Radio Gol
·24 April 2026
Historic: Tucumán runner was top Argentine at the Boston Marathon

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·24 April 2026

Tucumán athletics reached an international milestone in 2026 thanks to Jorge Larry. The runner, originally from the city of Concepción, delivered an outstanding performance in the 130th edition of the Boston Marathon, establishing himself as the first Argentine representative to cross the finish line in the oldest and most prestigious competition in the world.
Running in Boston is not for just anyone. It is the oldest annual marathon in the world, with its first edition dating back to 1897, and it is part of the World Marathon Majors, the select group of the six most important races on the planet. Unlike other events, entering Boston is not simply a matter of signing up; most runners must post extremely demanding qualifying times (known as Boston Qualifiers), making it a pinnacle of excellence for amateur and professional athletes alike.
Larry completed the 42.195 kilometers with an official time of 2 hours and 33 minutes. This time not only placed him at the top of the national delegation, but also reflected astonishing technical consistency, maintaining an average pace of 3:37 per kilometer throughout the entire course.
The Boston race is known for its difficulty, especially along the Newton Hills section and the famous Heartbreak Hill. The Tucumán athlete managed to overcome these geographic obstacles after intensive preparation that included high-volume training loads and a strategy focused on mental resilience.
At 47, this electronic engineer from Concepción, Tucumán, has managed to blend a demanding career as a production manager in the metalworking sector with the demands of elite sport. A father of three and driven by a curiosity that leads him to explore fields as varied as photography and language learning, Jorge Larry is a figure who defies conventional molds.
In running circles he is affectionately known as “Loco,” a nickname that comes from his particular training method: far from rigid structures or meticulously detailed plans, Larry relies on self-management and training based purely on feel. For him, passion and determination are the true engines of his performance, proving that it is possible to reach the top of world athletics while maintaining an approach that is as genuine as it is disciplined.
For the runner from Tucumán, this result in the United States represents the culmination of a return-to-sport process after years of prioritizing his university education and professional career. His participation in Boston was understood as a way of honoring personal values such as perseverance and discipline.
Despite moments of extreme fatigue between kilometers 39 and 40, Larry stayed focused, drawing on his previous experience and the support of his community in Tucumán. The sporting achievement also had a strong emotional component, as he dedicated this milestone to the memory of his father, whose remembrance was the main driving force that carried him through the final meters of the iconic competition.
With this result, “Loco” Larry not only raises the profile of running in Tucumán, but also sets a precedent of perseverance for the province’s athletes, showing that high performance is possible even while balancing it with professional and family life.
The course, which passes through several Massachusetts towns before reaching the heart of Boston, is famous for its technical difficulty. The final stretch is particularly feared because of the Newton Hills, a series of hills culminating in the legendary Heartbreak Hill, where physical exhaustion and the incline put competitors’ mental endurance to the test.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here.
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