星期一, 4月 20, 2015

Lelisa Desisa Wins Second Boston Marathon Crown In Three Year Span

Lelisa Desisa Wins Second Boston Marathon Crown In Three Year Span

By James O'Brien

In 2013, Ethiopia's Lelisa Desisa stormed to victory in the 117th Boston Marathon. Twelve months later, he returned with a weight of expectation on his shoulders; the result was a DNF. In 2015 he came to Boston with a point to prove - which he did in demonstrative fashion after a race that was epic from gun to tape, with more plot twists than a soap opera. Desisa stayed strong through less than ideal conditions, breaking the tape on Boylston Street in 2:09:17.

Approaching the 10:00 a.m. start in Hopkinton, the weather was cause for as much conjecture as the contenders. How cold would it be? Was the anticipated rain storm going to come to pass? How much of a factor would the wind be? With the forecast changing almost by the minute, the prevailing conditions were as much of an unknown as the ultimate winner. By the time gun sounded, though, the rain had not arrived, the wind was calm, and the temperatures were chilly, though not dire. That would certainly change as the race unfolded and the blustery winds and rain swept through. But, for the early miles at least, conditions were good for fast running.

Ethiopia's Tadese Tola bolted from the starting line with the evident intention of ensuring that some heat would be injected into the proceedings. Clearly, he - and, no doubt, many of his peers - had no intention of letting any contender charge to an early and unassailable lead, as Meb Keflezighi had done in 2014.

This year was to be different. Tola towed the field through an opening mile of 4:40; his compatriot Gebre Gebremariam kept it going through two miles at a pace only a hair slower and the scene was set for a barn burner.

Through the ensuing rolling miles, you only had to blink to see a new face at the front of the pack. Tola kept himself prominent, as did Gebremariam. Desisa took a turn, as did Boston debutant Yemane Adhane Tsegay from Ethiopia. It was a revolving door of self-appointed pace-makers, all running with one intent: keep it moving.

At the 5K, the split of 14:42 illustrated that this was going to be anything but easy. Gebremariam, twice a third place finisher here, fronted the pack, but in close formation were Desisa, Tola, two-time world marathon champion Abel Kirui (KEN), four-time world half marathon champion Zersenay Tedesse (ETH), last year's second placer Wilson Chebet (KEN), 2012 champion Wesley Korir, defending champion Meb Keflezighi, three of Meb's US teammates - Nick Arciniaga, Matt Tegenkamp and Dathan Ritzenhein - plus a clutch of other world class performers - 17 in total. Notably missing, at this early stage, was Patrick Makau, former world record holder at 2:03:08, who inexplicably had stepped off the course not to be seen again.

With the field maintaining close to 2:04 pace, it was inevitable that there would soon be some attrition. Desisa maintained his position at the forefront, pushing it along in a manner that could have been surmised to be foolish. But push it he did, with Tola, Tsegay, Gebremariam and most of the gang close by. US hopes took an early blow, though, with Tegenkamp and Ritzenhein being among the first casualties. As the pace waned momentarily, the US duo managed to get back on terms; but it was a momentary flirtation. The leaders hammered onward and Tegenkamp and Ritzenhein were off the back.

The 5 mile marker was passed in 23:50 with Tola holding the lead and a pack of 13 hovering on his shoulder. At 10 miles, the split was 48:10. The pack was holding tight - with two Americans, Meb and Arciniaga in its midst. Tegenkamp and Ritzenhein were gone - except that nobody told the latter. As the pace eased marginally - 12 miles in 58:10, 13 miles in 1:03:27; a 2:08 tempo, down from the previous 2:04 - Ritzenhein forged his way back into contention. Having been well off the pace, the Rockford, Mich., based three-time Olympian, surged back with such impetus that, by the time the leaders reached the half way mark (1:04:00), the American was at the forefront, pushing the pace with Tsegay hanging on his shoulder.

