
The New York City Marathon's real heroes finish after dark
Many follow the same playbook, carefully painting a behind-the-scenes portrait of elite athletes pursuing greatness – from cyclists confronting the steepest climbs of the Tour de France and surfers hunting vast waves to tennis players vying for grand slams and track sprinters for medals.
'That's kind of boring,' Michael Ring says of the genre. 'It's just another guy who figured out what he was best at in middle school, and didn't go to high school with normal kids, and maybe went to college, and dropped out and became a millionaire tennis player.'
Ring, 61, is among a handful of amateur runners who appear in Final Finishers, a new short film about the back of the New York City Marathon pack.
Many hours after the winners cross the line each year, the sun goes down over Central Park, the crowds thin, and race organizers start to hand out glow sticks. Those still out on the course, working their way through the last few grueling miles in the dark, are drawn in by the hum of a party at the finish.
Turning away from record breakers and podium chasers, the film celebrates everyday runners: those more likely to dwell on whether, rather than when, they will finish 26.2 miles. Extraordinary stories are not exclusively found at the front of the pack.
Olympians including Meb Keflezighi, Conner Mantz, Clayton Young and Beverly Ramos were in the audience in June when Final Finishers premiered at the Tribeca Festival. 'Getting to the finish line, no matter how many hours it takes you, is life changing,' Keflezighi, who won the NYC Marathon in 2009 and Boston Marathon in 2014, tells the Guardian. 'Everybody has a story.'
Take Ring. In 2014, he was diagnosed with a rare autoimmune condition. 'I went from fine to paralyzed in a couple of days,' he says. Over many months he slowly, but surely, progressed from a wheelchair to crutches, and then walked with a cane. In time he returned to running, too, with the help of ankle braces, and finished the 2017 NYC Marathon – the first of many post-recovery – in just under 10 hours.
Increasingly, major marathons have moved to make sure runners who finish with such times are not overlooked. In London, for example, tailwalkers set out after the final starter begins the race, and the finish line stays open until midnight.
Still, for those following such races, and the wider sport, much of the coverage remains pinned around those in the lead pack. The makers of Final Finishers are betting viewers will find runners far behind just as, if not more, inspiring.
Runners featured in the film 'are the most relatable to so many people out there, who don't see themselves as a quote unquote runner,' said Rob Simmelkjaer, CEO of New York Road Runners, the organization behind the New York City Marathon. 'They can start to see themselves as runners in a way that watching someone win the marathon in two hours and five minutes is not going to make them feel they can be a runner. Because they know they can never do that.'
Distribution plans for Final Finishers have yet to be announced. With another short film in the works, New York Road Runners recently launched East 89th St Productions, a production studio. It hopes to produce a docuseries, too.
Will a streaming platform, or broadcaster, bite? The wave of professional-focused sport docuseries appears to have crested. The new series of Tour de France: Unchained on Netflix will be the last. Six Nations: Full Contact, also on Netflix, and Make or Break, an Apple series following World Surf League stars, have been canceled.
Sign up to The Recap
The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action
after newsletter promotion
But as it draws up its plans for films and series, New York Road Runners is not rushing to put more elite athletes on screen. This has, at least at first, caused a little confusion.
'As we went out and talked to a lot of production companies out there, there was a lot of that that came back to us. It was, 'Oh, well, you know, who are the stars?' and 'are you going to get [Eliud] Kipchoge?',' says Simmelkjaer. 'And we don't necessarily subscribe to that idea, that it has to be the stars.'
'We're definitely starting to see the tide changing,' claimed Martinus Evans, founder of Slow AF Run Club. 'I don't want to say it like this, but I'm gonna say it like this: people are not necessarily excited about elite athletes' stories. People are not excited about people who spent their life running, and they're expected to get first place.'
A doctor who told Evans, 38, that he needed to lose weight laughed when said he wanted to run a marathon. 'Instead of punching the doctor like I wanted to, I bought running shoes that day,' he says in the film, which documents how he ultimately realized his goal, despite the doubters, and 'cried like a fucking baby' at the finish.
