“If I quit, everybody’s going to believe women can’t do this.”
That’s the thought that latched itself into Kathrine Switzer’s head when a male official tried to push her off the course of the Boston Marathon in 1967.
At just 20 years of age, Switzer had registered for the event after months of training, deciding she was ready to tackle the ultimate distance run.
She had registered for the event as “K.V. Switzer”, a gender-neutral name she says wasn’t intended to mislead officials — it was habit, the same way she signed off her college papers.
In fact, Switzer showed up at the start line wearing lipstick and eyeliner — the first woman to do so as a registered athlete.
(Switzer wasn’t the first woman to run the Boston Marathon — Bobbi Gibb ran, unregistered, the year before.)
But just two miles into the race, Switzer was accosted by Jock Semple, a race official who grabbed her and tried to pull her off the course.
Recalling the moment, Switzer says: “There’s this split second where you say, ‘Oh my God, I’ve done something really wrong, I’m so scared, I’m so ashamed’.”
“Then all of a sudden I said, ‘no, no, if I quit, everybody’s going to believe women can’t do this’.”
And by the end of the race — she crossed the finish line at 4 hours and 20 minutes — Switzer had what she calls “a life plan laid out in front of me”.