Josh Cassidy says it feels like receiving a pat on the back from thousands of people. The wheelchair racer from Port Elgin, Ont., has been brought to tears two or three times during competition in his career.
One of them was in 2006, the first of his 13 Boston Marathon appearances. "I remember coming around the [final] corner onto Boylston Street and it was just packed with people," Cassidy said in a recent phone call from his home in Barrie, Ont., ahead of this year's race. "Everyone is going nuts, I'm on my own and I remember looking around thinking, 'Oh, no, is someone or one of the top guys overtaking me?
Am I going so slow that the runners are coming up?' "No, they were all just cheering for me coming through [to the finish line].
It was support from people that [understood] the marathon, the struggle. The whole Boston community and everyone there gets it, and it's so special, the energy around it." A three-time Paralympian, Cassidy was in a struggle nearly from the outset of Monday's race on a cloudy and cool morning.