Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2011

2011 Boston Marathon: Desiree Davila after the race

April 18, 2011: Watch Desiree Davila's interview after her exciting second-place finish at the Boston Marathon. 

2011 Boston Marathon: Hall is happy

April 18, 2011: Watch Ryan Hall's interview after his fourth-place finish at the Boston Marathon, where he ran the fastest time ever by an American under any conditions.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Mutai, Kilel Win Wild 115th Boston Marathon

Men's champion produces fastest marathon ever; Davila women's runner-up and Hall fastest American all-time under near perfect racing conditions on historic point-to-point, downhill course
By Jim Gerweck, Running USA wire

BOSTON - (April 18, 2011) - The 115th running of the Boston Marathon on Monday turned out to be one of the record books - it just depends on which ones you want to rewrite.

Kenya's Geoffrey Mutai, 29, ran the fastest marathon in history - 2 hours, 3 minutes, 2 seconds - a time 57-seconds faster than the world record set by Haile Gebrselassie at Berlin in 2008 and an almost incomprehensible three minutes better than Robert Kiprono Cheryuoit's course record of 2:05:52, which was deemed virtually untouchable when he set it last year. Mutai's mark will not count as a world record, however, because the Boston course exceeds the IAAF limits on drop and separation from start to finish. Similarly, Ryan Hall's fourth place U.S. course record 2:04:58 won't erase Khalid Khannouchi's 2:05:38 from London 2002 as the U.S. record. In short, the Boston course is not record standard.





But none of those technicalities can fully take away from the incredible performances that 26,964 runners crafted on the roads from Hopkinton to Boston, pushed along by an aiding tailwind and running under near perfect temperatures in the mid-50s.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Benoit Samuelson to Run 2011 Boston Marathon

Two-time race champion and 1984 Olympic Marathon gold medalist eyes 2012 Olympic Marathon Trials qualifier; four-time champion Bill Rodgers also to serve as Grand Marshal of 115th running

BOSTON - (April 11, 2011) - The Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A.) has announced that Olympic gold medalist and two-time Boston Marathon champion Joan Benoit Samuelson will compete in the 115th running of the Boston Marathon on Monday, April 18. The 53-year-old Maine native will run the Boston Marathon for the first time since 1993. Benoit Samuelson will start among the Elite Women at 9:32am ET that will include approximately 67 of the world's top female marathoners.

Benoit Samuelson won the 1979 Boston Marathon in a U.S. best of 2 hours, 35 minutes, 15 seconds, and she established a world best at the 1983 Boston Marathon in 2:22:43. Her performance from 1983 remains the fourth fastest time in Boston Marathon history.
"Joan is a running legend and perhaps the greatest marathoner the United States has ever produced," said B.A.A. Executive Director Tom Grilk. "Any time she races, she adds to her legacy. We are pleased that spectators along the course, those watching on television and those following online will have an additional element of attraction."
Benoit Samuelson has stated that she may pursue at the Boston Marathon the 2012 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials qualifying time of 2:46:00.

"Boston is special race for me," said Benoit Samuelson. "The crowds know and appreciate the athletes competing and their accomplishments, and they never disappoint with their encouragement and enthusiasm. I look forward to experiencing their energy and excitement on Patriots' Day."

When she won in 1979, she was 21-year-old student Joan Benoit from Bowdoin College. She went on to win the inaugural gold medal in the women's Olympic Marathon at the 1984 Los Angeles Games. Over time and following her Olympic victory, she became an icon of the sport and one of its most recognizable names.





Benoit Samuelson is one of only four Boston Marathon champions to have also won gold in the Olympic Marathon. Gelindo Bordin of Italy, Rosa Mota of Portugal and Fatuma Roba of Ethiopia are the others.