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Ken Rideout
(Photo: Mike Blabac @blabacphoto)

How 51-Year-Old Ken Rideout Runs Sub-2:30 Marathons

Relentless dedication and strength training are some of the keys to his success聽

Published: 
Ken Rideout
(Photo: Mike Blabac @blabacphoto)

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Ken Rideout insists he鈥檚 just an average guy who likes to run marathons as fast as he possibly can.

He admits he鈥檚 never been a great athlete, but, at the same time, his commitment to training and his results are extraordinary. The 51-year-old resident of Nashville, Tennessee, has blossomed into one of the world鈥檚 top masters runners with a fierce competitiveness that has helped to consistently run some astonishingly fast times at World Marathon Majors races over the past several years.

He won the 50-and-over division at the New York City Marathon (2:33:31) in 2021 and the Boston Marathon (2:30:21) in 2022 and he has come in second in that age division in London (2:29:54), Chicago (2:29:53), and Berlin (2:35:48). He also won the 2021 Myrtle Beach Marathon outright in 2:30:58 just before turning 50.

On March 5, he鈥檒l toe the starting line at the Tokyo Marathon in an attempt to once again compete for a podium finish in his age division.

At 5-foot-10, with a muscular physique, Rideout breaks the mold of both typical elite runners and faster recreational runners. It鈥檚 his relentlessness to being the best he can be鈥攊ncluding and especially his strength training鈥攖hat sets him apart as an age-group runner and not any inherent talent as an endurance athlete.

鈥淲hen I am in a race, my mindset gets to the point that I’m gonna run until I collapse,鈥 Rideout says unapologetically about his steadfast approach. 鈥淚’m gonna give every ounce of energy until there’s nothing left to give. Win or die trying, that鈥檚 the message. If you have that mindset, you can鈥檛 lose.鈥

Ken Rideout
(Photo: Mike Blabac @blabacphoto)

Finding Peace in Endurance Sports

Growing up in a troubled family in a rough suburb of Boston and taking up boxing at an early age, Rideout has applied a fighter鈥檚 mentality and a notorious work ethic to every challenge he鈥檚 faced in life, sometimes to his own demise.

As a teen, he took a job as a prison guard where his stepfather and brother were incarcerated. He worked his way through college, eventually earning a sociology degree from Framingham State University. Although he became a self-made overachiever as a financial services sales executive, he admitted he suffered from imposter鈥檚 syndrome working alongside many Ivy League colleagues and eventually struggled with burn-out, and was diagnosed with substance use disorder tied to his excessive opioid use.

After working through a recovery program, Rideout found a more balanced path in life, channeling his energy into endurance sports, following a mostly vegan diet and the joy he shares with his wife and their four young children.

Rideout first applied his intensity to triathlon and qualified for the Ironman World Championships three times, winning the 40-44 age division at Ironman Wisconsin in 2015 with a 9:36:15 effort. But that sport took too much time away from his family, so he turned his focus to marathons in 2019.

So how does someone who started running in his late 30s and didn鈥檛 really focus on it until his 40s become fast enough to run 5:45 pace for a marathon after turning 50? Being unabated in his approach every single day.

鈥淚鈥檝e heard some people say I鈥檓 lucky to be able to do this at my age, and I’m like, 鈥業’m not lucky,鈥 I work my ass off every day,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 eat a perfect diet during the week. I work out twice a day. I’m a freaking lunatic with this stuff. I live this full-time.鈥

Despite his exuberance and intensity, Rideout says he鈥檚 grateful that most of his running brings a Zen-like calm to him. He admits he doesn鈥檛 want his energy to lead him to a dark place again. When he can, he listens to podcasts or audiobooks while running because he wants to be able to maximize his time to train and learn something at the same time.

鈥淭his is just my outlet,鈥 he says. 鈥淩unning is one of the things that makes me feel good about myself.鈥

Getting Guidance

When Rideout turned his focus to running five years ago, his training initially consisted of a 10-mile out-and-back run with 1,200 feet of vertical gain six days a week in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles. The other day of the week, he鈥檇 typically run 20 miles as hard as possible. While that helped continue to build his aerobic base and led him to a 2:40 effort at the Los Angeles Marathon, it only got him so far.

In 2019, he hired coach Mario Frailoli, who added structure to his training by increasing the length and adding specificity to his long runs, implementing speedier workouts into his routine and also encouraging him to slow down on his easy days that help optimize recovery.聽 He also makes sure that he stays between 70 and 80 miles per week. Since then, he鈥檚 run 2:36 or faster six times, including a 2:28:25 personal best at the age of 48 at the 2019 California International Marathon.

In addition to his run training, he works on strength in his home gym four days a week with a circuit that includes pull-ups, squats, bench press and numerous core exercises, as well as boxing drills鈥攊ncluding punching a heavy bag. His functional strength and athleticism are among his biggest assets, something that many recreational runners lack, Fraioli says.

Plus, because he鈥檚 not burdened by having 35 years of running in his legs, he still has considerable elastic recoil in his legs. (And yes, his carbon-fiber plated shoes also help, Rideout says.)

鈥淗e’s doing it right, and honestly, he has been doing it all long,鈥 Fraioli says. 鈥淗e has more than 10 years of aerobic development under his belt and a lot of that came on a bike and in the pool. And I think the strength training really just helps to keep him in one piece. It’s giving him that structure and that guidance and honestly just keeping him from, you know, completely running himself into the ground.鈥

Although he still works in the financial world, Rideout has also helped train mixed martial arts fighters and boxers, and is the co-host of the combat sports podcast, 鈥淭he Fight with Teddy Atlas.鈥 Because of his success and notoriety, he has been all over the media in recent years, including appearances on high-level podcasts with , Samantha Nivens, and weekly running show a couple of times.

Rideout has been eager to share his story鈥攁nd fans and followers seem to appreciate his vulnerability鈥攂ut insists he鈥檚 not special or extraordinary, especially as an athlete.

鈥淓veryone has what I have. I’m an average guy鈥 says Rideout, who played hockey and football in college. 鈥淭he only thing I do that other people don’t do is I try as hard as I can, I dedicate myself to being the best I can be. And I would say that if there’s one metric that matters above everything鈥攁nd you don’t need to be a rocket scientist to know this鈥攊t鈥檚 that consistency is the most important thing. Show up every day.鈥

Lead Photo: Mike Blabac @blabacphoto

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