星期一, 6月 01, 2026

波士頓體育會10K馬拉松賽訂6/21舉行 90餘傑出跑者參加

Boston Champions Ready to Race at 2026 B.A.A. 10K presented by Mass General Brigham Cancer Institute

BOSTON, MA (01 June) – The Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A.) announced today that champions and top international stars will take to the roads of Boston and Cambridge for the 2026 B.A.A. 10K presented by Mass General Brigham Cancer Instituteon Sunday, June 21. Headlining the field is two-time Boston Marathon presented by Bank of America champion Sharon Lokedi, fresh off a victory at April’s Patriots’ Day event.

“This year’s B.A.A. 10K will kick off the summer racing season, and brings together more than 90 of the most accomplished athletes in the sport,” said Mary Kate Shea, B.A.A. Chief Operating Officer. “Top athletes across the Open, Wheelchair, and Para Athletics Divisions from 21 countries will lead the way for a field of 10,000 participants on race day.” 

Kenya’s Lokedi enters the B.A.A. 10K as defending champion, having covered the 6.2-mile course that spans Boston and Cambridge in 31:39 last year. This will be her first race back following her victory at the 130th Boston Marathon in 2:18:51 – the second fastest winning time in Boston Marathon history (only behind her 2:17:22 course record from 2025).

"Boston holds a special place in my heart, and I look forward to running through the city once again in June at the B.A.A. 10K," said Lokedi. "From the 10K to the Boston Marathon, the community comes alive every race day. I'm ready to give my best to defend my title.”

Facing off against Lokedi in the women’s field is top American Rachel Smith, runner-up at the Boston 5K in April and a 2021 Olympian. From Kenya are Gladys Kwamboka, the 2025 African champion at 10,000m, Stacy Ndiwa, B.A.A. 10K runner-up in 2023, and Viola Cheptoo, second at the 2019 Boston 5K. British Olympian Jessica Warner-Judd is also entered. 

The professional men’s field represents 13 countries and features familiar and first-time faces to Boston. Ethiopia’s Dawit Seare, the 2025 Boston 5K champion, comes in with the fastest 10K in the field, having run 27:21. From Kenya are Alexander Mutiso, the 2024 London Marathon champion and runner-up at the TCS New York City Marathon last fall, as well as Patrick Kiprop, fifth place at April’s Boston 5K and winner of the BolderBoulder 10K on Memorial Day. Alex Masai (KEN), ninth at April’s Boston Marathon in 2:05:32, has finished in the top ten at the B.A.A. 10K three times.

South African Olympian Adriaan Wildschutt makes his B.A.A. 10K debut after a strong winter season where he won the NYC Half in 59:30 and placed 13th at the World Cross Country Championships. From Ethiopia is Hagos Gebrhiwet, an Olympic bronze medalist and two-time winner of the B.A.A. 5K, while Canadian Andrew Alexander enters after claiming the national 10K title on May 23. Also in the field is two-time U.S. Olympian Hillary Bor, a steeplechase specialist who has converted to the roads and placed second at the U.S. Half Marathon championships this year, as well as 2:05:46 marathoner Ryan Ford and reigning USA 25K national champion Andrew Colley.

A trifecta of B.A.A. runners enter after winning the Boston Marathon team title: Murphy Smith (2:08:58), Robert Miranda(2:09:40), and Barry Keane (2:13:01) are hometown favorites coming off a memorable 26.2-miles and train under B.A.A. coach and two-time Olympian Mark Carroll. 

In the wheelchair race, both B.A.A. 10K defending champions return in Daniel Romanchuk and Tatyana McFadden. Between the pair are seven Boston Marathon wins. Romanchuk holds the 10K event record (20:17) while McFadden won the Boston 5K last month. Joining them in the field are Delmace Mayo, the fastest Bostonian from the 2026 Boston Marathon; Hermin Garic, a three-time winner from 2022-2024; Tony Nogueira, winner of five straight B.A.A. 10Ks from 2014-2018; as well as Yen Hoang and Hoda Elshorbagy, winners in 2023 and 2024 from the University of Illinois. 

Mass.-native Brian Reynolds (T42-T44/T61-T64, lower limb impairment) set a T62 10K world record of 38:40 last year and returns with hopes to lower his mark in the Para Athletics Division. Also back are Para champions Atsbha Gebremeskel (T45-T47, upper limb impairment) and Cristina Burbach (T35-T38, coordination impairment). Among the winners from April’s Boston Marathon taking to the B.A.A. 10K are Marko Cheseto Lemtukei (T42-T44/T61-T64), Kelly Bruno (T42-T44/T61-T64), and Burbach.

Complete professional field lists can be found below and at www.baa.org.

The B.A.A. 10K presented by Mass General Brigham Cancer Institute will be the second event of the 2026 B.A.A. Distance Medley presented by Honda, a year-long series featuring the Boston 5K (April), B.A.A. 10K (June), and Boston Half (November). Media members interested in covering the B.A.A. 10K may apply for credentials here.

