Ottawa Citizen

Boston winner competes for victims

‘I’ll be carrying them in my heart,’ says wheelchair athlete in London Marathon

- ROB HARRIS

LONDON Tatyana McFadden’s thrill at winning her first Boston Marathon wheelchair title didn’t last long.

Shortly after leaving the Boston streets to prepare for a night of celebratio­ns, McFadden’s family informed her of the bombings near the finish line that killed three people and injured more than 180.

“They had this glazed look on their faces and it was like, ‘What happened, what is going on?’ ” she said on Friday. “And they said two explosions had gone off ... we were watching the replay over and over and over and over and over.

“That was just the toughest part to see, the mad chaos, people running, people were injured.”

Along with five teammates, McFadden scrambled out of Boston onto a flight to her Baltimore home.

“It was just muted ... I wasn’t even worried about celebratin­g,” she said. “You just think about others immediatel­y. I guess celebratio­n will come later in the road ... so we’ll see on Sunday.”

Sunday is McFadden’s 24th birthday. It will be marked by a defiant return to action in the London Marathon.

“We will be racing for the people in Boston,” she said in her hotel overlookin­g the River Thames. “So I’ll be carrying them in my heart.”

Giving into the terrorists was never in doubt.

“There is no concern about running on Sunday,” McFadden said. “We can’t live our life in fear because then we are letting those people (the bombers) win and that’s not what it’s about.

“It’s about trying to continue life and help those cope with the heartache.”

Paralympic sport could help to inspire those embarking on the road to cover.

For McFadden, a winner of three gold medals at the London Paralympic­s, it’s a simple mission: “I feel it’s my responsibi­lity.”

“It’s important as an elite runner — and an elite runner with a disability — to be a role model to those who, especially who are newly injured ... it’s important for me to be an advocate,” she said. “I go everywhere just to talk about disability and rebirthing life.

“I have lived with many challenges in my life, every single day, and so I know somewhat of what it’s like.”

Doctors never expected McFadden to live long.

Born in the Russian city of St. Petersburg with spina bifida, McFadden was abandoned in an orphanage. She walked on her hands for six years before being adopted by an American family and beginning a new life in Baltimore.

“It’s about nurture and that’s what we need to do for the people in Boston ... that’s how you help to continue a longer life,” she said.

Crossing the line first on Sunday in front of Buckingham Palace, and capturing a second major title in a week, won’t just be a personal triumph.

It will be a victory for sport, according to McFadden, a demonstrat­ion that athletes won’t cower to terrorists.

“There are always going to be a few bad people in this world but the majority are good,” McFadden said. “It’s about not letting those bad people win and ... showing, ‘Hey, we’re not going to let this stop us.”’

The winner of the men’s wheelchair marathon in Boston also arrives in London on a mission to give “motivation and hope to other people around the world.”

 ?? KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Wheelchair athlete Tatyana McFadden said she will compete in Sunday’s London Marathon to honour those killed and maimed in the Boston bomb attack on Monday.
KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Wheelchair athlete Tatyana McFadden said she will compete in Sunday’s London Marathon to honour those killed and maimed in the Boston bomb attack on Monday.

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