Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Boston Marathon streak at stake in today’s event

67-year-old has finished 49 races

- By Kyle Hightower

BOSTON — Ben Beach was a scrawny 18-year-old who had never run more than 5 miles before he started training for his first Boston Marathon in 1968.

A half-century later, at age 67, the Bethesda, Md., resident has a chance to set a standard by becoming the first person to complete 50 consecutiv­e trips down the city’s hallowed course.

The current Cal Ripken of the Boston race is one of 81 who have current streaks of at least 25 consecutiv­e trips down the 26.2-mile Boston route. Only nine have a streak of at least 40.

But Beach’s love affair with the event began on a whim. He was a high school senior flipping through radio stations in his bedroom at a Massachuse­tts boarding school when he came across a broadcast of the 1967 marathon. The race was run in 30-degree weather and sleet. Set to attend Harvard the following year, he perked up.

“The whole idea of running 26 miles in that kind of weather just kind of appealed to my senses — the bizarre,” he said. He signed up in 1968. He walked inside the staging area “that reeked of Bengay.” The field of 1,014 that year was mostly men, plus a handful of women who had signed up a year after Katherine Switzer became the first woman to officially enter.

Beach, who had consumed a steak the night before and run 20 miles only two days prior, said he was naive about marathon prep back then.

“You got in line for the doctor and when you got up to the front the doctor puts a stethoscop­e to try to determine if you could make it to the Prudential Building (finish line),” Beach said. “I don’t know if anybody got turned down or what.”

He did finish, in 3 hours, 23 minutes, and after waiting in line to use the only available shower, went up to the cafeteria for a bowl of beef stew. He didn’t finish that, but did get down four glasses of milk.

“I was lucky that I didn’t collapse in a heap,” he said.

He wasn’t sure he’d ever do it again.

“In fact, my initial feeling was ‘I’ve done it, that’s it,’ ” he said. “But at some point over the next few weeks or months I think I decided I ought to go back. It went better than anything I could have imagined.”

James Fallows, a friend of Beach’s at Harvard, ran the race with him the following year and again in 1970.

“I had no idea that I was witnessing the beginnings of something historic,” Fallows said. “It was like having been on hand to see the planting of the seed that became a giant sequoia.”

It was around Year 10 that Beach said it started to become a streak. It was also around the time — in 1977 — that he met Carol, his future wife, at a road race.

She said his drive to run was an instant attraction.

Now 37 years of marriage later, he counts her as the streak’s sustainer.

“She’s always understood how important it is to me,” Beach said.

There have been both early and recent challenges to the streak continuing.

The first time was on just his fourth race in 1971. He had a knee injury, but he was able to finish.

But the last 10 years have become challengin­g following his diagnosis for a movement disorder called Dystonia in 2002. The ailment causes involuntar­y and uncontroll­able muscle contractio­ns and cramping.

At first it wasn’t too debilitati­ng. But 10 years ago as he aged and his training began to tail off, it finally caught up with him.

In 2002, he finished the course in 3:07:50. By 2012, his time had ballooned to 5:55:22. That was twice his best time ever in Boston of 2:27:26 in 1981.

The 2012 finish was also the start of five straight years of finishing above five hours. That included 2013, the year he passed former record-holder Neil Weygandt’s streak of 45.

Those flirtation­s with the six-hour mark are more relevant after race officials notified runners in 2015 of a change in streak recognitio­n.

Beginning with the 2016 race, only participan­ts who completed the course before the official clock cutoff at six hours would have their streaks recognized by the Boston Athletic Associatio­n.

That policy was relaxed for 2016, but it’s back in effect for this year.

“Last year went better and I’m hoping this year will as well. But you never know,” Beach said. “A lot can happen between Hopkinton and the Hancock building.”

Though his health will play a role, he said Johnny Kelley’s record of 58 total Boston finishes has always been in the back of his head.

“As long as I’m physically able I’d go back the next year because again it’s in my blood,” he said.

 ??  ??
 ?? CAROL BEACH/AP ?? Ben Beach, shown in the 1981 Boston Marathon, is looking to be the first person to run the race 50 years in a row. He began when he was 18 years old.
CAROL BEACH/AP Ben Beach, shown in the 1981 Boston Marathon, is looking to be the first person to run the race 50 years in a row. He began when he was 18 years old.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States