'What's more exciting, and what's a lot more interesting, is the underdog: somebody you did not expect to be out there,' Evans tells the Guardian. 'Somebody that you looked at and was like, 'Oh no, he's not going to run a marathon' – like me. But I ran eight of them. And I'm training for number nine.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
22 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
NFL legend Drew Brees set for broadcasting comeback with Netflix Christmas game
NFL legend Drew Brees is set for a broadcasting comeback via one of Netflix 's Christmas Day games. Brees, 46, joined NBC in 2021 following his retirement from football, but lasted just one season in the booth after some scrutinized performances. He later told Front Office Sports that he wished to get another chance calling games. And the Saints icon and Super Bowl XLIV champion will reportedly get that shot once again this December. According to The Athletic, Brees will call either the Cowboys- Commanders game or the Lions-Vikings game on Christmas for Netflix. He appeared on the international broadcast for Netflix last year, while he also got the chance to be a guest analyst on ESPN's 'Monday Night Countdown' pregame show. Nonetheless, Brees will surely relish the chance to get back in the booth for Netflix after his stint with NBC didn't quite go to plan. 'I think I could be the absolute best at it, if given the opportunity,' Brees told FOS. 'I valued my time at NBC so much, for that year after I played, I spent most of that time in-studio on Sunday Night Football, having to work with some incredible people. 'But I didn't really get the chance to broadcast NFL games. And that's what I feel like I'm most qualified to do. That's what I feel like I'm most passionate about. And certainly where my knowledge base lies, right? Telling the story of the game, getting you inside the huddle, getting you inside the quarterback's head, letting you know how we're attacking this defense. That to me is something I'd love to do down the road when the time is right.' At NBC, Brees - who is second all-time in passing yards - called several NFL games, Notre Dame college games and also spent time working as a studio analyst. The last game he called was the AFC playoff matchup between the Bengals and Raiders in January 2022, and his performance was widely panned by fans. The Athletic also reported that CBS' Nate Burleson will serve as a game analyst for the second consecutive year, while his colleague, former Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan, was 'under heavy consideration' as well. Top networks have reportedly been hesitant to allow Netflix to utilize their talent, though ESPN's Mina Kimes, CBS' Ian Eagle and Fox's Greg Olsen were part of the streamer's broadcast last year. Netflix signed a three-year deal with the NFL worth a reported $150million to broadcast Christmas Day doubleheaders in 2024, 2025 and 2026.


Daily Record
22 minutes ago
- Daily Record
Andy Byron's gushing comments about Astronomer employee Kristin Cabot emerge after video
Astronomer CEO Andy Byron and HR staffer Kristin Cabot went viral this week after they were caught on the "kiss cam" at a Coldplay concert in Boston Tech mogul Andy Byron penned flattering remarks about his Astronomer colleague Kristin Cabot well before they became a viral sensation at a Coldplay gig. CEO Byron and HR executive Cabot were caught embracing on the band's "kiss cam" during their performance in Boston on Wednesday night. Upon realising they were being broadcasted to the crowd, they abruptly disentangled themselves. Cabot hid her face with her hands while Byron ducked down to avoid the camera, reportedly muttering "f****** hell, it's me." Frontman Chris Martin couldn't resist commenting on the scene, jesting: "Oh, what... either they're having an affair or they're just very shy." The two then scurried away from their seats, but the damage was done; the video had already gone viral, sparking curiosity about their identities and peculiar behaviour. In the aftermath, a purported statement from Byron supposedly slammed Coldplay for airing the footage. But his company have since revealed it is fake. Byron is the CEO of a New York-based data orchestration platform named Astronomer. The company's LinkedIn profile describes it as enabling data teams to realise essential analytics, AI, and software projects. Cabot, the woman Byron was seen embracing, is also on the Astronomer payroll. Her LinkedIn indicates she came aboard nine months prior, holding the position of Chief People Officer. When his colleague Cabot became part of the organisation in November, Byron offered glowing praise about her appointment in a company statement. He declared: "Kristin's exceptional leadership and deep expertise in talent management, employee engagement, and scaling people strategies will be critical as we continue our rapid trajectory. "She is a proven leader at multiple growth-stage companies and her passion for fostering diverse, collaborative workplaces makes her a perfect fit for Astronomer." The announcement also highlighted that she possessed a "proven track record of preserving and enriching company culture at organizations experiencing rapid growth". Cabot expressed similar enthusiasm, writing about being "energised in my conversations with Andy and the Astronomer leadership team and the opportunities that exist here". She continued: "I prefer to think of my role as people strategy versus traditional human resources, as the real magic happens when you align the people strategy with the business strategy." Byron has served as chief executive of the software development firm since July 2023, with Astronomer reportedly valued at more than $1.3billion (£1b). The Economic Times suggests his personal wealth ranges between $20million (£14.8m) and $70million (£52m).


