APR-B-13

THE 107TH BOSTON MARATHON:

 A BRIGHT BEAUTIFUL “SPECTATORS’ DAY” EVENT
FROM HOPKINTON TO BOSTON

April 21, 2003

 

            It was balmy, almost beautiful.  And the hardest miles I experienced were the first ones, when I finally got running, with the cramped up muscles from the week’s earlier Ultra-Run.

 

            After attending the AMAA meetings in the Colonnade Hotel, I left with one of the participants to walk a bit of the Freedom Trail to the Old North Church and the Revere Park and the old Copps hill Cemetery.  I then returned to pick up the Clarks, and we took the MTA down to the Quincy market, Faneuil Hall we had just left to stand in a very long queue for the traditional night before the race Pasta Party.  With not much better to be done, I went back to the Back Bay Hilton and went to bed for the early start.

 

            I wandered in to the Colonnade around seven AM and found a few folk who were waiting nervously to get on the AMAA bus to the start line.  Five school buses were leased to go out, and two would stay behind Colella’s Market in the usual place at Hopkinton for the baggage buses and returning folk, such as Freeman Dyson, who always goes out with Imme who was in my starting corral.

 

            I wandered the town square at Hopkinton for the obligatory “It All Starts Here” photo and the hoopla of the waiting crowds.  I saw Dick and Rick Hoyt again, who paces along at the level of the elite women, running in his 23rd Boston, pushing hi now 41-year old son with severe CP in a wheelchair.

 

            It was already too warm for my single most valuable aphorism “In any Endurance Event, if you are not Shivering at the Start You are Overdressed.”  In fact, it was a sunscreen and sunglasses day.  Ideal for spectators, it would get hard on runners.

 

I had made up a card to drop at Camp Calvin in Natick, which I had seen for ten years running.  IO knew it would be a long time for the Corral 16 qualifiers to be crossing the start line and a lot of the charity runners who were back in the 20,000 corral would be mixed in doing their walk-runs.  So, Imme wanted to push as far forward as possible.  I convinced her to dress down, although she was reasonably worried about chilling out in the perpetual wind tunnel of the finish line.

 

AND, WE’RE OFF!

 

            At noon the national anthem was drowned out by a flyover of the Air Guard and then the elite were off.  We stood for about twelve minutes without moving, then slowly walked past Collela’s market, and made the turn on Main Street.  I had met the VHTRC (Virginia happy Trails Running Club) participants in the Bull Run Run earlier, and I had also seen a few familiar faces and a number of first timers whom I had volunteered to coach along the way.  I had enough time for conversation since even after the start line passed about twenty minutes into the race; we were still strolling down the hill toward Ashland.  It was a good thing we were slow at the start.

 

THE FIRST 10 K OF THE 107TH BOSTON

 

            My tibialis anticus and quads were tight as a tick and complaining bitterly at the downhill shuffle.  I thought to myself, this must be payback for the long run earlier in the week; but, then I remembered, “Isn’t it always this way at the Get Go in Boston?  It seems that I never run just before the big event, so I have to re-learn how to do this.  It usually loosens up to the point that I ma no longer aware of the pain and then I start racing too fast while I am still in the down hill first half.  My other aphorism passed along freely to the first timers, is “The marathon ins in Two halves, and the half way pint is at Twenty Miles: There you need to have just as much energy to finish as you did to carry you to that point, so that I call it a twenty mile slog and a 10K race!”

 

            I loosened up after Ashland, where my favorite “local townspeoples” scenes take place---little kids holding out their hands, a group of Down’s Syndrome folk reaching out, and some elderly pushed out in wheelchairs with blankets over their laps to be a part of it all.  I always give High and Low Fives to the kids.  A Dixie land Band is always performing.  The shouts and cheers are from here to Boston in an uninterrupted stream.  “Wait until Wellesley!” I said to the first-timers: “It gets good up ahead.  This is one of the few times that an old fart can feel like a rock star!”

 

            I got to feeling good.  My heart rate monitor read out 140, and when I picked it up to 150+ I backed off on the pace.  I looked ahead to the Natick 9 mile point and Camp Calvin---and looked hard where it should have been and saw nothing.  After a decade of maroon and gold cheers—that curb was empty, unless I missed it.

