Tag Archives: marathon

New York City Marathon Returns With Fanfare and Optimism

The runners gathered in early morning darkness on Staten Island. They ran past confetti cannons in Brooklyn and a heavy metal band in Queens. And after being cheered in the South Bronx, they raced down through Manhattan and ended in Central Park, where volunteers welcomed them with medals and ponchos and supporters clapped from grandstands.

After being canceled last year because of the coronavirus pandemic, the New York City Marathon returned on Sunday for its 50th running. For many New Yorkers, the race served as a metaphor for the city’s arduous recovery from being one of the places most devastated by the pandemic, an opportunity to express pride and indulge in community after months of lockdowns and halting efforts to reopen.

The race was still limited in some ways. The field of 30,000 participants was about 40 percent smaller than the 2019 group, which featured more than 53,000 participants. Runners were spread out over five waves, with longer intervals separating their starts than in years past. Race organizers had moved to reduce crowd sizes around hydration and fueling stations, and festivities at the finish line were relatively subdued.

Still, it was hard to escape the collective optimism, a feeling that was bolstered by the warm sun, crisp air and colorful fall foliage along the route and at the finish in Central Park.

“It just felt like a homecoming party,” said Joe Shayne, a running coach for the New York running club TeamWRK, after completing the race. Shayne said local running clubs were out in force during the race to celebrate the marathon’s return.

Rykiel Levine, an emergency room resident at Lincoln Hospital in the Bronx, came out as a medical volunteer for the first time.

“It means that the world is going back to normal, which is really exciting,” she said. “And it’s really nice to see the city coming together and connecting and making us feel like this pandemic may be behind us.”

The marathon brought many familiar scenes back to the city.

For some participants, like Grace Ackerman, that meant shaking off the nerves. She was running her first marathon, and ate peanut butter on toast as she sat on the floor of the Staten Island Ferry station before the start. Ackerman, 23, said she would focus on her training — even if she became physically fatigued.

“At the end of the day, I trained and I can make it,” she said. “I just need to remind myself of that.”

For others, that meant finding the best way to support the race’s participants.

Boris and Yelena Sobolev, a married couple from Staten Island, have volunteered with the marathon for six years. At the start area on Sunday, Boris said he was “very excited.”

“They have so much energy you literally feel it in the air,” he said.

Yelena added, “I was very upset last year. You get energized for the whole year, it’s amazing. You have to feel it.”

The area near Cumberland Street and Lafayette Avenue in Brooklyn was electric, with runners slowing down and dancing to “Hot in Herre” by the rapper Nelly as they made their way along the course. The DJ, acknowledging the marathon’s hiatus last year, told the runners, “We can’t even tell you how much we missed you. We’re back, that’s all that matters.”

As runners filled the street on First Avenue in Manhattan, people shouted, blew whistles, rang cowbells and a live band played “Ring of Fire.”

Brian Dillon strolled along the route in Bay Ridge, where he had lived all of his life, wearing an absolutely peculiar accessory: a miniature replica of Parachute Jump, the old amusement park ride in Coney Island. His brother had made it for a previous Mermaid Parade out of cardboard, barbecue skewers, foil from the tops of yogurt containers, plastic from milk containers, a fishing line and lots of glue.

In the Bronx, members of the Boogie Down Bronx Runners cheered on the group’s 35 entrants, many of whom were running their first marathon.

“We are trying to prove that we are not the unhealthiest county in New York State,” said Vanessa Gamarra, a member of the group. “There is so much more to the Bronx community.”

And although in the marathon, as in life, it is the journey not the destination, for many participants, the finish line offered a sense of relief and triumph.

Amanda Chang, 27, finished her first New York City Marathon and her second marathon ever. She was joyous as she crossed the finish line.

“The crowd is unbelievable,” she said. “I feel like this is what Kim Kardashian feels like — red carpet, everyone cheering.”

Josh Cassidy, who finished fourth in the men’s wheelchair division, said the race was “surprisingly really great.”

He had competed in Boston but took time off for the birth of his son two weeks ago and had modest expectations for himself.

“It is so good to be back in New York,” he said. “I missed it.”

And for some, the race brought a sense of renewal.

Joel Gonzalez watched the race on First Ave with two massive Puerto Rican flags. Gonzalez, who ran the 2017 and 2018 marathons, said he was here to cheer on everyone, but especially the Latin community.

He said he planned to use the day as a personal reset — he’s going to quit smoking. And tomorrow, Gonzalez planned to start training for next year’s marathon.

Traci Carl, Nadav Gavrielov, Talya Minsberg, Karsten Moran, Alexandra E. Petri, Ashley Wong and Karen Zraick contributed reporting.

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Kyrsten Sinema hounded by activists at Boston Marathon

Activists targeted Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., as she ran in the Boston Marathon on Monday, urging her to support President Biden‘s $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill, also called the Build Back Better bill.

The Arizona Working Families Party and the Sunrise Movement’s Tempe chapter shared a photo of activists holding up signs urging Sinema to deliver “green jobs now,” “care jobs now,” and to “be brave, fight for us.”

