The Boston Athletic Association hosted the 2008 U.S. Olympic
Team Trials - Women's Marathon. Starting and finishing at the
traditional Boston Marathon finish line on Boylston Street, the
Olympic Trials race will feature a specially designed course
that tours historic Boston with a one-time loop that passes
Boston Public Garden, Boston Common, the State House and Beacon
Hill.A 60-minute highlights show will air on MSNBC on Sunday, April
27 from 12:00-1:00 p.m. ET.
California's Magdalena Lewy-Boulet raced to the start almost as
soon as the gun went off and had nearly a twenty second lead
after the first two miles. The Poland native who went to
college at U.C. Berkley and who became a U.S. citizen in 2001
was the first woman to hit the half way mark as she ran a
1:14:38 for a minute and fifty-second lead. The chase pack of
twelve would keep her in their sights, but would not gain on
her until after twenty-two miles.
The chase pack would thin after 14 miles and by the 15-mile
mark Mary Akor, Deena Kastor and Blake Russell would still be
together but were nearly two minutes behind Lewy-Boulet. After
the 15-mile mark 2004 bronze medallist Kastor would start to
give chase to the leader. At the 20-mile mark Kastor would
close to one minute and fifthteen seconds. By the 22-mile mark
Kastor was only 32 seconds back. Kastor would close to 6
seconds at the 23-mile mark and would later pass Lewy-Boulet to
take the lead and gain a 5 second lead by the 24th mile.
Kastor who placed second in the 2004 Olympic Team Trials
Marathon in 2:29:38 would win the 2008 Trials in 2:29:35.
Kastor has a personal best of 2:19:36. Magdalena Lewy Boulet
would hang on to finish second in 2:30:19.
University of North Carolina's Blake Russell was third with a
mile to go in the 2004 U.S. Women's Marathon Trials but was
passed in the final half mile and ended up fourth. Today,
Russell who has a personal best of 2:29:10 moved into third
place by the 16 mile and raced to the finish to take the final
Olympic spot as she took home the bronze in 2:32:40.
Rochester Hills, Michigan and Hanson team member Desiree Davila
who held on to the fourth from the 18-mile mark to the 23rd
mile mark faded and finished thirteenth in 2:37:50.
Zoila Gomez moved into the fourth spot in the final mile to
place fourth in 2:33:53. Gomez was born in Mexico and became a
U.S. citizen in 2005. She was an eleven time All American at
Adams State College.
Tera Moody the former Illinois high school and the University
of Colorado runner ran with race number 152, which was based on
her qualifying time of 2:46:40 in a hot 2007 Chicago Marathon.
Moody who recorded a 1:13:05 half marathon earlier this year
placed fifth in 2:33:54
University of Dayton Women's Cross Country coach, Ann Alyanak
put herself in good position during the U.S. Olympic Team
Trials - Women's Marathon as she was in the chase pack of
thirteen most of the first half of the race. Alyanak hit the
half way mark in 1:16:32 as eleven women hit the half marathon
pack together. By the 15-mile mark the chase pack would start
to separate, as Alyanak was eleventh. Alyanak moved to ninth
by the 17-mile marker and moved up one more spot in the next
mile. Alyanak advanced to seventh by the 25 mile mark and went
on to establish a personal best by four minutes and eleven
seconds with her 2:34:46 seventh place finish. Ann placed
ninth in the 2007 Boston Marathon as was a member of the
RUNOHIO/Second Sole Racing Team which won the USATF Women's
Club Cross Country Championships held in Cincinnati last
December.
Archbold's Rachel Kinsman crossed the half way mark in 47th
place with a 1:19:17. Kingsman's conservative start paid off
as she moved up steadily in the second half of the race to
captured a 25th place finish with her 2:41:07
Wooster's Melissa Rittenhouse hit the half way point in 1:22:33
in 113th place and moved up to finish 100th in 2:50:17.