Not only was this a remarkable change of fortune, but the ease with which Ritzenhein cruised from the outhouse to the penthouse fanned the flames of hope among spectators that, yes, an American could win this race again. Meb, after all, was still there, too, along with Arciniaga. Half the race gone; three Americans in contention and looking good. But there was a spoiler: immediately alongside them was a dozen or so of the world's finest - Kirui, Korir, Gebremariam, Tola, Desisa, Frankline Chepkwony (KEN), Wilson Chebet (KEN), Bernard Kipyego (KEN), and a handful more - all looking as if the race hadn't yet begun. Which it hadn't. The hills were coming.

Through 14 (1:08:23), 15 (1:13:24) and 16 miles (1:18:06), Ritzenhein retained his place at the pole. Every so often Desisa or Tsegay or Tola injected a turn of pace; but, Ritz was the rabbit, looking, it must be said, consummately at ease. As every Boston Marathoner knows, however, the miles from 16 to 21 are the determining factor in dreams coming true or nightmares becoming reality. The climbs - three of them, collectively known as the Newton Hills, culminating in Heartbreak - come almost immediately after the right hand turn at the Newton Firehouse. Prior to that, the hills are rolling; at this point they become significant.

Ritzenhein had been in the lead; but the moment the climb began, he drifted to the back of the pack of 11. Korir surged to the front, his first turn as pace-maker. Then it was Desisa's turn; then Tesgay's; then Chepkwony's. The knot of leaders became a string and indications were that the race was on.

Cresting the first hill, however, the pace eased and the group congealed once more, and - guess what? - Ritzenhein was back in the lead and looking as smooth as ever. The 17 mile mark was passed in 1:23:30, a 5:24 mile, the slowest of the race thus far. At 18, still climbing, the clock read 1:28:42, with all but Gebremariam hanging tight. Remaining in the fray were Tsegay, Keflezighi, Desisa, Korir, Chepkwony, Chebet, Kipyego, Tola and Ritzenhein, plus South Africa's Lusapho April, an intimidating group, with nobody giving any indication of who was frisky and who was fried.

Through 20 miles (1:39:01), approaching the crest of Heartbreak Hill, Ritzenhein continued to press as the pack of 10 fanned out across the road. At 21, another hard fought mile was reflected in the 1:44:26/5:25 split; but Ritzenhein kept hammering.

Once the hills are conquered, though, the Boston course begins phase three. Phase 1, from Hopkinton to the Newton Firehouse is rolling and freewheeling; Phase 2, the Newton Hills, are a grind, pure and simple; Phase 3, is a flat out blast into Boston. Broad straights, long, sweeping descents, raucous crowds. If you've got anything left at all, this is where you lay it on the line; and, if you haven't, this is where your longest day begins.

As the 22 mile mark approached, Tsegay put his foot down and the real racing began. Ritzenhein was gone almost immediately, accompanied by April. Along with Tsegay in the seven man pack were Desisa, Keflezighi, Korir, Chebet, Kipyego and Chepkwony. But Desisa was looking powerful, apparently not at all fatigued by his several turns at the front in the earlier miles. The 22 mile mark was passed in 1:49:13 (4:47) and 23 in 1:53:55 (4:42). Desisa was flying, Tsegay was hanging close and everybody else was suffering. Chepkwony, Chebet, Korir, Kipyego and the defender Keflezighi all gave ground and it was down to just two.

Keflezighi's hopes of victory may have been done, but drama remained. As the pace increased and he attempted to cover, he grabbed a water bottle and took a slug that went down the wrong way - badly. "Desisa was pushing hard," he explained later. "I responded, but I was carrying my water bottle. I took water and it didn't go down well. I had to stop five times to throw up. I had felt comfortable the whole way. I didn't have any problems before that."

While Keflezighi dealt with his issues, the leaders were flying. Desisa was the aggressor, forging onward with less than three miles remaining and opening a full 20 meter lead on Tsegay. At 24 (1:58:31/4:36), the chaser narrowed the margin to five meters, then to zero, and with the winner still to be decided, Tsegay visibly put his head down and surged. It should have been a decisive blow; in fact, it was. It was Tsegay's gasp. Desisa weathered the challenge, then surged away, creating an ever-widening margin that brought him through 25 miles in 2:03:23/4:52 and to the finish line in 2:09:17. Tsegay was as jubilant in second as he was exhausted, waving to the raucous crowd, crossing the finish line 35 seconds down in 2:09:48. Chebet, second here in 2014, held on for third in 2:10:22. Keflezighi gutted it out, placing eighth in 2:12:42 - "I wanted to get to the finish line. It just took a long time" - though he had to concede to Ritzenhein in the closing miles, who edged through to seventh in 2:11:20.