The race begins at 8:00 a.m. on Sunday, June 21, starting on Charles Street and finishing adjacent to Boston Common (course map available here). The course winds through Boston and Cambridge along the Charles River, crossing the Longfellow and Mass. Ave. bridges and passes over the iconic Boston Marathon finish line on Boylston Street. A total of 10,000 athletes will take part in the B.A.A. 10K.

Mass General Brigham Cancer Institute, the B.A.A. 10K’s presenting sponsor and exclusive fundraising partner, will again field a team of fundraising runners. Since 2016, more than 2,500 runners and 180 teams have raised $1.5 million to fuel life-giving breakthroughs through the B.A.A. 10K.


OPEN MEN’S DIVISION

COUNTRY

10K PB (t indicates 10,000m track time)

Dawit Seare

ERI

27:21 (Valencia, 2025)

Simon Mutula

KEN

27:23 (Yokohama, 2021)

Adriaan Wildschutt

RSA

27:28 (Gqeberha, 2025)

Alexander Mutiso

KEN

27:35 (Prague, 2022)

Patrick Kiprop

KEN 

27:35 (Atlanta, 2025)

Hagos Gebrhiwet

ETH

27:57 (Jaen, 2023)

Mohamed Reda El Aaraby

MAR

27:58 (Valencia, 2019)

Pablo Alba

ESP

28:06 (Valencia, 2026)

Andrew Colley

USA 

28:09 (Atlanta, 2025)

Alex Masai

KEN

28:09 (Boston, 2023)

Patrick Tiernan

AUS

28:09 (Manchester, 2024)

Tesfu Tewelde

ERI

28:11 (Mesa, 2025)

William Amponsah

GHA

28:13 (Atlanta, 2025)

Robert Miranda

USA 

28:16 (Charleston, 2026)

Andrew Alexander

CAN

28:18 (Ottawa, 2025)

Barry Keane

IRL

28:28 (Charleston, 2026)

Futsum Zienasellassie

USA 

28:41 (Cape Elizabeth, 2024)

Brian Shrader

USA 

29:11 (Boston, 2019)

Robert Warner-Judd

GBR

29:22 (Partington, 2023)

Hillary Bor

USA 

29:24 (Northport, 2024)

Erik Linden

USA

29:42 (Boston, 2024)

Brian Harvey

USA 

29:51 (Cape Elizabeth, 2014)

Aaron Gruen

AUT

30:05 (Boston, 2025)

Ryan Eiler

USA

30:18 (Boston, 2024)

Timothy Gill

USA

30:19 (Gloucester, 2022)

Ryan Ford

USA

30:22 (Boulder, 2026)

Yankarlos Diaz

USA 

30:35 (Holyoke, 2026)

Brett Brady

USA

31:01 (Northport, 2024)

Neil Ibata

FRA

31:19 (Boston, 2025)

Raphael Dapash

KEN

27:09.32t (Hachioji, 2025)

Will Smith

USA

27:53.19t (Palo Alto, 2025)

Marcelo Laguera

MEX

28:05.83t (Azusa, 2023)

Murphy Smith

USA 

28:23.31t (Raleigh, 2025)

Shinsaku Kudo

JPN

28:35.76t (Sagamihara,2023)

Ethan Gregg

USA

28:40.35t (Palo Alto, 2023)

Oisin Ó'Gailín

IRL

29:02.05t (Pace, 2025)

Andrew Kaye

USA 

29:19.30t (Azusa, 2024)

Philip White

USA 

29:46.83t (Lewisburg, 2025)

Ben Burgess

USA 

31:47.93t (Storrs, 2022)

Liam Back

NZL

N/A

 

OPEN WOMEN’S DIVISION

COUNTRY

10K PB (t indicates 10,000m track time)

Gladys Kwamboka

KEN

30:24 (Castellon, 2025)

Jessica Warner-Judd

GBR

30:41 (Valencia, 2024)

Sharon Lokedi

KEN

30:52 (NYC, 2022)

Veronica Loleo

KEN

30:53 (Herzogenaurach, 2023)

Viola Cheptoo

KEN

30:55 (Phoenix, 2019)

Rino Goshima

JPN

30:55 (Castellon, 2023)

Stacy Ndiwa

KEN

31:01 (Herzogenaurach, 2024)

Lily Partridge

GBR

31:31 (Manchester, 2025)

Daisilah Jerono

KEN

31:45 (Macau, 2025)

Priscah Cherono

KEN

31:53 (Marseille, 2002)

Winfred Mbithe

KEN

32:09 (Brasov, 2025)

Rachel Smith

USA

32:27 (NYC, 2022)

Lauren Hagans

USA

32:33 (Hardeeville, 2021)

Anne-Marie Blaney

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