“We’re here at the #Boston Marathon with @SunriseTempe and others from AZ asking @SenatorSinema to stop running from her constituents and start listening!” the Arizona Working Families Party tweeted. #StopRunningSinema & pass the full Build Back Better plan NOW!”

The protest came after activists from the Green New Deal Network, a coalition of 15 organizations, announced that they planned on “bird-dogging” Sinema during the marathon, according to The Boston Globe

Last week, activists approached Sinema at the airport and on an airplane, urging her to support the Build Back Better bill. Other activists even followed her from a classroom at Arizona State University, where she teaches, to a bathroom there. They continued hounding her while she was in the stall and later when she emerged to wash her hands.

TEAM BIDEN CLINGS TO RECONCILIATION BILL ZERO-COST CLAIM SHOT DOWN BY WASHINGTON POST FACT-CHECKERS

Sinema has expressed her opposition to the Build Back Better bill, which Democrats have often paired with a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill. Sinema and her colleague Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., have balked at the $3.5 trillion sticker price, which The Wall Street Journal editorial board has insisted is a low estimate of the bill’s true cost of $5 trillion. Biden and his advisers, meanwhile, have insisted that the cost is “zero” because they pledge to pay for the $3.5 trillion with tax increases on the wealthy and corporations.

Activists approaching Manchin’s houseboat aboard kayaks also accosted him

Biden addressed the confrontations against the senators last week, noting that neither senator has Secret Service protection.

“I don’t think they’re appropriate tactics, but it happens to everybody,” Biden said.

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“The only people it doesn’t happen to are the people who have Secret Service standing around them,” Biden added. “So, it’s part of the process.”

Neither the Green New Deal Network nor Sinema’s Senate office immediately responded to Fox News’ requests for comment.

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Boston Marathon Live Updates – The New York Times

Oct. 11, 2021, 9:25 a.m. ET

The men’s wheelchair winner is Marcel Hug of Switzerland in 1:18:11. It was his fifth Boston win and came despite his losing a few seconds after missing a turn near the finish.

Hug reversed the results of this year’s Chicago Marathon, where he was defeated by Daniel Romanchuk of the United States. That Chicago race, incredibly, was yesterday.

Oct. 11, 2021, 9:08 a.m. ET

After five kilometers, C.J. Albertson has taken a one-minute lead in the men’s race. But don’t award him the title yet. Though an accomplished runner — he was seventh in the most recent Olympic trials — it would be quite a surprise to see him stay out front for too long. Still, it’s a brief moment of glory for him.

Credit…Paul Rutherford/USA Today Sports, via Reuters
Oct. 11, 2021, 9:08 a.m. ET

Credit…Maja Hitij/Getty Images

With the world’s six major marathons — Berlin, London, Chicago, Boston, Tokyo and New York City — squeezed into a six-week window this fall, most top runners had a tough call trying to decide which race to pick.

Then there was Shalane Flanagan.

The women’s champion of the 2017 New York City Marathon, Flanagan these days coaches Nike’s Bowerman Track Club in Portland, Ore. But she saw an opportunity in the closely packed schedule created by the coronavirus pandemic, which pushed three spring races into the fall. She decided to run in all six major marathons, and to try to complete each one in under three hours — roughly a pace of under 6 minutes 50 seconds per mile.

After finishing the Chicago Marathon Sunday in 2:46:39 — and winning the women’s 40-44 division — she is halfway there.

Now comes the hard part.

Flanagan, who grew up in Marblehead, Mass., hopped on a plane to Boston on Sunday afternoon and will be on the starting line of her hometown marathon Monday morning in Hopkinton.

“It’s so typical of Boston to be the super hard part,” Flanagan said during an interview last week.

If she can walk after this weekend, she will do a virtual version of the Tokyo Marathon at home in Oregon in a week. Then it’s off to the New York City Marathon on Nov. 7.

That’s a heavy workload after two major knee reconstructions in 2019. Her patellas have hamstring tendons from cadavers.

“I missed pushing myself,” Flanagan, 40, said of life after the end of her competitive running career. “It was just fun to have a big goal again.”

“We all reach a point where we know we can’t make that podium anymore, but it’s difficult at that point to just walk away and not challenge yourself anymore,” said Kara Goucher, the former Olympian who has been competing in very long trail races the past few years.

Flanagan tried to mimic a shorter version of the Chicago-Boston double last month, running 20-plus miles on a flat course one day, then 21 miles at a 6:40-per-mile pace on hilly terrain the next day. Changing her 17-month-old son’s diapers and working in her garden after the first run served as a stand-in for the hectic journey from Chicago to Boston.

“I know I am a better person if I run,” she said. “I just needed something else other than running for the sake of running.”

Oct. 11, 2021, 8:57 a.m. ET

Reporting from the marathon

James Senbeta is a wheelchair marathoner from Chicago. “My first year was the year of the bombing and I had to do an exam right after the race because he wouldn’t give me the make-up.”

Credit…Hilary Swift for The New York Times
Oct. 11, 2021, 8:55 a.m. ET

Running the marathon

It’s just your basic school bus full of fast masked folks today. These bus rides to the start are generally super quiet — lots of people catching a little extra sleep and trying to conserve energy. Not this year. This one is loud. Everyone is chatting about running the past year and a half, and about all the other marathons they have run or missed. For dedicated runners, this is like a tribal reunion.

