Advertisement
| Digg | Facebook | Stumble It! | Delicious del.icio.us | Fark
E-mail | Print

Deena Kastor Wins Women's Olympic Marathon Trials

2004 Olympic Bronze Medalist Kastor Takes Lead In 24th Mile

Poland Native Magdalena Lewy Boulet (2nd) And Blake Russell (3rd) Also Make U.S. Team For Beijing Games

BOSTON (AP) ― It's been a while since the strains of "The Star-Spangled Banner" sailed over Copley Square to celebrate a U.S. marathon victory.

No American has won the Boston Marathon since 1985, before prize money began to draw the top international fields. But Sunday's Olympic trials offered a chance to celebrate American distance running - from the three members of the U.S. team newly crowned with the traditional olive wreaths, to the emotional farewell to Joan Benoit Samuelson.

"Coming from another country and having the opportunity to do whatever I wanted to do was a dream come true," said Magdalena Lewy Boulet, a native of Poland who was sworn in as a citizen on Sept. 11, 2001.

Showing off her new Olympic team warmups, she said, "I'm proud to wear this jacket."

Lewy Boulet ran alone for more than 20 miles, leading by almost 2 minutes before Deena Kastor passed her in the last three miles to win the U.S. Olympic marathon trials. They both earned a berth in the Beijing Games, along with third-place finisher Blake Russell, who was fourth in the 2004 trials and missed a spot in Athens by 35 seconds.

"After the disaster in 2004, we knew we had to develop a game plan to get where I am now," Russell said. "My goal was top three, by an inch or a mile. If I was third, that was as good as being first. I just didn't want to be fourth - again."

Kastor finished in 2 hours, 29 minutes, 35 seconds to beat Lewy Boulet by 44 seconds; Russell was another 2:21 back, but an all-important 1:13 ahead of first alternate Zoila Gomez. Kastor earned $50,000, Lewy Boulet $40,000, Russell $30,000 and all three could earn a $10,000 bonus if they line up in Beijing.

Ryan Hall, Dathan Ritzenhein and Brian Sell earned spots on the men's team with their top-three finishes in the New York trials in November.

It will be the second Olympic marathon and third Olympics for Kastor, who ran the 10,000 meters in Sydney.

"I accomplished two major goals: first, to make the team and, secondly, to win," said Kastor, who won the bronze medal in Athens. "It's an absolute honor that this is my third Olympic team. It feels just as sweet the third time around."

On a perfect morning for a marathon, with a clear sky and temperatures in the high 50s, 146 women set out on a loop course that crossed back and forth over the Charles River before leading them back onto Boylston Street for the traditional Boston finish. The roads and bridges were lined with thousands of fans, many of them runners planning to head to Hopkinton for Monday's 112th edition of the world's longest-running long run.

Wearing the favorite's bib No. 1, Kastor bobbed along in a blue singlet and white cap, taking off her sunglasses before making the final turn. She grabbed an American flag and waved it as she ran toward Copley Square, where no U.S. runner has claimed victory in the Boston Marathon since Lisa Larsen-Weidenbach in 1985.

Joan Benoit Samuelson, a two-time Boston winner who at 50 said this would be her last competitive race, finished in 2:49:08 to set an American record for the 50-54 age group. Samuelson won the inaugural Olympic women's marathon - the only U.S. medal in the event until Kastor took the bronze in Athens.

"It's been a great run," Samuelson said before turning to Kastor. "I'm handing the torch off to her now, and she can run with it. And I'm sure she will."

Samuelson crossed the finish line in a Red Sox cap, as she did when she won the Boston Marathon as a Bowdoin College senior in 1979.

"There have been some great years in between, and some not-so-great years," Samuelson said. "For the Red Sox and myself."

Kastor was an overwhelming favorite for the second consecutive trials, with a personal best that was 12 minutes faster than the next-closest competitor. But by Mile 14, Lewy Boulet led by 1:56 - the entire length of the 2,000-foot Harvard Bridge, the longest of the city's spans across the Charles.

Kastor made her move with about 10 miles to go, and Russell followed as the pack began to string itself out. Lewy Boulet's lead was 77 seconds as they passed the finish line to begin their final 6-mile loop, but it was down to 30 seconds at 22 miles and 8 seconds at the 23-mile mark.

As the runners ran on Memorial Drive in front of the stately columns of M.I.T., Kastor took the lead.

"I was already kind of succumbing to second place," Kastor said. "The gap started shortening a bit; that kind of fueled my fire. It was really the second half of the last lap that I thought I could win this race."

Lewy Boulet, who has a 3-year-old son and works full time coaching at the University of California in Berkeley, said she wasn't out to be the front-runner, but the slow pace set by the pack forced her to make a decision. Alone for the first 2 hours, she remembered what happened four years ago, when Russell led the first half of the trials but wilted in the St. Louis heat and finished fourth.

"There were a million things going through my mind, and Blake was one of them. I didn't want that to happen to me," Lewy Boulet said. "The plan was running the pace that I was running. The plan was not to run by myself."

(© 2008 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

From Our Partners

Advertisement