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109th Boston Marathon
Local runners make their mark on the race
By James Moreland April 18, 2005 Boston, MA For the Washington Running Report
Catherine 'the Great' Ndereba wins her fourth marathon in a
2:25:13 come-from-behind victory.
Hailu Negussie of Ethiopia holds off five Kenyan runners and
fourth place American Alan Culpepper (2:13:39), which includes
two former race winners, to win in 2:11:45.All Photos courtesy of Victah
(above is Men's start - below men's and women's champions)
Warm weather but lots cooler than last year
Sure, now they tell me the weather was just perfect for this
year's running of the world's best-known road race. Weigh too
much, I mean, way too late for me to try to qualify for this
special race. And you do have to qualify. All too many times we
see film of Jock Semple chasing after Katherine Switzer in a
vain attempt to stop women from racing. After fifty years of
eating at McDonald's, I can see Ronald McDonald chasing after me
trying to get another Clydesdale off the course.This race is special because of its long history, because you
must prove yourselves worthy not only of the formidable
finishing of the distance. You have to finish in a fast enough
time. All year long people muse on about qualifying for the
Boston marathon. Every year many of this area's elite athletes
train to go there. Make no mistake; they are elite just to get
there. Maybe this is why Boston has always had a huge number of
bandits. Everyone wants to say they have run Boston. Some of the runners never show up as ranked runners because they
no longer compete regularly but they still want to get to
Boston. Cherry Blossom race director Phil Stewart, a former sub
2:20 marathoner, made the show. One of his close friends,
Bennett Beach, is closing in on John Kelly's records (started
sixty-one, finished fifty-eight), having run more than thirty
Bostons. (Beach is the only runner to have completed all the
Cherry Blossom races and, if memory serves correctly, one of the
five runners to have run every Marine Corps Marathon.) This year, Washington, DC sent fifty-one men and forty-two
women. Wilson Komen (27) was the fastest male in 2:19:41.
Christopher Sabatini (40) was the top masters male in 2:48:16.
Kerry Rodgers (36) was the fastest woman in 3:18:53. Melissa
Edeburn (44) was the top masters woman in 3:37:00. Photo below: Alan Culpepper of Colorado, winner of the Men's
Olympic Trials Marathon in 2004, finished 4th in 2:13:39, the
best showing for an American male since Dave Gordon (also 4th)
in 1987.
Virginia Runners
Virginia and Maryland usually have similar numbers. This year
Virginia had a better participation with 412 finishers to
Maryland's 322. On our results page, we have listed the runners
in four divisions, Open (18-39), Masters (40-49), Seniors (50-
59), and Veterans (60-99). These will be separated by state and
sex (except the veterans). It is always fun to see how many
runners finish faster than their needed qualifying times. Before
anyone jumps up and down too strenuously, the official time is
the gun time. Many runners using the chip, or as I call it, PWT
(personal watch time), will note that with the narrow road in
Hopkinton and the many thousands of racers, official and chip
times will often be many minutes apart even for the faster
runners.In Virginia, the top woman was Milligan Grinstead (27) of
Alexandria in 3:07:05. The top masters woman was Tammy Rall (42)
of Stafford in 3:34:26. The top senior runner was Diana Joaquin
(52) of Arlington in 3:53:26. For the men, Eric Post (26) of
Centreville caught up with treadmill marathon world record
holder Michael Wardian (31) of Arlington. Post had been nearly
two minutes back at the halfway point. His finish time was
2:25:22 for 21st place. Wardian settled one place back in
2:25:43. Steve Dietz (45) of Springfield pulverized his
statewide compatriots by nearly two miles, finishing in 2:44:04
for fifteenth place in the division John Dodds (54) of Arlington started more than six minutes
behind the leaders. Luis Melendez (51) of Falls Church started
four minutes back. At the halfway point, Dodds had lost another
two minutes to Melendez. Right around mile twenty (did somebody
say Heartbreak Hill?), Dodds started coming back. On Boylston
Street he passed Melendez, finishing in 3:19:19 to 3:19:37 for
top seniors honors. 50 Plus Club member Jim Noone (60) of
Arlington has been lightly racing so far this year. Boston is
only his eighth race of the year. Still, he was the top veteran
from the state in 3:54:44 (note the eleven minute lag from chip
time). Jerry Lewis (71) of Reston was eighth in his age group in
4:15:45. Jay Jacob Wind of Arlington from the 50 Plus Club is a regular
at the race, having run near 2:25 in his youth. Rising star,
Bill Stahr of The Plains broke the masters record at the Stupid
Little 10 Miler last week and ran the hilly Fodderstack 10K this
Saturday for first in his age group as a prelude to his Boston.
