park. Shay seemed fine, Sara Hall said.
The Halls and Alicia were college teammates. Sara Hall considers Alicia one of her closest friends; she was a bridesmaid at the Shays' wedding in July.
It was in New York two years ago while watching the NYC marathon that Shay met his future wife. Alicia, who's hoping to make it to Beijing in the women's 10,000, was a two-time NCAA champion and the collegiate 10,000-meter record-holder while running as Alicia Craig at Stanford.
At the 2004 Olympic men's marathon trials, Shay was a favorite going in but was hampered by a hamstring strain and finished 23rd.
Shay was born May 4, 1979, in Ann Arbor, Mich., the fifth of eight children in a running family. His parents are the cross country and track coaches at Michigan's Central Lake High School.
"He achieved through hard work and effort goals and dreams that most people will never realize," Joe Shay said. "He was a champion, a winner and a good person. ... He used to say, 'Dad, there's a lot of guys out there with a lot more talent than me, but they will never outwork me."'
Watching an online interview of his son Friday night gave Joe Shay the urge to catch a 5 a.m. flight to New York and surprise him at Saturday's U.S. men's marathon Olympic trials.
He decided to stick with his original plan, to coach his runners in the Michigan state cross country meet.
"God, I regret it," he told The Associated Press on Saturday night. "I just do."
The dueling meets are a way of life for the Shay family. Ryan was the fifth of eight children, all runners. Joe and his wife, Susan, coach cross country and track at Central Lake High School.
Ryan encouraged his father to stay in Michigan with his athletes, saying, "Dad, you've been to these so many times."
At Notre Dame, Shay earned the school's first national individual track title with his victory in the NCAA 10,000 meters. Shay went on to become a five-time national road racing champion, winning the 2003 U.S. marathon, 2003 and 2004 half-marathon, 2004 20k and 2005 15k.
A moment of silence was observed for Shay, as well as for the recently slain brother of a Notre Dame football player, before Navy played Notre Dame in South Bend., Ind.
Susan Shay was in New York on Saturday night with two of Ryan's sisters and one of his brothers. Joe Shay was expected to leave Saturday night or Sunday morning.
None of the eight running Shay kids had ever suffered any serious injuries.
Running "dominated every moment of his time," Joe Shay said. Ryan also liked to fish and cut wood on property he owned in northern Michigan.
Ryan Shay had talked of becoming a chiropractor or a lawyer, his father said, because he could help people and stay involved with running.
When Ryan Shay was 14, he announced he would someday qualify for the Olympic trials. He was right.
He trained in Mammoth Lakes, Calif., with the Halls, Keflezighi and Kastor before moving to Flagstaff, Ariz.
"If you probably asked him if there was any way he wanted to go, it was out on the race course," said Terrence Mahon, who coached him in Mammoth.
Abdi Abdirahman, who dropped out of the marathon because of injury, trained with Shay for the past 3½ months in Flagstaff.
"I'm speechless. I still don't believe it," he said. "I probably was the last person to talk to him. We ate breakfast together, we ate lunch together, went to bed at the same time."
For Hall, Saturday culminated a reluctant route to the marathon. Neither Hall nor the second-place finisher, the 24-year-old Ritzenhein, had run a marathon as of a year ago. Saturday marked the second career race at the distance for both.
Hall broke away from the leading pack of five runners at about the 17th mile Saturday. He looked relaxed and fresh the entire race and was pumping his fist and bellowing over the final miles.
Too soon, those bellows became hushed words of shock and sympathy for Shay.
"He was a tremendous champion who was here today to pursue his dreams," said Craig Masback, CEO of USA Track & Field. "The Olympic trials is traditionally a day of celebration, but we are heartbroken."
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- its called idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis.
ihss. i think it comes from too much training
and activity as a kid. too much walking, running,
hyperactivity. its like running a horse too much.
or driving a car too long, and the tires blow
out from too much heat friction. gotta stop and
water the horses a lot. take breaks, pace yourself.
some of these parents, or kids have way too much
ambition for their own good. i planned on retiring
by the time i was 21 and be a playboy. i have ihss
too. maybe it''s caused by an enlarged ego?
a swell head? or living in the san fernando
valley, where its so hot, ya swell up like a watermelon every summer. and the smog, it just
destroys the heart. breathing recommended to be
optional. so smoggy that ya can''t see across
the street. inhaling hurts like heck. its much
better than it used to be, thx to anti-smog device.
growing up there, i hate fresh air. i''m not used
to it. fresh air, has odd effects on me.
fresh air fiends drive me crazy. stuffy rooms
are best. - Reply to this comment
- eye- he may have only run 5 miles THIS time, but the damage to his body was accumulated over time from pushing it too far too hard too long, he had an enlarged heart and it was made worse by his extreme activity. This is like someone with bad disks or a brittle bone disease deciding to "bulk up" by doing weight lifting, they may be fine for a while but then something just gives out.
He was ONLY 28, and people do not typically just die like that from an enlarged heart.
His heart was already under a lot of stress coping with his medical condition, and he added more of a load on it, and like an already overloaded truck used to haul firewood- a few more logs tossed up on top finally breaks the axle. In this guy''s case his heart was already having a hard time keeping up and then he decides to do marathons, this one was his last. - Reply to this comment
- We have to wait for the coroner''s report to see if he had drugs in his system;''till then all this is pure speculation.
- Reply to this comment
- Remind me of the Chicago Marathon and all the coments on how Chicago didn''t do their part for the safety of the participants. You have to know your limitations and take care of YOURSELF.
- Reply to this comment
- Only problem with your logic newster is that he''d only run 5 miles at the time. You have to face it...crappy things happen and sometimes there isn''t always a good, logical reason for it. You can''t make yourself feel better by thinking, ''oh, I don''t run marathons so I''m safe from this particular fate''.
- Reply to this comment
- This is what happens when people push and push and push, running 25 miles is totally unnatural and insane.
- Reply to this comment
Big-hearted dad dies from exercise...- Reply to this comment
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