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

Sunday, August 24, 2014

B.A.A. Sets Field Size of 30,000 Entrants for 2015 Boston Marathon®

 Boston Marathon
 August 18, 2014
Registration opens on Monday, September 8. The 119th Boston Marathon will be held on Monday, April 20, 2015.


BOSTON – The Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A.) has set a field size of 30,000 entrants for the 2015 Boston Marathon. Registration for the 2015 Boston Marathon will open on Monday, September 8, 2014 at 10:00 a.m. ET. The B.A.A. will use the same process to register qualified runners as it used for the Boston Marathon in 2012, 2013 and 2014, allowing the fastest qualifiers in their gender and age group to register first.

Friday, July 11, 2014

B.A.A. Adds Random Selection to Entry Protocol for 2014 B.A.A. Half Marathon®


 Boston Athletic Association
 July 9, 2014
20% of 8,000 runner field to be randomly selected from all submissions during registration on Wednesday and Thursday, July 16-17


BOSTON - The Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A.) will add a random selection component to the registration process for the 2014 B.A.A. Half Marathon® when entries are accepted next month. 

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Sports Science Examines 2014 Boston Marathon Winner

Sports Science Examines 2014 Boston Marathon Winner Meb Keflezighi




Monday, April 21, 2014

Shalane Flanagan: Boston Marathon 2014 Post-Race Interview

 Shalane Flanagan talks about her race following the 2014 Boston Marathon.

Keflezighi, Jeptoo Win Historic 118th Boston Marathon

 Duncan Larkin, for Running USA

 April 21, 2014
Jeptoo sets course record and captures third Boston crown, Meb is first American male to win in Boston in 31 years

BOSTON - (Monday, April 21, 2014) - One year after an explosive attack rocked the Boylston Street finish line, Monday’s running of the Boston Marathon -- the 118thedition of the world’s oldest modern 26.2-mile race -- was all about redemption. An emotional day for runners, spectators, race organizers and especially for the bombing survivors, today's race set out to define the #BostonStrong spirit.

Thursday, April 17, 2014

World Class Field Assembled for 2014 B.A.A. 5K

 April 17, 2014


The race is sold out. A prize purse of $39,900 (USD) will be awarded equally to the top male and female finishers

BOSTON – The Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A.) today announced an elite field of Olympic Games and IAAF World Championships medalists and returning champions for the 2014 B.A.A. 5K, to be held on Saturday, April 19, two days prior to the 2014 Boston Marathon®.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Elite Field Changes Announced for 2014 Boston Marathon

 March 5, 2014
There have been no changes to the women’s elite field


BOSTON, Mass. —  John Hancock Elite Athlete Team changes for the 118th running of the Boston Marathon on Monday, April 21, 2014 were announced this week by John Hancock Financial.

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Plans Announced for Boston Marathon Tribute



 Boston Marathon
 February 19, 2014
Mayor, Governor to co-host event honoring those affected by 2013 events

BOSTON – The Boston Athletic Association announced plans for an official tribute event to mark the one year anniversary of Monday, April 15, 2013. The event, hosted jointly by Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh and Governor Deval L. Patrick in coordination with One Fund Boston will be held at the Hynes Convention Center in Boston on Tuesday, April 15, 2014.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Boston Athletic Association Announces Documentary

 Boston Athletic Association
 February 12, 2014
Filmmakers to create first feature-length documentary film of the iconic Boston Marathon


BOSTON – The Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A.) announced that it has entered into an agreement with LA Roma Films, to produce “Boston” the first ever feature-length documentary film about the Boston Marathon - the world’s most legendary running race. 

Friday, February 7, 2014

B.A.A. Launches Boston Marathon Mobile App







FEB 05, 2014
The Boston Marathon World Run app and website, available to Apple and Android users, launched Wednesday. According to the B.A.A., the app is based on a simple idea: to expand the marathon experience to those who couldn’t run it. 
Read more info here! 

Friday, January 24, 2014

2014 Boston Marathon International Elite Field Revealed

 January 21, 2014

46 elite athletes From 13 Countries Invited For 118th running on Monday, April 21


BOSTON — In its 29th year as principal sponsor of the Boston MarathonJohn Hancock Financial announced the elite field for the 118th running of the Boston Marathon on April 21. A complete field list follows.
Reigning champions Lelisa Desisa and Rita Jeptoo will return to defend their titles, but will be challenged by the fastest field ever assembled for the world’s most historic marathon.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Korir, Cherop Win Hot 116th Boston Marathon

Another close women's finish; Hartmann top American in fourth place; heat wave hits storied 26.2 mile road race






By: Jim Gerweck, Running USA wire


BOSTON - (April 16, 2012) - Marathon lore holds that a year with optimal weather conditions is usually followed by one that challenges runners, and that was borne out at the 116th running for Boston Marathon on Monday. Temperatures that warmed the runners with temperatures in the 70s at the start in Hopkinton quickly rose under an unseasonable April sun to the mid- to upper-80s by the time the leaders reached the halfway point, eventually reaching a record 87 degrees.

