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Frame of Reference

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The Woman Who Stole Victory In The Boston Marathon

Ryan Fan
7 min readApr 22, 2023

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Photo by Miguel A Amutio on Unsplash

Making international headlines right now is Scottish ultramarathoner, Joasia Zakrzewski, facing calls for a lifetime ban for cutting the course in an ultramarathon from Manchester to Liverpool. She traveled 2.5 miles by car in a 50-mile race, which Zakrzewski attributes to being injured and wanting to drop out. She then accepted the third-place trophy when she came across the finish line, a mistake she attributes to arriving in Scotland from Australia too late and being severely jetlagged.

But at least Zakrzewski ran at least 47 miles of the race. Accepting the trophy was unethical, and it’s crazy she wasn’t caught sooner given tracking data shows she ran a mile in 1 minute and 40 seconds. She was disqualified. Cutting the course is a big deal and I get race officials and the running world have to make a big example out of it, but Zakrzeski’s sins pale in comparison to the most egregious course cutter of all time.

Likewise, this Monday was the 127th Boston Marathon, the most famous and popular marathon in America. It was also the marathon in my lifetime where I experienced the most hype — sub 2 hour marathoner, double Olympic champion, and the best marathoner of…

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Frame of Reference
Frame of Reference

Published in Frame of Reference

Explore the past, understand the present, and shape the future. We value research, quality, and accuracy.

Ryan Fan
Ryan Fan

Written by Ryan Fan

Believer, attorney, former teacher, and 2:35 marathon runner. Diehard fan of “The Wire.”