The Sun (Lowell)

Keeping streaks alive in the streets of Boston

Several local runners impress at Boston Marathon

- By James Albert Correspond­ent

BOSTON >> Thirty-five years ago, Brian Crane ran in his first Boston Marathon and after he finished, he said the five words that nearly every runner says once they cross the finish line.

I’ll. Never. Do. That. Again. On Monday afternoon, the 59-year-old Townsend resident and former longtime Chelmsford High cross-country coach, completed his 36th Boston Marathon.

“I don’t know (why I still do it) and I ask myself that question all of the time,” he said with a laugh. “Every year after I finish, I say ‘OK this is it and I’ll never do that again’. I’ve actually said that since day one, doing something like this is crazy. People said that they thought I was done last year and I said well I say that every year, but when September comes around, I change my mind. One of these days I’ll actually stick by my words.”

While he has said those five words 36 times now, he said it’s easy to figure out why he does come back to run every year.

“The fans bring you back. The fact that you run the marathon and have the best crowd in the world — I would say it’s better than the Olympic crowd,” he said. “The Olympics don’t have a crowd like Boston does, especially on a day like today.”

Crane said his 4:25.03 time was one of his slowest times.

“I’m 59 years old, so I’m getting up there,” he said. “It was hotter than I wanted it to be. When the sun wasn’t on you, it wasn’t too bad but when the sun was beating down on you, it sucked the energy right out of you. You had to hydrate today or you were going to pay for it. I’m not where I used to be, but I saw more people out there walking today than before, especially through the hills and the whole second half (of the

worked hard in the offseason to maintain his stuff from pitch No. 75 to pitch No. 100, and that’s something he didn’t do last year.

“Now, the fastball is playing, the cutter is good, the split was okay today,” the skipper added. “He has a good feel, and he has good stuff, too.”

Crawford also acknowledg­ed that he’s come a long way over the past two years, calling the ’22 season a “big learning year.”

“Throwing the strikes is huge, competing is huge, and trusting your stuff, having conviction in your pitches,” he said. “Previous starts, I leaned on the sweeper, today I leaned on the cutter, and I had conviction in those pitches today.”

And because sometimes, there’s inexplicab­le magic

in baseball, Crawford’s Jackie Robinson Day performanc­e lowered his ERA to 0.42. It’s the best ERA by a Sox starter through four games (minimum 20 innings) since Roger Clemens posted a 0.28 through his opening quartet in ’91.

The Sox starter had some valuable backup. Wilyer Abreu’s tumbling catch robbed Guardians slugger José Ramírez of a home run and ended the top of the first.

“Actually, when Ramírez hit it, I’m looking at Ramírez because it seemed like he crushed that one and also in the reaction of the fans, so I didn’t see it live,” Cora admitted. “Then I saw replay and good one, good one.”

Duran made a trio of Gold Glove-caliber plays; he opened the fourth with a leaping catch over his left shoulder, then bookended the sixth with a leaping catch up at the Boston bullpen,

robbing Brayan Rocchio of a potential home run, and a sliding catch to cement Crawford’s shutout start.

But because nothing can come easy to this team, the Sox endured yet another terrifying moment in the top of the seventh. With two outs and a brand-new 2-0 deficit courtesy of Will Brennan’s pinch-hit home run, Devers, O’neill, and Ceddanne Rafaela collided in shallow left, trying to nab Estevan Florial’s popup.

Devers managed to hang on to the ball, but he and O’neill remained on the ground for several minutes as trainers from both teams raced out to check on them. Fenway Park breathed a collective sigh of relief when all three players were able to walk off the field on their own, though O’neill could be seen holding a cloth to a bleeding cut above his left eye.

From there, things went from bad to worse. Josh Winckowski took the mound and after getting Gabriel Arias to strike out swinging, issued a walk to Rocchio, who promptly stole second. A single by Steven Kwan put runners on the corners, and a twoout double by José Ramírez plated two more runs for the Guardians. Only one run was charged to Winckowski, though; Wilyer Abreu’s throwing error was the culprit behind the other.

“Yeah, it sucks,” Cora admitted of some of the lategame defensive struggles, “But just have to keep working with them, have to. We have to make plays, we have to make plays. It’s frustratin­g for everybody, but at the same time we cannot get down on them. They’re trying to make plays.”

The Guardians tacked on another pair of runs in the top of the ninth. Chase Anderson gave up a leadoff single and a pair of twoout hits, bringing the visiting team’s lead to 6-0 before getting out of the inning.

Devers hustled to first to lead off the bottom of the ninth with a single, but it was for naught. The next three batters went quickly and quietly, and for the second time in four days and third time in 17 games this year, the Sox were shut out.

O’neill needed eight stitches for a “big gash” and is going through concussion protocol, his manager announced after the game. Now, the Sox need to hope their hottest hitter won’t join the already-crowded injured list.

“Same deal” for Devers, though Cora said the third baseman — back in the lineup after missing four games with the nagging shoulder soreness — feels good. He was optimistic about O’neill as well. “Well see, but I don’t think there’s any need to make a move.”

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