
in Exercise Physiology from Michigan State University and combine my love of exercise with my work at Mary Free Bed Sports Rehabilitation in Grand Rapids, MI where I operate the Performance Lab. Since then, I have won 11 national championships and 2 world championships for triathlon and other multisport events. After dabbling in the Warrior Dash world, I switched my focus to triathlon and started racing competitively in 2014. If I wasn't chasing a ball, I wasn't running! It wasn't until after I graduated, when my mom signed our family up for a Warrior Dash race, that I decided I should be able to run a 5k on its own before trying to do so through the mud and obstacles. I continued my baseball career during my undergraduate degree, but never enjoyed running "for fun". Jocelyn Benson, dean of Wayne State University Law School, shows off her Boston Marathon finisher's medal today, Monday, April 18.A lifelong athlete, I grew up playing baseball, basketball, and soccer in high school. She is one of the youngest women inductees in the history of the hall of fame, second only to Serena Williams, a 2012 inductee. In October, Benson, a civil rights advocate and national election law expert, was inducted into the 32nd class of the Michigan Women's Hall of Fame. At the time of her appointment, at age 36, she became the youngest woman ever to lead a U.S. "It is very moving to run with so many veterans and service members, running by numerous national monuments and finishing at the Iwo Jima Memorial."īenson was appointed dean of Wayne Law in June 2014, after having served as interim dean since December 2012. "Other than Boston, my favorite marathon is the Marine Corps Marathon in Washington, D.C.," she said. She also ran the Portland Marathon in Oregon in October, when she was one month pregnant. Being able to run in Boston is a very special experience, and the fan support is unrivaled."īenson's other marathons have included those in Florence, Rome and Venice, all of which she and her husband ran together while he was stationed in Italy with the U.S. "It meant a lot to me because Wellesley College, where I went for my undergraduate degree, is the halfway point of the race, and because I had completed my law degree at Harvard Law in nearby Cambridge and met my husband there. "Running in Boston in 2009 was the best marathon experience of my life," Benson said last week. She began running two marathons a year, ultimately qualifying for Boston the first time in May 2008 at the Traverse City Track Club Bayshore Marathon. "My first marathon experience in Detroit was so positive that I decided afterward to train and try to qualify for Boston," Benson said. This year is the 50th anniversary of women being permitted to run the Boston Marathon.īenson completed her first marathon, the Detroit Free Press Marathon, in October 2005, deciding to compete after completing the Ann Arbor Half Marathon and learning that the Free Press marathon finished on the 50-yard line of the Detroit Lions' Ford Field. So, I started training and, with the blessing of my doctor, flew to Boston to run."īenson and her husband, Ryan Friedrichs, who was in Boston today to cheer her on, are expecting their first child, a son, June 4. Her story inspired me to realize what seemed impossible was possible. But then I read a story about Amy Kiel, who had my same due date, was in her mid-thirties and had finished Boston in 2015. "Initially, I thought that eight months would be too far along for me to compete. "I found out in September that I was accepted to run in Boston, and I found out a month later that I was pregnant," Benson said.

She planned to run Boston again, and she qualified at the San Diego Marathon in May with a time of 3 hours, 37 minutes. Today's marathon was Benson's 22nd overall and the second time she has run in the Boston Marathon. Jocelyn Benson, dean of Wayne State University Law School in Detroit, today became one of only a handful of women in history to complete the Boston Marathon in her eighth month of pregnancy.īenson, 38, of Detroit completed the nation's most-prestigious marathon in 6 hours, 12 minutes, 32 seconds.
