April 23rd, 2008
Now I can Sleep
What a weekend! A few reflections from the greatest marathon in the world from a hometown boy:
- First off, great job by Matt & the PUMA gang on the PUMA / LetsRun.com Boston Marathon pre-race party Saturday night. The store was jam-packed, the Harpoon suds were flowing, a dance move or two were busted, and many a conversation were had. I walked by the NikeTown store on Newbury St. after leaving the PUMA party and it was eerily dark and quiet — in other words, closed. If Nike’s smart, they’ll throw a pre-marathon blowout next year in their store. These things are good for the sport, if you know what I mean.
- Ryan Hall was signing posters at the race expo on Saturday. Nice of him to come down from the mountains and enjoy the most beautiful Boston weekend thus far in 2008. Adoring fans formed a line around the Expo to meet Ryan, say a word or two, take a picture with him, and get an autograph. Nice to see a nice guy and great runner getting the attention he deserves from fans of the sport.
- I picked up the re-designed Running Times Magazine at their expo booth on Sunday. It was my first time seeing it in a few months, and I have to say this: quite simply, RT is the best publication available for fans of the sport. I subscribed several years ago, way back when RT was like a souped-down version of RW with less impressive design and basically one page dedicated to races and athletes. I’ve always liked RT better than RW, but today, the magazine is the perfect blend of training tips, race reports, and athlete bios to feed my need for running sustenance. And with the exception of microscopic typefaces on a few articles, the whole package flat out looks great. Kudos to Editor Jonathan Beverly and his staff for the new — and much improved — Running Times. (and big ups to our own Matt Taylor for a quality cover feature on Tegenkamp in the most recent issue)
- As I stood among the “commoners” on the race course Monday (just before Kenmore Sq, if anyone’s curious), I was struck again with the question that many have posed on this blog and podcast: “How are is the sport of running neglecting all these people?” Sure, people come out to experience the pomp and pageantry of the world’s greatest marathon, and to watch their friends and family members sweat it out. But do they know about the elite runners? My conversations Monday say they don’t. It seems the task ahead for the powers that be remains making fans out of the nominally interested participants and observers found along race routes and in races all over this country.
- Was Monday’s women’s finish the best in history? Conservatively, it was definitely high on the list. It was the type of back-and-forth, digging deep kind of competition that really energizes crowds and creates fans of the sport. Two virtual unknowns separate convincingly from a pretty good field of runners, and then break into a sprint with a mile to go … amazing. The Tune-Biktimirova finish is one for the record books.
- Monday’s race was the first time I’ve watched Boston in person, and thus it was the first time to witness the throngs of wasted college students along Commonwealth and Beacon Streets enjoying their day off. Marathons and drinking: a curious combination, methinks. One is the payoff for months of tireless and thankless hard work, and the glory lasts a lifetime. The other is an act of instant gratification that is quite short-lived and has one or two quite negative side-effects.
- Folks went nuts when Lance and his entourage ran by on Monday. If Lance Armstrong trained — like really trained — he’d be a 2:35 marathoner, easy. As it is, he’s beating 95% of the field and hovering around 2:50 on what I’d call minimal marathon training. (he said he ran about 5-6 miles a day with a few long runs thrown in while training for Boston) He likely won’t ever train hard for a marathon, partly because he’s so dang busy pounding cancer and mostly because he simply doesn’t love marathoning enough to do so. That’s fine. Lance is what he is — an amazing cyclist-turned-amateur marathoner who is a mighty fine ambassador for the sport.
- Who's the most exciting athlete on the planet? - September 6th, 2008
- Olympics Hangover - August 26th, 2008
- Yes We Can! - August 7th, 2008
- Gilbert - July 24th, 2008
- competition - April 14th, 2008

April 23rd, 2008 at 7:42 pm |
Actually, I was impressed at the knowledge of spectators at the Olympic Trials, and not all of them looked or sounded like hardcore fans. That was one of the best feelings I’ve ever had at a road race. We were all fans.
April 23rd, 2008 at 8:13 pm |
College town + day off = very drunk youngsters. This equation is universal.
April 24th, 2008 at 7:23 am |
Doesn’t surprise me at all, Adeel. Given the poor marketing in and around Boston for the Olympic Trials and the traditional early start time, the fans were bound to be those who knew what was up.
Jesse - Not saying I was surprised, but that the juxtaposition was really noticeable.
April 25th, 2008 at 6:14 am |
I hate missing parties, especially when I’m around. But staying in Boston was a great experiene after all so missing one party is just a minor inconvenience.
I agree on poor marketing. Why weren’t the athletes wearing their names on the bibs (like all major marathons?) in the Boston races. Wearing number on the front-bibs is from another era. Boston wake up! And why weren’t startlist handed out near the course on Sunday. Anyone could tell who was in front and saw her gusty tactics rewarded with a superb second place.
I also was wondering why there weren’t any banners on Boylstonstreet. Compare it to London were almost the complete course is bannered. If you’re a major contributor to the race with sponsor-money, you want to be seen on the most important part of the course. Every event depends on sponsors.
(walked around the trials course and on Monday near the Hynes Conv. centre on Boylstonstreet)