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2025 Boston Marathon sets records with historically hard cut-off time

Denver resident David French receives his metal after finishing the Boston Marathon. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)
Denver resident David French receives his metal after finishing the Boston Marathon. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)

Editor’s Note: This is an excerpt from WBUR’s daily morning newsletter, WBUR Today. If you like what you read and want it in your inbox, sign up here


Check your jacket pockets. Two unclaimed winning Powerball tickets bought in Massachusetts last October are about to expire next week.

But first, let’s get to the news:

On your marks, get set, try again: Remember last week when Boston Marathon organizers reported a record 36,406 qualifier applications for the 2025 race? A third of those speedy runners won’t make the cut. The BAA said yesterday that a total of 24,069 applicants are being offered a bib — meaning 12,324 runners who submitted qualifying times will be denied.

Catching up: This year’s MCAS scores are showing a slower recovery from pandemic-era learning loss than state officials had hoped. “We know there is much work to be done,” Massachusetts Education Secretary Patrick Tutwiler said of this past spring’s standardized test results, which were released yesterday.

Get your shovels: The local homeless services organization St. Francis House broke ground yesterday on a 19-story affordable housing development, just a block from Boston Common.

William Farwell, a former Stoughton police officer and twin brother of the cop accused of murdering Sandra Birchmore, has been banned from working again in Massachusetts law enforcement. The state’s police oversight agency voted to decertify Farwell yesterday for what it described as “misconduct” with Birchmore. While he does not face charges in the murder case, a 2022 investigation found Farwell was one of three Stoughton cops who had sexual relationships with Birchmore while she was in a youth police program.

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This article was originally published on WBUR.org.

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