Sports

Boston Marathon Postponed Until September in Wake of Coronavirus

  • Mayor Walsh says it will get the city to a ‘safer place’
  • Event was the site of a deadly 2013 terrorist attack

This year’s Boston Marathon, the world’s oldest annual such race and a local rite of spring, is being postponed to Sept. 14 from April 20 in the wake of mounting concern over the coronavirus.

The marathon draws about a million spectators and results in more than $200 million of economic activity, according to Boston Mayor Marty Walsh. Some 30,000 runners typically wend their way through eight Massachusetts cities and towns before finishing in Boston’s Copley Square.

Originally a locals-only event, the race began in 1897 as a result of the excitement generated by the first marathon at the 1896 Summer Olympics. It has since become one of the world’s six major marathons, drawing elite runners from across the globe.

The long history has been marked by controversy as well as tragedy. In 2013, two bombs set off by terrorists at the finish line killed three and injured 264.