"I'm happy and excited for my second victory," Desisa stated, as he should have been, given his $150,000 first place prize. "I saw in 2013 where to stop and hold back and where the ups and downs are. I worked with my coach to prepare for the course better and did more training that I did in 2013. During the race, after 35K, knowing who was around me, I knew I was going to win because my speed was greater than theirs."

Commented the deposed champion, Keflezighi: "Congrats to Lelisa and all of the runners here. We all worked so hard. I hoped that it would come together for me in the last mile or two, but I couldn't get it done. But I gave it my best today."

In the master's competition - in which category Meb will be eligible to compete next year - the victory went to Italy's Danilo Goffi (42) who scored a resounding victory over Canada's Christian Mercier (40), 2:18:44 to 2:24:37. Mercier had a less comfortable finish, fending off a second Italian, Said Boudalia (46), who crossed the line just 12 seconds later in 2:24:49.

Reflections on the 119th Boston Marathon will invariably include memories of the wind and rain and cold. But those memories will certainly be subsumed by remembrances of an inspiringly tough competition and a masterful new winner.

Next year, the hallowed race turns 120. One can only speculate on the marvelous, and celebratory, competition that will be in store for that special occasion.

McFadden Wins Third Straight Boston; Third Time’s a Charm for Hug

McFadden Wins Third Straight Boston; Third Time’s a Charm for Hug

By Jean Cann

On the 40th Anniversary of Bob Hall’s pioneering race to become the first athlete to officially complete the Boston Marathon in a wheelchair, 50 push-rim wheelchair participants completed the 119th Boston Marathon. Top finishers divided a prize purse of $84,500, provided by principal sponsor John Hancock Financial Services.

A short rain shower wet the roads before the start, but the fast finishers avoided later heavy rainfall in Boston. A pesky headwind slowed times, but didn’t impede competition. Switzerland’s Marcel Hug found a formula that worked to defeat 10-time champion Ernst van Dyk and the rest of the field, taking first in 1:29:53. American Tatyana McFadden won her third straight Boston in 1:52:54.

Hug crafted a commanding win this year after finishing fourth in 2012 and 2013. “It was most important for me to have a good downhill,” said the 29-year-old. “I know that Ernst is strong in downhill so I tried to be really strong today and attacking.”

Taking the lead by 10 miles, Hug continued to pull away from a field that included four past champions, including van Dyk (RSA), Masazumi Soejima (JPN), Hiroyuki Yamamoto (JPN), and course record holder Josh Cassidy (CAN). Before the Newton Hills, Hug led by more than a minute. The lead would ultimately grow to seven minutes and 20 seconds by the finish. “I feel great,” said the champion. “I am happy. To win here is really special and I am proud to win this historic race.”

Hug’s chasers worked together to try to catch him, but it was each man for himself in the sprint down Boylston Street. Defending champion van Dyk took second in 1:36:27, with Soejima third in 1:36:28, and Kota Hokinoue (JPN) fourth in 1:36:28. “Masazumi, Kota, and I tried to chase Marcel and close the gap,” said van Dyk. “But there was a point when we knew that wasn’t going to happen. At the end, Kota made the first move and I had to counter that. I was hurting a lot over those last few miles, but I knew I couldn’t slow down, because if I did, they’d catch me.”

Tomasz Hamerlak of Poland and American Joshua George took fifth and sixth, respectively, in another tight finish in 1:38:14 and 1:38:15. Yamamoto finished seventh in 1:39:36, with James Senbetta, Jordi Madera Jimenez, and Laurens Molina cracking the top ten in 1:40:56, 1:41:40, and 1:42:42.

Tatyana McFadden, who has dominated Abbott World Marathon Major races for more than two years with wins in 2013 and 2014 at Boston, London, Chicago, and New York, kept her streak alive with another Boston win. Her race this year played out much like her win at Boston last year when she reeled in a fast-starting Wakako Tsuchida. “I knew from the very beginning that I have to go against strong sprinters like Tatyana and Susannah,” said Tsuchida, five time Boston champion and course record holder (1:34:06).