Maryland Runners
In Maryland, the top woman was also the top masters runner. Lee
DiPietro (47) of Ruxton continues to defy age, racing home in
2:53:34 for twentieth overall and fourth masters. Linell Smith
(52) of Baltimore ran 4:05:12 for state seniors honors. Karolynn
Coleman (60) of Chevy Chase ran 4:28:45 for top veterans honors.For the Open men, Elias Tamiru (30) of Baltimore flew out of the
gate, hitting the 10K in 35:52. By the half marathon he was
still rolling along at a sub-six-minute pace in 1:17:08. Then
the wheels started to come off just a little. Meanwhile, Frank
Sprtel (32) of Takoma Park made a more veteran move with 37:23
at the 10K and 1:19:00 at the halfway point. Sprtel made his
move from ten seconds back at the 35K checkpoint, finishing tops
in 2:40:23. Tamiru ran 2:43:06. His next marathon will be wiser
and faster. Steven Leven (42) of Reisterstown had an easy time
winning the state masters title in 2:52:05. Alan Pemberton (52)
of Silver Spring ran a fine 3:07:52 for the seniors state best.
Another Coleman, (Norman (60) of Chevy Chase) was top veteran
for the men in 4:24:48. Saul Arthur (71) of Baltimore ran
5:26:01.
Top Men Finishers
Place Bib Name Official Time State Country Citizen
1 7 Negussie, Hailu 2:11:45 ETH
2 3 Onsare, Wilson 2:12:21 KEN
3 23 Cherono, Benson 2:12:48 KEN
4 10 Culpepper, Alan 2:13:39 CO USA
5 13 Cheruiyot, Robert Kipkoech 2:14:30 KEN
6 1 Cherigat, Timothy 2:15:19 KEN
7 19 Kipchumba, Benjamin 2:15:26 KEN
8 15 Letherby, Andrew 2:16:38 AUS
9 6 Ouaadi, Mohamed 2:16:41 FRA
10 22 Gilmore, Peter 2:17:32 CA USA
11 16 Shay, Ryan 2:18:17 MI USA
12 5 Kimutai, Benjamin Kosgei 2:18:22 KEN
13 11 Omwenga, Thomas 2:18:57 KEN
14 8 Loskutov, Pavel 2:19:04 EST
15 501 Kipkemboi, Joshua 2:19:28 GBR KEN
Top Women Finishers
Place Bib Name Official Time State Country Ctz
1 F1 Ndereba, Catherine 2:25:13 KEN
2 F2 Alemu, Elfenesh 2:27:03 ETH
3 F7 Genovese, Bruna 2:29:51 ITA
4 F3 Zakharova, Svetlana 2:31:34 RUS
5 F102 Biktagirova, Madina 2:32:41 POR RUS
6 F12 Morgunova, Lyubov 2:33:24 RUS
7 F10 Gemechu, Shitaye 2:33:51 ETH
8 F9 El Kamch, Zhor 2:36:54 MAR
9 F15 Ogawa, Mina 2:37:34 JPN
10 F5 Olaru, Nuta 2:37:37 ROM
11 F101 Sultanova-Zhdanova, Firaya 2:41:05 FL USA RUS
12 F22 Levan, Emily R. 2:43:14 ME USA
13 F25 Annis, Caroline E. 2:43:46 CA USA
14 F26 Graytock, Carly E. 2:44:02 MI USA
15 F20 Sato, Yuko 2:47:00 JPN
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