Credit…Matthew Futterman/The New York Times
Oct. 11, 2021, 8:53 a.m. ET

Credit…CJ Gunther/European Pressphoto Agency, via Shutterstock

New York is bigger. London, Berlin and Chicago are faster. Tokyo stands out as the biggest continent’s biggest race. But Boston is to marathoning what the Masters is to golf and Wimbledon is to tennis — the sport’s signature event, where a single victory often defines a career.

For most of the recent past, African runners have reigned supreme in the world’s oldest and most prestigious marathon, and it’s likely they will again this year. If history is a guide, the race will have to include some unique circumstances for a runner who is not from Ethiopia or Kenya to prevail.

In 2014, Meb Keflezighi of the United States won an emotional race one year after the 2013 bombing at the finish line. In 2018, Des Linden, another American, and Yuki Kawauchi of Japan prevailed during a freezing Nor’easter that made the race more a test of will than of speed.

A marathon that takes place during a pandemic probably qualifies as a unique circumstance, given the limitations on travel and the packed marathon schedule this fall that has spread the top talent among five major races. Still, there are several talented runners from East Africa who will be tough to beat: Lelisa Desisa of Ethiopia and Benson Kipruto of Kenya in the men’s race; Workenesh Edesa of Ethiopia and Angela Tanui of Kenya in the women’s.

That said, with temperatures expected to be in the 60s, this should not be a particularly fast race, unless there is a major tailwind. Linden, who this year became the first woman to break three hours for 50 kilometers, is in the field, and so is Scott Fauble, who lives and trains at altitude in Flagstaff, Ariz., and ran a 2:09 in Boston in 2019. Jordan Hasay, another fast American woman, has finished third twice and could be dangerous.

Para Athletics Division Start

Oct. 11, 2021, 8:46 a.m. ET

Video
Navajo women performed a traditional Jingle Dress Dance at the Boston Marathon finish line Sunday night.

It was well before dawn on Monday when, near the starting line of the 125th Boston Marathon, the chairman of the Boston Athletic Association read a statement acknowledging that the marathon’s 26.2 miles run through the homelands of Indigenous people.

The statement, read in the dark to the accompaniment of rattles and a drum, marked a victory for activists who had protested the decision to hold the marathon on Oct. 11, increasingly celebrated as Indigenous Peoples’ Day. The marathon is usually held in April but was rescheduled because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Rather than find another date for the marathon, as some activists demanded, the association apologized and offered to make the land acknowledgment. It also agreed to donate $20,000 to hold a celebration of Indigenous Peoples’ Day in Newton, one of the communities through which the marathon route passes. And it featured two Indigenous runners, Patti Dillon, of the Mi’kmaq, and Ellison Brown, of the Narragansett, on banners along the route.

Credit…Associated Press

The focus on Indigenous peoples added an unusual, somber note to marathon weekend, in the heart of a region that has long unreservedly celebrated its colonial history.

On Sunday night, two Navajo women performed a traditional Jingle Dress Dance at the finish line, tracing slow, bouncing circles in regalia strung with dangling metal cones, whose sound is believed to spread healing. Drums echoed in the canyon of Boylston Street.

One of the dancers, Erin Tapahe, 25, said she was running in part to bring attention to missing and murdered Indigenous women across the country by running in a long, red skirt, something she also did during training.

Love Richardson, 52, was one of 12 members of the Nipmuc Nation who were present for the pre-dawn acknowledgment on Monday.

She grew up in the central Massachusetts city of Worcester in the 1980s, and recalled her mother abruptly picking her up from school as Columbus Day and Thanksgiving approached, “because she didn’t want me to see those paper cutouts of turkeys and headdresses.”

She described it as “traumatic” to have been taught one version of colonial history at school and another, much more painful version at home. “We were not mentioned, we were colonized, assimilated,” she said.

Larry Spotted Crow Mann, 54, a Nipmuc singer and drummer, described Monday’s land acknowledgment as “amazing, kind of ineffable to describe,” despite the darkness and the bustle of marathon staff and the moving of trucks and cameras and equipment.

As soon as he started singing, he said, all of that seemed to disappear.

“I hope this is just the beginning of more press, and more coverage, in terms of doing it when it is actually light out,” said Mr. Mann, director of the Ohketeau Cultural Center in Ashfield, Mass. “Still, being there on that spot will leave an indelible mark.”

Oct. 11, 2021, 8:44 a.m. ET

Running the marathon

It’s been a long time waiting for the Boston Marathon. Thousands of runners gathered this morning at the Boston Common to take buses about 26 miles to Hopkinton, Mass., where they’ll get off and start running all the way back.

Video
Oct. 11, 2021, 8:34 a.m. ET

Reporting from the marathon

Kerry Patrick, 59 and Nicole Patrick, 27, are a mother and daughter-in-law pair from Rising Sun, Md., and Falls Church, Va. This is Kerry’s fourth Boston Marathon and Nicole’s first. “This is a family thing for us today,” Kerry said. “After family losses in the last year, this is overcoming everything.”

