February 11, 2009 8:47 PM
- Text
Disabled Runner A Winner, Hands Down
A veteran who lost his legs to a mortar round in Vietnam finished the Los Angeles Marathon a week after he began, to the cheers of supporters and passers-by.
Police closed down the last half block of the 26.2-mile course Saturday so Bob Wieland, 57, without a wheelchair and propelled only by his hands, could cross the finish line in the middle of a downtown street.
As about 150 people huddled around, Wieland raised a hand and pointed his index finger in the air as a marathon official placed a medal around his neck.
"This was not natural. This was supernatural," he said. "It was only done by the grace of God."
Wieland finished in 173 hours and 45 minutes, marathon officials said. He said he slept only 11 hours since he began the route March 1.
In an emotional gathering in the middle of the street, a friend gave Wieland a trophy for "most courageous athlete in America." He thanked his support team and the strangers who cheered for him as he slowly made his way along the route's sidewalks and streets.
It wasn't the first long hand-walk for Wieland. He crossed the United States from California to Washington, D.C., over a period of three years, eight months and six days in 1982-1986. He's also finished the New York City Marathon twice and the Ironman triathlon in Hawaii.
This was his third time finishing the Los Angeles Marathon, although it was his slowest time.
© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Police closed down the last half block of the 26.2-mile course Saturday so Bob Wieland, 57, without a wheelchair and propelled only by his hands, could cross the finish line in the middle of a downtown street.
As about 150 people huddled around, Wieland raised a hand and pointed his index finger in the air as a marathon official placed a medal around his neck.
"This was not natural. This was supernatural," he said. "It was only done by the grace of God."
Wieland finished in 173 hours and 45 minutes, marathon officials said. He said he slept only 11 hours since he began the route March 1.
In an emotional gathering in the middle of the street, a friend gave Wieland a trophy for "most courageous athlete in America." He thanked his support team and the strangers who cheered for him as he slowly made his way along the route's sidewalks and streets.
It wasn't the first long hand-walk for Wieland. He crossed the United States from California to Washington, D.C., over a period of three years, eight months and six days in 1982-1986. He's also finished the New York City Marathon twice and the Ironman triathlon in Hawaii.
This was his third time finishing the Los Angeles Marathon, although it was his slowest time.
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