To catch Tsuchida, McFadden worked with her University of Illinois teammate Susannah Scaroni, and Amanda McGrory. The defending champion, who compared herself to a grandma on downhills, kept the pace uphill while Scaroni and McGrory took turns on flat stretches. By 15k, McFadden left the others and passed Tsuchida for good. She amassed a minute-and-a-half lead by the 18-mile-mark in the Newton hills. Tsuchida closed the gap but never came within a minute until just before the finish. McFadden crossed the line in 1:52:54 with Tsuchida next in 1:53:48. “It was an absolutely incredible day,” said McFadden, who dedicated her race and gave her laurel wreath to the Richard family, who lost 8-year-old Martin in 2013. “The weather cleared up. It wasn’t too chilly, but there was definitely a headwind. It was the 40th anniversary, so to be an American up there on the podium, I couldn’t have asked for a better day.”

Scaroni and McGrory, both from the US, finished together in 1:57:21, with Scaroni third for the second-straight year, and McGrory fourth. 2012 Paralympic Games bronze medalist Sandra Graf, of Switzerland, took fifth in 1:59:18, with Paralympic marathon silver medalist Shelly Woods (GBR) making her Boston debut in sixth (2:05:14).

In addition to winning monetary prizes for top finishes at Boston, wheelchair athletes will be able to compete for an additional prize purse from the Abbott World Marathon Majors (AWMM) starting with the 2016 Boston Marathon. A male and female winner will be determined based on scoring at the Boston, Virgin Money London, Tokyo, BMW Berlin, Bank of America Chicago, and TCS New York City Marathons, and each winning athlete will earn $50,000.

“I think that the sport is definitely growing and for the better,” said McFadden. “Now the wheelchair is part of the Abbott World Marathon Majors series it changes everything. It makes it better, stronger, and faster, and it will keep on growing. I’m so honored to come home with another win as part of it.”

About the AWMM, veteran competitor van Dyk said, “Basically it means that we’re going to have five marathons every year where the standards will be very high and the reward will be a couple of guys who can do this full-time and make a living out of it.

“We all know Boston does a good job. London does a good job. New York does a good job too. I think we’ve already seen it the last two to three years with the London-Boston challenge. We’ve seen a huge growth in the field in Boston and in London. Adding Berlin and Tokyo and giving it an ultimate prize will make a lot more guys commit to it.”

Caroline Rotich Sprints to Victory in 119th Boston Marathon

Caroline Rotich Sprints to Victory in 119th Boston Marathon

By Barbara Huebner

By the 5K mark of the 119th Boston Marathon, Desiree Linden had shed her hat and tossed away her long-sleeved shirt. If the 31-year-old American had to be the one to assure that this year’s race was run at an honest pace, with no excuses for the biting 45-degree chill and nerve-wracking headwind that would worsen to gusts of 29 mph by the finish, so be it.

For the next 20 miles, the gutsy Michigander took control. Now and then she might tuck in for a minute, but then resumed command. If she lagged to grab fluids, she quickly motored back into the lead. When the pack shuffled to follow a tangent, she moved back into position. Fans armored with rain gear and hugging themselves to stay warm erupted in chants of “USA! USA!” as they caught sight of an American in the lead. Lisa Rainsberger, whose win in 1985 was the last for an American woman, had fired the starter’s pistol. Perhaps it was an omen.

But in the 23rd mile, Ethiopian Mare Dibiba decided it was time to remind everyone, including her rivals, that her 2:19:52 personal best was the fastest in the field. Last year’s Boston Marathon runner-up, Buzunesh Deba, insisted that her 2:19:59 PB wasn’t going to waste, either.

Surprisingly, Kenya’s Caroline Rotich, with a lifetime best of 2:23:22 and better known as a half marathoner, tagged along. After making the race, Linden slipped back.

The three hammered the next mile and a half together, often elbow-to-elbow, as the experts waited for the Ethiopian duo to leave Rotich behind before launching into the Big Duel down Boylston Street.