Credit…Hilary Swift for The New York Times
Oct. 11, 2021, 8:34 a.m. ET

Credit…Robyn Beck/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

There’s not much the pandemic hasn’t delayed — Sunday travel to Boston was no exception. But some runners feared they might not make it at all.

Daniel Galvez had a flight from Chicago to Boston late Saturday afternoon but was faced with several delays before the flight was finally canceled. The reason was because the crew was short a flight attendant, he said.

Galvez took an Uber back to his house, got into his truck and drove through the night. He left Chicago at 8:30 p.m. Central time on Saturday and arrived at about 1:45 p.m. Eastern on Sunday, stopping only for gas and water. “I made it here,” said Galvez, a construction worker who is running in his 10th Boston Marathon, which he calls the Super Bowl of marathons. “Next is to finish.”

Across social media, too, runners tweeted at airlines including Delta and Southwest, sharing stories of flights terminated just as boarding began, delays that led to missed connections, struggles to connect with agents to rebook flights and cancellations that meant spending hundreds of extra dollars to make it in time for Monday’s start.

By Sunday night, Southwest Airlines had canceled more than 1,000 flights or nearly 30 percent of its schedule, according to a FlightAware tracker. The airline blamed air traffic control issues and disruptive weather, but federal regulators attributed the disruptions to aircraft and staffing issues.

Tammy Conquest picked up her bib on Sunday afternoon, relieved to have her kit safely in hand. Conquest was traveling from Washington, D.C., and also encountered delays at the airport. But some of her running partners from Washington and other racers have not been as lucky. “I have friends who are stranded trying to get to Boston,” said Conquest, who works for the government. Their flights were canceled, then their Amtrak trains faced lengthy delays, she said.

“It’s my third marathon, but it feels like my first,” Conquest said, adding that the backdrop of the pandemic added to her race-day nerves.

Handcycles and Duos Start

Oct. 11, 2021, 8:20 a.m. ET

The wheelchair racers were the first to take off, and there are big early leaders already after five kilometers. Marcel Hug, a four-time winner, is up by 30 seconds on the men’s field, and Manuela Schar, the defending champion, leads the women by a minute.

Credit…Hilary Swift for The New York Times
Credit…Hilary Swift for The New York Times
Oct. 11, 2021, 8:14 a.m. ET

Reporting from the marathon

Joshua Jamison of York, Pa., has been running the marathon since 2011. “The only year I’ve missed is 2012. It’s a tradition, something I look forward to every year. I have that streak going. It’s something I enjoy training for. The crowds and the tradition of Boston — the history of this race is really cool.”

Credit…Hilary Swift for The New York Times

Women’s Wheelchair Start

Oct. 11, 2021, 8:04 a.m. ET

Reporting from the marathon

Marathoners are making their way through Boston Public Gardens to get onto the buses that will bring them to the starting line. Among them is Mandar Ananda, 43, who is running in his first in-person Boston Marathon after it was canceled last year. “I’m a little nervous and anxious — I never ran a race this big.”

Oct. 11, 2021, 8:01 a.m. ET

Credit…Jamie Sabau/Getty Images

After waiting nearly two years for America’s three major marathons to return, runners and fans alike were greeted with back-to-back spectacles, with Chicago leading the way on Sunday and Boston picking up the pace on Monday.

The Chicago marathon was a smaller-scale version of what is among the six largest marathons in the world — but one that still lived up to its reputation as being one of the fastest.

Some 33,000 runners started and finished the race in Grant Park under humid conditions, with temperatures reaching well into the 70s. Ruth Chepngetich of Kenya was on pace to break the world record before settling for a dominant win, finishing in 2 hours 22:31 minutes. Seifi Tura of Ethiopia won the men’s race in 2 hours 06:12 minutes. Both are solid times given the uncomfortable conditions.

It was also a fairly impressive day for the Americans. Emma Bates and Sara Hall finished in second and third place among the women, and Galen Rupp finished second among the men.

As is often the case in big city races, though, much of the attention fell to the more than 30,000 participants and the tens of thousands of people who watched them, giving the country a glimpse of what things used to look like.

Chepngetich clearly has a talent for winning in warmer weather. She won the marathon at the world championships in Doha in 2019. That race had to be run at night to avoid the most severe temperatures, but still only 40 of the 68 runners finished the race in the 90-degree heat.

Boston should provide a little more comfort Monday, although temperatures will be in the high 60s and runners will be headed into a 10 mile-per-hour wind from the northeast.

Oct. 11, 2021, 7:55 a.m. ET

Reporting from the marathon

It’s a gray, damp and cool morning here in Boston. Some marathoners are wearing black plastic garbage bags or ponchos as they make their way to the bus, though the drizzling has stopped. Others are in tanks and shorts.

Oct. 11, 2021, 7:53 a.m. ET

Credit…Michael Dwyer/Associated Press

For most of the 20th century, the citizenry of Greater Boston could count on two things: The Boston Marathon took place in the spring, on Patriots’ Day, and the Red Sox broke everyone’s hearts in the fall.

