
For the first time, women training and racing marathons was being talked about and shown on TV, which led to a boom in women’s road running that has continued to increase in popularity, 35 years later. Women worldwide saw women racing not in the elite, inaccessible environment of a stadium track, but on regular city streets, passing stores and gas stations, schools and churches-all scenery that was familiar to everyday people, both women and men.

Since 1970, the world record had been broken 17 times, coming down from 3:02:53 to 2:22:43 (the latter of which Samuelson set when she won Boston in 1983). When: By 1984, the pioneering work for women’s running had been done.

On the 35th anniversary of Samuelson’s historic win, we’re looking back on what pushed her to that Olympic finish line, paving a path for so many women after her.

That was the moment when women's running worldwide moved from the margins to the mainstream.Īs with all such key moments in history, it was made seminal by a conjunction of factors: when, what, where, who. Even more than a symbol, the message Samuelson gave as she moved from obscurity to acclaim triggered a transformation that 35 years later is still gaining momentum. The moment when Joan Benoit Samuelson emerged into the sunlight of the Los Angeles Olympic stadium was the perfect symbol for how far women’s running had come.
