BOSTON (AP) Johnny Kelley, a two-time Boston Marathon champion who became a beloved figure in the history of the race by running it a record 61 times, died at 97.
He died Wednesday night at a
''Johnny was not only a great runner, he was a great person who touched millions of lives and inspired millions of runners,'' DeLong said. ''He lived life to the fullest, in everything he did, and one of his greatest gifts was always seeing the best in everything and everybody.''
Kelley, a former Olympian and member of the USA Track & Field, National
Distance Running and Road Runners Club of America halls of fame, won
''Johnny was an icon for all of running, not only the Boston Marathon,'' said Guy L. Morse III, executive director of the Boston Athletic Association, the race's organizer. ''And, as much as he and his name may have been synonymous with running, he was also a true gentlemen in all senses of the word.''
Born
Kelley was timed in 3 hours, 17 minutes in his first marathon at age 20 in
1928 on an out-and-back course between
He tried to stay with the leaders in 1933, but faded to 37th by race's end. The following year, Kelley once again ran near the front, but this time he held on for second place the first of his seven second-place finishes.
Kelley continued to improve as a runner and in 1935 ran away from Pat Dengis to capture his first Boston Marathon win in
He placed fifth in 1936 after taking part in the race that is commonly
considered the origin of the term ''Heartbreak Hill.'' Kelley, thinking that
race leader Ellison ''Tarzan'' Brown had exhausted himself
by the last of the four
That summer, Kelley finished 18th in the marathon at the Berlin Olympics. He
made the Olympic Team again in 1940, but the games were canceled after
In June 1942, Kelley's wife of three years, Mary, died of cancer and he was
soon drafted into the U.S. Army. Private John Kelley came up from
Another second place followed in 1944, but then in 1945, a decade after his
first win in
His lifetime best of
In 1957, he surprised everyone by placing ninth in
In 1993, the statue ''Young at Heart'' was dedicated in honor of Kelley at
the base of the third hill in
Beginning in 1995, Kelley has served as the Grand Marshal of the Boston Marathon, preceding the runners in a pace vehicle. He missed the 1999 race, when he was recovering from illness.
Runner's World magazine named him as its ''Runner of the Century'' for his contributions to the sport.
''Johnny Kelley has long been the heart and soul of the Boston Marathon,'' BAA president Thomas S. Grilk said. ''Now that he's gone, his heart and soul live on in the race that he, more than anyone else, has come to personify.''