But the Red Sox have won the World Series four times since 2004. And earlier this year, when Americans were struggling through some of the worst weeks of the pandemic and just beginning to get vaccinated, organizers moved the marathon from its traditional date on the third Monday in April to October, figuring that life might be back to something approaching normal by now and that staging a large event might not be quite so dangerous.

Indeed, Massachusetts has one of the highest vaccination rates in the country, with 78 percent of residents over age 12 fully vaccinated.

The organizers had plenty of company. The two other major spring marathons, in Tokyo and London, also shifted to the fall. Organizers in Tokyo recently postponed the in-person version of their race again, but all the shifting created a glut of major marathons in the fall.

For their part, the Red Sox are scheduled to play at night — against the Tampa Bay Rays in their American League division series — rather than starting at 11 a.m. as they usually do on Patriots’ Day. Sadly, that means no Sam Adams party at Fenway for runners after the race.

Oct. 11, 2021, 7:46 a.m. ET

Credit…Allison Dinner for The New York Times

This year’s Boston Marathon is much different than the event people have gotten used to.

To reduce overcrowding, organizers cut the size of the field to roughly 20,000 runners from the usual 30,000, which made qualifying for the race extremely difficult. Boston is the only major marathon that requires all participants who are not running for a charity to meet a standard, age-adjusted time.

The race was oversubscribed by more than 9,200 qualifiers, and with the field reduced by roughly one-third, runners had to beat the qualifying standard for their age group by 7 minutes 47 seconds to get into the race, since Boston accepts runners from fastest to slowest. That’s nearly three minutes faster than the previous record for the cutoff.

Instead of starting runners in multiple waves, organizers have set up a rolling start for everyone not in an elite competitive division. There will be no waiting around for hours at Hopkinton High School. It’s get off the bus and start running when you’re ready.

Runners need to be vaccinated or test negative for the coronavirus within 72 hours of the race. No one has to run with a mask, but runners have to wear them on the bus to the starting line and when they finish.

The biggest difference this year may be what unfolds on the sidelines. For the Boston region, the Patriots’ Day version of the marathon in April is usually a 26-mile party on a day when Massachusetts gives itself a hall pass from regular life.

There’s a lot of beer and plenty of barbecues on the lawns and sidewalks beside the racecourse, especially in the last 10 miles. Will those gatherings be as big and loud and boisterous during a pandemic as they were before it? If they are, at least a lot of them will be outside.

Oct. 11, 2021, 7:12 a.m. ET

Credit…Ryan Mcbride/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The world’s biggest marathons were early casualties of the coronavirus pandemic, and they were some of the last vestiges of prepandemic life to return.

In the last 15 days, however, they have come back in force. Berlin in late September, London last weekend, Chicago on Sunday. Tens of thousands of runners trotted through the streets and thousands more cheered them on, celebrating a return to something approaching normalcy.

Now comes the oldest and grandest marathon of all: Boston, which until the pandemic had been run in April of every year since 1897. Organizers last year first postponed the race to the fall, then canceled the in-person event altogether for the first time in its 124-year history.

Monday’s version will be smaller, and have some different details, but once more Boston is set to hold a 26.2-mile celebration of running and itself like no other city does, beginning early Monday morning and running right into the start of the Red Sox playoff game at a packed Fenway Park, a little more than a mile from the finish line, Monday night.

It doesn’t get much more Boston than that. For one day at least, and especially for 20,000 marathoners, life might actually feel almost normal.

Oct. 11, 2021, 7:03 a.m. ET

Credit…Steven Senne/Associated Press

After being delayed by 18 months because of the pandemic, the Boston Marathon is back this year, marking its 125th anniversary.

The race will be broadcast on NBC Sports Network and Peacock, NBC’s streaming platform, starting at 7:30 a.m. Eastern on Monday. The races will also stream live on NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports app.

NBC Sports’s Paul Swangard will be calling the race, with additional analysis from the two-time Olympian Kara Goucher and the seven-time Paralympian Chris Waddell.

WBZ-TV, a local CBS station, will also carry the race beginning at 7 a.m. Eastern on Monday, featuring news and athlete interviews.

For those who miss the earlier coverage, the Boston Marathon will be rebroadcast on myTV38 in Boston and on NBC’s Olympic Channel at 8 p.m. on Monday night.



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Nuclear security helicopter scours Boston Marathon route for radiation

Enlarge / The US Department of Energy uses two Bell 412 helicopters to survey background radiation in advance of major events.

This morning, a Department of Energy helicopter buzzed above cities and suburbs in eastern Massachusetts, scanning for radiation in advance of the 125th Boston Marathon. The sweep is part of security preparations to help first responders pinpoint possible “dirty bombs” and other terrorist activities before they claim any lives.

The flight started with a thorough scan of the starting line in the western suburb of Hopkinton before flying along the 26.2-mile route to the finish line in Boston, where the helicopter performed another comprehensive survey. The craft flew at low altitude the entire time, dipping below 100 feet on several occasions, according to FlightAware.

Enlarge / Flight path for N412DE on the morning of October 8, 2021.

FlightAware

The twin-engine Bell 412 (tail number N412DE) is operated by the National Nuclear Security Administration, a division of the Department of Energy that is responsible for everything from nonproliferation to maintaining the nation’s nuclear stockpile. The helicopter is part of the agency’s Aerial Measuring System, which routinely performs radiological surveys before major events, including presidential inaugurations, Super Bowls, and New Year’s Eve celebrations in Las Vegas.