Instead, Deba fell prey to Hereford Street. When Dibaba surged with about 400 meters to go, it looked as if she would play out her role as race favorite right to the finish line.

Then Rotich, 31, unleashed a ferocious kick with less than 200 meters remaining, vanquishing a dejected Dibaba and breaking the tape in 2:24:55 to win her first Abbott World Marathon Majors race.

“We came to [mile 25] and I was like, ‘it’s almost over,’ and knew I wouldn’t go all-out until the finish,” said Rotich, who took home the top prize of $150,000. “[When Dibaba surged] I thought I would finish second. Just like that I saw the finish line and was like, ‘Oh, I can kick!’ Once I saw the finish, I knew I could let go.”

Dibaba, runner-up in 2:24:59, had predicted on Friday that she would win, “but I realized in the last few meters that I wasn’t going to have enough.” Deba finished third in 2:25:09, and fought back tears as she tried to describe the feeling of falling just short of victory once again (in addition to her second place here last year, the 27-year-old from the Bronx has twice been runner-up in the TCS New York City Marathon).

Linden finished as top American, fourth in 2:25:39. Winning the master’s division was New Zealand’s Liza Hunter-Galvan, 45, in 2:46:44. Joan Samuelson finished in 2:54:03, the fastest marathon by a 57-year-old woman in history.

Hometown favorite Shalane Flanagan, who grew up in Marblehead, Mass., and last year recorded the fastest Boston Marathon ever by an American woman (2:22:02), ran safely in the lead pack until just before the firehouse turn into the Newton Hills. She abruptly veered away from the pack, running a tight tangent in which she searched for breathing room to regroup from legs that began feeling heavy around halfway. Flanagan soon fell back and ran alone the rest of the way, fighting the wind and searing disappointment to finish ninth in 2:27:47.

“I felt like I had lead legs,” she said, unsure of the cause but wondering if her timing in coming down from altitude might have been a factor. “Normally when I put in the work I can see the results, and this is maybe the first time that I haven’t seen the results coincide with the training.”

Linden—whose runner-up finish by two seconds in 2011 is the best by an American since 1993—flashed a quick smile as she passed through the Wellesley College scream tunnel just before bringing the 11-woman pack though the halfway point in 1:12:33. By the 18-mile mark, entering the Newton Hills, she was the only American remaining, as first Amy Cragg and then Flanagan drifted back. Cragg would drop out of the race between 35K and 40K.

“With the conditions and the course I knew today was going to be a war of attrition,” said Linden. “My goal was to go out there and make it a full marathon, to grind it out and hopefully there wouldn’t be a huge pack at the end. I had to trust that the race was going to take the legs out of people late.”

They say the marathon begins at 20 miles, and this one surely did. At exactly that mile marker, 2011 Boston Marathon champion Caroline Kilel—the woman who denied Linden an American victory that year—hit the gas pedal as if trying to outrace a tornado. The surge didn’t last long, but it was enough to shake the pack out of its routine. Then, Dibaba slung herself around Cleveland Circle, and the pack finally began to splinter. Linden briefly regained the lead before Dibaba, Deba, and Rotich, who finished fourth here in 2011 and is coached by Olympic triathlete Ryan Bolton in Santa Fe, New Mexico, took off for good.

Linden said afterward that had someone else come forward to set an honest pace, she would have happily tucked in, but that she refused to let the pace get too soft and had no regrets.

Asked how the race compared to her near-triumph four years ago, Linden said, “2011 was definitely a highlight for me. I hope it isn’t the highlight of my career, but that’s why I keep coming back. Today was huge for me, being injured in 2012 (and forced to drop out of the Olympic Marathon). I’m really proud of myself. Today was just as big personally as 2011 was.”

昆士市慶祝地球日 4/22社區會議談氣候變化


QUINCY STARTS COASTAL ADAPTATION PLAN
Community Meeting 4/22 to gather citizen input on plan


QUINCY – The Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC), in partnership with the City of Quincy, with assistance from the Boston University City Planning and Urban Affairs Program, is creating a Coastal Adaptation Plan for the City of Quincy.

