The News-Times (Sunday)

Tokyo Paralympic champ heads new Boston Marathon division

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BOSTON — When Misato Michishita won the Paralympic marathon in Tokyo this summer, she picked up more than a gold medal.

The visually impaired Japanese office worker became a must-get for organizers of Monday’s Boston Marathon, where she will headline one of three new para divisions being unveiled for the 125th edition of the race.

“I had a dream about running a Boston Marathon for a long time,” Michishita said this week. “Most runners have the goal to run the Boston Marathon, so I would like to be a part of that.”

The first major marathon to include a wheelchair race, in 1975, Boston has named a champion in a visually impaired division since 1986. But ever since the 2013 finishline bombing that killed three people and left so many with prosthetic limbs, organizers sought a way to be more inclusive for para athletes who had long participat­ed only for the satisfacti­on of finishing.

For the first time this year, the Boston Athletic Associatio­n will award titles and prize money in three new divisions: visually impaired, upper-body impairment and lower-body impairment. The top men and women in each will receive $1,500 from a total purse of $16,500. (The new divisions were scheduled to begin last year, but the race was canceled because of the pandemic.)

“It doesn’t surprise me that

it was Boston first to do that,” said Manuela Shar, the twotime defending Boston wheelchair winner who also took gold at the Tokyo Paralympic­s. “It’s good to see things moving in the direction of inclusion and equality.”

Blind in her right eye since middle school due to a rare genetic disease in her cornea, Michishita began running marathons at 26. Using a guide to direct her along the course, she won a silver medal in Rio de Janeiro and saw the opportunit­y to upgrade to gold in her homeland.

When the 2020 Olympics and Paralympic­s were delayed for a year, Michishita remained confident that they would not be canceled. Now 44, she struggled to train because of a state of emergency in Japan that prevented her from getting together with her guide.

But she broke the tape in Tokyo in 3 hours, 50 seconds — a Paralympic record that increased her profile and sealed the deal with Boston organizers. “We had to have her,” B.A.A. chief operating officer Jack Fleming said.

Joe Walsh, who is the former head of the USOPC’s Paralympic division and is advising the B.A.A., said organizers hope the new categories will provide the sort of motivation for impaired runners that the pushrim competitio­n has given wheelchair racers.

Five-time winner wheelchair winner Tatyana McFadden “is a role model and inspiratio­n to others who are wheelchair users who may want to be active and participat­e in sports, maybe even do something like the Boston Marathon,” said Walsh, a two-time Paralympia­n as a cross-country skier.

 ?? Simon Bruty / Associated Press ?? Misato Michishita, left, and her guide break the tape to take the gold medal in the women’s marathon T12 athletics final at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games in Tokyo in September.
Simon Bruty / Associated Press Misato Michishita, left, and her guide break the tape to take the gold medal in the women’s marathon T12 athletics final at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games in Tokyo in September.

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