Boston Marathon M60-64: Ramek Runs Away With It
- Steven Ramek won the M60-64 age group in 2:43:31 (6:14/mi) — nearly five minutes clear of runner-up Michael Uelses (2:48:16).
- Michael Uelses (PA) ran a strong negative-split-style climb through the men's field, moving from well outside the top 2,500 men at the start to 2,498th by the finish at 6:25/mi.
- Michel Armandy held remarkably steady throughout, barely shifting position across all tracked checkpoints on his way to 3rd in 2:52:12 (6:34/mi).
- The sub-3:00 barrier was cleared by 16 finishers in the M60-64 age group, with Ted Macmahon (15th, 2:59:00) sneaking under just before the clock struck three hours.
Steven Ramek put on a masterclass in Boston on a cool, breezy Monday — 51°F and a 10 mph wind that, for a 6:14/mi effort, was more ally than enemy. His 2:43:31 wasn't just a win; it was a statement. The gap to second place was 4 minutes and 45 seconds, which in a field of 1,514 M60-64 finishers is a commanding margin. His one notable wobble came in the 21M–35K stretch, where his men's field position ticked slightly backward before recovering — a sign of a course doing its best to bite, not quite succeeding.
Michael Uelses (PA) told a different kind of story: a racer who spent the entire 26.2 miles moving forward through traffic. He was outside the top 3,600 men through the early going, and by the finish had climbed all the way to 2,498th in the men's field — a relentless, disciplined grind at 6:25/mi that earned him the silver in 2:48:16. Michel Armandy, in contrast, was the picture of consistency in 3rd — his men's field position barely budged across every checkpoint, a 6:34/mi metronome all the way to 2:52:12.
The battle for 4th through 6th was tight and hard-fought. David Putney (NY, 2:53:19) and Jeff Mescal (IN, 2:54:09) both made significant forward moves through the field as the race wore on, while James Nolan (PA) rounded out the top six in 2:54:46. Further back, the race to beat 3:00 produced genuine drama: Brian Crowley (NJ, 2:57:50) and Frank Mckelvey (DE, 2:57:52) crossed just two seconds apart in 11th and 12th, and Ted Macmahon (AZ) punched his ticket under the barrier in 15th with exactly 2:59:00 — not a second to spare.
AI recap · generated from official results