A public forum on Earth Day, Wednesday, April 22, 2015 from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Germantown Neighborhood Center located at 366 Palmer St. in Quincy will begin the discussion among the residents and businesses of Quincy. Refreshments and childcare will be provided, and the event is free and open to the public.

The forum will offer locals a chance to learn about climate change and its impacts on the natural environment, Quincy's developed areas and its infrastructure, its coastal areas, local health, and the local economy. Special focus will be paid to the impacts on particularly vulnerable populations, including lower-income- and non-English-speaking residents, as well as physically or mentally challenged groups that live within floodplain areas.

Presenters will also discuss positive, proactive measures that property owners and the city can take to become resilient to such changes, as a way of saving property owners money while upholding Quincy's high quality-of-life for all residents. 

“This project is a critical step for the city to identify short-, mid-, and long-term strategies to change land use practices that will protect residents from climate change impacts such as coastal and inland flooding, increased heat, and intense precipitation, as well as create a beautiful city that balances both economy and environmental protection,” said Dennis Harrington, Quincy Planning Director.

We are excited to work with Quincy on this important climate resiliency planning effort, as it serves as a pilot for MAPC to do this type of planning for an urban municipality facing multiple potential impacts," said Julie Conroy, AICP, Senior Environmental Planner at MAPC. "These strategies can then be replicated in coastal communities across Eastern Massachusetts."
The Quincy Coastal Adaptation Plan is being funded through the District Local Technical Assistance Program (DLTA), as well as Boston University and City of Quincy leveraged resources.
For more information on the project, contact MAPC Senior Environmental Planner Julie Conroy at 617-933-0749 and jconroy@mapc.org, or Quincy Principal Planner Robert Stevens at 617-376-1411and rstevens@quincyma.gov.

If you need any special accommodations, e.g., assistive listening device, translation, and/or interpretation, please contact MAPC two weeks prior to the meeting by contacting Julie Conroy or Jennifer Erickson, Equity Specialist at MAPC, at jerickson@mapc.org or 617-933-0759.  

To register for the forum, please visit http://conta.cc/1xGaw3C.

To take the BU-created survey about and coastal adaptation, please visit http://t.co/qV6KY6IuJJ

'The Bay State: A Multicultural Landscape' Opens April 25 At Scandinavian Cultural Center In Newton

'The Bay State: A Multicultural Landscape' Opens April 25 At Scandinavian Cultural Center In Newton
Inspirational portraits by nationally known professional photographer Mark Chester create a visual archive celebrating the diversity of Massachusettscitizens from 165 countries 
around the globe
April 20, 2015 - Newton, MA - The Scandinavian Cultural Center in Newton is proud to host the opening exhibit of The Bay State: A Multicultural Landscape on April 25. The selection of inspirational portraits by nationally known professional photographer Mark Chester is a moving display of more than 300 newly naturalized U.S. citizens who are residents of the Commonwealth. The opening had originally been scheduled for March 5 but was postponed due to inclement weather.

The opening exhibit of A Multicultural Landscape will be held on Saturday, April 25, with a reception at 2:00 p.m. At 2:30, Chester(shown, left) will present an artist talk. At 3:00, Westy Egmont, director of the Immigrant Integration Lab at Boston College's Graduate School of Social Work, will speak.

A selection of the Chester's photographs will be on display during April and May in the Scandinavian Cultural Center's Nordic Hall Gallery, for which hours vary. The Gallery is located at 206 Waltham St. in West Newton. The photographer and a number of the exhibit's subjects will be at the opening. 

Chester's cultural-diversity collection is featured in the Dreams of Freedom: Boston's Immigrant Experience exhibit, which began on March 10 at Boston's 
Skywalk Observatory, located on the 50th floor of The Prudential Tower.

Chester's powerful images create a visual archive that celebrates the diversity of Massachusetts' citizens from 165 countries around the globe. The photographs of New Americans enrich the viewer by sharing the vast cultural resources and rich ethnic heritage of the Bay State's 351 towns and cities.

Click here to view and download high-resolution, JPEG-format images in The Bay State: A Multicultural Landscape exhibit.

Click here to download a listing in Word format of the countries of all of the participants in The Bay State: A Multicultural Landscape traveling exhibit.

