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Boston Marathon

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Event information

Boston Marathon

Apr 15, 2002

4.7
Organizer`s website

Where

Boston, MA, United States

Start time

09:00

Distances

Marathon

Sub-events

26.2

Marathon

April 15, 2002 Monday
Distance: Marathon·Start time: 09:00
MarathonPoint to pointWheelchair race

Race Results

Top 3

1. Rodgers Rop 02:09:02
2. Christopher Cheboiboch 02:09:05
3. Fred Kiprop 02:09:45

Top 3 Women

2. Margaret Okayo 02:20:43
3. Catherine Ndereba 02:21:12
4. Elfenesh Alemu 02:26:01

Top 3 Men

1. Rodgers Rop 02:09:02
2. Christopher Cheboiboch 02:09:05
3. Fred Kiprop 02:09:45
SEE ALL RESULTS

Race Details

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Training Plan

Free 20 week Basic Marathon Training Plan

A detailed plan created by our Head Coach designed for help you prepare for your first marathon.

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Reviews

4.7
Based on 2 Reviews from other runners - tap or click to see all!

By: Marathon Junkie

Posted: November 12, 2025

The Best Fan Base Bar None! It's the Olympics for the common runner!

The Boston Marathon isn’t just a race—it’s a rite of passage. From the quiet start in Hopkinton to the roaring finish on Boylston Street, the course is a 26.2-mile roller coaster of emotion, pain, and pure electricity. Don’t let the net downhill fool you; Boston’s brutal hills and unpredictable weather make it one of the toughest major marathons in the world. The first few miles feel almost too easy. The course drops sharply out of Hopkinton, and it’s tempting to fly, legs fresh and adrenaline high. But every step downhill is a promise you’ll have to repay later. Smart runners hold back, knowing the course has a cruel sense of humor. You coast through Ashland and Framingham, cheered by fans who’ve been out since sunrise. In Natick, the crowd grows louder, the energy thicker. By the time you reach Wellesley College, it hits you—the legendary “Scream Tunnel.” Hundreds of college students line the street, shouting so loud it feels like running through a jet engine. The sound is pure chaos and pure motivation, impossible not to smile through. But then comes the reckoning. The Newton Hills. Starting around mile 16, the course punches back. Four climbs, each steeper and more demoralizing than the last, capped by the infamous Heartbreak Hill at mile 20. It’s not the height that kills you—it’s the timing. Just when your legs are begging for mercy, Boston asks for more. Every muscle burns, and the crowd seems to sense it. They close in along the sidewalks, faces inches away, screaming your name, pounding on signs, offering oranges, hugs, anything to keep you moving. There’s a unique madness to it, a shared suffering that turns strangers into teammates. And then, finally, the hills are behind you. The course tilts downhill into Brookline, and you can almost taste the finish. The city crowds tighten, three deep now, waving flags, cowbells, beers in hand. You pass under the iconic CITGO sign at mile 25—a beacon of hope and heartbreak all at once. Your legs are shredded, your lungs raw, but Boston is carrying you now. Then you make that sacred left on Boylston. The noise hits like a wall. It’s not sound—it’s a physical force. Thousands of fans jammed shoulder to shoulder, their cheers bouncing off the buildings like thunder. The finish line glows in the distance, blue and gold, and for a moment, the pain disappears. Every step down Boylston feels like you’re running through history, through triumph and tragedy, through every runner who’s ever dreamed of this moment. Crossing that line isn’t just finishing a marathon—it’s surviving Boston. The hills, the crowds, the chaos—they test every ounce of strength you have. But the payoff, that electric surge along Boylston Street, makes it all worth it. It’s not just a finish. It’s a roar, a heartbeat, a city lifting you home.
4.3

By: Becky B.

Posted: April 17, 2024

The best marathon !

The fans /spectators make this race my favorite. The encouragement, high fives, music, the volume of the cheers just energize me to keep going!
5.0
Write a review

Training Tips

The Hidden Injury You’re Ignoring: Why IT Band Syndrome Derails Marathoners and How to Stop ItThe Hidden Injury You’re Ignoring: Why IT Band Syndrome Derails Marathoners and How to Stop ItYou’ve logged the miles, built your base, and finally feel like a real marathoner — until a sharp, burning sensation flares up on the outside of your knee, and...

Jun 1, 2026

Related News

Free Boston Marathon Entries, With a Catch

The Boston Marathon is taking a new approach this coming year with New York’s new Miles for Medals program develloped by Team USA in Rochester. Organizers are hoping the new program will give runners a new incentive.

General News Democrat and Chronicle

Dec 16, 2002

Doctor Examines Mystery Behind Boston Marathon Death

In response to Cynthia Lucero's sudden, and unexplained death, physicians at Brigham & Women's Hospital are researching Hyponatremia as 'water intoxification,' and suggest some dangers that may lie for marathoners. With symptoms like dizziness, fatigue, vomiting, headaches, disorientation and seizures, runners need to know when to stop running and drinking. The illness may also be triggered by muscle injury and the body's hormonal responses to it.

General News The MetroWest Daily News

Nov 11, 2002

Marathon runner's death blamed on excess liquids

Boston marathoner Cynthia Lucero died from a condition known as hyponatremic encephalopathy, in which the brain swells because sodium levels have become too low.

General News National Post

Aug 15, 2002

Marathon runner's death linked to excessive fluid intake

The state medical examiner's office concluded yesterday that 28-year-old runner Cynthia Lucero, who collapsed and died at this year's Boston Marathon, was felled in part by drinking too much fluid.

General News The Boston Globe

Aug 13, 2002

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