DULUTH - As Christopher Raabe cruised into downtown Duluth Saturday morning, the thousands of spectators lining the Grandma's Marathon course began chanting, "USA! USA!" In Canal Park, cowbells rang out near the finish line as the buzz spread among race fans: an American, and a Minnesota native, was on the cusp of winning.
Bill Raabe already knew. After finishing the Garry Bjorklund Half Marathon around 8 a.m., he walked to the corner of Lake and Superior streets, where he fielded phone calls updating him on his son's progress. His wife, Julie -- listening to an Internet broadcast of the race from their home in Washington, D.C. -- told him Chris had opened up a one-minute lead. Then he stretched it to two. Then three.
His father couldn't see the finish line, but the roar confirmed that Chris Raabe had become the first American man to win Grandma's Marathon in 14 years. Raabe, 30, finished in 2 hours, 15 minutes, 13 seconds, nearly three minutes ahead of second-place Charles Kanyao of Kenya. The former cross-country runner at Sauk Rapids High School and North Dakota State took the lead around the 13-mile mark and never looked back, becoming the first American man to win the race since Mark Curp in 1995.
The last Minnesotan to win was Dick Beardsley, in 1982.
While Raabe ended one streak, Mary Akor kept another one alive. Akor battled the hot, humid weather to win her third consecutive Grandma's. Akor's time of 2:36:52 beat Alina Ivanova by six seconds.
Raabe first attended Grandma's when he was 10, watching his father run the 26.2 miles from Two Harbors to Canal Park. He hoped to run it one day, but he didn't anticipate winning.
"I just hoped to improve off of last year," said Raabe, who was sixth at Grandma's a year ago and 12th in his debut there in 2007. "If I had run faster and placed better, I would have been happy with that.
"This was one of the first marathons I came to as a kid. I always thought it would be cool to do it. Now that it's worked out, I don't think it's completely sunk in."