By Blake Wolf
The Boston Marathon allowed transgender-identifying biological males to compete in the women’s division this year, despite creating a separate category for “non-binary” identifying individuals.
Meanwhile, political commentators have observed that these regulations effectively created the possibility for men to compete in—and potentially win—all three categories of the Boston Marathon.
The Results:
Men’s Champion: John Korir of Kenya clinched the title with a time of 2:04:45, the second-fastest in the event’s history. Notably, he overcame an early fall near the start and surged ahead at the 20-mile mark to secure victory. This win is historic, as John and his brother, Wesley Korir (2012 champion), are the first siblings to both win the Boston Marathon.
Women’s Champion: Sharon Lokedi, also from Kenya, set a new course record by finishing in 2:17:22, surpassing the previous record by over two minutes. She outpaced two-time defending champion Hellen Obiri, who finished 19 seconds behind.
The winner of the nonbinary division at the 2025 Boston Marathon was Ryan Montgomery.
The “non-binary” category allows for both biological men and women to compete against each other, and it was introduced two years ago. In both years, biological men came out on top in the non-binary category.
However, despite the new category, which presumably allowed for a more level and equal playing field, males identifying as transgender women are still being allowed to enter the female category…
READ FULL ARTICLE HERE… (oann.com)
Home | Caravan to Midnight (zutalk.com)





