Bryan Ryder (@bryder9) 's Twitter Profile
Bryan Ryder

@bryder9

SCSU 25’ XC/T&F Lynn 22’

ID: 2888186493

calendar_today22-11-2014 19:46:12

9,9K Tweet

303 Followers

1,1K Following

Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@noadalzell) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Jordan Walsh addresses Celtics fans on the last game of the season: “On behalf of the organization, I want to thank you all for being the best fans in sports.”

Bill Simmons (@billsimmons) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Unbelievable Celtics win and an even worse Magic loss. Joe Mazzulla incapable of tanking ever under any circumstances. 5-6-7-8 seeds just got thrown into a blender!

Justin Turpin (@justinmturpin) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Joe Mazzulla on what it says about him as a coach that the team plays hard and connected no matter who is playing: “It says nothing about me. It says everything about the team. They are the ones that have to go out and do it. It just proves that we have really good players.

Jonathan Gault (@jgault13) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Simeon Birnbaum's 3:31.69 on Saturday was the third time the NCAA 1500m record has been broken in the last 15 months. Remember Yared Nuguse's solo 3:34.68 NCAA record in the ACC prelims? That was less than 5 years ago and is now #15 all-time. letsrun.com/forum/flat_rea…

Simeon Birnbaum's 3:31.69 on Saturday was the third time the NCAA 1500m record has been broken in the last 15 months.

Remember Yared Nuguse's solo 3:34.68 NCAA record in the ACC prelims? That was less than 5 years ago and is now #15 all-time.

letsrun.com/forum/flat_rea…
Jonathan Gault (@jgault13) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Perfect conditions (40s, 9-10 mph tailwind) led to the fastest times in race history at 2026 Boston Marathon. Before today, only 4 American marathoners had broken 2:06. Five did it in Boston today -- Talbi, Hicks, Young, Ford, & Klecker.

Perfect conditions (40s, 9-10 mph tailwind) led to the fastest times in race history at 2026 Boston Marathon.

Before today, only 4 American marathoners had broken 2:06.

Five did it in Boston today -- Talbi, Hicks, Young, Ford, & Klecker.
Jonathan Gault (@jgault13) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“They mentioned it a couple times in the meetings before the race that, you know, you’ve got a tailwind, you should go for it.” Why did so many men run fast at the Boston Marathon? They saw the once-in-career weather forecast. And decided to send it. letsrun.com/news/2026/04/h…

The Winning Difference (@thewinningdiff1) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"The greatest gift I have is I get to coach a bunch of guys that care about winning and being a part of the culture that we have." The greatest teams care more about the results than recognition. Great teams are not built only by great players. They are built by great teammates.

Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@noadalzell) 's Twitter Profile Photo

NEW STORY: Joe Mazzulla rejects the Coach of the Year award. We all know that by now. But what does that actually mean? “The whole idea of this thing is that everything’s bigger than us." On his faith, evolution, and the bigger picture: celticsblog.com/boston-celtics…

Jason Fitzgerald (@jasonfitz1) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Boston winner Joseph Korir is getting attention because some of his runs are 9:00+ min/mile. Influencers are saying, “See! You can run slow too!” They’re not appreciating that he runs 130+ miles per week! You can’t copy the pacing of elites unless you also copy their mileage…

Owen Corbett (@slowencorbett02) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Conner Mantz did not run the Boston Marathon yesterday, but his presence was strongly felt 🧵 In 2022 when Mantz made his debut, his 2:08 for 7th in Chicago was a BIG deal. It had him knocking on the door of the 5 fastest Americans ever, and more notably he was only 25 (1/X)

Conner Mantz did not run the Boston Marathon yesterday, but his presence was strongly felt 🧵

In 2022 when Mantz made his debut, his 2:08 for 7th in Chicago was a BIG deal. It had him knocking on the door of the 5 fastest Americans ever, and more notably he was only 25 (1/X)
Steve Magness (@stevemagness) 's Twitter Profile Photo

On running slow: You run slow enough to recover from the rest of the training and to accumulate volume. The more miles you run and heavier training load there is...the more you have to compensate somewhere. It acts as a kind of safety mechanism. When you're running 100+ miles

Steve Magness (@stevemagness) 's Twitter Profile Photo

During my career, I coached 25+ distance runners who qualified for the Olympic Trials Some ran 60 miles per week. Others 110+ Some maxed out 8 miles of threshold in a session, others 4 The principles of performance are the same. But how each individual gets there is different!

Steve Magness (@stevemagness) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I hope track folks are paying attention. Arkansas just dropped tennis... It's expensive to run, low revenue, almost entirely international (low alumni engagement, costs more per player, etc.). We need a plan for track to be financially feasible AND show value in other ways.