Columbus' Rebecca Michael was 47th at the 13.1 mile mark and
placed 107th in 2:53:38
Read the Ohio women's pre-race interviews at -
http://www.runohio.com/news/04-11-
08_Ws_oly_trials.html
Read The Running Network coverage -
http://www.runohio.com/news/04-11-
08_Ws_oly_trials.html
Kastor rallies to win U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Women's
Marathon
From USATF press release
BOSTON - A nearly insurmountable deficit could not deter
American record holder Deena Kastor as she led fellow
Californians Magdalena Lewy Boulet and Blake Russell onto the
Olympic Team, Sunday at the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team Trials -
Women's Marathon.
With her American record personal best of 2:19:36 making her 12
minutes faster than the next-fastest Olympic Trials entrant,
Kastor (Mammoth Lakes, Calif.) was a heavy favorite coming into
Sunday's race. But Lewy Boulet (Oakland, Calif.) ran far ahead
of the pack for the first half of the race. Her lead at 14
miles was 1:55, but Kastor at that point truly began to pursue
Lewy Boulet. A strong second half is what gave Kastor, also the
American record holder at 10,000m and a two-time World Cross
Country silver medalist, the Olympic bronze, and she again
demonstrated strength and patience in Boston.
The 35-year-old Kastor began running mile splits of 5:30 to
5:34, quickly eating up Lewy Boulet's lead. When the Olympic
bronze medalist strode past Lewy Boulet 2:14:50 into the race,
she increased her pace even further, to 5:29 per mile, as she
added an Olympic Trials marathon title to her storied resume by
crossing the finish line in 2:29:35.
Lewy Boulet, 34, made her first Olympic Team, finishing second
in a personal-best time of 2:30:19. The native of Poland and
mother to a nearly 3-year-old boy, Lewy Boulet's time improved
on her personal best of 2:30:50, which she ran in placing fifth
at the 2004 Olympic Trials in St. Louis.
It was those 2004 Olympic Trials that had been bitter for
Russell. After leading through the first portion of the race,
she had faded to the most bitter of finishes - fourth - to miss
an Olympic berth by one place. Sunday in Boston, Russell ran in
third nearly the entire race. At 20 miles, she appeared to be
laboring a bit but she easily held on for third in 2:32:40.
Zoila Gomez (Alamosa, Colo.) was fourth in 2:33:53, with Tera
Moody (Boulder, Colo.) fifth in 2:33:54.
14 miles of chasing
Lewy Boulet immediately took the lead as the race began, and by
25 minutes unto the race led by more than a minute. Between the
fifth and sixth miles, the chase back began to thin out, led by
Mary Akor, Kastor and Blake Russell.
Lewy Boulet passed six miles in 34:27 and led the pack by 1:05,
and extended her advantage to 1:19 at 8 miles, which she passed
in 45:49. She came through 14 miles at 1:19:43, with the pack,
still led by Kastor, Russell and Akor, at 1:21:37.
Kastor began to quicken the chase pack's pace at that point as
the race for the Olympic Team began in earnest. Kastor led a
chase-pack 15th mile in 5:39, which cut into Lewy Boulet's lead
by four seconds, and the Olympic medalist quickly and firmly
put herself in second. She then began to set her sights on the
victory. Kastor covered the 16th mile in 5:33 (1:32:48) and got
another seven seconds closer to the leader (1:31:06).
During that same 16th mile, Russell, 32, took over third place,
putting several seconds on Akor and remaining ahead of any
other challenger. The position of the top three would not
change, with Kastor reeling off mile splits in the 5:30s and
Lewy Boulet and Russell holding steady.
At age 50, 1984 Olympic Trials champion and Olympic gold
medalist Joan Benoit Samuelson finished 90th in 2:49:08,
crossing the finish line in a Boston Red Sox cap. It was an
American record for the women's 50-54 age group.
Enriching race
Athletes won a total prize-money purse of $220,000 at the
Olympic Trials, hosted by the BAA. Kastor won $50,000, while
Lewy Boulet took home $40,000; Russell $30,000; Gomez $20,000;
and Moody $15,000. Prize money continued through $1500 for 15th
place.
