Boston, Mass. -- On a spectacular Sunday morning in
Boston, the top female marathoners in the United States put
forth an historic performance. Deena Kastor, Magdalena
Lewy Boulet, and Blake Russell headlined the April 20 show
as they captured the three spots on the U.S. Olympic Team
for the women's marathon. As a result, their next marathon
will be run through the streets of Beijing on August 17 as
they compete in the 2008 Olympic Games. Behind the three
Olympians, 143 other women thrilled the tens of thousands
of spectators and viewers on NBCSports.com with one of
the greatest women's marathons ever held.
A one-hour highlight show of the event will air on Sunday,
April 27 on MSNBC from 12:00-1:00 p.m. ET. Commentary
will be provided by commentator Al Trautwig and 10-time
NCAA All-American Ed Eyestone. The show will be the
premier episode in a series highlighting a number of
Olympic Trials events leading up to the Beijing Olympic
Games in August. The Olympic Trials online and over the air
broadcast is a joint production of the USOC, Boston Athletic
Association, NBC Sports and USA Track & Field.
The attached photograph shows the 2008 U.S. Olympic
Team in the Women's Marathon serving as Grand Marshals
of the 112th Boston Marathon on Monday, April 21. Pictured
are (l-r) Magdalena Lewy Boulet, Deena Kastor, and Blake
Russell. Credit for the image is FAYFOTO/Boston.
Among the many notable accomplishments from the event
on Sunday:
Athletes
* 181 qualifiers (171 via a marathon performance, 10 via a
10,000m performance)
* 146 starters
* 124 finishers
Sub-2:50's
* 98 women ran under 2:50. This is the second largest
total in the history of women's marathon running, trailing
only the 1984 U.S. Olympic Trials when 109 women broke
that mark.
* By comparison, 61 women broke 2:50 at the 2004 U.S.
Olympic Team Trials-Women's Marathon. 44 did so in
2000; 71 in 1996; 46 in 1992; and 81 in 1988.
All-Time Rankings
* Deena Kastor and Magdalena Lewy Boulet ran the 2nd
and 11th fastest Olympic Trials performances in U.S.
history
.
* Kastor's winning time of 2:29:35 is the 41st fastest
marathon ever run by an American woman. She also owns
the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 10th, 12th, 14th, and 43rd-fastest
times.
* Lewy Boulet's second-place time of 2:30:19 is the 53rd
fastest marathon ever run by an American woman.
Age Group Records
* Linda Somers Smith (2:38:49) sets U.S. 45+ record.
(Previous best was Joan Samuelson, 2:42:28.)
* Joan Samuelson (2:49:08) sets U.S. 50+ record.
(Previous best was Shirley Matson, 2:50:26.)
Personal Bests & Qualifying Performances
* 135 women qualified for the Olympic Trials by running a
new personal best in the marathon (out of 171 women who
qualified with a marathon time).
* 41 women ran new personal bests on Sunday, including
13 of the top 15 and 20 of the top 26
.
* 47 women improved upon their qualifying performance
for the event (including Blake Russell who qualified via a
10,000m time because she did not have a qualifying
marathon performance).
U.S. Championships
* Deena Kastor won her third U.S. Marathon
Championship (2001 and 2007), and become the first
woman since Linda Somers (in 1993-1994) to win
back-to-back titles
* Kastor becomes the first woman to win three U.S.
championships in the marathon. Julie Brown, Janis Klecker,
and Linda Somers each won two.
Olympic Teams
* Kastor joins Cathy O'Brien as the only women to make
two U.S. Olympic Teams in the Women's Marathon.
* This represents the first time that the first alternate from
an Olympic Team (Blake Russell in 2004) has made the
Olympic Team four years later
.
* The 4th and 5th-place finishers from 2004 (Russell and
Lewy Boulet, who finished just 35 and 53 seconds out of
third place, respectively, in 2004) both made the Olympic
Team this year.
Website Usage
* 48,583 visitors to www.bostontrials2008.com on race
day.
* 360,968 race day page views
.
* Visitors to the website were from all 50 states, the
District of Columbia, and more than 90 countries.
USA Track & Field
USA Track & Field (USATF) is the National Governing
Body
for track and field, long-distance running and race walking in
the United States. USATF encompasses the world's oldest
organized sports, the most-watched events of Olympic
broadcasts, the #1 high school and junior high school
participatory sport and more than 30 million adult runners in
the United States.
USATF is a volunteer-driven, not-for-profit organization with a
staff of professional program administrators at the National
Office in Indianapolis. The mission of USATF is to foster
sustained competitive excellence, interest, and participation
in the sports of track & field, long distance running, and
race
walking. For more information, visit www.usatf.org.
Boston Athletic Association
Established in 1887, the Boston Athletic Association is a
non-profit organization with a mission of managing athletic
events and promoting a healthy lifestyle through sports,
especially running. The B.A.A.'s Boston Marathon is the
world's oldest annual marathon, and the organization
manages other local events, including the B.A.A. Half
Marathon presented by Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and
the Jimmy Fund, and supports comprehensive charity,
youth, and year-round running programs. Since 1986, the
principal sponsor of the Boston Marathon has been John
Hancock Financial Services. The B.A.A. is the local
organizing committee for the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team
Trials- Women's Marathon.
Media Contacts:
B.A.A.: Jack Fleming (617-236-1652, x2627; mobile:
617-459-1587; fleming@baa.org)
or Marc Chalufour (617-236-1652, x2632; mobile:
617-459-1586; chalufour@baa.org).