To schedule an interview or for further information, contact:

Susan Wagner
Strategic Partner
Susan Wagner PR + Best Rate of Climb
978.852.8563
 Steven Jones-D'AgostinoStrategic PartnerSusan Wagner PR + Best Rate of Climb508.930.8675

第119屆波士頓馬拉松賽中國,台灣選手分別在哈佛、波約斯頓街聚首

來自台灣的選手,昨日在波士頓馬拉松賽終點站前合影。(圖由經文處新聞組提供)
             (Boston Orange 周菊子波士頓報導)第119屆波士頓馬拉松賽將於今(廿)早從霍普金頓(Hopkinton)的主街出發,九點三十二分女子精英組先出發,十點鐘男子精英組出發,一路穿過至少六個麻州市鎮,跑到柯普利廣場旁的波士頓公共圖書館前,抵達終點,全長26.2英哩,預定下午兩點舉行頒獎禮。
年滿六十歲以上,第一個拿到馬拉松賽大滿貫的中國跑者田同生,昨日在哈佛校園
分享經驗。(周菊子攝)

            波士頓馬拉松賽沿途會從霍普金頓主街,穿過的市鎮包括亞許蘭Ashland, 傅萊明罕(Framingham),納提克Natick),衛斯理(Wellesley),牛頓市(Newton),布魯克蘭鎮(Brookline),最後到波士頓市的約翰漢考克大樓附近。
            昨日陽光普照,氣候和暖,不過天氣預報指今日轉冷,還會從西往東的下雨,甚至下大雨。氣溫約在華氏五十度出頭,頂多升到六十度出頭。風速約每小時五到十哩,不算太糟,但有可能增大。估計雨勢會從下午四點以後才比較大。
            2007年馬拉松賽那天的氣溫,將和今日相似。
            根據波士頓體育會的資料,今年的三萬二千多名跑者中,約有二百人來自中國,香港,台灣。
萬科總經理郁亮昨日在哈佛暢談,因他推動,萬科成立了長跑協會等經過。(周菊子攝)
            昨日下午,來自中國的略博咨詢公司執行董事田同生應哈佛中國論壇之邀,在該校愛默生大樓,以“中國選手的波士頓馬拉松經驗”為題,分享經驗。
            因為跑馬拉松,整個人瘦了一圈的萬科集團總經理郁亮,昨日下午
由哈佛中國學生學者聯合會主持,在該校科學中心E廳,以他的跑步經驗,和一百,二百名出席者談“管理從自己開始”,還笑言期待今日領教一下衛斯理美女夾道送吻的艷福。
昨日與田同生一起到哈佛分享經驗的跑者。(周菊子攝)
            來自台灣的廿二名波士頓馬拉松賽參賽者,有十三人和駐波士頓台北經濟文化辦事處聯絡上,昨日下午到波士頓馬拉松賽終點站前晤面,晚上再聯袂接受波克萊台灣商會的款待,在新月宮餐廳享用龍蝦大餐,為今日參賽打氣。
            去年已完成馬拉松大滿貫紀錄的田同生昨日透露,他是應波士頓體育會邀請來參賽的。體育會官方人士告訴他,今年國籍為中國的參賽者共104人。其中從中國飛來的有75人。他個人認為以波士頓馬拉松賽有三萬多人參加的數目來說,中國人實在還太少,希望將來能鼓勵更多人參加。
  波士頓馬拉松賽終點站前,昨日擠滿了人。(周菊子攝)

            根據波士頓體育會公佈的資料,在中(75)(82)(22)的近二百名參賽者中,共有二人擠入第一波出發的精英組。他們分別是拿到第638號,來自中國大陸北京,廿五歲的鄧國民(譯音,Deng, Guomin),另一人為拿到634號,來自香港的澳洲籍人,三十六歲的 Ashley J. Miles
            擠入第一波第二批出發的,有來自香港,拿到1432號的三十八歲趙博良(譯音,Chau, Pak Leong),以及1720號的的四十八歲卓鴻高(譯音,Cheuk, Hon Kau)。來自中國的有拿到1507號,三十二歲寧波人李舟(譯音,Zhou, Li),拿到1736號的四十二歲丹東人孫大華(譯音,Sun Da Hua),