The NNSA will fly additional surveys in the Boston area over the next three days, including Monday, when the marathon will be run. Today’s flight is intended to develop a map of background radiation sources, which will help the helicopter and other ground-based sensors detect any unusual radiological activity on race day, including so-called “dirty bombs” that use traditional explosives to scatter radioactive material.

Mapping the sources

Background radiation maps are critical in these situations because the earth is constantly emitting varying levels of radiation. Some types of rocks emit more than others, and when they’re near or on the earth’s surface, they can cause spikes that might otherwise set off detectors and distract first responders. The National World War II Memorial in Washington, DC, for example, is made from large amounts of granite and emits enough radiation to merit a special mention in the radiation survey report for the 2009 presidential inauguration.

Enlarge / The map produced by NNSA for the 2009 presidential inauguration. Note the “bullseye” pattern where the National World War II Memorial stands.

US Department of Energy

Onboard the AMS helicopter, two pilots fly the craft while a mission scientist and equipment operator monitor the sensors and computers from the back. Fully loaded, the helicopter can fly for about two and a half hours before needing to refuel. Two pods that hang off the sides house four sodium iodide sensor modules that record gamma radiation once every second. The helicopter can also fly with helium-3 sensors used to detect neutron radiation.

The entire AMS fleet consists of two Bell 412 helicopters and three Beechcraft BN-350 airplanes split between Joint Base Andrews in Maryland and Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada.

The Boston Marathon has become a high-security event ever since two domestic terrorists detonated homemade pressure-cooker bombs at the finish line in 2013, killing three and injuring more than 250. The attack sparked a days-long manhunt that culminated in a shootout in nearby Watertown. While the AMS surveys probably can’t detect the types of explosives used in the 2013 bombing, the surveys are part of a larger effort to secure the event. The commonwealth has designated the route as a “no drone zone,” and police are stationed along the entire length of the race. Checkpoints are scattered throughout high-traffic areas where officers can search bags and coolers for weapons or explosives.

It may seem like a lot of security for one race, but few people in the Boston area complain. I passed through the finish line area less than an hour before the 2013 bombing, and I holed up during the subsequent days-long lockdown. I still attend the race to cheer the runners, and every year, I’m happy to see federal and state law enforcement preparing for a range of possible incidents, no matter how remote they may seem.

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Olympic French marathon runner finishes 17th after wiping opponents’ water to the ground

A French marathon runner is getting some flak online for appearing to knock over a row of water bottles at a hydration station during the latter half of the Olympic men’s marathon on Sunday. 

In a video, Morhad Amdouni, 33, can be seen in a cluster of other runners as he approaches the station. He then reaches for a water bottle, knocking an entire row of them off the table like dominoes before grabbing the last one and leaving nothing for the runners behind him. 

The moment happened in the second half of the 26-mile race in Sapporo, Japan where temperatures climbed to 84 degrees Fahrenheit. 

The video has sparked debate on Twitter as to whether or not the move was intentional. Some argued that he was in an awkward position, sandwiched between others in excessive heat while trying to reach for a water bottle. 

NBC SEES ‘WORST CASE SCENARIO’ AS OLYMPICS RATINGS PLUNGE AMID ‘WOKE’ PROTESTS

Competitors run past the water station during the men’s marathon at the 2020 Summer Olympics, Sunday, Aug. 8, 2021, in Sapporo, Japan.
(AP)

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Amdouni ultimately finished 17th place. Kenyan runner Eliud Kipchoge, 36, defended his Olympic marathon title, finishing at 2 hours, 8 minutes, and 38 seconds – 80 seconds ahead of runner-up Abdi Nageeye of the Netherlands.   

The Associated Press contributed to this report

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Tokyo 2020 Olympics: Kipchoge wins men’s marathon, cycling and more on final day – live! | Sport











02:09











02:04

Thank you very much Tom – see you in Paris.

Ok, one final leg for me in this epic Guardian Sport relay. My attention will begin in the velodrome where the women’s omnium is about to get underway. Team GB record breaker Laura Kenny goes for a seventh medal today, while Australia has interest in London bronze medalist Annette Edmondson, and the USA have team pursuit bronze medalist Jennifer Valente.

A reminder the omnium is four separate events that combine to create one medal. We’re underway in the first of those four, the scratch race.




Laura Kenny, riding into history. Photograph: DPPI/Photo Kishimoto/LiveMedia/REX/Shutterstock











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YouTuber Is Eating 140K FF14 Eggs In Big Twitch Marathon

I’ve often said the best video game challenges are the ones we make up ourselves. Here’s YouTuber Ross “RubberNinja” O’Donovan to prove me wrong. Last year the streamer made odd headlines by eating an entire stack of 999 eggs in Final Fantasy XIV. Now he’s eating 140 times that, an entire inventory’s worth. That’s nearly 140,000 eggs. He’s streaming the whole thing live, and he’s only eating real life egg dishes until he’s done. My stomach aches just thinking about it.