For more information on the U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Women's
Marathon, visit http://www.usatf.org/events/2008/OlympicTrials-
Marathon-Women/
Athlete quotes, 2008 U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Women's Marathon
Deena Kastor, 1st place - I accomplished my two major goals
coming in to this race. First, to make the team, that was the
most important thing, and secondly to win. Blake and Magdalena
both gave me a run for my money today. They both looked so
great. I thought for many miles I may have misjudged (Lewy
Boulet). I wanted to feel as comfortable as possible the first
half of the race. In the middle miles I thought I might have
misjudged Magdalena's strength. I tried to pick up the pace and
I kept hearing a minute forty (that she was 1:40 behind Lewy
Boulet). I tried not to dip anything under 5:20 to 5:25 pace
(per mile) because I wanted to make sure I was staying in the
right energy zones. The gap started shortening a bit. That
fueled my fire and I started to gain confidence again going
into the last loop. It was the second half of the last lap that
I thought I could win the race... I think we can all attest to
the crowds being amazing today. We were all inspired by it. The
BAA put on a great show for us today.
The moment I was getting ready to pull into the lead I was
getting ready to fulfill the second half of my dream for this
race. I was maybe succumbing to second place in the middle of
the race, but then rallying. My coach gave me some great advice
coming into this race, as he always does. He told me right
before the Chicago Marathon, he said to define myself. Today he
said to draw on the strength of my teammates, and I did that
today. My Running USA team in Mammoth Lakes together has,
collectively all the strength in the world. Individually
sometimes we have to help each other. The exhilaration of
moving into the lead is what gets you to the finish line. It's
exhilarating.
Magdalena Lewy Boulet, 2nd place - Just going into the race I
knew that I had to stick to about 5:40s (mile pace), coming
through 1:15 through the half and trying to duplicate the
second half about the same. I had no idea that I was going to
be by myself, but it worked this time. I was definitely a
little bit uncomfortable, especially the first and second mile,
a bit surprised that I was out there by myself. But the crowd
just kind of took me through it. Right before the race, my
husband and my coach said the race is not going to come to me,
I would have to go get it. And that's what I did. ... the gap
was between 1:40 and 2:00, and for a moment I thought I was
going to win the race. In the back of my mind, I knew Deena was
coming. That's the beauty of a criterium course is you can see
where everyone is. Going into the fourth loop, I knew I had
enough strength to maintain (the make the team). My pace slowed
from 5:30s to some 5:50s. When she passed me I jumped in behind
her to help pull me along and I ran 5:40. At that time I knew I
had made the team.
I left Poland when I was about 16 and lived in Germany for
three years. My parents left for political reasons. My country
was still communist. We had relatives in Germany came here in
1991. (Lewy Boulet was sworn in as a U.S. citizen on
9/11/2001). I can't even explain how exciting this is. I've
been working so hard toward it. Coming from a different country
and having the opportunity to do whatever I wanted to do is
amazing... Having my son three years ago has been probably the
best thing that has ever been to me. He is an inspiration and I
want to make him proud. Every mile I run is so one day he can
look at me and be proud of me.
Blake Russell, 3rd place - Right now I don't think it's really
sunk in. It's something that after the disaster in 2004
(placing fourth at the Olympic Trials), my coach and I said
we've got to set up a plan to get me to this spot right here. I
think later on tonight it's going to hit me but right now it
seems surreal. I just couldn't be happier. It's funny, this is
the team I picked going into it. ... (at 20 miles) I was hoping
I wasn't in trouble. I knew she (Desiree Davila) was gaining a
little bit and I thought she was really strong. I learned from
2004 that a lot can happen those last couple of miles, so I was
telling myself to stay relaxed and not to panic. Then I threw
in a couple of good miles to open it up a little bit more. I
knew I just had to maintain it. They gave me a run for my money
and I couldn't let up at all.
My race plan going into it was to sit through at least 17
miles, but if somebody went I was going to go with then. I
totally respect Magdalena, but it didn't look like it was her.
[She didn't realize it was Lewy Boulet in the lead]. If I had
recognized her, I probably would have gone with her. She
usually is in a ponytail, so I didn't recognize the braid.