It was Desisa’s
second fastest time of his career and just six seconds away from the 2013 IAAF
World Championships marathon silver medallist's best time, set in the 2011 New
Delhi race. Desisa, the 2013 Boston Marathon champion who has already announced
that he will defend that title in April, came home three seconds in front of
Eritrea’s Nguse Amlosom, who set a personal best by just over a minute.
In a thrilling race at the sharp end, with
the first eight finishers crossing the line within 20 seconds of each other,
the Kenyan quartet of Wilson Kiprop, Bernard Koech, Bernard Kipyego and Micah
Kogo followed the leading pair home in 59:45, 59:46, 59:47 and 59:49
respectively.
Ethiopia’s Feyisa Lelisa and Kenya’s Paul
Longyangata the other men to finish inside the hour, an unprecedented feat in a
half marathon, and were seventh and eighth in 59:51 and 59:54.
Neverthless, there was a slightly
anti-climactic feeling when the results were examined because faster times
almost certainly could have been achieved, perhaps even Patrick Makau’s course
record of 58:52 threatened, if the field had dared to race a little more
audaciously over the first 5km, which was reached in 14:31.
After that initial reluctance to attack
the distance, things livened up markedly in the men’s race, with Koech, Desisa
and eventual third placer Wilson Kiprop pushing the tempo, resulting in a 10km
split of 28:30 for the leading pack of 10 men.
The leaders reached 15km in 42:38, with
only Kenya’s Jacob Kendagor and Ethiopia’s Ibrahim Jeilan coming off the back
of the leading group. Koech, under the hour in his last four half marathons,
continued to be the aggressor. However, sadly for him, several of the other
contenders still had plenty in the tabk.
Desisa and Amlosom broke away from their
rivals with three kilometres to go, with initially the unheralded Eritrea
looking the better of the two. A kilometre later though, and the marathon
strength of Desisa enabled him to dig deeper and he opened up a critical gap of
a few metres that he would eventually hold to the line.
Kenya’s London 2012 Olympic Games silver
medallist Priscah Jeptoo was a much clearer winner of the women’s race in
1:07:02, finishing more than a minute in front of her second-placed compatriot
Flomena Cheyech, who was second in 1:08.13.
Her acceleration over the 5km to 10km,
reaching in 32:41, meant a 15:27 split; with only Cheyech, Ethiopia’s Guteni
Shone and Kenya’s Helah Kiprop able to stay within a few seconds of her
notoriously flailing gait. What came next was mighty impressive: she covered
the 5km segment between 10km and 15km in another 15:27 and then hit 20km in
63:45.
Her lead before she headed in to the long
home straight over the final 1.1km had reached a yawning 62 seconds and the
race was all but over. Behind her, the next eight athletes also broke 70
minutes with Shone in third taking 28 seconds off her best with 68:31.
Jeptoo’s win was the fourth successive
victory by Kenyan women in the Emirate, a sequence started in 2011 when Mary
Keitany set a still-standing world record of 1:05:50 on the same course.
Phil Minshull and organisers for the IAAF
No comments:
Post a Comment