The original Final Fantasy egg-eating incident occurred in August of last year. As chronicled in RubberNinja’s Twitter thread, upon logging into the game on August 15, a stranger handed him an entire stack of eggs. When strangers hand you 999 eggs, you make FFXIV history. RubberNinja began to eat and tweet, drawing a crowd in-game as his character scarfed down semi-gelatinous protein orbs one-by-one. The entire process took about an hour and a half, and a good time was had by all.

Nearly a year later, RubberNinja is seriously upping his game with 139,860 eggs in total. Instead of an informal in-game gathering, this egg-eating marathon is a live event being streamed on Twitch. It has rules. It has bonus stream sub goals. It even has a name: “Eggwalker.”

The plan is to stream the eggs being eaten until every last one is gone. The original 999 eggs took around 90 minutes to consume. This time, with 140 stacks of 999 eggs, if RubberNinja eats at the same rate he did last year, we’re looking at 210 hours of gulping and chewing. The event could run even longer, possibly forever, as he will be adding another stack of 999 eggs for every 1,000 Twitch subs he earns during the marathon. Should he reach 20,000 subs, he will shave his head to resemble an egg.

In the interest of not keeling over dead, RubberNinja is taking breaks during the stream to eat, shower, use the restroom, and sleep. He’s set up a simple macro to keep his character munching on eggs while he is AFK, which has the added bonus of circumventing Final Fantasy XIV’s idle disconnect, recently activated to help combat server crowding and long login queues.

I planned on asking Ross “RubberNinja” O’Donovan a few questions, such as why he’s doing this (aside from subs), why anyone would do this, and just basically shouting, “WHY?” at him until something happens. Unfortunately, I caught him during nap time, so I could only watch as his character robotically devoured virtual eggs while a looped recording of O’Donovan saying “eggs” droned on in the background.



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Supreme Court to consider reinstating death sentence for Boston marathon bomber

The Supreme Court said Monday it will consider reinstating the death sentence for Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, presenting President Joe Biden with an early test of his opposition to capital punishment.The justices agreed to hear an appeal filed by the Trump administration, which carried out executions of 13 federal inmates in its final six months in office.The case won’t be heard until the fall, and it’s unclear how the new administration will approach Tsarnaev’s case. The initial prosecution and decision to seek a death sentence was made by the Obama administration, in which Biden served as vice president.But Biden has pledged to seek an end to the federal death penalty.In August, the federal appeals court in Boston threw out Tsarnaev’s sentence because it said the judge at his trial did not do enough to ensure the jury would not be biased against him. The Justice Department had moved quickly to appeal, asking the justices to hear and decide the case by the end of the court’s current term, in early summer. Then-Attorney General William Barr said last year, “We will do whatever’s necessary.”Tsarnaev’s lawyers acknowledged at the beginning of his trial that he and his older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, set off the two bombs at the marathon finish line in 2013. But they argued that Dzhokar Tsarnaev is less culpable than his brother, who they said was the mastermind behind the attack.Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, died following a gunfight with police and being run over by his brother as he fled. Police captured a bloodied and wounded Dzhokhar Tsarnaev hours later in the Boston suburb of Watertown, where he was hiding in a boat parked in a backyard. Tsarnaev, now 27, was convicted of all 30 charges against him, including conspiracy and use of a weapon of mass destruction and the killing of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer during the Tsarnaev brothers’ getaway attempt. The appeals court upheld all but a few of his convictions. The initial prosecution and decision to seek a death sentence was made by the Obama administration, in which Biden served as vice president.

The Supreme Court said Monday it will consider reinstating the death sentence for Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, presenting President Joe Biden with an early test of his opposition to capital punishment.

The justices agreed to hear an appeal filed by the Trump administration, which carried out executions of 13 federal inmates in its final six months in office.

The case won’t be heard until the fall, and it’s unclear how the new administration will approach Tsarnaev’s case. The initial prosecution and decision to seek a death sentence was made by the Obama administration, in which Biden served as vice president.

But Biden has pledged to seek an end to the federal death penalty.

In August, the federal appeals court in Boston threw out Tsarnaev’s sentence because it said the judge at his trial did not do enough to ensure the jury would not be biased against him.

The Justice Department had moved quickly to appeal, asking the justices to hear and decide the case by the end of the court’s current term, in early summer. Then-Attorney General William Barr said last year, “We will do whatever’s necessary.”

Tsarnaev’s lawyers acknowledged at the beginning of his trial that he and his older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, set off the two bombs at the marathon finish line in 2013. But they argued that Dzhokar Tsarnaev is less culpable than his brother, who they said was the mastermind behind the attack.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, died following a gunfight with police and being run over by his brother as he fled. Police captured a bloodied and wounded Dzhokhar Tsarnaev hours later in the Boston suburb of Watertown, where he was hiding in a boat parked in a backyard.

Tsarnaev, now 27, was convicted of all 30 charges against him, including conspiracy and use of a weapon of mass destruction and the killing of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer during the Tsarnaev brothers’ getaway attempt. The appeals court upheld all but a few of his convictions.

The initial prosecution and decision to seek a death sentence was made by the Obama administration, in which Biden served as vice president.