Daily Mail
23 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Fyre Festival's McFarland courts MAGA ahead of new business launch
By Convicted fraudster Billy McFarland is heading to MAGA-friendly television to pitch his next eyebrow-raising business. And curiously, the disgraced former owner of the Fyre Festival brand isn't offering many details about what it is. McFarland teased his next dubious product during the first episode of a brand new show, Real America's Pop Culture, a project of the MAGA-friendly Real America's Voice (RAV) hosted by Adrienne Gray. McFarland described his forthcoming venture as one that 'has more viability and fits better with [his] skill set than trying to do a festival.' 'We've built a new tech product,' he said. After the disaster of the first Fyre Festival, McFarland was sentenced to six years in prison in 2018 for defrauding investors out of $26 million along with over $100,000 in additional fraudulent ticket-selling schemes. McFarland agreed to pay back his victims. Along with jail time he was ordered to forfeit the cash. After serving under four years of his six-year sentence, he was released to a halfway house, and was under house arrest until September 2022. Real America's Pop Culture debuts on RAV Saturday at 7:00 PM EST, and the maiden episode was reviewed exclusively by the Daily Mail. Some of RAV's current big-name broadcasts include Steve Bannon's War Room, Jack Posobiec's Human Events Daily, and The Charlie Kirk Show. McFarland sold the intellectual property rights to Fyre Festival brand on ebay this week for a measly $245k, which he described as 'so low' while live-streaming the internet auction. The Fyre Festival founder described the sale to Gray as a way to put a 'bow on the chapter of Fyre' which would then allow him to 'move on' and reveal his next move that he's been 'working on' which he will be 'announcing this summer.' Gray, a 36 year old mother of two young boys who lives in the Washington, D.C. metro area, told the Daily Mail that her vision is to 'create a show where we have an intersection of politics and pop culture.' Covering popular culture is a new venture for the conservative RAV network, and Real America's Pop Culture is planned to be the first show in an entirely new division called Real America's Music. 'I think about the show as ... my girlfriends group chat. It's the top headlines of the day in politics and the top, you know, headlines in pop culture,' Gray told the Daily Mail. The show aims to bridge the gap between diverse personalities in American pop culture while engaging conservative audiences who care about music, movies, and entertainment as much as their liberal counterparts but have been abandoned by the left. Asked by the Daily Mail who her dream show guest is, Gray replied, 'obviously Trump. He's the pop culture president.' Back in July of 2024, Rolling Stone reported that the Fyre Festival founder was acting as an intermediary between rappers and the Trump campaign, adding that 'McFarland has helped connect rappers with Trump at least twice.' McFarland also posted a photo with Trump on President's birthday in 2024. As the former host of The Apprentice for its first 14 seasons, Trump has spent more time in the pop culture spotlight than the political one. Gray told the Daily Mail that the Trump era seems like the ideal time for conservatives to reclaim pop culture, and that the creation of content such as her show may even help the right politically in bridging the gap the problematic demographics, including suburban women and young voters in Generation Z. The show is not explicitly political despite it's home at RAV, and Gray plans to interview progressives and liberals as well as MAGA friendly celebrities. Real America's Pop Culture can be viewed on streaming platforms including Rumble, YouTube, and Roku TV starting Saturday evening.