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1. H. Negussie, 2:11:45
2. W. Onsare, 2:12:21
3. B. Cherono, 2:12:48
Top 100 men
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1. C. Ndereba, 2:25:13
2. E. Alemu, 2:27:03
3. B. Genovese, 2:29:51
Top 100 women
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1. E.F. Van Dyk, 1:24:11
2. K. Schabort, 1:30:03
3. F. Nietlispach, 1:30:34
Top wheelchairs
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1. C. Blauwet, 1:47:45
2. D. Roy, 1:50:53
3. S. Graf 1:51:46
Top wheelchairs
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audio slideshow
Scenes from starting line
We were in Hopkinton to talk to the runners and document the start of the 109th running of the Boston Marathon.
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boston.com video
The 17th Mile
(4/19/05 9:23 a.m.) We captured the memorable sights and sounds along the 17th mile of the Boston Marathon route.
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Boston Globe photosEthiopian Hailu Negussie broke away from a group of Kenyans to become the first man from his country to win the Boston Marathon since 1989. (Globe Staff Photo / Matthew J. Lee)
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In 2000, Catherine Ndereba became the first woman from Kenya to win the Boston Marathon. (By Nancy Marrapese-Burrell, Boston Globe)
Hailu Negussie had a role in this macadam movie last year, and he'd heard about how others turned out. A lonely Ethiopian hemmed in by a bunch of high-stepping Kenyans for 20 miles -- and no laurel wreath at the end. (By John Powers, Boston Globe)
Wilson Onsare was the fastest Kenyan in yesterday's 109th Boston Marathon. In any other year, the 28-year-old native of Nairobi probably would have won. (By Michael Vega, Boston Globe)
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By yesterday morning, Copley Square was almost back to normal. Some of the tent hardware was still being taken down, and there was a stray thermal blanket on the sidewalk near the Westin Hotel. But for the most part, Monday's 109th running of the Boston Marathon was in the history books and in the memories of those who ran it ... (Boston Globe, 4/20/05)
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