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Boston Marathon legend Dick Hoyt dies at 80

One of the legends of the Boston Marathon, Dick Hoyt, has died at the age of 80, his family confirmed to WCVB.Hoyt passed away in his sleep Wednesday morning, according to longtime Boston Marathon race director Dave McGillivray. For close to 40 years, Dick Hoyt was a fixture of the marathon course, pushing his son, Rick, a quadriplegic with cerebral palsy, from 1981 until 2014.“The message is: Yes, you can. There isn’t anything you can’t do as long as you make up your mind to do it,” Dick Hoyt told WCVB in 2016. “There is no ‘No’ in the Hoyt vocabulary.” In addition to Boston, the pair competed in more than 1,100 marathons and triathlons.”We are tremendously saddened to learn of the passing of Boston Marathon icon Dick Hoyt. Dick personified what it means to be a Boston Marathoner, finishing 32 races with son Rick. We are keeping his many family & friends in our prayers,” the Boston Athletic Association said in a statement after news of his passing. Hoyt was a lieutenant colonel in the Air National Guard for more than 30 years. Originally planning to retire after the 2013 race, Dick Hoyt returned in 2014 to honor those killed and injured in the Boston Marathon bombings. Team Hoyt was stopped at the 25-mile mark when the explosions halted the event. A bronze statue of Dick and Rick Hoyt was dedicated near the Marathon’s start line in Hopkinton in 2013. Dick Hoyt served as the Grand Marshal of the race in 2015.

One of the legends of the Boston Marathon, Dick Hoyt, has died at the age of 80, his family confirmed to WCVB.

Hoyt passed away in his sleep Wednesday morning, according to longtime Boston Marathon race director Dave McGillivray.

For close to 40 years, Dick Hoyt was a fixture of the marathon course, pushing his son, Rick, a quadriplegic with cerebral palsy, from 1981 until 2014.

“The message is: Yes, you can. There isn’t anything you can’t do as long as you make up your mind to do it,” Dick Hoyt told WCVB in 2016. “There is no ‘No’ in the Hoyt vocabulary.”

In addition to Boston, the pair competed in more than 1,100 marathons and triathlons.

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“We are tremendously saddened to learn of the passing of Boston Marathon icon Dick Hoyt. Dick personified what it means to be a Boston Marathoner, finishing 32 races with son Rick. We are keeping his many family & friends in our prayers,” the Boston Athletic Association said in a statement after news of his passing.

Hoyt was a lieutenant colonel in the Air National Guard for more than 30 years.

Originally planning to retire after the 2013 race, Dick Hoyt returned in 2014 to honor those killed and injured in the Boston Marathon bombings. Team Hoyt was stopped at the 25-mile mark when the explosions halted the event.

A bronze statue of Dick and Rick Hoyt was dedicated near the Marathon’s start line in Hopkinton in 2013. Dick Hoyt served as the Grand Marshal of the race in 2015.



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NYC Weather: More snow expected as marathon nor’easter slams New York City and the Tri-State

NEW YORK (WABC) — More snow is expected to fall Tuesday across the Tri-State area after New York City experienced its snowiest day in five years while parts of New Jersey topped 2 feet.

More than a foot of snow fell in Central Park Monday, in a snow storm that made the top 20 for New York City and one of the biggest ever for parts of northern New Jersey.

The relentless storm piled on 3 inches of snow an hour at times while wicked wind gusts caused blowing snow that limited visibility and drifts that buried parked cars to their windows.

RELATED: Snowfall totals around New York and the Tri-State area

The same areas that were hit hard earlier Monday will tack on even more snow — including areas of Northern Jersey, Westchester and Rockland County.

Meteorologist Lee Goldberg says expect waves of light to moderate snow Tuesday. It’ll start out as an early morning mix and then be met by colder air that turns into snow Tuesday evening through Wednesday morning.

Blowing and drifting will continue as winds stay gusty in the 30-35 mph range. The event could well last 48 hours, making it a rare snowstorm the likes of which we see every five to 10 years, ABC7 meteorologist Jeff Smith said.

Before it’s over, parts of New York City could see 18 inches of snow, with even higher amounts to the north and west as the heaviest snow shifts in that direction.

RELATED: School closings for New York, New Jersey and Connecticut

The winter storm warning continues on Tuesday as the storm slowly pulls away. It’ll still be blustery and chilly. Additional significant accumulation is not likely during the day Tuesday, but don’t be surprised to see a few more inches before the storm finally departs.

The snow itself will likely remain fluffy throughout the event, because it’s so cold, but could become wetter and heavier in coastal airs that see mixing.

Coastal areas will also have to contend with the risk of flooding from the powerhouse storm, with flood warnings in effect on Long Island until 3 a.m. Tuesday. These areas face a risk of moderate coastal flooding, but some areas could see major flooding.

There were also concerns that high tide could bring widespread moderate to isolated major flooding in vulnerable areas, areas like Freeport and Lindenhurst on Long Island and the South Shore back bays. The storm’s slow-moving nature will encompass several high-tide cycles, adding to the concerns.

RELATED: Live winter storm updates from around the Tri-State

Stay with the AccuWeather team for continuing updates.

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