Media
Three athletes, three paths
Video by Rabbitwolf Creative
April 2021
HALL AND SINCLAIR NAMED #9 2021 ULTRARUNNERS OF THE YEAR
Abby Hall is ranked ninth in the 2021 UltraRunner of the Year voting. The highlight of her year was a breakthrough second place at the highly competitive Courmayeur-Champex-Chamonix (CCC) 101k race in the Alps. She also finished second at the Canyons 100K in California and Arizona’s Crown King Scramble 50K. A vegan advocate and designer, the former Abby Mitchell married Cordis Hall in 2019. The couple live in Boulder, Colorado. – John Medinger. Photo: Joe McCladdie
TrainingPeaks
“Behind Ultra Runner Abby Hall’s Sensational CCC-UTMB Placement”
September 10, 2021
Trail Runner Magazine
“What It Takes To Crush in Chamonix”
September 1, 2021
Women of Distance: Episode 14
June 2021
Canyons 100k
Video by Rabbitwolf Creative
May 2021
Nüümü Poyo
Video by Rabbitwolf Creative
October 2020
Womxn Of The Wild, Ep. 12: Abby Hall on the Nuumu Poyo
September 23, 2020
BLDRFLY Podcast: “Pursuing a John Muir Trail
FKT with Boulder ultrarunner Abby Hall”
September 14, 2020
“Do Big Things” Podcast
September 2, 2020
Cordis talks about his recent unsupported FKT on the LA Freeway with Adam McRoberts
Abby & Cordis on the “Off the Couch” Podcast, Episode 56
June 30, 2020
Abby and Cordis talk about their upcoming goal, the Pfiffner Traverse, plus the benefits and challenges that arise when your partner is also a competitive runner.
Abby on the Strength Running Podcast: "When to DNF, Failure and Going All In”
November 11, 2019
Abby talks with Jason Fitzgerald on transitioning to longer distances after being a middle-distance athlete, when she thinks it’s a good idea to drop out of a race, what surprised her most when she started competing in long trail races, and what she considers her biggest failure.
Abby on the Strength Running Podcast:
Episode 113: “3 Elite Runners on Fueling for
Workouts, Long Runs, and Races”
October 23, 2019
Today you’re going to hear from three Ultramarathoners on how they fuel for races, what their post long run fueling looks like, and how things might be different if they were training for shorter races.