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Expect insane porta potty lines, cold weather, and a super spirited crowd.
Expect insane porta potty lines, cold weather, and a super spirited crowd. (Photo: Marcio Silva/iStock)

The Boston Marathon Cheat Sheet

Champ Amby Burfoot and streak runner Ben Beach give the DL on the world鈥檚 most storied marathon

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(Photo: Marcio Silva/iStock)

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Ben Beach was a high school senior in 1967 when he heard a radio broadcast of the Boston Marathon. 鈥淚 thought, 鈥淚鈥檇 really like to do that next year,鈥欌 Beach says. 鈥淚t was an unpleasant day鈥攊t was sleeting鈥攁nd it really appealed to my sense of the bizarre.鈥

So he called up Jock Semple, the petulant Scottish-American race director dead set against hosting college hooligans. 鈥淔raternity members who would run the marathon as a stunt drove him crazy,鈥 Beach says. 鈥淗e wanted serious runners.鈥

Beach somehow convinced Semple he was serious鈥攄espite never having logged more than five miles at a time鈥攁nd ran his first Boston Marathon in 1968 after paying the $2 entry fee. (His time: an impressive 3:23, despite doing his final long run of 22 miles two days before the race.) He鈥檚 run every Boston Marathon since; this year will be number 49.

鈥淭here are so many things that make it special,鈥 Beach says. 鈥淭he history, the point-to-point course. I love the spectators; they鈥檙e dedicated and knowledgeable. The volunteers are unbelievable. It attracts the best athletes in the world, and it鈥檚 so well organized. And Boston is a cool city.鈥

A lot has changed since Beach ran his first Boston. Now you have to qualify, the entry fee is $180, and running 26.2 miles is no longer considered bizarre. But one thing will never change: the feeling you鈥檒l get crossing the finish line for the first time.

鈥淚t鈥檚 one of my most cherished memories, running down those final couple hundred yards,鈥 Beach says. 鈥淚 almost get choked up now just remembering it.鈥

Ready to run Boston? Below, Beach and Amby Burfoot, and winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon, give the inside scoop on all things Boston Marathon.

Get In

There are three ways to run Boston: qualify, raise money for charity, or bandit. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think many people bandit these days,鈥 Burfoot says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 still the young, mostly drunk college students.鈥 If that鈥檚 not you, don鈥檛 do it, lest you suffer the wrath ofthe Internet like Foursquare co-founder, , and his wife did after banditing the 2014 event. 听

So qualify; adding a BQ to one鈥檚 running r茅sum茅 is an impressive feat. Up your chances of making the cutoffs by doing 鈥渁 thorough study of the fastest courses and best conditions,鈥 Burfoot says. 鈥淣othing says it can鈥檛 be a downhill course.鈥 Check out this list of the most popular qualifiers. Then train hard and pace it smart. 鈥淔ind a pace team or group who will work together to achieve a qualifying time because it鈥檚 huge to have help on the course,鈥 Burfoot says.

If qualifying is out of the question, 27 official charities await your fundraising prowess. Bonus: Besides raising money for a worthy cause, many of the charities offer training programs.

Course Recon and Strategy

Boston starts late鈥攁fter 10 a.m. for most people鈥攂ecause you鈥檒l be bused from Boston Common to Hopkinton in the morning. Expect some insane porta potty lines and cold weather in Hopkinton, where announcers will tell you when to start walking the approximately half-mile to your corral.

Tip: 鈥淓verybody I know goes to the thrift store鈥 to load up on gloves and hats, sweatshirts,and sweatpants to shed just before racing, Burfoot says. That way you鈥檒l stay warm until go time without sacrificing your own clothes.

鈥淭he first mile is a very steep downhill,鈥 Burfoot says, followed by more downhill for the first four miles. 鈥淪ometimes you don鈥檛 realize it because you just see 3,000 runners all around you and you run it way too fast.鈥 That will set you up for quad failure later on. So start easy and controlled. 鈥淏oston has a small window of opportunity to run a good time,鈥 Burfoot says. 鈥淚t opens up if you go out slow and run an even pace.鈥

Tip: Kiss the girls. At about the halfway point, you鈥檒l run by the Wellesley Scream Tunnel, where hundreds of co-eds carry signs, many asking for a kiss. 鈥淚n the old days, seconds counted and I wasn鈥檛 slowing down or stopping for anything,鈥 Beach says. 鈥淥nce, fairly recently,鈥 he paused for a kiss. 鈥淭hey were probably hoping for a young buck in his 20s or 30s, not some senior citizen.鈥

At 20.5 miles, you鈥檒l encounter the famous Heartbreak Hill. It鈥檚 not that bad, climbing about 90 feet in half a mile. 鈥淛ust slow down, modulate your pace, shorten your stride, keep the effort, and chug up it,鈥 Burfoot says. Friendly spectators might even give you some water and orange slices to help you up.

Tip: Mentally prepare for the stretch between miles 23 and 25. 鈥淚 swear they鈥檙e the longest two miles anywhere,鈥 Beach says. 鈥淚f you know it鈥檚 going to seem longer in your head, then maybe you鈥檒l be prepared.鈥 Or not. 鈥淪omehow I鈥檓 never prepared,鈥 Beach says. 鈥淭hose two miles just go on and on.鈥 Of course, they鈥檒l feel even longer if you鈥檝e cooked yourself on the downhills.

Then finally, you鈥檒l be instructed to go right on Hereford, left on Boylston. It鈥檚 the famous chicane printed on t-shirts and bumper stickers. Once you make that right turn, you鈥檒l have less than a mile to go, surrounded by thick, cheering crowds. Enjoy the fat, final straightaway to the finish line. You鈥檒l be sprinting it鈥攗nless you went out too hard. Then it鈥檒l be a slow but glorious hobble to your medal.

Train

Now you know about the initial downhill. So prepare for it. 鈥淵ou can get quite a bit of benefit from just one hard downhill running training effort,鈥 Burfoot says. 鈥淭wo or three times and you鈥檒l get even more benefit.鈥 Your legs will get accustomed to the eccentric contractions and get stronger.

鈥淪o don鈥檛 worry about the uphill training,鈥 Burfoot says, 鈥渂ut do three to four workouts before Boston with some downhill repeats at a pretty good clip where you鈥檙e seriously putting some stress on your quads.鈥 If you鈥檝e already got mile repeats planned, do them downhill. And choose mostly downhill routes for some of your long runs. 鈥淚f you do your last downhill workout two to three weeks out, you鈥檒l have plenty of time to recover,鈥 Burfoot says.

Gear

鈥淚n the last four or five miles, the wind goes from a warming tail wind to a cooling breeze off of the bay,鈥 Burfoot says. So run with layers. Specifically, a lightweight windbreaker you can tie around your waist鈥攊f it鈥檚 not 89 degrees like it was in 2012. 鈥淚n April the weather can be 35 or 85, and it can change on course,鈥 Burfoot says. So check your weather app often. And don鈥檛 forget to hit up your local thrift store for pre-race gear.

Even if it鈥檚 cold, don鈥檛 forget a hat, sunglasses, and sunscreen, on a sunny day. 鈥淭here are no leaves on the trees yet,鈥 Burfoot says. 鈥淪o many people have finished the Boston Marathon with an extreme sunburn on the one side of their body that鈥檚 been facing the sun the whole way.鈥澨

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