Ajay Haridasse collapsed 1,000 feet from the Boston Marathon finish line with severe cramps. Two strangers - Aaron Beggs of Northern Ireland and Robson De Oliveira of Brazil - stopped their own races, slid under his arms, and walked him across. The man they carried finished in 2:44:32. Beggs crossed 4 seconds later.

Two Strangers Stopped Their Race to Carry Him Across the Finish Line

1 viewsPosted 12 days agoUpdated 43 minutes ago

With less than 1,000 feet left in the 2026 Boston Marathon, Ajay Haridasse's legs stopped cooperating. The 21-year-old Northeastern University distance captain went down with severe cramps - and stayed down, collapsing repeatedly as his body refused to stand. The finish line was right there. He couldn't reach it alone.

Three Countries, One Finish Line

Aaron Beggs, a 40-year-old maintenance worker from Bangor, County Down, was running his own race when he spotted Haridasse by the barrier. He glanced at his watch. Then he made a decision. "My natural instinct was to help," Beggs later said. "I've been brought up with the attitude that you should put others before yourself." He extended both arms and pulled Haridasse upright.

Brazilian runner Robson De Oliveira, 36, came up from behind and did the same. The three men - one American, one Northern Irish, one Brazilian - slid under Haridasse's shoulders together and walked the remaining stretch as one.

The Part Nobody Expected

The moment was filmed and spread across TikTok, Instagram, and every major broadcaster within hours - millions of views. CNN brought Beggs and Haridasse together for a reunion segment. The story was covered by Al Jazeera, NPR, NBC News, the Irish Times, and RTÉ News.

Then came the detail that made everyone smile twice: Haridasse - the one being carried - officially crossed in 2:44:32. Beggs, who stopped to lift him, finished 4 seconds later at 2:44:36.

What They Said Afterward

Haridasse had been running strong at a 5:50-per-mile pace, holding form through 15 miles before cramping started around mile 22. He recovered within two days and returned to his co-op placement at New Balance. "I wanted to give the race everything I had," he said. "And I think I did that."

Beggs - competing for North Down Athletic Club - narrowly missed a personal best by stopping. He didn't dwell on it. "We all need just a nice story in our lives just to make us smile, bring a tear to our eyes with happiness."

Frequently Asked Questions

Who helped Ajay Haridasse at the 2026 Boston Marathon?
Two fellow runners stopped to help: Aaron Beggs, a 40-year-old maintenance worker from Bangor, County Down, Northern Ireland, and Robson De Oliveira, a 36-year-old runner from Brazil. Both men were running their own races when they spotted Haridasse collapsed near the finish line and chose to stop and carry him across.
How far from the finish line did Ajay Haridasse collapse?
Haridasse collapsed approximately 1,000 feet - around 200 strides - from the Boston Marathon finish line. He was suffering from severe dehydration and cramping and went down multiple times, unable to stand on his own.
Did Aaron Beggs sacrifice his personal best to help at the Boston Marathon?
Yes. Beggs, competing for North Down Athletic Club, narrowly missed a personal best by stopping to help Haridasse. He finished in 2:44:36 - four seconds after Haridasse, who officially crossed at 2:44:32, meaning the man being carried finished ahead of the man carrying him.
What was Ajay Haridasse's finishing time at the 2026 Boston Marathon?
Haridasse finished with an official time of 2:44:32. His helper Aaron Beggs crossed four seconds later at 2:44:36 - he had stopped his own race to lift a stranger, and the stranger beat him across the line.
What happened to the Boston Marathon carry video?
Footage of the three men crossing the finish line together went viral, gathering millions of views on TikTok, Instagram, and other platforms within hours. CNN ran a reunion segment featuring Beggs and Haridasse with anchor Victor Blackwell, and the story was picked up by NPR, Al Jazeera, NBC News, the Irish Times, and RTÉ News.

Verified Fact

Core claims verified: Northeastern University News (northeastern.edu/2026/04/24) confirms Haridasse age 21, Northeastern Club Running captain, finish time 2:44:32, cramping began mile 22, recovered at New Balance co-op. Al Jazeera (aljazeera.com/sports/2026/4/24) confirms collapse 1000 feet from line, Beggs extended arms, De Oliveira came from behind. Irish News/RTÉ confirms Beggs 40, Bangor Co Down, maintenance worker, North Down Athletic Club, finish time 2:44:36. De Oliveira age 36, Brazil - confirmed via research brief and CBC/Al Jazeera coverage. CNN reunion segment with Victor Blackwell confirmed (cnn.com/2026/04/24). Race date: Monday April 20 2026 (Patriots Day, 130th Boston Marathon). YouTube video _6wROeaGloo confirmed live via oembed. No dialogue invented - all quotes sourced from Beggs (Al Jazeera/Irish News) and Haridasse (Northeastern News). | Independently audited 2026-06-02 (fact-verifier: numeric coherence + citation fidelity + claim-source tracing); corrections applied where flagged.

Northeastern University News

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