A year later, Boston Marathon runners race again
April 21, 2014 -- Updated 1622 GMT (0022 HKT)
(CNN) -- One year after the bombing at the Boston Marathon, as competitors stood shoulder to shoulder at the start, the race announcer shouted to them, "Take back that finish line!"
The women's elite group
began first around 9:30 a.m. ET, and the elite men's group at 10. Waves
of other runners started after them.
For Kenya's Rita Jeptoo,
33, it was a second straight victory. She again won the women's division
with an unofficial -- and course record -- time of 2:18:57, according
to the event's official Twitter account.
The United States' Meb
Keflezighi, 38, crossed the finish line shortly after Jeptoo, becoming
the first American man to win the event since 1983, race officials
tweeted. His unofficial time is 2:08:37, according to the race's Facebook page.
But don't call the other runners normal or regular. They are extraordinary.
Lee Ann Yanni told CNN
before the race kicked off that she planned to run wearing a necklace
with a silver stingray charm that her father gave to her before he died
of cancer. The force of the blasts as she ran in 2013 along Boylston
Street failed to tear the memento from her body. She would not be
stopped then, and she won't be stopped Monday.
Unable to walk for five
and a half weeks, she eventually got back to training and finished the
Chicago Marathon last October in 5 hours and 44 minutes.
"I'm running for those
who can't," she told CNN. "I don't run very pretty ... but at the finish
line, everybody is going to be represented."
Krystle Campbell, 29,
Lingzi Lu, 23 and grade-schooler Martin Richard, 8, were killed. More
than 260 people were wounded. Some lost limbs.
This year's race has
9,000 more runners than last year's, and an unprecedented crowd was
expected to gather, officials have said.
J.P. Norden and his
brother Paul remembered the agony of the bombings recently with CNN at
the Forum Restaurant on Boylston Street.
"Where we are right now
where we got hurt, lost ... (it) changed our lives but, I don't know.
..." J.P. said, struggling to find the words.
Each brother had his right leg amputated, and they now walk on prosthetic legs.
"It was such a tough
journey and stuff," J.P. said, "but we got so much help from everyone
that it's weird, it seems like so long away and ago and quick at the
same time."
Another survivor, Marc
Fucarile, also lost his right leg. He's undergone numerous surgeries,
but shrapnel is still lodged in the inner wall of his heart. If it
moves, he could die. Recently, the 35-year-old went to a court hearing
for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev who allegedly, along with his brother Tamerlan
Tsarnaev, were responsible for the bombing.
Tamerlan was killed in a
shootout with police; Dzhokhar is facing numerous charges and could be
sentenced to death. His trial is set to begin in November, and he has
pleaded not guilty.
"Whatever he gets," Fucarile told CNN, "he deserves."
Officials have worked
hard to make sure security is very tight Monday. Backpacks are not
allowed on the course this year, said Kurt Schwartz, director of the
Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency.
Costumes that cover the
face, containers with more than 1 liter of liquid, and bulky clothes
such as vests with pockets are also prohibited.
The course this year
will be "very safe," Gov. Deval Patrick told CBS' "Face the Nation" on
Sunday. "Somebody said it may be the safest place in America," he said.
The weather for Monday's
race looks gorgeous -- ideal for running -- in the 40s with a brisk
wind. All runners are wearing chips in their shoes, and their progress
can be followed online at the Boston Athletic Association's website.
CNN affiliate WBZ in Boston is showing images of the race as it happens on its website.
The women's elite group
began first around 9:30 a.m. ET, and the elite men's group at 10. Waves
of other runners started after them.
Runner's World is carrying a list of the men and women who are expected to perform best.
CNN's Ray Sanchez, Holly Yan and Jason Carroll contributed to this report.
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