Boston Marathon 2012: Heat Forces Runners To Adjust
The Run for the Hoses. The Duel in the Sun. The Inferno.As the prospect of
80-degree temperatures looms over Monday's Boston Marathon, race organizers are
hoping the heat will forge a classic contest to rank among the legends of the
event's 116-year history even as they prepare for a potential medical crisis if
runners wilt under the scorching sun.The forecast forced organizers to offer a
largely unprecedented deferment to the entire field of 27,000 that had spent
the last year qualifying, registering and training for what is often a
once-in-a-lifetime experience."We're asking runners who haven't run
previously to think about tomorrow and maybe coming back next year,"
Boston Mayor Tom Menino told the attendees at the traditional pre-race pasta
dinner on City Hall Plaza on Sunday night. "We don't want have any
accidents out there, or anybody overtaken by the heat."The Boston Athletic
Association also offered a deferment in 2010, when the Icelandic volcano
eruption stalled air traffic in Europe and prevented
about 300 runners from making getting to Boston.
There is no way of knowing how many will take them up on the offer this year
until Monday morning, when the number of no-shows is calculated.B.A.A.
co-medical director Pierre d'Hemecourt warned runners with underlying medical
issues, such as a cough or a cold or a recent stomach virus that left them
dehydrated: "Please don't run the marathon on Monday." Those who have
not run a full marathon before, or who have not run in the heat, should also
sit this one out, race organizers said."Only the fittest runners should
consider running. The risks that you'll see tomorrow are simply greater than
normal," B.A.A. executive director Tom Grilk said, advising runners who do
line up at the start to slow their pace and focus on finishing rather than a
fast time. "You should adopt the attitude that this is not a race; it is
an experience."One year after cool temperatures and a significant tailwind
– perfect running weather – helped Geoffrey Mutai finish in 2 hours, 3 minutes,
2 seconds for the fastest marathon ever, the heat has elite runners preparing
for a slower pace and the recreational runners trying to figure out how to
finish at all.Forecasts call for 73 degrees at the 10 a.m. start in Hopkinton,
80 degrees at the halfway point in Wellesley
by 11 a.m. and 82 degrees at the Back
Bay finish line at noon.
For the recreational runners expecting to be out on the course later that
afternoon, temperatures are expected to peak at 84 by 3 p.m.
Although Mutai said he has never run a hot marathon, fellow Kenyan and
defending women's champion Caroline Kilel said she was used to training in warm
weather. But Kilel said the typical conditions were more like 73 degrees – hot
for a marathoner, but not quite what's expected on Monday."The heat
affects everybody. Nobody runs fast in the heat. Nobody benefits from the
heat," 1968 winner Amby Burfoot said this weekend as the weather became
the dominant topic of conversation. "If anyone's been training in Miami,
that would be great for them."The Boston Marathon has had its share of hot
weather, with the thermometer hitting 97 degrees during the 1909 race that came
to be known as "The Inferno" and the 1976 "Run for the
Hoses" that started in 100-degree heat and finished with spectators
sprinkling winner Jack Fultz with garden hoses to cool him down."It's just
the worst thing a marathoner can face," said Burfoot, who ran with Fultz
for half of the `76 race before fading in the heat. "I hate that the
marathon is such a crapshoot. You train for 4-6 months, and the only thing that
matters is the weather."
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