 

            But I did NOT miss Wellesley.  The screams and cheers were audible, of course, about a mile before you get close, and I hug the right side and slap hands with the screaming pulchritude of  hundreds of nubile college women in full cry.  I keep noticing the genes on display.  (On a warm day in Wellesley, quite a lot of the Wellesley women is on display!)  It seems to me that each year the women become more Asian, and fewer blue-eyed blondes.

 

            My race is over after Wellesley—but I looked up to see the Half Way point at about the two hour cut point on my watch, subtracting the twenty minutes for the start (Gun minus Chip time.)  Others were  running faster in the shade of the few trees that are around Framingham, with a lot of terrain ahead including the sun-baked hills of Newton.  Everyone says after the first rise that they have been on Heartbreak Hill not realizing that there are five hills and the rise they have just come over is not one of them.  I look out for the crossing of the Mass Pike, 128/95 where one invariably picks up the wind in the teeth from the onshore breeze, and then, after rolling through four Newton hills, I hit  Mile 19.2 at the foot of the last of the “Heartbreak hill.”  There I always turn to salute the bronze statue of the Old and Young Johnny Kelly, age 95, the marshal of the Boston Course and the only 63 time participant in the running until the year before I entered.  Charlie Clark is running his 29th and is among a group of the 25+ finishers.  Cindy will run in at 17 miles to accompany him in.

 

            I went out into the middle of the road to climb the hill with my head back and a determined smile upon my face.  I was determined, despite the last run of twice this distance, to WALK NOT A SINGLE STEP OF THIS RACE, HILLS INCLUDED.  That I achieved.

 

            I crested heartbreak and gave High Five to the TV cameraman standing with his rig right in my path, and chugged on down, noting that despite the slowed pace, my heart rate had bumped to 160 on the uphill slope. 

           

            Now, it is counting down time.  From this point I am counting up the miles I have run, and after twenty I start the reverse “Only a 10K,’ “A meager five Miles,” “Anyone can do a 5K,” etc.

 

            Boston College tried to outdo Wellesley, and in one sample group may have done so.  With my eyes at midlevel along the sidelines, I seem to have passed a constant stream of bared midriffs, and jeweled navels.

 

             I came along Commonwealth Ave—a place where only 34 years ago, I had stood in the sleet, with a coat over my Surgery resident whites, and a small boy on my shoulder, watching these incredible paragons of mankind weathering through their 22nd mile.

 

I looked up and saw the Citgo Sign—the Kenmore Square oracle as if lifted up by Moses himself to let us know the “End is Nigh.”  I stretched out the stride and began lapping quite a few of the folk who had passed me, and at one long level stretch, I was the only runner threading my way around walkers.  “If this weren’t THE Marathon, I would bag it right now,” said one to me as I passed, and encouraged him with a tap on his shoulder.  I caught up behind a tall young woman with long legs and “Sarah” written on her singlet.  I glued on to her backside, and never lost her until I turned the corner onto Boston where there is 500 yards between the runners and the clearly visible finish line.  Then I took off my cap (“Couch Potato”) and kicked it.  I may have passed everyone between me and the mats at the end under the 385 yard point, since I saved out a bit of the glycogen depleted muscle function by thinking “This is only the first of two back to back marathons in the last race” and hit the mats on a hot day total chip time somewhere between 4:15 and 4:30.  OK, I was satisfied.

 

 I got the medal and the Mylar blanket and then started the long trek through the wind tunnel of Downtown Boston to thread my way through Hotels---Marriott to Colonnade, where I made the reunion with the AMAA group an got the key to the shower room, then made my way back to the Back Bay Hilton to pick up my Checked bags for the Airport to make it to my 9:00 PM shuttle,  Everyone saw my medal and gave me thumbs up or “Congratulations: However, on earth, could you do such a thing?”  More realistically, how could I lug all my bags and baggage aboard the MTA, make three transfers, and lug them over from Terminal A to the Delta Shuttle terminal?  I was told that a taxi would take four times as long because the disruption of the street traffic by the marathon course and all those runners still coming in.  Bless them!

 

So, another in my consistent series of Boston marathons now goes into the history books, which is spread through both of the centuries in which it has been run.  It is a great party and a wonderful celebration of life, health, and strength—none of which are commodities to be taken for granted.  There are 25, 000 stories out there on the road from Hopkinton, and mine is neither more nor less than one of those, and I did it fair and square, with the same effort required of us all.  I am delighted to report taht6 the airport security metal detectors detected my medal!

Return to April  Index

Return to Journal Index