The result, as expected, was that times were well off most runners' anticipated goals. That was also gratifying to organizers, who intentionally spent the three days preceding the race warning participants of the possible dangers, encouraging those not in top shape to not run, even taking the step of allowing those who had qualified to defer their entry to 2013. In the end, only 427 of the 26,716 entrants elected to do so, but many of those who toed the line in Hopkinton did not make it to the finish on Boylston Street. "People were dropping out left and right," said one runner who finished around 4:30. The attrition rate was above average, with 21,611 of the 22,426 starters succeeding in completing the distance before the course was closed, an hour later than normal in deference to the weather.

What was perhaps somewhat surprising was that the slowdown extended even to the leaders, who are usually more immune to harsh conditions than the less-fit participants behind them.

Wesley Korir (left, PhotoRun), an American-educated Kenyan, used a come-from-behind strategy to edge countryman Levy Matebo by 26 seconds in 2 hours, 12 minutes, 40 seconds, the slowest winning time since Robert Kipkoech Cheruiyot's second win five years ago.

The women's race once again came down to a finishing sprint down Boylston, with Sharon Cherop (left, PhotoRun) holding of fellow Kenyan Jemima Jelagat Sumgong by two seconds. Cherop's winning time of 2:31:50 was the slowest since Salina Kosgei's 2:32:16 in 2009. The last four women's titles at Boston have now been decided by a total margin of eight seconds.

The hot conditions caused both the men and women to run cautiously from the start, with packs of nearly a dozen going through halfway in 1:06 and 1:17 respectively. That resulted in the somewhat unexpected sight of six-foot-three-inch tall American Jason Hartmann in the lead.

"I was just running my race, not doing anything rash," the Colorado runner said. "And with the weather, no one else was either."

The real racing began, as it often does in Boston, just past Wellesley, between 14 and 15 miles, with Mathew Kisoro and then Matebo putting in surges that whittled the pack down to a half dozen, including defending champ Geoffrey Mutai. Within a few miles, Mutai's chances of retaining his title, and potentially a berth on the Kenyan Olympic team, fell victim to the conditions when he was forced to drop out from stomach cramps, the result of drinking more fluids than he was used to.

By the time the third of the three hills in Newton had been climbed, Kisoro had moved away to a lead of nearly 30 seconds and seemed to have the race in hand. But the victory evaporated in the final downhill stretch from Cleveland Circle. Korir, who had ignored most of the surging on the hills, was running in sixth place when he suddenly saw the runner ahead of him getting closer.

"I thought, 'This is not bad, I can be fifth in the Boston Marathon.' Then I caught fourth place, and saw third just ahead and thought, 'Great, I can be on the podium.' So I just moved up until I found myself in a position to win the race," recounted Korir.

Korir, 29, moved into first as they crested the Mass Pike overpass by Fenway Park, where the Red Sox were playing the traditional morning Patriots Day game. Matebo responded as they entered Kenmore Square, then Korir took the lead for good just before the duo went underneath Mass Avenue with a mile to go.

Meanwhile, Hartman, running his steady-paced race, was echoing Korir's success, finally crossing the finish in fourth place, in 2:14:31.

"This was definitely a race of redemption," he said, referring to his disappointing 2:16:44, 32nd place finish at January's Olympic Trials in Houston. "I thought I was a contender to make the team, even if was an outside chance. Since that race I've had this date circled on my calendar.

"I wasn't going to let the heat bother me. I feel it's the same for everyone, and if you worry too much about it, you're beaten before you start. I wasn't going to allow myself to fail today."

Cherop, 28, who placed third in last year's Boston race, used the lessons she learned there to move to the winner's spot this year.

"I didn't know the course that well, so I got to know it better this time," she said. "I knew how far it was to the finish, when to push."

She admitted that her significant move on the Newton hills was primarily directed at Firehiwot Dado, the winner of last November's ING New York City Marathon.

"The Ethiopian girls have a stronger kick than the Kenyans," she continued. "I did not want to have to try to outsprint her in the final stretch."

