Linden Hall (athlete)

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Born (1991-06-20) 20 June 1991 (age 34)[1]
Sunbury, Victoria, Australia[2]
Height1.67 m (5 ft 6 in)
Weight51 kg (112 lb)
Linden Hall
Linden Hall in Stockholm Diamond league (2022)
Personal information
Born (1991-06-20) 20 June 1991 (age 34)[1]
Sunbury, Victoria, Australia[2]
EducationPenleigh and Essendon Grammar School, Florida State University
Monash University[3]
Height1.67 m (5 ft 6 in)
Weight51 kg (112 lb)
Sport
SportAthletics
Event
1500 m
College teamFlorida State Seminoles[4]
ClubAthletics Essendon
Medal record
Men's athletics
Representing  Australia
World Cross Country Championships
Gold medal – first place2026 TallahasseeMixed relay

Linden Hall (born 20 June 1991) is an Australian track and field middle-distance runner.

Hall started running while in primary school in Victoria. While still in Grade 6, she came 11th in her first national championships in cross country. She also played netball and was a strong swimmer. However, she gave these away when she joined Essendon Athletics club and commenced regular athletics training with a coach.

After high school, from 2011 to 2015, Hall went to the US where she studied Dietetics at Florida State University. During her college athletics career, she ran in three National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) 1500m finals and won bronze in 2014.[5]

Career

In 2016, Hall set a new PB of 4:04.47 in Palo Alto qualifying her for the Olympics. She was selected for the team and represented Australia in the 1500 metres.[1] She came 4th in her heat to qualify for the semifinal. In the semifinal she finished in 8th and did not advance to the final.[6]

Hall competed at the 2018 Commonwealth Games in the 1500 Metres, finishing in fourth and narrowly missing out on a medal.[7]

She also competed at the 2019 World Championships, making it to the semi-finals where she finished 10th, so did not advance to the final.[8]

In 2021, Hall ran under the 4-minute barrier for 1500 metres for the first time clocking a time of 3:59.67, becoming the first Australian woman to achieve this.[9] At the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, Hall came third in both her heat and semi-final of the Women's 1500m, each time improving her time. She thus made the final of the 1500m, where she finished in 6th position with a personal best time of 3:59.01.[10]

Hall is a two time Australian national champion in the 1500m: in 2018 and 2021. She has set new Oceanian records for 1500m at least twice, the last occasion on 16 September 2023 at the Prefontaine Classic Diamond League meet with 3.56.92 (beating her previous record of 3:57.27 set 2 months previously)[11] She won a Diamond League 1500m race on 30 June 2022 at the Bauhaus-Galan in Stockholm; and in June 2025 won the again at the Bauhaus-Galan Diamond League meet, this time in the 3,000m in a new pb.[12]

Personal bests

Distance Time Date Location Notes
800 metres 1:59.22 27 March 2021 Brisbane, Australia
1000 metres 2:35.12 4 August 2023 Bern, Switzerland
1500 metres 3:56.33 22 August 2025 King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels, Belgium #2 Australia all-time*
1500 metres short track 4:05.06 1 February 2026 New York, USA #3 Australia all-time*
Mile 4:19.58 19 July 2025 London, UK #2 Australia all-time*
Mile short track 4:21.45 1 February 2026 New York, USA #2 Australia all-time*
3000 metres 8.30.01 15 June 2025 Stockholm, Sweden #3 Australia all-time*
3000 metres short track 8:27.03 24 January 2026 Boston, USA #2 Australia all-time*
5000 metres 14.43.61 24 May 2025 Los Angeles, United States #3 Australia all-time*
5000 metres short track 14:58.43 15 February 2025 Boston, United States NR*
  • as at 20 July 2025

International competitions

References

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