Sheri Piers of Falmouth, Maine joined Hartman as the top American finisher, placing 10th in 2:41:45, not far off her Boston times under better conditions.

"We had a mild winter in New England, but I still did a lot of my workouts on a treadmill in a room that was pretty warm," said the 40-year-old. "And fortunately I don't sweat a lot, so the heat didn't bother me that much today."

And while most runners' times were slowed by the heat, the only record set wasn't just the temperature. In the men's wheelchair division, Canadian Joshua Cassidy broke the course record by two seconds, zipping across the line in 1:18:25.

Many in the rest of the field weren't so fortunate. While organizer went to great lengths to caution runners about the hazards of running in hot conditions, and doubled the supply of on-course water, approximately 10 percent of the runners were seen by medical personnel, with 152 being treated at local hospitals.

116th B.A.A. Boston Marathon
Boston, MA, Monday, April 16, 2012

MEN
1) Wesley Korir (KEN), 2:12:40, $150,000
2) Levy Matebo (KEN), 2:13:06, $75,000
3) Bernard Kipyego (KEN), 2:13:13, $40,000
4) Jason Hartmann (USA / CO), 2:14:31, $25,000
5) Wilson Chebet (KEN), 2:14:56, $15,000
6) Laban Korir (KEN), 2:15:29, $12,000
7) Michel Butter (NED), 2:16:38, $9000
8) David Barmasai (KEN), 2:17:16, $7400
9) Hideaki Tamura (JPN), 2:18:15, $5700
10) Mathew Kisorio (KEN), 2:18:15, $4200
11) Tim Chichester (USA / NY), 2:21:10, $2600
12) Sergio Reyes (USA / CA), 2:22:06, $2100
13) Brendan Martin (USA / MI), 2:22:32, $1800
14) Gebre Gebremariam (ETH), 2:22:56, $1700
15) Uli Steidl, 40, USA / WA, 2:23:08, $11,500

MASTERS MEN (40+)
1) Steidl, see above
2) Franklin Tenorio, 42, ECU, 2:24:04, $5000
3) Tracy Lokken, 46, USA / MI, 2:31:06, $2500
4) Jason Ryf, 41, USA / WI, 2:31:50, $1500
5) Patrick Kuhlmann, 41, USA / DC, 2:32:55, $1000

WOMEN
1) Sharon Cherop (KEN), 2:31:50, $150,000
2) Jemima Jelagat Sumgong (KEN), 2:31:52, $75,000
3) Georgina Rono (KEN), 2:33:09, $40,000
4) Firehiwot Dado (ETH), 2:34:56, $25,000
5) Diana Sigei (KEN), 2:35:40, $15,000
6) Rita Jeptoo (KEN), 2:35:53, $12,000
7) Mayumi Fujita (JPN), 2:39:11, 9000
8) Nadezdha Leonteva (RUS), 2:40:40, $7400
9) Svetlana Pretot, 40, FRA, 2:40:50, $15,700
10) Sheri Piers, 40, USA / ME, 2:41:55, $9200
11) Genet Getaneh (ETH), 2:42:11, $2600
12) Larisa Zyusko, 42, RUS, 2:47:47, $4600
13) Sheila Croft (CAN), 2:48:31, $1800
14) Paula Keating, 45, CAN, 2:48:58, $3200
15) Hilary Dionne (USA / MA), 2:51:56, $1500

MASTERS WOMEN (40+)
1) Leonteva, see above
2) Piers, see above
3) Zyusko, see above
4) Keating, see above
5) Jen Nicholson, 43, CAN, 2:56:01, $1000

Complete results, photos and more at: www.bostonmarathon.org

this article Courtesy of Running USA wire
 

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Past Race Champions Returning to Boston Marathon

Inaugural Class of 1972 women among those to be honored; Joan Benoit Samuelson joins Boston Marathon field; Meb Keflezighi to serve as grand marshal

BOSTON - (April 10, 2012) - The Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A.) has announced that several former champions of the Boston Marathon will be returning to Boston and participating in the events surrounding the 116th running of the world's oldest annual marathon on Monday, April 16, 2012.

Notably, inaugural Olympic Marathon gold medalist Joan Samuelson has entered this year's Boston Marathon and will run on Monday. Samuelson won the 1979 and 1983 Boston Marathons (as Joan Benoit) before winning Olympic Games Marathon in Los Angeles in 1984. Samuelson also ran the 2011 Boston Marathon, finishing in 2:51:29. Samuelson has been a member of principal sponsor John Hancock Financial Service's Elite Team and is one of the sport's most recognized and popular personalities. She has remained a competitive athlete for more than three decades.